The reasons for being a buyer are pretty simple.
#1 You have a shot at the playoffs. The Pirates have been fairly injured all year
and Cutch has been awful, yet the Pirates are only a couple of games out of the
final playoff spot. Adding the needed pieces
(mostly pitching) ought to push you over the top.
#2 You have a deep farm system. This is always an important consideration
when looking to be a buyer. Do you have
the pieces to lose? And right now the
answer may actually be yes. Do the Pirates
really need Adam Frazier, Max Moroff, and Alen Hansen? What about Chad Kuhl, Brault, Kingham, and
Williams? Not to mention Clay Holmes in
AA. Even the wave after that already
includes Hinz and Keller. And let us not
forget that we have Kramer, Tucker, and Newman all bunched together and Hayes
right behind occupying third further narrowing that group. The farm system could survive a trade or two.
The reasons for being a seller (or at least not a buyer).
#1 You have no real shot this year. The Pirates have an easy schedule down the
stretch, some head to head with the Cardinals, and have been pretty even so far
with the Mets. It is reasonable to
assume that they can be jumped if the right trades are made. And the Marlins are playing above their
heads, the last wild card spot is a real possibility. But, that gets you a one game playoff on the
road against Kershaw. Yikes. If you win that you get the Cubs with the new
improved bullpen. I am not sure the
Pirate are cut out to win a five game set against them. If they did they would get either Bumgardner
and the Giants or Strassborg and Harper with the Nats. Both seem to have better rotations and star
players playing like star players. That
is just to get to the World Series. Not
a likely scenario at this point.
#2 You are about to lose Mark Melancon for nothing. The Pirates are not going to resign him, and
he will probably be overpaid. But the
Pirates could trade him now and get something in return. Maybe a prospect for the pen in a year or a
guy who might compete for a 5th rotation spot next year. Maybe even a catcher to push Diaz. He will be overvalued right now at the
deadline. This is an opportunity to get
a little something to help next year.
#3 There are too many needs to make the Pirates great again. The Pirates need another arm in the pen to
make a run. While Watson and Hughes are
regaining form, another solid late inning arm is necessary. Four late inning guys and a ground ball guy
ought to be good enough for a playoff push, but they need one more arm to get
to that spot. It doesn’t have to be a
closer, but a good hard throwing strike out guy. But what the Pirates really need is a
starting pitcher. Right now they have
Cole and that is it. Lirano is not going
anywhere, but he needs to be pushed down in importance. Let us assume for a moment that he is getting
it together and Taillon is reliable into the post-season. You don’t want to have to go with Glasnow and
Kuhl or Locke and Niese as the back end for the playoffs. And you don’t want any of them this year pitching
in the playoffs. So, assuming one of
those four can hold down a fifth slot we need a guy to take the fourth slot to
pitch in the playoffs. It would actually
be better if you can get a #2 or 3 guy to make the Pirates competitive. The price for a Chris Archer or a Julio
Teheran would be astronomical. You are
talking losing a Bell or Meadows plus someone like Brault plus something else
(or two).
#4 The market stinks.
We already mentioned the high priced names with control left like
Teheran that will cost top 5 prospects and then some. Even if the Pirates are just looking for a
rental it will still cost a top tier prospect plus a lower minor leaguer, and
the return will be bad. That is just the
market this year because there is no one.
None. It is an ugly starting
pitching market. Seriously James Shields
is the big name rental. Oakland’s Rich Hill
might be the best idea, but he just went on the DL. And Rich Hill is not exactly a world beater
that is going to change your team from pretender into contender.
#5 Help will be here next year. The Pirates, thanks to some bad injuries last
year, are just in a weird year where their internal help is too far off. Glasnow is not really ready. Kingham went down. Kuchno imploded, and it is just a stretch to
bring up some bullpen arms. Think about
next year. The starting rotation can be
Cole, Lirano, Taillon, and now Kuhl. All
have experience and ready to go. By mid
June you could bring up Glasnow and Kingham or a Brault and have a good solid
rotation. Your bullpen can have Watson
as the closer, Hughes, Locke (or not whatever), and a whole bunch of new
guys. You can sign a guy if you need it
or bring back Schlegul. You could have
Durapau by mid season (who is dominating AA right now), and you could convert
Frank Duncan to the pen to start the season.
Maybe even a September call up of Luis Heredia, who is destroying High A
in the pen. Add to that Josh Bell’s
power bat, and the Pirates are a lot better next year than this year.
All in all it is pretty clear I want to be a seller. I think you have to get something for
Melancon while you can, and frankly I might trade some others if I could. I like Jaso and I think he has a place on
next year’s team, but maybe now is the time to let Bell do what he can do and
get something in return. Maybe Matt
Joyce is as good as it is going to get right now. I don’t really shop those guys, but I listen
if someone came a calling.
That being said, I also would not be upset if the Pirates just ride it out. Keep what you have and let Melancon walk at the end of the year. That way you are not giving up, and you might slip into the playoffs anyway.
That being said, I also would not be upset if the Pirates just ride it out. Keep what you have and let Melancon walk at the end of the year. That way you are not giving up, and you might slip into the playoffs anyway.
I suspect that the Pirates will make a real low level deal
for a bullpen arm. Maybe a Jeremy
Jeffress or a David Hernandez or Andrew Bailey, but nothing too much.
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