I'm pretty surprised that anybody on a baseball simulation site in 2014 would actually employ pitcher wins and batting average in an argument over who won a trade, let alone do so in selective fashion to advance their "argument".
I'm pretty surprised anybody on a baseball simulation site in 2014 would completely dismiss pitcher wins and batting average in an argument--are we arguing?--over who won a trade. MLB statisticians and executives certainly don't dismiss them; so you're mistaken to do so. Wins
are a partial indicator of an SP's ability to stick out a victory. Batting average
is a partial indicator of hitting ability. Also, as you can see above and in my subsequent post, I definitely didn't
only depend on those issues in my argument; I well-supported it with many other facts. Also, I never mentioned "batting average" in that post you quoted
at all. I said "
average hit tool," which refers to his entire hitting ability, not just his batting average. You need to read my posts better before you erroneously respond.
So let's break this down. Heyward's career batting average is a middling .262, yes, but he does absolutely everything else very well. With 4.5 full seasons under his belt all before entering his prime he's put up a .352 career on base percentage, a .429 slugging percentage, and is essentially a centerfielder playing right; i.e, the best defensive corner outfielder in MLB going back several years per all the advanced metrics.
No, he
doesn't do "everything else" well at all. He is a
terrible hitter against left-handers, and hit an atrocious
.169 against them last year. That practically makes him a platoon-quality player. Also, a .429 slugging percentage is very unimpressive for a "power-hitting" outfielder. And he has posted dismal sub-.400 slg pcts twice in his career, including an alarmingly bad .384 last year. His power is
also questionable, as he only hit 11 hrs in 573 ABs last year.
So, he is essentially an excellent defensive right fielder who can't hit lefties, with mediocre-average hitting skills, dubious power, and ok on-base skills. Excuse me if I'm not majorly impressed...
So yeah, the Cardinals are only acquiring him for one year of contractual control, but they also acquire a year's worth of time as an exclusive negotiating window to extend him while plugging him in the lineup of a likely playoff team for 2015. And they get two years of control of the flamethrowing Walden to boot, who, unlike the prospect going to Atlanta in the deal, has actually proven himself at the major league level while missing a lot of bats.
You majorly overvalue this "negotiating window," particularly since Heyward will not want to actively negotiate until he's improved on his horrid 2014 year. In fact, as the team controlling him, they will still have to match or top what he hopes or expects to get on the open market to keep him from it. So, they would have just as easily and effectively signed him as a free agent. And they could have done so
without giving up
four years of Shelby Miller. I'm also surprised that someone on a 2014 baseball site would be so dismissive of 95-mph throwing prospects who are tearing up the AFL. I would have thought you could have recognized that value.
On the Braves side they get Shelby Miller who yes won 15 regular season games two seasons ago. And I'll concede further that he had a fine season that year even though pitcher wins is a weak-ass predictive stat when thinking about the future. But his arm was so scragged by the end of that season in 2012 that the Cardinals completely shut him down for the entire postseason, letting him only throw one inning where he got tagged. His velocity plummeted, his mechanics showed it, he had more than fatigue something was dearly wrong. And that showed itself last season where his k/rate (a stat that matters going forward when making predictions unlike pitcher wins) plummeted by 2.5 k's per 9 innings, a massive drop considering that he should be entering his prime. His walk rate spiked by about .6 per 9 too. His velocity was off. The only thing that remotely saved his season was an insanely lucky .256 ba against on balls in play, which is utterly unsustainable. See Voros McKracken's research, etc. Even so he was just 10-9 with an ERA lucky enough to be a middling high 3's. The 15-game winner is gone.
The only plausible thing to say on the Braves side is that they get 4 years of cost control on Miller and a similar amount on the young kid who has yet to make it out of the low minors. But Miller is , at best, a #3 going forward. At best, probably worse than that. Last year , based on the things that a pitcher actually controls that affect the outcome of the game, he was essentially a replacement level starter.
First of all, I'm
very surprised a grown-up educated man would ever use the puerile, nebulous "adjective," "weak-ass" to describe anything. It only shows you can't actually articulate what you have against using "wins" as part of one's evaluation of a pitcher. The fact you never specify what
is wrong with doing so further undermines your position.
Secondly, many of the things you say about Miller are just
wrong. The Cards did shut him down at the end of his rookie season as
many teams do with rookie pitchers. He had pitched more innings than he had ever pitched, and the fresh Wacha had already replaced him in the rotation. And
nothing was dearly wrong with his mechanics or velocity; they were all fine this year. Yes, he had a k's dip--and a small BB spike--in his sophomore season...many Sps do. However, he was hitting
93-95 most of the year, he had a
2.94 ERA in the second half, as well as a remarkable 1.49 ERA in September, so he's clearly not slowing down.
That makes your saying "the 15-game winner is gone" simply ridiculous. It also makes it hypocritical, since you previously claimed to erroneously give no credence to games won as an evaluator. And starters who throw as hard as Miller and maintain 2.94 ERA's in second halfs are
not #4 starters; they are #2-#3 starters. And 4 years of one of them is worth
much more than one year of a dubious offensive player like Heyward. And whether or not Jenkins makes it is irrelevant. If he does, it just makes the trade a bigger steal for the Braves.
From the Braves perspective they can say that Heyward rebuffed their attempts to sign him to an extension, but they suffer the opportunity loss by settling for the scragged Miller instead of sending Heyward to a contender mid season closer to the trade deadline. Where their leverage will improve. And by jettisoning Heyward they pretty much signal that they've already given up on contending in 2015 even though their core was certainly still good enough (J.Upton, Simmons, Freeman, Kimbrell, etc etc) to snatch a wild card spot. We saw what the Giants and Royals did with that.
So yeah, respectfully, the Cardinals completely swindled the Braves here.
The Braves made no attempt to sign Heyward to a long-term contract. They were smart enough to know he wasn't worth the risk or investment. And trading Heyward certainly didn't end their playoff hopes. Making room for a more potent hitter like Gattis and greatly improving your starting pitching doesn't tend to do that.
And they settled for no "loss<" although I have no idea why you call Miller "scragged," he's not scrawny. You really are severe in your unfounded criticisms of the kid. They got
four years of a 25-yr-old pitcher, who throws 93-95, had a 2.94 ERA in last years second half (with a 1.49 ERA in Sep.), and won 15 games a year ago; and a top fireballing SP prospect for only
one year of a mediocre hitting RF who can't hit lefties and a replaceable setup man.
So, yeah, respectfully, the Braves completely swindled the Cards here.