markinmsp

November 14th, 2012 at 12:34 PM ^

 Disagree. Torii is a perfect fit for the Tigers at the 2-hole. He will be a cat-bird just like Anaheim, between Jackson, Cabrera, and Fielder. Even considering a .280 BA is more plausible, he clobbers left-handed pitching, and the Tigers need that. When you consider the financial side that seals it. Bourn, Pagan, Swisher and others all are going to want long contracts, which the Tigers should avoid right now. He’ll come with a 2 yr contract & maybe an option, just long enough to cover and not be saddled with another prolonged aging contract. He is great defensively, and can tutor Jackson as he did Trout. Has some pop, and enough speed. Plus is a strong, vocal, veteran leader in the clubhouse. An asset the Tigers needed desperately after losing Vmart. (My only concern is I hope they don’t clash, but doubt they will) As soon as I heard the Angels didn’t offer Hunter, I was knew he was the perfect get at the right cost.

Gobluegobluegoblue

November 13th, 2012 at 11:24 PM ^

Alvarez and Nicolino are good prospects, but this is pretty crazy. Interesting to see if they go after Hamilton now, or if they really did just sign all these guys last year to get the stadium. I certainly wouldn't put it past Loria.

ChalmersE

November 14th, 2012 at 11:34 AM ^

Actually the best prospect in the deal is probably Marisnick.  This deal really sucks for Miami baseball, especially after they finally gave Loria his domed stadium.  I do, however, note that three years from now, people might look back on this deal as a piece of genius:  Buerhle is getting up there in age; Johnson and Bonifacio have injury issues; Reyes was not a $20 million player in 2012; and Buck is, well, Buck.  If a couple of the prospects pan out, the Marlins might be sitting pretty in 2015 with guys like Jose Fernandez and Christian Yelich in the pipeline.

markinmsp

November 14th, 2012 at 11:42 AM ^

 No way! Miami wouldn’t get Hamilton. Not unless they guarantee him all GROSS stadium receipts of the next few years. Would have to be front-loaded, not back, because Loria would never be trusted again to not have another fire sale. (I hear Giancarlo is livid about the trade.)

 Miami has shot themselves in the foot. The only way they EVER get significant free agents is with Tony Montana included on their negotiating team. Otherwise, they will always have to include a massive premium to induce a signing or there has to be something significant detriment to the player signing elsewhere. (maybe a Melky situation)

 Jays fans have to be dancin’ in the streets as this addresses most of their needs with quality not just band-aids. Including swapping out Escobar. Makes them a huge player in AL East.

chris1709

November 13th, 2012 at 11:32 PM ^

The tigers should get melky cabrera, he would be a steal. His PED test is going to kill his value and he will be on a mission to prove hes an All-Star without the drugs. He's a five tool player that you can probally sign for 2 years at 7 or 8 per.

WMUgoblue

November 13th, 2012 at 11:44 PM ^

So I wonder what the asking price is for Giancarlo Stanton then, might as well see if they'll take Castellanos and Garcia. The Marlins got boned in the returns on this deal.

david from wyoming

November 14th, 2012 at 1:09 AM ^

I agree 100 percent. In addition, with the Tiger's working on re-signing Sanchez, we clearly wouldn't have room for both Buerhle and Johnson. If we can get Sanchez to stick around, I'm totally fine without cherry-picking the marlins here. We currently have awesome depth at SP.

WMUgoblue

November 14th, 2012 at 1:30 AM ^

Realistically at the end of the season I thought we had a good chance at keeping Anibal but after reading this http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/winter-meetings-anibal-sanchez-free-agent-contract-110812 I'm not so sure he'll be back.

Regardless the Tigers have a little bit of money to play with still, so hopefully they get another bullpen arm and maybe some catching depth with Laird likely to seek more playing time from another team (this is assuming we sign Torii Hunter as well, which looks more and more likely everyday.)

david from wyoming

November 14th, 2012 at 1:45 AM ^

15 million a year for 6 years. Guh. Maybe not at that price.

I hope we don't sign a closer since you pretty much have to overpay. Sign a bunch of low risk, low money guys and hope one or two work out for bullpen depth. Sit Coke, Benoit, Dotel and Bruce Rondon down together and say "who wants to close?"

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

November 13th, 2012 at 11:55 PM ^

Not sure I'd call the Marlins' situation a "plight" as it implies it's not their fault.  Jeff Loria is the best in the world at running a franchise into the ground while siphoning off every last cent.

Michigan4Life

November 14th, 2012 at 2:25 AM ^

Firesale --> slowly rebuild --> playoff team --> WS --> Profit --> Repeat process

Not saying it's wrong, but they keep coming back with young players and then trade them away at their peak value or close to it.  Their biggest mistake, trading away Miggy to Tigers and got literally nothing other than trading away Willis contract.

Yes, if I was the Marlins fan, I'd be tired of it. 

French West Indian

November 14th, 2012 at 10:43 AM ^

...have really looked oold the past few years.  I don't know how they've managed to hang on but it wouldn't shock me in the least if they finally crashed in 2013 and finished 3rd or worse in the East.

ghost

November 14th, 2012 at 11:25 AM ^

They could fall to third, but anything lower than that I think would be unlikely.  I expect to see Baltimore regress next year.  They are not going to win that many 1 run and extra inning games again.  The Yankees are going to spend a bit less then then they usually do to get under the luxury tax threshold in I believe it is 2014 to avoid the most punitive tax.  I'd expect them to go on a spending spree after that, especially with Soriano and Swisher off the books this year and possibly Granderson the year after.

Felix.M.Blue

November 14th, 2012 at 3:56 AM ^

would love to see MLB get rid of a couple teams. Miami would be a great place to start.

Just play the all-star game in the nice stadium but get rid of their team. Hell nobody wants to even watch Tampa and they are pretty good.

willywill9

November 14th, 2012 at 7:35 AM ^

The Marlins find a way to build the team up for 2 or so years then replenish.  They've won 2 world series since their inception. 

Also, their fans just don't show up, for starters.  Maybe it's because they sucked this year, or maybe because fans in Miami just have better things to do in the summer.

That said, I don't get how hot/cold they can be.  Last season was the exact opposite approach to managing a team... with long-term deals.

/random thoughts.

EDIT: more random notes... the Marlins are the only thing that stood in the way from the Yankees winning the WS for 1996 - 2000.  If you factor in another expansion team (D-Backs in 2001) they both helped prevent the most dominant streak in modern US Sports (potentially ever)

jethro34

November 14th, 2012 at 7:06 AM ^

I've been saying for over a decade that baseball needed to contract two teams at least.  Especiallynow that the Astros have moved to the American league meaning there's an odd number of teams in each league and every day will feature an interleague matchup.

There are some teams that simply don't have the fan support regardless of their talent.  Some of the places with crappy attendance actually have decent franchises, but no one comes to see them.  Oakland was a crazy environment in the playoffs and down the stretch, but for years they've drawn fewer than 20,000 per game, while a half dozen teams are doubling that.

Even Tampa Bay has been a competitive team but struggles to draw over 24,000.

I personally think MLB has 24 markets that can sustain major league baseball. 

My recommendation would be to contract to 24 teams, increase rosters to 27 or 28 players, and put an end to guys like Ryan Raburn ever starting baseball games at the major league level.  More teams would be competing because theorhetically the talent gap would be smaller (I'm guessing more players would rather start on some team than ride the bench on a loaded team).

Most of the lower attendance teams are in warm weather cities.  Marlins, Rays, Diamondbacks, Astros, Athletics, and Mariners.  Perhaps MLB should start the season a week or two earlier but instead of having games in Japan, have these fairer weather cities host games the first 2-3 weeks (with some other teams like the Braves, Rangers, Giants, Padres, Dodgers, Angels, etc. hosting home openers)  Even it out so no team got an unfair number of home games and divide the revenue between the 24 teams while investing some into the stadiums that host the games - perhaps letting the reform impact the minor league system and having stronger minor league teams at the top level playing in some of the fringe major-league markets.

Roll out a draft to distribute the players in these systems through the rest and allow all their coaches and scouts to be free agents.  I promise you would see better baseball and scarcity would drive demand.