Off Wing Opinion
Off Wing Opinion


October 30, 2003

Don't Let The Door Hit You On The Way Out


Think the Red Sox are determined to come back next season and contend for a World Series. Looks like it to me, after it was revealed that the team has placed slugger Manny Ramirez on irrevocable waivers. Jack Curry of the New York Times explains:

If more than one club claims Ramirez, the club with the poorer record will have the right to him. So, if the Yankees, who tied with the Atlanta Braves for the best record in the majors this season, are interested, they will have to hope no other teams make claims.

While putting players on waivers is a formality that happens hundreds of times during the season, both executives said the timing of Boston's decision was unusual and signals that the team is serious about moving forward without Ramirez. Dan Duquette, who was dismissed as the general manager in 2002, signed Ramirez to the contract before the 2001 season. Ramirez is the second-highest-paid player in baseball, behind Alex Rodriguez of the Texas Rangers.

"I guess they're hoping someone takes him," one of the baseball executives said.

As others have noted, the Red Sox have plenty of players to sign in the offseason if they want to bring back the team that came within an inning of going to the World Series. Looks like the way to do that is get rid of Ramirez, and take the money they save and invest it in a number of players who can replace his production in the aggregate.

Sounds like a Sabremetric move to me. And a gutsy one as well. I'll be checking in with all the Red Sox blogs to gauge reaction a little later.

POSTSCRIPT: Is the Yankees braintrust still in Tampa? If they are, this is going to land like a bombshell, and is sure to set George Steinbrenner off like a Roman Candle. Could this be a diabolical plot to saddle the Yankees with a massive contract for a player about to enter declining years of production?

Say what you want about John Henry, Larry Lucchino and Theo Epstein, but they're all scary-smart. I think there's more to this than just gettting rid of a massive salary.

UPDATE: Stuff is beginning to pour in:

Bryant Durrell sees a hidden agenda:

That’s whatcha call daring and surprising. My first reaction was that it was mildly insane; if the Yankees don’t take Ramirez (and they’re the only team that can), the guy’s going to be unhappy in the Red Sox clubhouse for the rest of his contract.

But then I had my morning coffee and thought about it a little more. What if this didn’t come as a surprise to Manny? What if Theo Epstein sat down with Manny a week ago and asked him if he was serious about wanting to play for the Yankees? What if Manny sees this as the Red Sox offering him a chance to go where he wants to go?

Bambino's Curse is excited beyond words:

This is so damn exciting. Like Silverman sees it, "the Yankees', decision on whether or not to pick up Ramirez will be fascinating."

Fascinating times two!

A roll of the dice so friggin' shrewd and gutsy on Epstein's part. You know that else is so sublime about this waiver move? It completely kills any more media or fan discussion about Grady Little. That story is so old news now. This kind of control over the news cycle is straight out of James Carville's or Karl Rove's "Politics 101."

David Pinto likes what he sees:

While I think Manny is probably worth the money for the next couple of years, he's at the point in his career where a decline can be expected. So if I'm a team that wants Manny, I'm going to hold out for a trade and try to get the Red Sox to pick up at least 1/2 of his salary.

By the way, with all the articles about how heads are going to roll in NY, all the Yankees have done is fire their hitting coach. The Red Sox have fired their manager and tried to dump their best hitter! Maybe those stories are being written about the wrong team. :-)

Love this headline from Boston Dirt Dogs:

Nation Applauds Bold Move, Clueless Jock-Sniffing Lemmings Panties in a Bunch Again.

The Dogs also make a point of reminding us of this quote from Lucchino:

"One of the biggest mistakes you can make in management is to fall in love with your veterans. We appreciate them. We respect them. We feel grateful for the style of play that they had but as we reassemble the team for next year, we'll look at ways we can get better and try not to let that gratitude and sentiment stand in the way."

More later.



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Comments

I was just about to blog this - heard it on the radio on the way in this morning. Quite surprising, and I'm not sure if it's a bad move. As a Yankee fan, I'm not sure if I'd like them to try and pick him up - mainly because he's a head case. Secondarily because I'd have no one to yell at in LF when I went to games where he was a visitor.

Otherwise, he's a monster player and this could be a huge opportunity for a team to pick him up - if they had the loot. I'd look for the Mets, for one, and some of the West Coast teams to look at him. the NL is an interesting idea for him, as he can't DH, but the Dodgers could be interested because of Jordan filing for FA, and the Bravos might look to replace a Gary Sheffield. Though they have Chipper out in left.

Posted by: at October 30, 2003 07:48 AM

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