Skip to main content

Pedro Pursuit, Halladay Hypothesis and Prospect Pronouncements

Could future Hall of Famer Pedro Martinez be on his way to the Phillies' pitching rotation? Yes, he could be. He could be the annual mid-level addition to the pitching staff that the team, and its phans, have grown accustomed to. Cory Lidle, Kyle Lohse, Jamie Moyer, Joe Blanton...those are the sorts of acquisitions the Phillies make each year, in July, to make a run at the playoffs. Pedro Martinez is no longer an all star...no longer a Cy Young Award contender...and no longer a staff ace. Toronto's Roy Halladay, who the Phillies were tied to with trade rumors this week, is that #1 pitcher the Phillies always miss out on.

The Phillies don't do what it takes to add a top level, front of the rotation, all star, Cy Young Award winning sort of hurler. The team lets money and the risk of trading away prospects get in the way. John Kruk tells a story about how the 1993 Phillies could have added Randy Johnson in a mid-season trade, but the front office was held up on pitching prospect and top draft pick Tyler Green. Those that remember Tyler Green surely would realize that he did not pan out the way the Phillies had hoped, and surely should not have ever been a breaking point in a deal to acquire a Cy Young Award winning, all star and future Hall of Fame pitcher. The 1993 Phillies team came up short in the post season. Hopefully, if this year's Phillies team passes on getting Halladay, or another staff ace pitcher, they won't come up short. Joe Blanton proved to be just what the rotation needed last year. Blanton came over to the National League and went undefeated in 13 starts, with a 4-0 record, 4.20 ERA and a .246 batting average against, after a 5-12 start with Oakland.

Pedro, who has been working out for Major League teams in recent weeks, pitched in the World Baseball Classic this year for the Dominican Republic. In 2 games, both against the Netherlands, Martinez pitched 6 total innings and allowed no runs while striking out 6. Experts said he looked good...like he could still pitch in the Majors. If the Phillies make Pedro an offer, it will be because they think he could help them win games. It may also end speculation over what the Phillies can offer Toronto for Roy Halladay.

The Phillies' minor leagues are deep with prospects. Each minor league team has begun seeing an increase in ML scouts attending games. Names like the triple A IronPigs' Lou Marson, Carlos Carrasco and Jason Donald....the double A Phillies' Michael Taylor, Kyle Drabek and Joe Savery....high A ball level Treshers OF Dominic Brown....and low A ball level BlueClaws pitcher Jason Knapp are all names that are coveted by baseball big shots. These are all, of course, names that are being tossed around in trade rumors.

If a trade for a top tier pitcher is the move our Phillies chose to go with, and the swap calls for the Phils to give up some of the names I've just listed, don't worry, phans. The Phillies system is plentiful with prospects. That list didn't include Reading pitchers Mike Stutes and Vance Worley, who are holding it down at the double A level after both were drafted just last year. That list also doesn't include Steve Susdorf, a 22 year old outfielder who is batting .397 with a .933 OPS through his first 15 games with Clearwater, after batting .333 with .902 OPS through 21 games with Lakewood earlier this year. The list doesn't have MLB All Star Futures Game pitcher Yohan Flande, who was 7-1 with a 2.52 ERA through 13 starts with Clearwater prior to being promoted to Reading last week, on it. That list does not include Planet Earth's stolen base leader Lakewood BlueClaw Anthony Gose, an 18 year older who is batting .277 with 47 steals in his first full year of pro ball. It also does not include Tommy John Surgery investments Scott Mathieson and Mike Zagurski who are on their ways back to the majors. The farm is deep, my babies. Don't you fret none.

BallHype: hype it up!

Comments

Anonymous said…
I still wouldn't want to give up Drabek or Taylor, no matter what else is in the system.

-OBC
Jay Floyd said…
I just feel like a prospect is not a lock. A Cy Young Award winner is a greater commodity...and winning now is what's important.

There are ways for teams to stay top tier and still deal away high level prospects. Look at the BoSox...they dealt a slam dunk minor leaguer like Hanley Ramirez and they are still a top team even though Hanley became what he was projected to be. AND they won a World Series with the guys they got- Beckett and Lowell! I'd take a deal like that...Another championship for a "slam dunk" prospect, with the knowledge that the frame work is in place to continue to win.

Popular posts from this blog

Rappers in Phillies Caps

Weekend greetings to you phine pholks out there. Today's post features pictures of rappers wearing Phillies caps. Why rappers in Phillies caps, you ask? Because... Any other questions? We will start things off properly by going with a highly recognizable hip hop star. 50 Cent stays constantly relavant by consistantly creating radio friendly material to help sell (G) units, while he "keeps it real" by still rapping about the thug life he lived before becoming the 2nd highest earning black entertainer in America. 50 is seen here in a recent interview rocking a throw-back Phillies cap. Next up we'll use a throw-back screen cap from what may be the very first major appearance by a rapper wearing Phillies gear. Chuck D, of legendary rap group Public Enemy, wore a Phillies cap in the music video for rap anthem Fight The Power in 1989. The song was the lead single from the soundtrack for Spike Lee's film Do The Right Thing . Next up we'll go with some home grown tal...

Ring-a-ling

This week I heard old news about how when the Indianapolis Colts won the Super Bowl, they gave former Colt Edgerrin James a championship ring. "Edge" had been a Colt for seven years, and even though he was gone when they won the big one, the team and the coaching staff felt as though James had contributed in building the team that won it all, so they awarded him a ring. This got me wondering which people, in an extended Phillies phamily , would be deserving of a 2008 World Series Champions ring. I heard an interview with Mike Schmidt, in the days that followed the Series, and when asked if he thought he'd get a ring, he said, "They have my (ring) size." Schmidt, the Hall of Fame thirdbaseman , was a long time Phillie, a one time coach of the single-A Clearwater Threshers (where he managed World Series MVP Cole Hamels ) and appears as a guest hitting instructor in Phillies spring training every year. With all those things in mind, of course Mike Schmidt shou...

All in the Family

22-year-old pitching prospect Nick Hernandez's father helps him stay fit during the off-season Phillies pitching prospect Nick Hernandez spent much of the 2010 regular season on the disabled list with an injury to his throwing shoulder. The 6'4", 215 pound lefty, who was named a mid-season South Atlantic League all-star with the Class A Lakewood BlueClaws, attempted comebacks twice during the season, making rehab outings for the rookie level Gulf Coast League Phillies, but experienced setbacks that curtailed his return to the mound and kept him from helping his teammates lock down a second consecutive league championship for Lakewood. In 8 starts with the BlueClaws last season, the 12th round draft pick from 2009 posted a 3-1 record with a 1.61 ERA and averaged 7 innings per start. Hernandez's strength is throwing a lot of strikes and he owes some of his success to his father, also named Nick (Dad's full first name is spelled Nicolas, while son's name is spell...