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Mariners brilliant offseason capped by signing Hernandez longterm

January 19, 2010
Jack Zduriencik, here introducing Chone Figgins as the Seattle Mariners new third baseman, has done a excellent job in bolstering his up-and-coming team

Jack Zduriencik, here introducing Chone Figgins as the Seattle Mariners new third baseman, has done an excellent job bolstering an already up-and-coming team.

Prior to this past season, the American League West was one of the weakest divisions in the major leagues, second only to the horrid National League West. The Oakland Athletics, Seattle Mariners, and Texas Rangers had watched the Los Angeles Angels win division title after division title, and though the Angels took home the divisional crown one again in 2009, these three teams increased their level of play, and one, the Mariners, carried over their success to the offseason.

Billy Beane’s A’s tied their 2008 mark with 75 wins, a total one victory less than accomplished in 2007. They won with a plethora of no-names, relying mostly on young players, with their starting rotation members of the 25-and-under club. As their youth matures, Oakland will only get better.

The Texas Rangers missed out on the playoffs in 2009, but that doesn’t take away from their accomplishments. A pitching staff that had struggled mightily for years and years flourished under the tutelage of Mike Maddux. They won 87 games even though their star power hitter, Josh Hamilton, was plagued by injuries throughout the campaign. Texas’s offense was, as it has been for the past 10-plus years, built around the longball, but backed by a solid pitching staff, they were actually able to contend and do so until the end.

The Mariners contended until mid-September, winning 85 games, a 24-win improvement over a 2008 season in which they lost 101 games. Like the Athletics, their offense wasn’t made up of many well-known players, but despite hitting just .252 as a team, anchored by Ichiro Suzuki’s ho-hum .352 batting average and a surprising 31 homers clubbed by a resurrected Russell Branyan they gave their superb albeit patched-together pitching staff enough to work with on a regular basis.

The Mariners team-ERA was an excellent 3.87, and they were paced by Felix Hernandez, their 23-year old righthanded ace who posted a 2.49 ERA in winning 19 games and who was recently signed to a 5-year deal worth $80 million. What makes Seattle’s accomplishments remarkable is the fact that they only had two pitchers start more than 20 games–Hernandez made 34 starts and Jarrod Washburn made 20 before being traded to the Detroit Tigers–and that 10 other pitchers took the mound, with none making less than six starts. Once again like the Athletics, their rotations featured a crop of very young pitchers and the youth movement paid immediate dividends. With their core presumably set, heading into the 2010 season, the Mariners were already equipped to make a run at the American League West title. But despite their standing and impressive one-year turnaround, General Manager Jack Zduriencik wasn’t about to stand pat this offseason, given their impressive improvement.

Following the 2008 season in which the Mariners became the first team in major league history to lose a 100-plus games with a payroll over $100 million, Zduriencik took over for the fired Bill Bavasi and got to work. After a busy first offseason at the helm, he signed free-agent third baseman Chone Figgins, who is equally gifted with the glove and the bat and has extraordinary speed, to a four-year contract. Figgins won’t mirror the power provided by Adrian Beltre, who manned the hot corner for the Mariners the previous five years before moving on to the Boston Red Sox, but he gives the team a devastating one-two punch atop their batting order by joining Suzuki. He’s a great clubhouse guy and, unlike Beltre, is a consistent producer offensively.

The second-year GM signed Hernandez longterm, inking the Venezuelan to a five-year deal worth $78 million. As one of the best young pitchers in baseball, this deal was a no-brainer on the part of Zdurienick. Though he was clearly worth such a deal, the Mariners put him on the trade-market earlier this year, just to see if they could get a world of talent in return. No offer satisfied their wishes, so Seattle decided to reward the young star for his efforts, a very smart move.

Zduriencik also re-signed Ken Griffey Jr. to a one-year deal, keeping The Kid in Seattle. The future Hall of Famer’s numbers have decreased rapidly during his twilight years, but, now at age 40, anything positive from him brings back the memories of old. The one-year deal gives Griffey the chance to spend another season with the team that drafted him more than twenty years ago and with the fan base that watched his smooth stroke club homers throughout the 80′s and 90′s in the famed Kingdome. He will see a limited role, and may hit in the low-.200′s again, but just his presence will once more be enough for the team and fans he grew up with.

A smart signing, a feel-good signing, an obvious signing, and now a high-risk, high-reward trade. Zduriencik managed to get the Chicago Cubs to take the regrettable contract of pitcher Carlos Silva in exchange for another bad contract, Milton Bradley. But unlike Silva, Bradley has tremendous talent, and can harness it if he behaves. He has an awful temper that has hurt his reputation significantly, yet Zduriencik gave him the all-important fourth chance to get his act together and succeed. It’s simple: if Bradley is happy, he can hit 30 homers and drive in upwards of 100 runs. If not, it will be a nightmarish situation (just ask the Cubs, Rangers, and San Diego Padres).

Considering Zduriencik has made Seattle the place to be by turning a bottom-dweller into an ever-so dangerous team, Bradley should be ecstatic and ready to help improve the already much-improved Mariners attempt to topple the other two division foes and dethrone the Angels.

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10 Comments leave one →
  1. January 20, 2010 5:36 am

    The balance of power has definitely shifted in the AL West.

    Going forward, it will be Seattle and Texas competing with each other over the next few years.

    The Angels are good enough to hang around still, but they aren’t as good as last year, and however it plays out this year, this is the end of their window of opportunity, and like the Red Sox they are in the process of turning over their roster and getting younger, and unless Weaver really emerges as an ace, one who can beat other aces, I don’t see them making the post season.

    Oakland looks like they have allot of bad seasons in front of them. As we discussed, I think Selig wants to move the franchise, and with the Freemont deal dead, it will ultimately happen.

    Back to the Mariners, it is about time they spent some money, and spent it wisely. The way they draw, and with that ballpark, they are no small market team. They have the resources to dominate that division like they did when Pinella was there. I question some of their decision making there in the past, and given their unique ownership situation, I think the franchise would be best served with a strong veteran baseball man running the front office, and giving him total control over everything and everybody.

    • swamigp permalink*
      January 23, 2010 3:30 pm

      Mariners have definitely spent wisely this offseason, hence the article. With the Angels losing a bunch of players, the Mariners can win the AL West. They’ve done an excellent job, both short-term and long-term. Texas and Seattle will be the beasts of the division, I agree. But I wouldn’t count out Oakland either. They could use a change in scenery, though.

      • January 24, 2010 8:32 am

        Sure, Oakland could improve, but would they want to?

        They are kind of in the predicament from the movie Major League. The better they do the herder it will be, politically, to move. So they will just stay in a rebuilding mode, because that will make it easier for them to justify the move, their argument being that SF is a one team market.

        Nothing is going to be resolved until the next CBA is ratified between MLB and the MLBPA, and as we discussed, that is going to be nuclear war, but when that happens, 2 years from now, look for them to quickly resolve the Oakland situation, and also expand to add two more teams and go to 4 divisions in each league thus eliminating the wildcard, and quite possibly either completely adopt or most likely eliminate the DH.

        Until then Oakland is going to be a 4th place team playing before 12,000 a night.

      • swamigp permalink*
        January 24, 2010 6:21 pm

        Yeah, Oakland’s a odd organization. Beane’s had a plan, but it’s never really amounted to much success. I like the prediction. I could see a major change coming. You’ve hit it on the spot, my friend. That could be in the future. Expansion, DH or No DH, makes sense. Something has to be done to level the playing field. The way I see it, the NL is punished for no reason. Why do their pitchers have to hit? It doesn’t make sense. I look for either Selig to make some moves to define his legacy or for them to be done by his successor.

  2. January 20, 2010 5:04 pm

    Also, I can’t believe that both Jon Garland and Erik Bedard is out there.

    Someone is going to get a top of the rotation starter for nothing. I don’t know which of the two it will be, but it will be one of them.

    Also Torrealba and Jose Molina are both still out there for the Red Sox, and the price goes down by the day, and don’t be surprised if at the end of the month the Sox sign Molina for the minimum. It allows them to bury Varitek on the bench, and he can also give the inside dope on the Yankee staff.

    Hank Blalock is coming off really the only bad year in his career, and Jim Thome still has allot of pop.

    Orlando Cabrerea is still out there.

    In the outfield Johnny Damon, Rick Ankiel, Rocco Badelli, Endy Chavez, Jermaine Dye, Xavier Nady, and Randy Winn are all still out there.

    Starting Monday, everything gets marked down.

    Starting the following Monday, February 1, whoever is left out there will just be begging for a job.

    GMs are getting over on teams left and right.

    You are too young to remember the collusion of the 80s, where the owners eventually paid damages on.

    Back then nobody would bid on another teams player. In order to leave Montreal, Andre Dawson had to send in a blank singed contract to the Chicago Cubs, and did so publicly, just to demonstrate the folly of it all.

    Owners have learned their lesson from being forced to pay damages from that time, and what they do now, is hold an open market for the top tier guys in December, then trickle in some of the second tier guys in January, and leave the whole rest of them begging for work come February.

    Of those 14 names at least 5 and probably half of them, will be big time performers.

    • swamigp permalink*
      January 23, 2010 3:28 pm

      There are a lot of good players out there, for sure. All can be had at an inexpensive rate.

      It’ll sure be interesting to see what happens up until Feb. 1st. So many out there without a job. A lot of teams are set, too, which hurts some players chances of getting the job they deserve.

      Sorry I haven’t been around lately. School and Fan Huddle take up a lot of my time. And I don’t have much else I want to write about these days. You understand, right?

      • January 24, 2010 8:26 am

        Sure, its all good.

      • swamigp permalink*
        January 24, 2010 6:17 pm

        Great! I have a test this monday and a paper due tuesday, but I’ll be sure to write at least two articles this next week. If I’m up for it, maybe four or five.

  3. January 25, 2010 2:31 am

    Once they get a labor agreement, then they can work on these other side issues. What I think will happen is that they will probably get rid of the DH, and in return the union will get expansion, and thus a total net gain in jobs, and thus dues paying members.

    The owners want to get rid of the DH, because they tend to be old guys with big contracts who are defensive liabilities, who if it were not for the DH, they would be out of baseball.

    That is why last time around the owners used contraction as a stick. It was false leverage that they were never actually going to use. Next time around they will try to use expansion, which is what they want anyway because it creates a big pot of money to split up, and yet use it as leverage to get the MLBPA to agree to eliminate the DH.

    Even being an American League fan, it wouldn’t bother me. It creates more strategy, and especially places an added emphasis on having depth, particularly in the bullpen.

    • swamigp permalink*
      January 26, 2010 11:04 am

      They either have to eliminate the DH or give the National League the DH, too. I agree with your thinking. What you predict could easily happen, and it makes sense. It would not only level the playing field, but also force every team to play National League style ball, which I find very exciting. Small ball would spread throughout the majors, given the pitchers would have to hit, and I like that aspect of the game.

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