Guest rpackrat Guests Posted July 2, 2005 Posted July 2, 2005 [url]http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2099580[/url]
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted July 2, 2005 Posted July 2, 2005 Home to Staten Island or to burn in the Bronx. You decide, John.
Guest Bret Sabermetric Guests Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 Assuming this caps off his career, Franco will have pitched in his forties from 2001-2005 for mostly old, mostly bad last-place teams (mainly the Mets) for an aggregate total of about 150 innings over the five seasons for an aggregate salary of over 10 mil (that's about 65 grand per IP).[url]http://baseball-reference.com/f/francjo01.shtml[/url]Now, if those 30 IP per season were quality IP, that would be one thing, but they've been pretty mediocre IP (about league average ERA). So you've gotten neither quality nor quantity, just the privilege of having a big-name reliever on your staff and the cold comfort of having been able to say "Well, Franco could always come around, the man's got sixty bazillion saves," despite what your own lying eyes told you.As Everett Dirksen used to say, "10 million here and 10 million there and pretty soon you're talking about wasting some real money." Of course Franco's just a prominent symbol of a policy of throwing money at reputations without considering the real-world return on investment--I could name you other names but you can guess who I mean--that just hasn't worked out well for the Mets.OE: "I'm disappointed, but my numbers aren't that good," Franco said. "It's part of the game. They have a number of young guys that they want to take a look at." I mean, that's been true for quite some time--I'd much rather take a look at younger, cheaper guys--or develop some, or sign some, or throw the 10 mil into an offer for Vlad or Carlos D.
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 It's slowly becoming my standard line, but John Franco could be a Duck. In fact, he'd make a good Duck.
Guest ScarletKnight41 Guests Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 Between Franco, Strickland and Turk, the Astros have signed and released a lot of former Mets relievers this season.
Theoldmole Old-Timey Member Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 And Leiter eased out of the starting rotation....
Guest ScarletKnight41 Guests Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 Yes, but the Astros really didn't have anything to do with that one.
Guest SwitchHitter Guests Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 OTOH, Wheeler is shaping up pretty well this year.
smg58 Old-Timey Member Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 What did we get for Wheeler? For all the talk about the Kazmir deal, this one might be the one from last year we most want back.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted July 3, 2005 Posted July 3, 2005 Dan was neither ace nor deuceSo we traded him for Adam SeussSaid he, "No ace nor deuce am IBut I'm a useful bullpen guy!"And useful did he make himselfWith cahnfidence, strength, control, and healthBut Seuss, his bounty, where is he?A B-Met or a Tide is he?Did we send him up or send him down?Or option him to Hagerstown?O, check the net, learn of his fateHe got only seven trips to the plateThen the Mets released him without conditionThe had enough at his positionThey cut him, shunned him, punched his ticketTold him just where he could stick itWere they smart or were they dumb?To be sure, there is more news to to comeNow the Astros re-signed Adam Seuss(Though he's been suspended, he's on the juice)But the release is not the issue hereBut the initial trade that sent Dan thereSo Duquette's demoted, 'cause he's no dealerAs the 'Stros now have both Seuss and Wheeler
Guest 86-Dreamer Guests Posted July 5, 2005 Posted July 5, 2005 Bump. Thanks Edgy - I really enjoyed that rhyme.
Zach Thornton Syracuse Mets - AAA LHP On Sunday, the southpaw tossed five shutout innings as the bulk pitcher. He gave up 2 hits, walked 2 and had 5 strikeouts. Explore Zach Thornton News >
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