l.strether wrote:For 2 yrs/25 mil, they got one who hit 26 homers, with 92 RBis, a .362 Obp, and a .456 sg. pct. at a good price.
DH or no, he's still going to be a middle of the order bat who hit 26 homers, with a .362 OBP, and a .456 slugging percentage last year. And, no, you can't easily find cheaper alternatives that could feasibly give you similar production in the middle of the order. There aren't any free agents providing that feasible production at that low price.
And you're kidding yourself if you think you can expect David Ortiz production at DH for 2 yrs/25 mil. 35-yr-old Victor Martinez, who does provide that production, just signed for 4 yrs/68 mil. That's a lot steeper than 2 yrs/25 mil.
I will take Ortiz all day over Laroche at 2/$25m, perhaps your are kidding yourself with your comparison of Laroche vs Ortiz. When has Laroche ever hit lefties? When is the last time he even put together 2 good years in a row? He has been an every other year type of hitter. Now he goes to the AL (yes he did play 6 games a few years ago in the AL), could be an adjustment period for him as well. If you want to factor in age, when Ortiz was 34-35 he was putting up top DH numbers year after year. Laroche hasn't hit .275 in a full season since 2006 and his best OBP was last year at .362 and he hit .259 (failed to mention that!).
Bottom line Laroche is not in same league as Ortiz is as a DH.
Bottom line: you need to read my posts better.
I
never said I would take Laroche over Ortiz, or that Laroche was in "Ortiz's league." I said: "Valen is kidding himself if he thinks one can expect Ortiz production at DH for 2 yrs/25 mil." Big difference. In case you hadn't noticed, that caveat
includes Laroche.
Now to LaRoche. I never said he was a flawless player without drawbacks. I correctly noted he hit 26 homers, with a .362 OBP, and a .456 slugging percentage last year. That is excellent production for 2yrs/25 mil. Even if he does a bit less than that, it still would be a great return. And who cares if he hit .259? That's not terrible for a power hitting run-producer. Secondly, as long as his OBP stays at .340-.360, he could hit .240 and it would still be a great deal. And many hitters still hit well from 35-38, particularly when they don't rely on speed. Victor Martinez is proof of that. LaRoche significantly cut down his strikeouts last year; so he's actually improving. Also, he's now moving to US Cellular field; that will help immensely.
Finally, if you think LaRoche is a bad deal, then you need to tell the forum what better offensive deal you think you can get on the free agent market for 2 yrs/25 mil. Knock yourself out; it won't be easy.
P.s. Lighten up on the intensity (and exclamation marks). We're talking free agents here, not Ferguson.