Scott Williamson -- 1 year, 900k+incentives
Chad Bradford deal in place but not official yet.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2678427
Scott Williamson -- 1 year, 900k+incentives
Chad Bradford deal in place but not official yet.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2678427
When all is said and done more is said than done.
Wow...apparently bullpen fixation dissorder is spreading.
If you can't get decent starters, just stack the bullpen 7 deep and give them half your IP.
Games are won on run differential -- scoring more than your opponent. Runs are runs, scored or prevented they all count the same. Worry about scoring more and allowing fewer, not which positions contribute to which side of the equation or how "consistent" you are at your current level of performance.
Bradford, Williamson, Walker, Baez and Ray is a pretty solid pen.
If teams are giving the Eatons and Lilly's of the world $8-$10M/year, then it makes sense to add solid pitchers to your pen. It's cheaper, and your starters only have average about 6 innings. It's not a bad strategy.
We should've signed Williamson to a similar contract...I think he still has a house in Cincy, and he could have competed for the closer's role.
I wanted the Reds to get Bradford SIGH
If Scott Williamson's arm can stay attached, Leo Mazzone could get a scary good season from him.
I'm not a system player. I am a system.
In one of the most bizarre twists in baseball, the Orioles have some of the best pitching around as far as I'm concerned. Their farm system is pretty well-stocked with young talent. They have a handful of starters who are inconsistent: horrendous some days, but potentially five straight days of awesome. Their bullpen is pretty solid. This either means that they are so badly deficient in some other areas or all-around irreparably cracked, or that they may be a halfway decent team in a couple of years.
There is no such thing as a pitching prospect.
That's a fair comparison. But I think that the pitching in the Orioles' system is better than what the Cubs have had. And their starting pitching right now is more balanced than one genuine ace and a couple of perpetually injured prodigies. Not as showy, but could be more solid.
There is no such thing as a pitching prospect.
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