Winter Meetings: Day One Review

The first day of the annual winter meetings is complete. Here’s what happened:

– a bogus rumor circulated sending Mets fans in horror, reporting that Pat Burrell was on his way to Flushing.

– another bogus rumor had the Mets trading for Edwin Jackson. I feel bad for MetsToday reader Micalpalyn, who has been pining for this acquisition for two years.

– the Nationals acquired Brian Bruney. If they acquire a halfway decent closer, they’ll have a better bullpen (on paper) than the Mets. The trade also rekindles a fairly lame “feud” between Bruney and K-Rod.

– the Cardinals signed Brad Penny to a one-year deal. Penny + Dave Duncan = 15+ wins

– the Giants, Mariners, and Rockies are interested in the most athletic free-agent catcher. The Mets remain interested in Bengie Molina

– the Mets might be on the verge of offering Bengie Molina a one-year deal worth $6M plus a vesting option for 2011

– no one other than the Mets have displayed interest in Bengie Molina

– one source reported that the Mets were talking to JOSE Molina. Apparently they haven’t completely cornered the market on backup catchers who can’t hit a lick. Or maybe Omar Minaya thought he was talking to Bengie. They DO look similar, after all.

– Rafael Soriano accepted arbitration. The Braves now have the NL East’s best bullpen — to match the division’s best starting rotation one through five. How does that old philosophy go? You win with pitching, pitching and more what?

– the Brewers are on the verge of signing Randy Wolf to a three-year deal. If that’s what it takes, I’m glad the Mets are out of the bidding.

– Roy Halladay was rumored to be going to the Dodgers or the Rays, of all places

– the Rays are shopp(ach)ing Dioner Navarro

– the Mets are talking to Adam Kennedy. Now THAT’s a guy I’d pay $2M to be the infield utilityman.

– the Mets will meet with the agents for Randy Wolf, Joel Pineiro, Jason Marquis, and John Lackey during the meetings. Pineiro wants (giggle) a four-year deal.

– Matt Murton has been sold to the Hanshin Tigers of Japan

– the Mets inquired on Kelvim Escobar

– at least one source reports that the Mets are willing to trade Luis Castillo for Juan Pierre. Why not just put Castillo in left field?

– Elmer Dessens is weighing offers from the Mets, Dodgers, and Padres. Really?

– Pudge Rodriguez signed with the Nationals. You know what? I’m starting to worry about the Nats.

About Joe Janish

Joe Janish began MetsToday in 2005 to provide the unique perspective of a high-level player and coach -- he earned NCAA D-1 All-American honors as a catcher and coached several players who went on to play pro ball. As a result his posts often include mechanical evaluations, scout-like analysis, and opinions that go beyond the numbers. Follow Joe's baseball tips on Twitter at @onbaseball and at the On Baseball Google Plus page.
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4 Responses to Winter Meetings: Day One Review

  1. Tommy2cat says:

    Joe – Thanks for the straight talk. Almost impossible to get an accurate, boiled-down account of the winter meetings.

  2. TheDZA says:

    Ditto – I just trawled through a swamp on ESPN and everything I needed was right here.
    I thought the Mets had signed Dessens?! Well seeing they haven’t they must have another..say $2mill rolling around in the cookie jar right?

  3. isuzudude says:

    If all it takes is a 1-yr, $6M contract to land Bengie Molina, then maybe I can accept him becoming a Met. At least Omar isn’t caving in right away and gift wrapping a multi-year contract to Molina. If no other team is interested in Molina, then I hope Omar stands his ground and waits Bengie out, because he’ll come crawling back to Omar eventually. Bengie also doesn’t cost a draft pick to obtain, so that’s a plus. And he is coming off a 20 homer season, and last time I checked, the Mets are pretty desperate for power; even if it’s from an ancient, sloth-like backstop. Plus, if he’s only given a 1 year deal, perhaps with an option that kicks in if certain parameters are achieved, then Molina will have motivation to put up big numbers again in 2010. In my eyes, I see Josh Thole as entering the starting catcher picture in ’11, so Molina would keep the position warm until Thole is ready, all the while hopefully hitting 15-20 homers in the bottom half of the lineup in ’10. Again, if all it takes is $6M, I’m not going to object.

    Agreed that Rafael Soriano accepting arbitration gives the Braves a very formidible bullpen now. However, will that bullpen stay intact? They say Soriano could make $8M in arbitration in 2010, which may be too rich for the penny pinching Braves. Don’t forget, Atlanta is also looking to fill holes a 1B, LF, and RF (depending on if you believe they see Matt Diaz and Ryan Church as everyday players). I’d say Soriano’s a good bet to get traded, perhaps with Church or Kelly Johnson, for a corner OF, (Corey Hart? Josh Willingham?) but what do I know.

    Though, I think the Pudge signing by the Nats is poor. Jesus Flores should be their starter, and giving Pudge $3M a year to be a backup on a last place team is nonsensical. Sure, Pudge can school Flores and provide a solid veteran voice on a young team, but I doubt his signing helps the Nats win any more games than they were already projected to win in 2010. His signing also means the Nats are sacrificing a draft pick, something they should not be doing for the likes of a 38 year old projected backup.

  4. joejanish says:

    I’d like to see at least one other team show a smidgen of interest in Molina before an offer is put on the table. If I were the Mets I’d offer him a 1-year / $3M deal and wish him good luck.

    The Braves are stuck with Soriano until June 15th unless he approves a trade, or if they release him during ST. He won’t be released, but you’re right, he could be traded. Which means the Braves suddenly have a somewhat valuable trading chip to help them fetch the big bat they need.

    Molina will surprise me if he hits more than 15 HR next year — and it’ll take him 600+ ABs to do it. Are those HRs going to offset his lack of mobility, fading defensive skills, 1-pitch at-bats, and .280 OBP? I’m not sure. Having both Francoeur and Molina in the lineup scares me — it’s like giving the opposing starting pitcher an extra inning.

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