- Posts: 2143
- Joined: Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:32 am
Last winter, the baseball intelligentsia was all abuzz about San Diego's brilliant, energetic new GM, AJ Preller, and his complete re-vamping of the team. Trawling his farm system and major league team, Preller secured for the Padres a whole new outfield of Justin Upton, Wil Myers, and Matt Kemp; a new starting catcher in Derek Norris; a young 3b in Will Middlebrooks; an ace closer in Craig Kimbrel; and a new ace James Shields, who was signed to a long-term contract.
The thinking was the Padres could stop angsting about Petco Park and win as an offense-oriented team and compete in the NL West. After 64 games, the jury is still out, and the cost they paid for that revamp is looking costlier and costlier. Kemp has been a complete disaster with 2 hrs and a woeful .689 OPS. Myers has been OK, but his offense and (definitely) his defense have been inferior to the Cf they traded away, Cameron Maybin. Middleborooks' .652 OPS is worse than Kemp's. When Kimbrel has had games to save, his ERA has been an unusually high 3.75. And while Upton has been solid, if not spectacular, he is most certainly going to leave SD after this year for a bigger, higher-paying market. And the Padres are an unremarkable 32-32 and 5 games out.
To make things worse, it is clear the talent they traded away is substantial talent they could have used this year and would have been able to use in their future:
1. Their current questionable keystone problems could have been solved this year and next by Jace Peterson (whom they traded to ATL) and Trea Turner (whom they traded to WSH). Peterson is currently playing a solid 2b for the Braves with a .285 BA and a .356 OBP. Turner has been tearing up AA with a .322/.385/.471 line and will probably be playing SS for the Nationals next year...instead of the Padres.
2. They traded away their four best pitching prospects--Matt Wisler, Max Fried, Joe Ross, and Zack Eflin, as well as solid young starter Jesse Hahn. Ross is already up and pitching well with the Nats. Wisler, until a recent shelling, had been pitching solidly in AAA (Braves) and has shown his #3-#2 starter potential. Eflin has pitched very well for the Phils' AA team. Lhp Fried is recovering from Tommy John surgery, but scouts believe he can throw 95+ as he once did. And Hahn has done a solid job for the A's with a 1.19 WHIP.
What makes this substantial subtraction of pitching talent even worse is the Padres' starting pitching has been pretty poor this year, particularly considering their park. Their supposed ace Cashner is 2-8 with a 4.16 ERA. Tyson Ross has a horrid 1.53 WHIP. Despaigne has been mediocre and Kennedy has been horrid. So, not only did Preller jettison possible pitching help for this year. He got rid of 4 viable replacements and/or improvements on their current substandard starters.
3. And just to make those losses worse, they also sent defensive whiz/Cf Cameron Maybin-- who is playing his usual stellar D in Cf and hitting .303 with a .375 OBP--to Atlanta, as well as 3b prospect Dustin Peterson who is hitting over .300 in A ball, and speedy Of Mallex Smith who is hitting .338 in AA.
So, the Padres are still in the race, and things can go better for them. However, at this point, savvy Padres fans with their eyes on the future, as well as the present, are probably a bit worried and wondering if Preller didn't give up too much of the future for only a decent shot this year. If I were a Padres fan, I would be both.
The thinking was the Padres could stop angsting about Petco Park and win as an offense-oriented team and compete in the NL West. After 64 games, the jury is still out, and the cost they paid for that revamp is looking costlier and costlier. Kemp has been a complete disaster with 2 hrs and a woeful .689 OPS. Myers has been OK, but his offense and (definitely) his defense have been inferior to the Cf they traded away, Cameron Maybin. Middleborooks' .652 OPS is worse than Kemp's. When Kimbrel has had games to save, his ERA has been an unusually high 3.75. And while Upton has been solid, if not spectacular, he is most certainly going to leave SD after this year for a bigger, higher-paying market. And the Padres are an unremarkable 32-32 and 5 games out.
To make things worse, it is clear the talent they traded away is substantial talent they could have used this year and would have been able to use in their future:
1. Their current questionable keystone problems could have been solved this year and next by Jace Peterson (whom they traded to ATL) and Trea Turner (whom they traded to WSH). Peterson is currently playing a solid 2b for the Braves with a .285 BA and a .356 OBP. Turner has been tearing up AA with a .322/.385/.471 line and will probably be playing SS for the Nationals next year...instead of the Padres.
2. They traded away their four best pitching prospects--Matt Wisler, Max Fried, Joe Ross, and Zack Eflin, as well as solid young starter Jesse Hahn. Ross is already up and pitching well with the Nats. Wisler, until a recent shelling, had been pitching solidly in AAA (Braves) and has shown his #3-#2 starter potential. Eflin has pitched very well for the Phils' AA team. Lhp Fried is recovering from Tommy John surgery, but scouts believe he can throw 95+ as he once did. And Hahn has done a solid job for the A's with a 1.19 WHIP.
What makes this substantial subtraction of pitching talent even worse is the Padres' starting pitching has been pretty poor this year, particularly considering their park. Their supposed ace Cashner is 2-8 with a 4.16 ERA. Tyson Ross has a horrid 1.53 WHIP. Despaigne has been mediocre and Kennedy has been horrid. So, not only did Preller jettison possible pitching help for this year. He got rid of 4 viable replacements and/or improvements on their current substandard starters.
3. And just to make those losses worse, they also sent defensive whiz/Cf Cameron Maybin-- who is playing his usual stellar D in Cf and hitting .303 with a .375 OBP--to Atlanta, as well as 3b prospect Dustin Peterson who is hitting over .300 in A ball, and speedy Of Mallex Smith who is hitting .338 in AA.
So, the Padres are still in the race, and things can go better for them. However, at this point, savvy Padres fans with their eyes on the future, as well as the present, are probably a bit worried and wondering if Preller didn't give up too much of the future for only a decent shot this year. If I were a Padres fan, I would be both.