I'm sure the Cubs would throw every penny to get Albert.
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I'm sure the Cubs would throw every penny to get Albert.
Padres get zero major league players? For reals? C'mon, Jed. Kevin Towers at least got Clayton Richard for Jake Peavy.
Peavy was under contract for more than one year and the White Sox weren't forced to sign a "Ryan Howard-type" extension either.
What I'm surprised is that Clay Buchholz wasn't part of this deal.
Here's some info on the prospects. Rosecrans does an awesome job analyzing this for me and PFF.
Meet your newest Padres - CBSSports.com
Quote:
For both Padre fans left, you may be wondering what you're getting in exchange for Adrian Gonzalez.
Well, here's a quick look at the three players known to be going to San Diego:
http://sports.cbsimg.net/images/mlb/...20410kelly.jpg RHP Casey Kelly (pictured): The Red Sox first-rounder (30th overall) in 2008 dropped in the draft some because he had signed a scholarship to play quarterback at Tennessee and many thought he wouldn't sign out of high school. Instead, the Red Sox signed him and gave him $3 million, which is a lot more than even Cam Newton could ask for, so Kelly went the baseball way.
Kelly wanted to play shortstop and was given that shot before being moved to the mound in 2009, where the Red Sox projected him the whole time.
Last season, Kelly, 20, pitched for Double-A Portland, going 3-5 with a 5.31 ERA in 21 starts. He struck out 81 and walked 35 in 95 innings. The Red Sox didn't appear worried about his ERA going from 2.08 at Single-A Greenville and Salem in 2009 to his five-plus ERA mark in the Eastern League (and 6.75 ERA in 16 innings in the Arizona Fall League), because his velocity increased to where he was throwing 90-94 with his fastball, touching 96, while he is still growing, too.
Kelly turned 21 in October and stands 6-foot-3, 210 pounds. He has a plus fastball, curveball and changeup, with good command. The other positive was how he handled his struggles at Portland.
Kelly comes from a baseball family, his father, Pat, was a catcher in the big leagues and currently a minor-league manager in the Reds system.
Baseball America ranked Kelly as the top player in the Red Sox system.
1B Anthony Rizzo: The best comp is from Alex Speier of WEEI.com -- 20-year old Adrian Gonzalez at Double-A Portland in 2002: .266/.344/.437, 17 HR, 96 RBI in 138 games. Last year the 20-year old Rizzo played at Portland as well, hitting .263/.334/.481, 20 HR, 80 RBI in 107 games.
Between Class A Salem and Double-AA Portland, Rizzo hit 25 homers and had 100 RBI in 136 games.
Those numbers out of a high-school kid -- Rizzo was a sixth-round pick in 2007 out of Florida -- are impressive enough, but consider what he went through to get there. When he was at Class A Greenville in 2008, he was diagnosed with limited stage classical Hodkin's lymphoma and missed the rest of that season to get treatment. Since then, he's been cancer-free and obviously regained all his strength.
Rizzo has struggled against left-handers and has a reputation as a good defensive first baseman.
Baseball America ranked Rizzo as the No. 3 player in the Red Sox system.
OF Reymond Fuentes: Fuentes is the cousin of Carlos Beltran, and has drawn comparisons to the former All-Star. Fuentes was just the sixth Puerto Rican ever drafted in the first round of the draft when the Red Sox took him 28th overall in 2009.
In his first full season as a pro, Fuetntes hit .270/.328/.377 at Class A Greenville, hitting five home runs and driving in 41 in 104 games, while stealing 42 bases. He can flat-out fly.
South Atlantic League managers rated him as the best defensive outfielder in the league, according to Baseball America .
Fuentes is still skinny -- listed at 6-feet, 170 pounds -- the left-handed throwing, left-handed hitting outfielder could add some pop with some time. He will turn 20 in February.
Baseball America ranked Fuentes as the No. 6 player in the Red Sox system.
None of the three figure to see PetCo Park in 2011, but Rizzo and Kelly could be ready for 2012.
The Padres will also get a player to be named.
So which trade was a more somber moment for you Leo? Peavy or Gonzalez (before Peavy continuing to have major injury issues)
The Red Sox couldn't agree to an extension and the deal is off.
So MLB has a window of opportunity for the Sox to get the extension done. And they fail to get it done.
Still a "chance" for the deal to get done, but you have to think that other teams are gonna start offering the Padres trades now that they know what it will take.
How much you want to bet they end up trading him somewhere else for much less talent than they would have gotten in this deal.
They are in on him, but the new owner wants to build from within so id call it a long shot.
Do you guys have anything to build from within?
Not anything for 1B, but we do have a pretty solid system as it stands.