- Dec 17, 2003
- 9,530
- 91
You said it, things have been bad for a minute now.Originally Posted by Proshares
Hope everything works out for Dave Duncan and his wife.
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You said it, things have been bad for a minute now.Originally Posted by Proshares
Hope everything works out for Dave Duncan and his wife.
You said it, things have been bad for a minute now.Originally Posted by Proshares
Hope everything works out for Dave Duncan and his wife.
The Chicago Cubs may have gotten their first baseman of the future, and his name isn't Prince Fielder.
The team acquired Anthony Rizzo from the Padres in a deal that sends right-hander Andrew Cashner to San Diego.
Rizzo batted .331 with 34 doubles, 26 home runs and 101 RBIs in 93 Triple-A games last season. He struggled in his callup to the Padres, batting .141 in 128 at-bats, but it was the 22-year-old's first exposure to the big leagues.
[h4]More On The Cubs[/h4]
Can't get enough Cubs information? ESPNChicago.com has all the latest from the North Side. Blog
New Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein and general manager Jed Hoyer know Rizzo well. The 6-foot-3, 220-pounder was originally drafted by the Red Sox in 2007 when the pair were in Boston. Rizzo was then a big part of the deal that brought Adrian Gonzalez to Boston. At that time Hoyer was the GM of the Padres.
The Cubs also get right-hander Zach Cates, 22, who pitched at Single A last season, in the trade. In addition to Cashner, the Cubs send minor league outfielder Kyung-Min Na, 20, to San Diego.
Cashner, 25, was 2-6 with a 4.29 ERA in 60 major league games. He was expected to step into the starting rotation last season but made only one start and appeared in just seven games due to a shoulder strain.
The Cubs have been in need of a first baseman since not re-signing Carlos Pena, who manned the position for one season.
Epstein had said recently that the team's first baseman at this point would be Bryan LaHair, who also had a huge year at Triple A last season, winning the Pacific Coast League MVP.
LaHair did a little better than Rizzo in his major league callup, hitting .288 with two homers and six RBIs in 59 at-bats with the Cubs. But LaHair is also 29 years old, and Epstein has vowed to build for the long haul.
Both players bat left-handed, though, which is an area of need for the Cubs. And if Rizzo did win the first baseman's job, LaHair gained some experience in the outfield last season. Epstein has reportedly been talking to teams about Alfonso Soriano, but his big contract is an impediment to a trade.
Fielder is still the biggest name on the free-agent market. The Cubs had reportedly shown interest in the former Brewers slugger, but he doesn't seem to fit into Epstein's commitment to building from within and only adding big free agents when the team is poised to challenge for a title. After a 71-91 season and with a number of holes to fill, the team is likely a few years away from being a serious contender.
The Chicago Cubs may have gotten their first baseman of the future, and his name isn't Prince Fielder.
The team acquired Anthony Rizzo from the Padres in a deal that sends right-hander Andrew Cashner to San Diego.
Rizzo batted .331 with 34 doubles, 26 home runs and 101 RBIs in 93 Triple-A games last season. He struggled in his callup to the Padres, batting .141 in 128 at-bats, but it was the 22-year-old's first exposure to the big leagues.
[h4]More On The Cubs[/h4]
Can't get enough Cubs information? ESPNChicago.com has all the latest from the North Side. Blog
New Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein and general manager Jed Hoyer know Rizzo well. The 6-foot-3, 220-pounder was originally drafted by the Red Sox in 2007 when the pair were in Boston. Rizzo was then a big part of the deal that brought Adrian Gonzalez to Boston. At that time Hoyer was the GM of the Padres.
The Cubs also get right-hander Zach Cates, 22, who pitched at Single A last season, in the trade. In addition to Cashner, the Cubs send minor league outfielder Kyung-Min Na, 20, to San Diego.
Cashner, 25, was 2-6 with a 4.29 ERA in 60 major league games. He was expected to step into the starting rotation last season but made only one start and appeared in just seven games due to a shoulder strain.
The Cubs have been in need of a first baseman since not re-signing Carlos Pena, who manned the position for one season.
Epstein had said recently that the team's first baseman at this point would be Bryan LaHair, who also had a huge year at Triple A last season, winning the Pacific Coast League MVP.
LaHair did a little better than Rizzo in his major league callup, hitting .288 with two homers and six RBIs in 59 at-bats with the Cubs. But LaHair is also 29 years old, and Epstein has vowed to build for the long haul.
Both players bat left-handed, though, which is an area of need for the Cubs. And if Rizzo did win the first baseman's job, LaHair gained some experience in the outfield last season. Epstein has reportedly been talking to teams about Alfonso Soriano, but his big contract is an impediment to a trade.
Fielder is still the biggest name on the free-agent market. The Cubs had reportedly shown interest in the former Brewers slugger, but he doesn't seem to fit into Epstein's commitment to building from within and only adding big free agents when the team is poised to challenge for a title. After a 71-91 season and with a number of holes to fill, the team is likely a few years away from being a serious contender.
Originally Posted by Mr Jordan04
Originally Posted by wildKYcat
Zambrano and Ozzie
I cant wait for that
Is Miami taking his whole contract too? The Marlins are soon going to become all Latin, no white guys or blacks
Originally Posted by Mr Jordan04
Originally Posted by wildKYcat
Zambrano and Ozzie
I cant wait for that
Is Miami taking his whole contract too? The Marlins are soon going to become all Latin, no white guys or blacks
Best way to do it if you want sustained success. Theo gets it.Originally Posted by SportsJunkie
As a cub fans, i like what Theo is doing. building from the ground up. Jim Hendry seems like he was doing the opposite.
Best way to do it if you want sustained success. Theo gets it.Originally Posted by SportsJunkie
As a cub fans, i like what Theo is doing. building from the ground up. Jim Hendry seems like he was doing the opposite.
Yeap you are right. Now we need to find a trade partner to get Soriano out of town. Thats gonna be complicated because we owe him 52 million over 3 years still.Originally Posted by 651akathePaul
Best way to do it if you want sustained success. Theo gets it.Originally Posted by SportsJunkie
As a cub fans, i like what Theo is doing. building from the ground up. Jim Hendry seems like he was doing the opposite.
Yeap you are right. Now we need to find a trade partner to get Soriano out of town. Thats gonna be complicated because we owe him 52 million over 3 years still.Originally Posted by 651akathePaul
Best way to do it if you want sustained success. Theo gets it.Originally Posted by SportsJunkie
As a cub fans, i like what Theo is doing. building from the ground up. Jim Hendry seems like he was doing the opposite.
Games | 1,829 | 8th |
2B | 379 | 7th |
HR | 275 | 8th |
RBI | 1,065 | 11th |
XBH | 664 | 9th |
2B | 379 | 7th |
HR | 275 | 8th |
RBI | 1,065 | 11th |
XBH | 664 | 9th |
Games | 1,829 | 8th |
2B | 379 | 7th |
HR | 275 | 8th |
RBI | 1,065 | 11th |
XBH | 664 | 9th |
2B | 379 | 7th |
HR | 275 | 8th |
RBI | 1,065 | 11th |
XBH | 664 | 9th |