SB Nation - Login for mobile commenting

Bucs Dugout

FanShot

Every year, Baseball America prints a few scouting reports on players who are decent prospects, but not quite good enough to make it into their team's Top 30 list for BA's printed prospect guide.

The piece at the link includes reports on two such players from the Pirates' system: shortstop Gustavo Nunez and outfielder Harold Ramirez.

2 comments

FanShot

That seems apt somehow.

8 comments

FanShot

Neal Huntington somehow hadn't crossed Daniel Cabrera off his bucket list, but I suppose he has now. Cabrera hasn't pitched in the states since 2010. By his last couple years in the big leagues, he wasn't throwing nearly as hard as he did when he first came up with the Orioles, and he didn't exactly make up for the decline in velocity with stellar control. The velocity drop led to many fewer strikeouts, which made him a pretty horrible pitcher overall. Even as a Class AAA signing, this looks like a stretch, but who knows?

26 comments

FanShot

Aklrw79ceaaemkt

Mike LaValliere picking up Jose Lind. LaValliere looks even more like himself than he used to. Via the Pirates' Twitter account.

12 comments

Are Pirates In The Market For ... Anyone?

KANSAS CITY, MO - SEPTEMBER 15:  Starting pitcher Jeff Francis #26 of the Kansas City Royals throws during a game against the Chicago White Sox at Kauffman Stadium on September 15, 2011 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images)

Here are the details on Jeff Francis' minor-league deal with the Reds:

Francis will earn a base salary of $1.5 million if he makes the Reds' big league roster, the source said. The deal includes performance bonuses based on starts that could increase his total payout to $3.25 million.

Francis also has the ability to opt out of the contract on March 28, before the end of spring training.

That's a bargain, frankly. In situations like this, I've sometimes felt a little exasperated by people who say, 'Why didn't the Pirates get in on that?' Well, maybe they did; maybe Francis, for whatever reason, just doesn't want to come to Pittsburgh. Or maybe the Pirates simply feel that Francis isn't very good. That's a point of view to which I could be somewhat sympathetic if the Bucs had even a basic level of rotation depth. But as this point, any pitcher who can throw 180 innings without getting shelled is one the Pirates should consider, especially when he can be had for just a couple million bucks.

And there's this, too: I don't hear much evidence the Pirates have much interest in anyone at this point. Now, maybe that doesn't mean anything -- maybe the Bucs are secretly still working hard at making significant upgrades to the big-league roster, and none of that has been reported. That happens sometimes. But usually when there's fire, there's smoke, and right now, I don't see any.

That's why, when I saw the Edwin Jackson "mystery team" thread go up, I had to chuckle. There's a "mystery team" interested in Edwin Jackson! Let's put aside how silly and empty the reports of "mystery teams" are in the first place. (Could it be my team?! I don't know, there's a 1-in-30 chance!) Given all the evidence -- particularly the absence of any serious reporting connecting the Pirates to Jackson, and the fact that the Pirates never, ever sign free agents as good as Jackson -- is there any reason whatsoever to think the Pirates are this "mystery team"? The whole thing is like a dysfunctional game of Clue, where there may not have been any crime committed in the first place, and if there was, you know it wasn't Colonel Mustard who did it, because the dog ate that card years ago.

The complete absence of action out there right now suggests the Pirates like their team right now, or at least that they've come to terms with it. You can, of course, make the argument that the Bucs weren't going to contend in 2012 anyway, and that therefore, the water-treading the Pirates have done this offseason isn't some great tragedy. But it's still disappointing.

126 comments

FanShot

Eh... oh well.

29 comments

FanShot

Didn't see a link to this anywhere else.

No. 8 Jameson Taillon
No. 11 Gerrit Cole
No. 40 Starling Marte
No. 69 Josh Bell

Enjoy!

56 comments

Neal Huntington: Pirates Would Need 'Dramatic Overpay' To Trade Andrew McCutchen

PHOENIX, AZ - SEPTEMBER 20:  Andrew McCutchen #22 of the Pittsburgh Pirates high fives Pedro Alvarez #24 after scoring agianst the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fifth inning of the Major League Baseball game at Chase Field on September 20, 2011 in Phoenix, Arizona.  (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Neal Huntington says in this interview that in order to trade Andrew McCutchen, he would need another team to offer a "dramatic overpay." That's pretty much what we'd hope he would say, of course -- you'd want him to listen if an amazing offer came along, but with McCutchen still under team control for four more years, there's no pressing reason to trade him.

That said, it's a drag that Huntington has been here for four years and we're still talking about this. If Huntington's first two first-round picks were looking better, I doubt anyone would be asking him about trading McCutchen, because there would clearly be a pretty exciting groundswell of young talent in Pittsburgh. Now, though, there's a big age gap between McCutchen and the rest of the Pirates' best young players. So while I still think the four years of control makes a McCutchen deal unlikely, it isn't a possibility that they can dismiss outright.

Huntington also talks about how he added "veteran leadership" this offseason in Clint Barmes, Rod Barajas and Erik Bedard.

Via MLB Trade Rumors.

173 comments

More Posts from Bucs Dugout

Explore Full Archive Next Page