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Written by Scott Pisani
February 1, 2008
Does anyone else see the parallel between the Johan Santana deal and
a really bad fantasy deal? In that manner, it highlights how some deals
that may look horrible are not always done with malicious intentions –
but that still doesn’t make it a good deal.
For example, the Twins are like that owner in your league at deadline
time that is way out of the running and has a great commodity (lets use
Johan at $40 for simplicity’s sake), and announces to the league
he wants to trade him and is looking for keepers. So this owner sends
out a few proposals to some of the contending teams, asking for the moon.
And why not? Santana is a great pitcher and can help any of these teams
win the pennant. He asks not only for their best keepers, but for several
of their best keepers. He offers deals that probably aren’t going
to happen, but Santana’s owner is being greedy, and who knows -
it's a tight race and maybe someone will overpay.
Initially, these contending teams are very excited about the prospect
of adding a Santana, and 2 of the owners are always in a rivalry with
each other, so half of their excitement is fueled by the thought of keeping
the other away from Santana. Team 3 doesn’t have a lot to offer
after the initial outrageous proposal from Santana's owner, but he sticks
in it and tries several counter offers.
Now, Santana’s owner knows the players he really wants are on the
first two teams, so he tries several combinations trying to lure these
great keepers away. While the offers are getting more reasonable, they
are still too much. Team 3 is way behind what Santana’s owner wants,
so he doesn’t completely rebuff him, but he’s not really paying
much attention to team 3, either.
Finally, it’s trade deadline day. Santana’s owner realizes
that if he doesn’t pull the trigger today, he’s stuck with
a great player he can’t keep. He tries one last time with owners
1 and 2 to get the players he wants, and fails. Owner 3, who has been
sitting back this whole time, still has his less than great offer that
he’s been sticking to for weeks. With a choice of getting something,
or getting nothing, Santana’s owner says, fine, I’ll accept
your deal of 4 potential (but not great) keepers.
With our RotoUmpire service, we get stories like this all the time –
“I offered him around the league and this was the best offer I got,”
“nobody else wanted him,” etc. While we do sympathize with
the owner of Santana in that hypothetical case (and with the owners in
our RotoUmpire cases), as the Twins’ case highlights, sometimes
it’s his fault he didn’t get a better offer than the one he
got because he wasted his time on deals that weren’t going to happen.
Just because he didn’t get an official offer better than the one
he made, it doesn’t mean it’s a good deal, and it definitely
doesn't mean it's always a deal that’s to the benefit of the league.
A golden rule we always follow when evaluating trades is: “The good
of the league outweighs the benefit to any 2 individual teams.”
Both teams may have gotten something of benefit, but getting the best
pitcher in the game for a very young OF who hit .230 last year, and 3
pitchers, 1 of whom is many years from the majors, and 2 of whom don’t
project higher than a #3 starter at best, is not really a good deal for
a fantasy league – far too much balance is shifting for far too
little payment.
Now you can’t compare major league situations exactly to fantasy
owners. After all, fantasy owners are really at the mercy of the whims
of the major league GMs: how they treat their youngsters, when they promote
them and how often they play them. So much can happen before a minor leaguer
makes the majors that a fantasy owner has absolutely no control over.
If Carlos Gomez were to miss the entire 2008 season, he would not be kept
in 99% of fantasy leagues (and almost never by choice). But the Twins
are not hurt nearly as bad by an injury like that as they can just play
him in 2009 and other than a little bit of salary that might even be insured,
he’s not cutting into a salary cap or keeper limit or anything like
that for the year they have to keep him when he doesn’t play. A
fantasy owner would be devastated by that same turn of events if, for
some unexplainable reason, he had to keep Gomez.
Now from a real baseball standpoint, as a lifelong Mets fan, I love the
deal. I was actually not against the Mets trading Reyes for Santana, but
in hindsight, I’m obviously glad they didn’t. Gomez is a nice
player – very, very fast and should develop into a useful speedster
with decent stats in the other 4 categories, but he’s not really
a superstar. None of the pitchers make me nervous the way I was when the
Mets gave away Scott Kazmir. And even if they did, it’s going to
be years before we’d see any success out of them on the major league
level. Santana is producing now, at a superstar level, and should continue
to for many years. Sorry Twins fans!
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