I’m done trying to guess what the Reds plans are for 2025. They’ve surprised me with every move. I don’t think we should assume anything about them at this point, good or bad. I’ve liked every move so far, so I’m just going to enjoy the ride this offseason.
Last edited by 757690; 11-08-2024 at 11:44 AM.
Hoping to change my username to 75769024
dfs (11-08-2024),OesterPoster (11-08-2024)
Almost all QOs are made with the expectation of rejection. In most cases, the FA is going to want a multi-year deal. So it’s a free draft choice, the odds are low of QO acceptance. There have been few QOs accepted under that system of draft compensation.
In the Reds case, they seldom use the QO and when they do it’s because they expect rejection.
In Martinez’ case, there was some risk, but with Boras - not that high. I’m sure Reds would much rather Martinez reject it (or negotiate something more palatable). If he accepts, it’ll come out of other spending. They’ll spend less on other players, or they’ll trade off salaries, or both. Anyone expecting Santander or Teoscar AND Martinez at $21 million is reaching IMO.
This is the Reds. There is no free lunch.
Last edited by Kc61; 11-08-2024 at 12:00 PM.
Just want to point out that while I do believe that Martinez was always going to accept the QO once it was offered because QO's kill the markets of guys like Martinez, the only report saying that he actually is going to take the QO is from John Heyman, and John Heyman is a knucklehead and anything that he reports should be ignored until confirmed by someone else.
So while Heyman is backing up what my personal belief is, the fact that it is Heyman makes me think that he's not going to take the QO.
Wishful thinking. When they start spending on players, send me a wake up call. The rest of this is just conjecture.
The same conjecture we hear from the usual posters every season, I might add.
The critical fact so far is a reduction in TV revenue. They hired a manager which could mean more player spending or less player spending. Maybe the idea is that Tito can work better than others with a cheap team.
Last edited by Kc61; 11-08-2024 at 12:25 PM.
Couldn't agree more. I think they made the offer hoping he'd take it, and I think he's their best chance to get somebody for the rotation who'll potentially make a difference, not just occupy innings. And, like you, I think there are way too many uncertainties in the rotation to simply declare it ok. Maybe by next year, not now. And if they don't deepen the rotation, the other stuff doesn't matter.
mth123 (11-08-2024),Revering4Blue (11-12-2024)
Not just Petty and Burns.
They also have Connor Phillips, who's got as good a stuff as any starter in the Red system, Chase Burns included. He often doesn't know where it's headed, but he's talented enough to give him a shot.
Then there's Jose Acuna, who's already been mentioned. He's pitching well in the AFL currently and could be a sneaky good guy similar to Julian Aguiar.
There's also last year's depth piece, Carson Spiers. He's shown flashes at the major league level.
They can also turn to Brent Suter, who pitched well in one-time-through opener games; Lyon Richardson, who looks like he's going to be put in that role in AAA; or most likely, Graham Ashcraft, as a middling BOR guy they know.
This, too, doesn't include any of the AAAA free agents they've habitually turned to as starters go on the shelf in previous seasons. (The Ben Livelys of the world.)
The five Red starters they have are clearly their best five. Beyond them are levels of questionable production, but at least there's upside there that often isn't available in most seasons. As a small market squad (with cheap ownership that doesn't care much about winning), they'll always have to answer questions during the season. This year, it seems as if the rotation has quality answers in the 1-5 spots and at least a solid answer for slots 6-14.
That, to me, is progress.
lollipopcurve (11-08-2024)
757690 (11-08-2024),CaiGuy (11-08-2024),HokieRed (11-08-2024),mth123 (11-08-2024),RedsRocker (11-09-2024)
Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity, in all this vastness, there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves. -- Carl Sagan (Pale Blue Dot)
He hasn't actually accepted it yet, correct? He's still got until the 19th to decide.
Maybe he does wind up accepting it. But the way it came out, it read to me like a leveraging ploy. "You better offer better than 2/30, because my client is perfectly happy taking the 1/21 that's already on the table."
That said, the part of this that I have no seen discussed is the cost of signing a QO guy. If you're the Mets, do you want to give up your 2nd and 5th pick in the draft (or 3rd and 6th if he's not the only QO guy) plus the associated pool money, plus $1M int'l pool money?
I've seen some analysis that says a 2nd round pick is worth about $6-8M surplus value and a 5th around $1-2M (typically about 5x the associated slot bonus). Not sure how international bonus pool money is valued, but let's say it's the same. So we're talking about giving up $10-15M in surplus value for the privilege of signing Martinez. When you're talking about a Willy Adames who is going to get at least $150M, that's not a big deal, it's like a 5-10% kicker. For Martinez, who is looking at something in the 30-60 range, you're talking a 20-50%. Instead of offering him 3/50, maybe you can get a better or comparable guy for 3/60.
So that reality might take many of his potential suitors off the table, leaving only down-market teams who wouldn't bear the same cost.
I think the Reds were probably correct in extending him the QO, but I think there was always a healthy chance he accepted it. And if he does, that almost certainly takes any other notable FA signings off the table. Though it may make us more active in the trade market.
https://www.mlb.com/glossary/transac...alifying-offer
• Competitive Balance Tax payors: A team that exceeded the CBT threshold in the preceding season will lose its second- and fifth-highest selections in the following year's Draft, as well as $1 million from its international bonus pool for the upcoming signing period. If such a team signs multiple qualifying-offer free agents, it will forfeit its third- and sixth-highest picks as well.
• Revenue-sharing recipients: A team that receives revenue-sharing money will lose its third-highest selection in the following year's Draft. If it signs two such players, it will also forfeit its fourth-highest pick.
• All other teams: If a team does not receive revenue sharing and did not exceed the CBT salary threshold in the previous season, it will lose its second-highest selection in the following year's Draft, as well as $500,000 from its international bonus pool for the upcoming signing period. If one of these teams signs two such players, it will also forfeit its third-highest pick.
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.
Good explanation for the phenomenon Kc61 has been describing. QOs suppress value, especially for marginal QOs and older guys who may not warrant longer-term deals.
To state the obvious, the Reds clearly see Martinez as a starter for '25, rather than a swing arm. I'd see this as their Montas replacement. Spend an extra $5 million (Montas was 14 + 2), get both a better recent track record and more certainty (less injury risk). Less important, given the inevitability of pitching staff injuries, but the team also gets flexiblity to turn Martinez back into a swing if Burns pulls a Skenes and can't be denied a rotation spot.
Accepted QO may be third-best option after (1) two-year deal at lower AAV and (2) decline and Reds get a pick, but all three scenarios are wins in my view.
They weren’t buying a top-shelf outfielder either way. Nor should they. Santander and Teoscar will fetch deals beyond the Reds’ means and to be honest, Reds need a CF or true RF at least.
Reds were and will be fine with Martinez picking up this QO because it’s a short deal. That is the Reds’ MO: shortened deals equal less risk.
Also, they were going to need to spend $15MM or so on these innings if they want quality. Might as well get a sure thing and just non-tender Espinal to balance the books.
HokieRed (11-08-2024)
Bourgeois Zee (11-08-2024),CaiGuy (11-09-2024),Z-Fly (11-11-2024)
Board Moderators may, at their discretion and judgment, delete and/or edit any messages that violate any of the following guidelines: 1. Explicit references to alleged illegal or unlawful acts. 2. Graphic sexual descriptions. 3. Racial or ethnic slurs. 4. Use of edgy language (including masked profanity). 5. Direct personal attacks, flames, fights, trolling, baiting, name-calling, general nuisance, excessive player criticism or anything along those lines. 6. Posting spam. 7. Each person may have only one user account. It is fine to be critical here - that's what this board is for. But let's not beat a subject or a player to death, please. |