Fri Jul 31, 2015 7:18 pm
The winners of the 2015 deadline are:
Buyers
1. Houston Astros. For their unexpected playoff run, the Astro's acquired s legitimate #2 starter (Scott Kazmir), a 5-tool center fielder (Carlos Gomez), and a solid mid-rotation starter (Mike Fiers). Kazmir and Fiers join Keuchel, McHugh, and McCullers Jr. to form one of the most formidable rotations in the league. Gomez gives the Astros a top of the rotation hitter, defensive whiz in Cf, and game base-path disruptor all in one. And Gomez and Fiers will be with the team for 1 and 3 more teams respectively. And of all the players the Astros gave up, only one--Cf Brett Phillips--was a blue chip prospect, so their farm system is still nicely stocked.
2. Texas Rangers. The Rangers only made one deal, but it was a huge one, netting them a left-handed ace for the next 3 1/2 season. They traded away a lot of talent, but Chirinos has played well enough to make losing the questionably hitting Alfaro sustainable. They still have the talented Nomar Mazara and Lewis Brinson as Of prospects to replace Nick Williams, and Jake Thompson--who has #3 starter potential at best--will be replaced by the impressive Luis Ortiz, who has dominated LoA with a 1.72 ERA and a 1.12 Whip. So, the Rangers did very nicely at the deadline.
3. Toronto Blue Jays. Like always, Anthopolous has shown a willingness to empty his minor league system of talent, and he did so again this week. If Tulowitzki stays healthy for much of his tenure, then sending hard-throwing blue chip pitching prospects Hoffman and Castro to Colorado will be worth it, if not that loss will sting. Having sent blue-chip Lh pitching prospect Daniel Norris and solid lh pitching prospects Matt Boyd and Jairo Labourt to Detroit for 1/2 a year of David Price, they will be in even worse shape if they don't make the playoffs. So, this #3 slot entirely depends on a Toronto post-season. If not, Toronto could face another system withdrawal after Antopolous' famous misguided trade with Miami.
Sellers
1. Detroit Tigers. With the Tigers facing a losing season, a barren farm system and 3 players--Cespedes, Soria, and Price--headed to free agency, Dombrowski brilliantly acquired top talent for all three players. He got the three talented lh pitching prospects mentioned above, the hard-throwing blue chip pitching prospect Micheal Fulmer from the Mets, and the power-hitting infielder Jacoby Jones from the Pirates. Dombrowski does have his mess-ups--like the ill-advised Fister deal--but he's shown again this week why he is one of the best GM's in the game.
2. Milwaukee Brewers. Failing to get Wheeler from the Mets, Doug Melvin turned around and got a better deal from the Astros for 1 1/2 years of Gomez and Mike Fiers. Brett Phillips is a legitimate 5-tool cf with a bettter hit tool than Gomez (if not the sublime D) who will be under team control for over 6 years. Domingo Santana could give them significant power in Rf, and Josh Hader is a solid lh back-of-the-rotation starter who could pitch this year for the Brewers, and Houser is a Rh version of the same. So, it's a nice reboot for a player they could sign and a mid-rotation starter.
3. Philadelphia Phillies. Ruben Amaro definitely got a nice haul for Hamels. However, all three of the prospects he got have some blemishes. Alfaro is obviously a talented defensive catching prospect with power, but he has a questionable hit tool and suffered a major ankle injury costing him the season. Nick Williams is a very talented of with power and speed, who can play cf and rf, but he still strikes out too much. Jake Thompson is a fine pitching prospect with a high floor and #3 potential, but he's not dominating and won't come close to taking Hamels' spot as ace. So, it was a very nice haul for Amaro, but for an ace with Hamels' relatively cheap contract, I'm not sure he couldn't have done better.
Losers
1. San Diego Padres. After his disastrous emptying of his team's farm system last year, Preller needed to recoup by trading away the soon-to-leave Upton and the un-needed Kimbrel. Supposedly, his demands were way too high, and the Padres will end up with just a draft pick for Upton and a closer they still don't need.