M’s sign Chris Shelton
Dave · December 8, 2008 at 8:07 am · Filed Under Mariners
Seriously, I think Jack Z understands how to build a pretty sweet 1B platoon for no money. The M’s have inked Chris Shelton, and he now becomes the frontrunner to be Branyan’s platoon partner at first base. That should be a productive duo for basically $2 million bucks.
Go Jack Go.
97 ABs is enough for the manager to determine if you deserve another 97. He was DFA’ed in June.
And this proves what, exactly? Michael Jordan was cut from his high-school basketball team in tenth grade — clearly, the guy just couldn’t play the game.
I don’t think anyone is looking at this signing as anything more than what you just said, Bill. On paper, it looks as if Jack Z. has signed two low-cost players to fill a gap until a better solution presents itself. I don’t think he signed them to platoon at 1B/DH for years to come. I mean, Shelton’s contract is a minor league deal. If Jack Z. and Don W. don’t think he’s working out during spring training, then they can keep him in the minors. No harm there. If anything, he’ll rake down there and perhaps earn himself another shot at the bigs.
I think you’re reading too much into people’s elation. I think people are just really excited that Jack is actually making somewhat beneficial moves. Instead of selling the farm for nothing, he’s taking a flyer on a low-cost player with some upside, something that Bavasi wouldn’t have done with a gun pressed to his temple.
Not just Sorrento, but David Segui too … he perhaps wasn’t the bargain that Sorrento was but he still hit serviceably and had a salary that was less than half of the M’s departed free agent Tino Martinez. So in the four years between the (relatively) big names of Tino Martinez and John Olerud, the Ms managed to do okay with relatively cheap first basemen.
If you can’t get excited about the massive change in organizational process and philosophy that these recent moves show, then I don’t know what to tell you.
LaHair’s career minor league OPS: .806
Shelton’s career minor league OPS: .919
Shelton’s the better hitter. Not even close.
(FWIW, Russ Branyan’s career minor league OPS: .917)
No, it isn’t.