Phill11
The Payphone Man
Trading Finley was good yet bad. We got a decent trade in return. Murphy seems like a Casey Fossum. Nothing special. Abercrombie seems like another guy that we'll have to wait on. He strikes out more than Sexson. The way people talk about his speed he should just bunt the ball. Hill seems like a nice pickup, but we have Hammock, Ansman, and a lot of other good catchers. Doesn't 5 guys seem like too much?
Here's MLB's Analaysis of these guys:
Reggie Abercrombie, OF
Abercrombie is one of those tremendous raw talents who you wait for the baseball skills to come through. Now 24 and in his fourth full season, the Dodgers got tired of waiting.
When everything is going right for Abercrombie, he's got five-tool written all over him. He hit a career-high 15 homers last year, his first at Double-A. He's got great speed, as evidenced by his two 40+ steal seasons and the 28 he swiped a year ago. He's a plus defensively, with above-average arm strength.
Complete Coverage >
The only problem is that Abercrombie swings and misses. A lot. He struck out 164 times in 2003 in 448 at-bats. And here's where the frustration may have set in with the Dodgers. He didn't seem to make many adjustments this year. He got a late start because of a torn ACL, but couldn't stick in Double-A, even though it was his second season there. After hitting just .173 in 41 games (and 66 K's) with Jacksonville, he was demoted to the Florida State League, where he's hit .271 with 33 strikeouts in 34 games.
Koyie Hill, C
A switch-hitter with a line-drive stroke from both sides, Hill is just about ready to contribute at the big league level, and he should get the chance in Arizona. A Team USA alum, Hill carried a .284 career average into this season and was in the process of putting up his second straight above-.300 season at Triple-A Las Vegas before the trade.
The 25-year-old, who was drafted in the fourth round out of Wichita State in 2000, already had a career-high 13 home runs this season, though that's probably his ceiling. Originally a third baseman, Hill moved behind the plate in 2001 while playing in the South Atlantic League. His overall catching skills still could use some improvement, but he could prove to be an average Major League catcher with the glove, with an above-average bat.
Bill Murphy, LHP
Bill, we hardly knew you. Less than 24 hours after being dealt to the Dodgers from the Marlins, Murphy found his way to Arizona. Murphy originally came to the Marlins as the player to be named later in the offseason deal that sent Mark Redman to Oakland. Originally taken in the third round of the famed "Moneyball" draft out of Cal-State Northridge, Murphy has moved up the ladder quickly, reaching Double-A in 2003, his first full season.
He's spent all of 2004 in Double-A with a three-pitch repertoire: fastball, curve and changeup. While his strikeout rate is excellent -- 113 (2nd in the Southern League) in 103.2 IP -- it's more because of an effective combination and mixing of his pitches, not because of overpowering stuff. All of his pitches are solid, though the irony may be that his curve might be his best pitch and the Marlins stress developing fastball/changeup pitchers in their system.
Murphy's biggest issue is his command. He's walked 59 in those 103.2 IP, and he'll have to work on throwing more strikes if he wants to succeed at the big league level. It's clearly hurt him in the Southern League; Murphy has a 4.08 ERA despite holding hitters to a .221 average. Still, Murphy threw an impressive inning at the Futures Game in Houston and the Marlins even considered him for a spot start after the All-Star break. Down the line, the competitive lefty is seen as a No. 4 or 5 starter in the big leagues, leaning closer to 5 than 4.
The Nomar to CHC seemed to fit all teams pretty well. Nomar wasn't going to stay in Boston after the season. We all know it. The thing is why does BOS want Mienkiwetz (SP). He's a good player and all, but they have to put Kevin Millar on the bench?
Anyways, nice trade for all teams involved.
But us trading RJ is absurd.
Here's a few quotes from the big guy himself....
"I'm in a boat with no oars and the perfect storm is about to hit," Randy Johnson said Saturday, looking around a clubhouse quickly depleted by the Steve Finley deadline trade and Luis Gonzalez's season-ending surgery set for Monday. "The water's getting kind of choppy."
This guy is getting to be trouble. Trade him! Unload him! Get Prospects! I'd rather have 150% giving Finley then negative RJ.
Now onto the thing I'm pretty heated about. LA Trading LoDuca.
This guy would be buried in his Dodger uniform. Why didn't we offer like Hammock, Ansman and a few others for him? This guy is a gamer. He brings it all to the field.
That's just my opinons. What ya'll think?
Here's MLB's Analaysis of these guys:
Reggie Abercrombie, OF
Abercrombie is one of those tremendous raw talents who you wait for the baseball skills to come through. Now 24 and in his fourth full season, the Dodgers got tired of waiting.
When everything is going right for Abercrombie, he's got five-tool written all over him. He hit a career-high 15 homers last year, his first at Double-A. He's got great speed, as evidenced by his two 40+ steal seasons and the 28 he swiped a year ago. He's a plus defensively, with above-average arm strength.
Complete Coverage >
The only problem is that Abercrombie swings and misses. A lot. He struck out 164 times in 2003 in 448 at-bats. And here's where the frustration may have set in with the Dodgers. He didn't seem to make many adjustments this year. He got a late start because of a torn ACL, but couldn't stick in Double-A, even though it was his second season there. After hitting just .173 in 41 games (and 66 K's) with Jacksonville, he was demoted to the Florida State League, where he's hit .271 with 33 strikeouts in 34 games.
Koyie Hill, C
A switch-hitter with a line-drive stroke from both sides, Hill is just about ready to contribute at the big league level, and he should get the chance in Arizona. A Team USA alum, Hill carried a .284 career average into this season and was in the process of putting up his second straight above-.300 season at Triple-A Las Vegas before the trade.
The 25-year-old, who was drafted in the fourth round out of Wichita State in 2000, already had a career-high 13 home runs this season, though that's probably his ceiling. Originally a third baseman, Hill moved behind the plate in 2001 while playing in the South Atlantic League. His overall catching skills still could use some improvement, but he could prove to be an average Major League catcher with the glove, with an above-average bat.
Bill Murphy, LHP
Bill, we hardly knew you. Less than 24 hours after being dealt to the Dodgers from the Marlins, Murphy found his way to Arizona. Murphy originally came to the Marlins as the player to be named later in the offseason deal that sent Mark Redman to Oakland. Originally taken in the third round of the famed "Moneyball" draft out of Cal-State Northridge, Murphy has moved up the ladder quickly, reaching Double-A in 2003, his first full season.
He's spent all of 2004 in Double-A with a three-pitch repertoire: fastball, curve and changeup. While his strikeout rate is excellent -- 113 (2nd in the Southern League) in 103.2 IP -- it's more because of an effective combination and mixing of his pitches, not because of overpowering stuff. All of his pitches are solid, though the irony may be that his curve might be his best pitch and the Marlins stress developing fastball/changeup pitchers in their system.
Murphy's biggest issue is his command. He's walked 59 in those 103.2 IP, and he'll have to work on throwing more strikes if he wants to succeed at the big league level. It's clearly hurt him in the Southern League; Murphy has a 4.08 ERA despite holding hitters to a .221 average. Still, Murphy threw an impressive inning at the Futures Game in Houston and the Marlins even considered him for a spot start after the All-Star break. Down the line, the competitive lefty is seen as a No. 4 or 5 starter in the big leagues, leaning closer to 5 than 4.
The Nomar to CHC seemed to fit all teams pretty well. Nomar wasn't going to stay in Boston after the season. We all know it. The thing is why does BOS want Mienkiwetz (SP). He's a good player and all, but they have to put Kevin Millar on the bench?
Anyways, nice trade for all teams involved.
But us trading RJ is absurd.
Here's a few quotes from the big guy himself....
"I'm in a boat with no oars and the perfect storm is about to hit," Randy Johnson said Saturday, looking around a clubhouse quickly depleted by the Steve Finley deadline trade and Luis Gonzalez's season-ending surgery set for Monday. "The water's getting kind of choppy."
This guy is getting to be trouble. Trade him! Unload him! Get Prospects! I'd rather have 150% giving Finley then negative RJ.
Now onto the thing I'm pretty heated about. LA Trading LoDuca.
This guy would be buried in his Dodger uniform. Why didn't we offer like Hammock, Ansman and a few others for him? This guy is a gamer. He brings it all to the field.
That's just my opinons. What ya'll think?