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The Royals just gave Jeremy Guthrie 3yrs/25 million (what were they ****ing thinking?) after acquiring Ervin Santana obviously earlier this month.
They are doing a really good job assembling a SP staff
The Mets should seize the moment and see what Niese is worth if the Royals are overvaluing pitchers that much.
Last edited by metswon69; 11-21-2012 at 03:30 AM.
They also could be thinking that they rather give a guy like Guthrie big money instead of dealing one of their highly touted prospects or one of their MLB stablished hitters.
Guthrie was the Royals best pitcher last year, they are going to need to add more than just him.
They acquired Santana, but he wasn't that good last year.
"You don't know how to drink. Your whole generation, you drink for the wrong reasons. My generation, we drink because it's good, because it feels better than unbuttoning your collar, because we deserve it. We drink because it's what men do."
Maybe we could trade them our Santana. Then they'd have two Johan Santanas.
And before anyone say "HIZ NAME IS ERVIN SANTANA YOU STOOPID!"
Santana was born Johan Ramon Santana, and used that name throughout his life until 2003. At that time, he decided to change his name to avoid having the same name as pitching star Johan Santana.[1] According to Ervin Santana, "I just came up with Ervin... Ervin Santana, that sounds good."
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You wouldn't make that trade? If I'm the Royals, I might ask for some tweaking, but all in all it looks pretty good for the Royals to me. Niese and Gee would both fit into their rotation. In fact, Niese would probably be their #1. Flores, IMO, is an upgrade over Getz at 2B, but I might ask for Murphy instead. Either or both Duda and MDD could develop into decent major league outfielders, but they might not as well. So, basically, KC would be trading outfield offense for pitching (present and future), and a 2B upgrade.Originally Posted by Rio40
I may be in a minority here but I would make an offer of Niese, Gee, Tapia, Duda, Flores and MDD for Myers and Gordon.
On the other hand, my offer would be:
Niese, Familia, Murphy, Tapia, Den Dekker, and Ceciliani for Myers, Lorenzo Cain and Kyle Zimmer.
Former B'klyn Dodger fan. Mets Maniac since 1962.
There was an article posted about this last night on yahoo. Pretty good read
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/royals-...rting-pitcher-
What surprised me is that the Mets were not even mentioned in the article. I would think that having the Cy Young award winner available on the trading block, having a former ace with an expiring contract, and having a young talented middle of the rotation lefty that we would be more in the conversation than any team other than maybe Tampa.
Does anyone think that if we offered to eat most of Johan's contract, that he becomes a big chip? He is coming off injuries, but also threw a no hitter last year. What if we packaged Johan, with us taking his salary, with Niese. I would think that would be a game changer for a team in need of pitching. They would possibly be adding a #2 and 3 to their rotation with limited out of pocket.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/royals-...015456742.html
Looks like Myers could definitly be snagged.The Kansas City Royals are pushing hard to contend in 2013, considering almost every option to upgrade their pitching staff. And that includes trading the best hitting prospect in baseball.
In their search for a top-of-the-rotation starter, the Royals have dangled outfielder Wil Myers, the consensus 2012 minor league player of the year, two sources told Yahoo! Sports
While the Royals have designated Myers off-limits for anything other than pitching, teams with frontline starters understand Kansas City is desperate to add another pitcher after re-signing Jeremy Guthrie and trading for Ervin Santana. With the returns of Danny Duffy and Felipe Paulino from Tommy John surgery, plus the arrival of prospect Jake Odorizzi, an overhaul of the Royals' rotation could thrust them into contention in the AL Central – especially with a pitcher like Tampa Bay's James Shields, whom the Royals covet at the top of the rotation but are loath to trade for because only two years remain on his deal and he has thrown the second-most regular-season innings of any pitcher the last two seasons.
The Royals' payroll commitments are around $69 million, leaving them two options to stay within their expected payroll around $73 million: They can pursue a young starter with a cheap contract but not as much experience as the Royals want; or deal for a veteran with a higher salary whose cost would cause them to deal a veteran, such as Bruce Chen or Luke Hochevar, the underachieving starter who also would be a non-tender candidate.
With a dominant bullpen and lineup full of young position players, the Royals are in a position to win now and in the foreseeable future, hastening their desire for another pitcher. The franchise's internal belief is that team success would accelerate the growth of its young core, one of baseball's best and the likely source of another starter, considering how prohibitive the free agent market for owners unwilling to stretch the budget.
Is he a CF?
Thanks. I knew he at least played CF. I would love to be able to get him and put him in CF. Dickey actually falls right in line with what they want to spend. Not to mention he will be far away from us.
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