The balancing act when trading for now but not getting burned in the future
There is always a risk when making a trade in any sport, especially 
baseball. It is usually less risky when making a player for player deal as, for 
the most part, with established players you have a pretty good idea what you are 
giving and what you are getting. Also there is less of a financial penalty 
because there is no salary cap. A deal may hurt your budget but not necessarily 
cripple the team. Of course injuries that may crop up are out of anyone's 
control. The Ian Kinsler/ Prince Fielder trade between the Texas Ranger and the 
Detroit Tigers is evidence of that. Tigers look to come out way ahead of that 
one so far with Fielder possibly out for the season with neck surgery.
Where deals are a little more cloudy is when you start throwing prospects 
into the mix. This happens a lot near the trade deadline for teams that look to 
get an established arm or bat to help in a push for the post season or for a 
World Series run. Eliminated teams will often deal top end players that will not 
help them in the short term and get top end prospects to help them get better in 
the long term. It is a tough balancing act on how much teams are willing to give 
up in terms of the future for players that can be dropped into the line-up right 
away.
Every team has stories about winning and losing deals with this practice. 
As a Braves fan I know all to well that one can hit a huge home run when the 
prospect that you trade for becomes a soon to be Hall of Fame member. It started 
with the Braves trading Duane Ward to Toronto for Doyal Alexander. Then 
Alexander was traded to the Tigers for Prospect John Smoltz. Not a bad deal, 
Alexander went 9-0 and helped the Tigers win the AL East, Smoltz went on the be 
part of one of the best rotations ever assembled in the last 50 years. There is 
also trades that looking back involving prospects that look less then favorable 
as a Braves fan. 1 Career year for JD Drew and Eli Mararo to the Braves for 
competent reliever Ray King, Jason Marquis (who was still decent at the time) 
and, this is where it hurts - prospect Adam Wainwright (he turned out pretty 
good). The other prospect trade that looks bad now was the deal that brought 
Mark Texteria and Ron Mahay to Hot-Lanta for  Beau Jones, Elvis Andrus (Starting 
SS-close to 30sb per yr), Neftali Feliz (40 saves in 2010), Matt Harrison (won 
18 in 2012) and Jarrod Saltalamacchia.
The best trade of late that was not made was the deal that would have sent 
Randall Delgado to the Cubs in a deadline deal that would have seen Ryan 
Dempster sent to the Braves. Thankfully Dempster vito'd the trade and the Braves 
retained the rights to Delgado. Delgado was then used as a key piece that 
brought Justin Upton to The ATL with 3B Chris Johnson for  Nick Ahmed (minors), 
Brandon Drury (minors), Randall Delgado, Martin Prado and Zeke Spruill. Had 
Delgado been traded to the Cubs for 1yr of Dempster the Braves may have had to 
include Julio Teheran as part of the Upton deal. Not something the Braves I 
imagine would have either wanted to or would have been willing to do.
 

 
 
 

 
1 comment:
Good recon on the trades. I didn't know the Ward-Alexander-Smoltz connection, so this was interesting to read. A-thanka-you.
Also, I enjoy the use of the old-school logo. :)
Post a Comment