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Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


For an xtra year and an xtra 24 million they can have him.

Now let's get Ollie.


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Posted


="John Cougar Lunchbucket":3qgkl57i]For an xtra year and an xtra 24 million they can have him.

Now let's get Ollie.[/quote:3qgkl57i]


Exactly , the four years is bad but they also seemed to have blown the door open with the $60 million , who did they think they were competing with?







attgig
Jan 13 2009 09:49 AM


="metirish":27ncuko8]
="John Cougar Lunchbucket":27ncuko8]For an xtra year and an xtra 24 million they can have him.

Now let's get Ollie.[/quote:27ncuko8]


Exactly , the four years is bad but they also seemed to have blown the door open with the $60 million , who did they think they were competing with?[/quote:27ncuko8]

a mystery team. who else?







Fman99
Jan 13 2009 09:52 AM


Good. Way too much money/years for a guy who is 36 and has his head screwed on sideways.

I like Sheets or Ollie at this point as a #4 guy.







Benjamin Grimm
Jan 13 2009 09:58 AM


I really wanted them to get someone better than Oliver Perez. I wanted a number 2 guy.

Oh well.

I would have been more optimistic heading into the season with Lowe than Perez. At least Redding should be an upgrade over Pedro.







metsguyinmichigan
Jan 13 2009 10:02 AM


I'm very OK with this. That deal is going to look horrible before too long. Ollie can be lights out. He'll probably toss our first no-hitter.

A seven-walk, two hit-batsman no-hitter, granted.







smg58
Jan 13 2009 11:08 AM


="smg58":3cvsi3pd]A month or so ago I thought Derek Lowe would present the best value of the free agent pitchers. But I hear more rumors about teams being interested in him than in anybody else. I no longer think he'll come that cheap. He's more consistent and durable than any other pitcher on the market besides CC, but at his age I wouldn't want to be the team that offers him a fourth year at $15M+ per.[/quote:3cvsi3pd]

I said that on Nov. 5, and I'm sticking to it.







A Boy Named Seo
Jan 13 2009 11:13 AM


Good job, Mets. I don't doubt Lowe woulda been fine this year, maybe better than Ollie, and maybe good next year, too. But they weren't gonna go four expensive years on a 36-year old guy period, and they stuck to that.







MFS62
Jan 13 2009 11:42 AM


From age 37-40, Curt Schilling went sometning like 51-24, with ERA+ from 80 (one year) to 150 (best during that span). Not saying Lowe can come close to that, but it can happen. Of course there are probably many examples of rapid declines, too. But Lowe reminds me of Schilling - a bulldog. I wanted him on the Mets.

Later







Frayed Knot
Jan 13 2009 01:21 PM


="batmagadanleadoff":r9o9y1ku]I'll say this for Heyman in fairness -- like him or not (and I'm not sure where I stand) last season, he was by far, the most accurate reporter at predicting future Mets moves ... especially during the will-they-fire-Willie and when-will-they-fire-Willie phase of the 2008 season.[/quote:r9o9y1ku]

Heyman has long been a first-rate baseball reporter as far as digging out the facts and getting them right more often than not and often getting them first. And he didn't always get the credit for his scoops due to the tendency of the national press to cite the big-city dailies while overlooking Heyman's suburban-based Newsday.
It may have been those frequent slights that prompted him to leave the newspaper biz for the brighter lights of SI, WFAN, SNY, and now MLBTV.

Heyman's columnist persona while he was still at Newsday tended to irk a few around here from time to time but that was usually separate from his regular reporter chores.







Nymr83
Jan 13 2009 01:30 PM


too much and too long for Lowe, i'm glad it wasn't us.



Guest attgig
Guests
Posted


="metirish":27ncuko8]
="John Cougar Lunchbucket":27ncuko8]For an xtra year and an xtra 24 million they can have him.

Now let's get Ollie.[/quote:27ncuko8]


Exactly , the four years is bad but they also seemed to have blown the door open with the $60 million , who did they think they were competing with?[/quote:27ncuko8]

a mystery team. who else?







Fman99
Jan 13 2009 09:52 AM


Good. Way too much money/years for a guy who is 36 and has his head screwed on sideways.

I like Sheets or Ollie at this point as a #4 guy.







Benjamin Grimm
Jan 13 2009 09:58 AM


I really wanted them to get someone better than Oliver Perez. I wanted a number 2 guy.

Oh well.

I would have been more optimistic heading into the season with Lowe than Perez. At least Redding should be an upgrade over Pedro.







metsguyinmichigan
Jan 13 2009 10:02 AM


I'm very OK with this. That deal is going to look horrible before too long. Ollie can be lights out. He'll probably toss our first no-hitter.

A seven-walk, two hit-batsman no-hitter, granted.







smg58
Jan 13 2009 11:08 AM


="smg58":3cvsi3pd]A month or so ago I thought Derek Lowe would present the best value of the free agent pitchers. But I hear more rumors about teams being interested in him than in anybody else. I no longer think he'll come that cheap. He's more consistent and durable than any other pitcher on the market besides CC, but at his age I wouldn't want to be the team that offers him a fourth year at $15M+ per.[/quote:3cvsi3pd]

I said that on Nov. 5, and I'm sticking to it.







A Boy Named Seo
Jan 13 2009 11:13 AM


Good job, Mets. I don't doubt Lowe woulda been fine this year, maybe better than Ollie, and maybe good next year, too. But they weren't gonna go four expensive years on a 36-year old guy period, and they stuck to that.







MFS62
Jan 13 2009 11:42 AM


From age 37-40, Curt Schilling went sometning like 51-24, with ERA+ from 80 (one year) to 150 (best during that span). Not saying Lowe can come close to that, but it can happen. Of course there are probably many examples of rapid declines, too. But Lowe reminds me of Schilling - a bulldog. I wanted him on the Mets.

Later







Frayed Knot
Jan 13 2009 01:21 PM


="batmagadanleadoff":r9o9y1ku]I'll say this for Heyman in fairness -- like him or not (and I'm not sure where I stand) last season, he was by far, the most accurate reporter at predicting future Mets moves ... especially during the will-they-fire-Willie and when-will-they-fire-Willie phase of the 2008 season.[/quote:r9o9y1ku]

Heyman has long been a first-rate baseball reporter as far as digging out the facts and getting them right more often than not and often getting them first. And he didn't always get the credit for his scoops due to the tendency of the national press to cite the big-city dailies while overlooking Heyman's suburban-based Newsday.
It may have been those frequent slights that prompted him to leave the newspaper biz for the brighter lights of SI, WFAN, SNY, and now MLBTV.

Heyman's columnist persona while he was still at Newsday tended to irk a few around here from time to time but that was usually separate from his regular reporter chores.







Nymr83
Jan 13 2009 01:30 PM


too much and too long for Lowe, i'm glad it wasn't us.



Posted


Good. Way too much money/years for a guy who is 36 and has his head screwed on sideways.

I like Sheets or Ollie at this point as a #4 guy.


Posted


I really wanted them to get someone better than Oliver Perez. I wanted a number 2 guy.

Oh well.

I would have been more optimistic heading into the season with Lowe than Perez. At least Redding should be an upgrade over Pedro.


Guest metsguyinmichigan
Guests
Posted


I'm very OK with this. That deal is going to look horrible before too long. Ollie can be lights out. He'll probably toss our first no-hitter.

A seven-walk, two hit-batsman no-hitter, granted.


Posted


="smg58":3cvsi3pd]A month or so ago I thought Derek Lowe would present the best value of the free agent pitchers. But I hear more rumors about teams being interested in him than in anybody else. I no longer think he'll come that cheap. He's more consistent and durable than any other pitcher on the market besides CC, but at his age I wouldn't want to be the team that offers him a fourth year at $15M+ per.[/quote:3cvsi3pd]

I said that on Nov. 5, and I'm sticking to it.







A Boy Named Seo
Jan 13 2009 11:13 AM


Good job, Mets. I don't doubt Lowe woulda been fine this year, maybe better than Ollie, and maybe good next year, too. But they weren't gonna go four expensive years on a 36-year old guy period, and they stuck to that.







MFS62
Jan 13 2009 11:42 AM


From age 37-40, Curt Schilling went sometning like 51-24, with ERA+ from 80 (one year) to 150 (best during that span). Not saying Lowe can come close to that, but it can happen. Of course there are probably many examples of rapid declines, too. But Lowe reminds me of Schilling - a bulldog. I wanted him on the Mets.

Later







Frayed Knot
Jan 13 2009 01:21 PM


="batmagadanleadoff":r9o9y1ku]I'll say this for Heyman in fairness -- like him or not (and I'm not sure where I stand) last season, he was by far, the most accurate reporter at predicting future Mets moves ... especially during the will-they-fire-Willie and when-will-they-fire-Willie phase of the 2008 season.[/quote:r9o9y1ku]

Heyman has long been a first-rate baseball reporter as far as digging out the facts and getting them right more often than not and often getting them first. And he didn't always get the credit for his scoops due to the tendency of the national press to cite the big-city dailies while overlooking Heyman's suburban-based Newsday.
It may have been those frequent slights that prompted him to leave the newspaper biz for the brighter lights of SI, WFAN, SNY, and now MLBTV.

Heyman's columnist persona while he was still at Newsday tended to irk a few around here from time to time but that was usually separate from his regular reporter chores.







Nymr83
Jan 13 2009 01:30 PM


too much and too long for Lowe, i'm glad it wasn't us.



Posted


Good job, Mets. I don't doubt Lowe woulda been fine this year, maybe better than Ollie, and maybe good next year, too. But they weren't gonna go four expensive years on a 36-year old guy period, and they stuck to that.


Posted


From age 37-40, Curt Schilling went sometning like 51-24, with ERA+ from 80 (one year) to 150 (best during that span). Not saying Lowe can come close to that, but it can happen. Of course there are probably many examples of rapid declines, too. But Lowe reminds me of Schilling - a bulldog. I wanted him on the Mets.

Later


Posted


="batmagadanleadoff":r9o9y1ku]I'll say this for Heyman in fairness -- like him or not (and I'm not sure where I stand) last season, he was by far, the most accurate reporter at predicting future Mets moves ... especially during the will-they-fire-Willie and when-will-they-fire-Willie phase of the 2008 season.[/quote:r9o9y1ku]

Heyman has long been a first-rate baseball reporter as far as digging out the facts and getting them right more often than not and often getting them first. And he didn't always get the credit for his scoops due to the tendency of the national press to cite the big-city dailies while overlooking Heyman's suburban-based Newsday.
It may have been those frequent slights that prompted him to leave the newspaper biz for the brighter lights of SI, WFAN, SNY, and now MLBTV.

Heyman's columnist persona while he was still at Newsday tended to irk a few around here from time to time but that was usually separate from his regular reporter chores.







Nymr83
Jan 13 2009 01:30 PM


too much and too long for Lowe, i'm glad it wasn't us.



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