December 2009
Is DeRosa DeAnswer?
Although nothing has been confirmed yet, Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports is reporting that the Giants are close to a two-year, $12 million dollar deal with veteran third baseman Mark DeRosa.
When I heard this news, I had two instinctive reactions. One was, “Yes, the Giants are actually doing something this offseason!”; the second was, “Uh oh…another veteran?” I think these sentiments are probably ones that many other San Francisco fans share, particularly the latter one. Over the past few years we’ve been haunted by Sabean’s signings of so-called veteran players (i.e. Aaron Rowand, Edgar Renteria, Dave Roberts, Rich Aurilia again–no offense Richie, but the first time we cut you should have been the last) who haven’t produced offensively, gotten injured frequently and just been all-around busts, especially if you take into account their exorbitant paychecks. So I can’t help but feel a little hesitant when I see that DeRosa is in his mid-thirties and that he had wrist surgery this offseason on top of that. Tim Dierkes of MLB Trade Rumors seemed to have a similar reaction regarding the proposed contract of DeRosa, saying, “$6MM a year would be big bucks for DeRosa, as he turns 35 in February and had wrist surgery in November.”
On the other hand, it looks like DeRosa is at least a solid veteran offensively, or at least solid for the Giants’ poor lineup. Last year he played 139 games and although he only batted .250, he did have 23 home runs and 78 RBI’s, numbers which would be some of the highest on the team if he were a Giant. If we signed him, he could create a pretty good third base platoon with Uribe (who is also rumored to be close to a deal to return to the Giants) and allow Pablo Sandoval to move over to first base, where it seems like he’s better suited, anyway. Besides, I can’t turn my nose up at every veteran baseball player; look at Bengie Molina or Juan Uribe; both of them are in their thirties and both carried this team last year.
…so how do I feel about the DeRosa signing, if and when it happens? Well, with the limited options from this tepid free agent market and the fact that the Giants so badly need another bat, I’ll take it.
Winter Meetings Inactivity: A Little Less Conversation, A Little More Action (Please!)
Arguably the best time of the year for Major League Baseball gossip is the one-week stretch in December dubbed oh-so-creatively as the winter meetings, when all the front offices gather in a single hotel and speak to player agents about possible signings or trades. It’s the time of year when I check mlbtraderumors.com even more compulsively than I already do during the offseason, hunting out anything I can find about a San Francisco Giants player–past, present or possibly future.
Unfortunately the week came and went and left me with more things to worry about than get me excited about the 2010 season. I mean, you know it’s bad when the juiciest detail you find is about a prospective swap of Kevin Kouzmanoff for Fred Lewis and Kevin Frandsen.
Yes, there were also rumors about the Giants maybe getting Dan Uggla and maybe looking at first basemen like Nick Johnson, but nothing was confirmed coming out of the week. As usual, Brian Sabean didn’t show any of his cards, but rather made vague hints that the team was at least talking to people. This made me want to bang my head against the wall, though. My instinct as a fan is that I want “a little less conversation, a little more action.” I read somewhere that at this time last year the Giants had already signed Edgar Renteria, Jeremy Affeldt and Bob Howry. Now I know that two of those players were duds this year, so I guess from that I can understand why Sabean might want to take things slower. But as a fan it just makes me nervous that such little activity means that little or nothing will happen to boost our poor offense this offseason. I mean, the only thing that Giants fans did get out of the winter meetings was that Bengie Molina isn’t coming back; I believe the expression Sabean used regarding that was, “That ship has sailed.” So we haven’t done anything so far this offseason, haven’t really been strongly linked to obtaining any good hitter and oh yeah, we’re losing our second best bat who also happens to be the catcher who our elite pitchers Tim Lincecum and Matt Cain are used to. It seems like every free agent catcher out there is getting signed to a two year contract (even guys like Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez”), so why not just bring back Molina on a one-year deal with an option for a second? Couldn’t we just trade him at the trading deadline next July to a(nother) contending team if Bochy and Sabean felt Buster Posey was ready to be the everyday starting catcher? I dunno…I just think that would be the best option all-around because then Molina could mentor Posey and we would be more secure at the starting catcher position and not have to throw Posey out there right away when he’s not ready to start. I know it’s not realistic because Molina wouldn’t want to come back when he knows there’s another catcher waiting in the wings, but I don’t see why the Giants can’t try offering him a contract; instead it seems like they’re just walking away because they assume the Mets or some other team will snatch him up. They shouldn’t be regarding someone like Bengie like that in my opinion, though; not when he’s the guy who’s carried this team offensively (and defensively, one could argue) for the past couple years.
I hope that the Giants will make a move sooner or later, one that shows fans that the team is serious about building on this past season. Until then I guess I’ll just have to keep griping about what hasn’t happened yet…
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