schillingfan
All Star
But, the situation of having no spot for him is both untrue and D-Backs created. It can't be right that they had no roster spot, because they traded him for another pitcher who they put on the 25 man roster. So, by definition, there was room for him as a pitcher.coyoteshockeyfan said:Well, what did you want them to do? Where would you have stuck him? He couldnt be in the minors, and he couldnt make the team, what does that leave other than trading him? They had what looked like at the time far better options, he was not only coming off of an injury but undoubtably terrible both numbers wise and in terms of his "stuff" (his fastball was only in the mid-80s, no breaking ball at all at that time, although he did end up turning that around a bit). There was absolutely no roster spot for him, and the Diamondbacks were about to undoubtably lose him for nothing. They had to trade him for whatever they could get since he obviously was not going to come close to making the team.
They did not want him, not they didn't have room. In their evaluation he was not good enough. In my opinion they gave up too soon. Why would you trade a young out of options pitcher in order to get a left-handed reliever on a team that had no hope of making the playoffs. Anyone who believed they would compete last year was clearly delusional.
The right thing to do was to keep JPatt and see if he was going to make it as a major league starter. They had invested $10 mil in him as a signing bonus. Clearly he shouldn't be discarded for a bad lefty specialist.
They created the situation themselves by their stupid moves. So you can't say they had no choice. They backed themselves into their own corner. As I said, they had to put Casey Daigle on the roster because they had no other choice. Well they had a choice that they foolishly traded away.
I give no sympathy or excuse for the horrible moves the D-Backs made last winter.