Outfielders are Overrated!!
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Outfielders are Overrated, Doesn't Bowden Know?
Its no secret that Washington National's GM Jim Bowden gets a hardon for a talented outfielder. During his time in Cincinnati he brought in talented outfielders such as Greg Vaughn, Jeffery Hammonds, Mike Cameron, Dante Bichette, Juan Encarnacion, Jose Guillen, Wily Mo Pena, Ken Griffey Jr. as well as developed Austin Kearns and Adam Dunn. The trend has continued in Washington with the aquisitions of Austin Kearns, Wily Mo Pena, Rob Mackowiak, Lastings Milledge, and Elijah Dukes. However, for all the outfielders he's brought in and continues to bring in there are NO quality arms to balance it out. Anyone that knows a darn thing about baseball knows pitching wins, without pitching you have no chance. Except for the occasional broken down vet that comes in and does alright for a season and a half the only big name pitcher Jim Bowden can claim to have brought in is Denny Neagle (who was even on the back end of his career).There is no excuse for Bowden to continue his building strategy that obviously doesn't work. Cincinnati became fed up with his inability to pull the trigger on deals involving pitchers. So much so that even former Reds President John Allen (thought of as a joke in himself) knew enough to deal Jose Guillen for Aaron Harang. POS John Allen topped all of Bowden's deals for pitchers in one trade a few days after firing Bowden. Now you can argue, and should, that no one knew that Aaron Harang would develope into an ace. I'll even admit I thought he was crap. However, this is my point........you have to take chances on pitchers. Even if it means giving away an outfielder that ends up shoving it back in your face because outfielders are expendable! Every team in the major leagues has decent enough outfielders. The Pirates have Jason Bay; the Rangers have Josh Hamilton and Milton Bradley; and Seattle has Ichiro, however how many teams really have good pitching? The answer: not many and those who do contend year in and out. There are those Reds fans that throw a fit everytime one of the "fan favorites" is traded. Well quite simply they are expendable. Guillen, Encarnacion, Kearns, Cameron, all replaced rather easily. Of course there was an uproar when Josh Hamilton was dealt for Edison Volquez but it is obvious the Reds have found a gem in the young stud. Something that may allow them to contend for years to come. Sure many times the Reds dealt their outfielders for the likes of Ryan Dempster and Bronson Arroyo hasn't been too hot either, but sometimes you get a Aaron Harang or Edison Volquez. And as far as outfielders go......theres another waiting in the wings, Jay Bruce.
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Comments
Shouldn't "hardon" at least be hyphenated?
Yum-o!
by Fat Vegas Alan on May 10, 2008 12:15 AM EDT 0 recs
Kudos!
I’m glad someone finally has the courage to call out Jim Bowden. He’s had it too good for too long!
by Red Menace on May 10, 2008 3:56 AM EDT 0 recs
I don't get it
Everyone knows outfielders rate. Especially scrappy, hustling, left-handed outfielders.
All Things Bubba: Because how can you not love a baseball player named Bubba?
by BubbaFan on May 10, 2008 6:01 AM EDT 0 recs
If Outfielders aren't important...
why do you have three of them in your starting line-up? I mean you could always have three catchers instead.
Hope Springs Eternal! Go Reds
by Caleb on May 10, 2008 8:42 AM EDT 0 recs
many years ago I thought the Reds were going to have 3 first basemen
when they traded for Casey, Kurnerko, and Young.
The Dusty Path to the World Series!*
*Note this is not an endorsment of Dusty Baker.
by justin007000 on
May 10, 2008 11:20 AM EDT
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One quibble
out of, well, many;
John Allen didn’t make the Guillen/Harang deal. That was Brad Kullman and Leland Maddox, who were the interim GM’s after Bowden was fired.
"Karma - there it was. The meaning of life, straight from Carson Daly's lips to my morphine-laced ears." -Earl Hickey
by BLee2525 on May 10, 2008 11:02 AM EDT 0 recs
are you proposing the Reds trade Bruce?
The Dusty Path to the World Series!*
*Note this is not an endorsment of Dusty Baker.
by justin007000 on May 10, 2008 11:23 AM EDT 0 recs
John Lannan's a pretty good pitcher for the Nats
Jon Rauch is good out of the bullpen. And tall.
Bowden’s problem in DC is that he doesn’t pull the trigger in trading any of his decent players to try to build and strengthen the team. He held on to Soriano, Dmitri Young, Livan Hernandez, and Chad Cordero for too long instead of trading them when their value was high. Soriano left during free agency, Hernandez netted Matt Chico, who was been pretty unimpressive this year, Young has been fat and on the DL this year, and his position has been taken by Nick Johnson. Instead of trading him, Bowden signed him to an extension. Cordero was good in 2005, but is now pretty much a bust and won’t net much in return.
by Brendanukkah on May 10, 2008 11:46 AM EDT 0 recs
Bowden didn't have problems constructing bullpens
Brantley, Shaw, Belinda, Graves, Mercker, White, Williamson, Sullivan, etc, etc, etc. It is a valie point that he can’t build a rotation, but i don’t think that is anything new.
The Dusty Path to the World Series!*
*Note this is not an endorsment of Dusty Baker.
by justin007000 on
May 10, 2008 11:59 AM EDT
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I found the second exclamation point compelling
'cause something is happening here, but you don't know what it is.
by Man Mountain on May 10, 2008 12:14 PM EDT 0 recs
Color me simplistic...
But pitching doesn’t win. You actually have to score more runs than the other team.
I hate statements that use either of the following formulae:
1. “[Aspect of baseball, e.g., defense, pitching, hitting, clutch hitting, two-out rbi, hustle, etc.] always wins [games, championships, etc.].”
2. “The reason that [team] always loses is that they don’t [aspect of baseball] well.”
Almost invariably, the person making the statement has some sort of axe to grind, and almost invariably, the person oversimplifies the situation to suit his or her particular myopia or hobby-horse, because baseball games are won generally by the team that plays better baseball in all aspects of the game (with a large element of chance).
At least it wasn't Grady Little.
by Paul Householder on May 11, 2008 3:13 AM EDT 1 recs
he's convinced me
the Reds shouldn’t have any outfielders.
The Dusty Path to the World Series!*
*Note this is not an endorsment of Dusty Baker.
by justin007000 on May 12, 2008 9:56 AM EDT 1 recs
Excellent. Rec'd.
At least it wasn't Grady Little.
by Paul Householder on
May 12, 2008 10:52 PM EDT
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