Laley23;412067 wrote:Huh? They didnt sign him after this season, but .325 BA /.370 OBP/.590 SLG% and an 147 OPS+ is NOT a brain fart. For 10 Million, those numbers and a top 5 MVP finish is a bargain.
That was the 2001 season. Shapiro didn't become GM until after the 2001 season. Juan Gone beasted that year.
I'm talking about when he was brought back in 2005 with the hope that he would be a starting outfielder. He was hurt to start the year, finally got called up at the end of May, pulled his hamstring (or something like that) in literally his first at bat of the season, and never came back. He was a reclamation project because he played 70, 82, and 33 games the previous 3 years, and Shapiro brought him in hoping he would be the power bat in right field.
kayo;412053 wrote:Well, have at it, I guess. I fail to see how signing utility infielders or taking fliers on reclamation projects can even be considered 'mistakes'.
Ordinarily reclamation projects wouldn't be mistakes. But Shapiro signs these guys with the intention of plugging them into the 5 man rotation (a la Bere), the back end of the bullpen (a la Graves), or starting positions (a la Gonzalez take 2). When you try to catch lightning in a bottle as your calling card and it repeatedly fails, then yes they are mistakes in my opinion.
Utility infielders usually wouldn't be mistakes either, but since Wedge loved platooning so much the utility guys ended up becoming regular fixtures in the starting lineup pretty frequently, which makes them pretty important pieces. If you start at 3rd one day, then 2nd, then short, you are still starting all 3 games. Just because you don't have a set position doesn't mean you can't be a mistake.
And I fail to see how anyone could still possibly try to defend Shapiro, but you go ahead and have at that if you'd like.