-
10-31-2012, 09:57 AM #1
Salt, meet wound
This is beating a dead-horse, I know.
The Gold Glove Awards were announced last night in an oddly concocted award show format on ESPN2. In the AL, Baltimore Orioles' shortstop JJ Hardy was the recipient of the hardware for that position. So now, the Twins have traded away a 30-home run, Gold Glove winning shortstop.
Since trading him, the Twins have had a -5.2 UZR/150 at the position (third-worst in the AL) along with a .280 weighted on-base average (third lowest). Meanwhile, the Orioles have hit the most home runs at the position (52 compared to the Twins' 18) and the O's have had the third-highest UZR/150 (9.6) in baseball.
How do you feel about the team's future at this pivotal position?@OverTheBaggy
-
10-31-2012, 10:02 AM #2
I find it far more significant that the O's UZR is high than whether or not JJ won the Gold Glove. I actually think he probably deserved it, but the Gold Glove is perhaps the worst award given by MLB. Several marginal defenders have won the award and some (Palmeiro) have won when they mostly have served as a DH.
-
10-31-2012, 10:05 AM #3
Right, the Gold Glove is often a travestshamockery and you could argue that Brendon Ryan was a superior defender, but I think this is league-wide recognition that JJ Hardy is very much an elite defender and jives with the advanced defensive statistics.
@OverTheBaggy
-
10-31-2012, 10:06 AM #4
No doubt Gardy is happy he has shortstops that play the way he did and not Hardy.
"WAR, what is it good for? Absolutely nothin'!" Edwin Starr
-
10-31-2012, 10:11 AM #5
Hindsight is 20/20. I'm sure there were more than a few here (maybe with paper bags over their heads now) who were fine with jettisoning the fragile Hardy for the next big thing from Japan.
Besides, to reiterate, Gold Gloves are kind of stupid. Mike Trout didn't win one? That pretty much says it all.
-
10-31-2012, 10:12 AM #6
Hardy was a pansy who missed too much time with that little wrist boo-boo he "had". Also he's slow.
But seriously, I don't think Dozier has the defensive ability to stick at shortstop and I think Florimon is Juan Castro v2. Whoever the Twins shortstop of the future is, I don't think he's on the roster right now.
-
10-31-2012, 10:15 AM #7Banned All-Star
- Posts
- 1,362
Yeah, MI is a bit of blackhole for us but we do have a handful of legit prospects in the pipeline - Rosario, Micheal, Polanco, Santana. I suspect next year we'll have Carroll (who isn't that bad) and a pu-pu platter again.
I wonder if Span gets traded for a MI and a pitcher.
-
10-31-2012, 10:25 AM #8Senior Member Triple-A
- Posts
- 463
How did Jeter not win? Rigged!
-
10-31-2012, 10:41 AM #9Senior Member All-Star
- Posts
- 1,387
-
10-31-2012, 10:42 AM #10
We need to draft MI and SP only. No more Relief Pitchers, outfielders, or corner outfielders. Maybe a few catchers now and then. The next stud SS for the Twins will be the first in my 25 year lifetime.
-
10-31-2012, 10:53 AM #11Senior Member All-Star
- Posts
- 1,416
Had the Twins drafted Hardy, he surely would not have ended up as a SS. His size and (lack of) speed would have convinced the Twins he wouldn't have the range for SS long before he would have reached the majors.
My biggest issue with the Hardy loss lies in the rumors that the Twins and Hardy butted heads on his reluctance to hit to all fields. Willingham and Plouffe showed this year that for right handed hitters, Hardy's philosopy was the correct one at Target Field.
-
10-31-2012, 10:56 AM #12
-
10-31-2012, 10:57 AM #13
What future at MI ?
The worst part about losing JJ is that we got jack for him.
-
10-31-2012, 10:59 AM #14
-
10-31-2012, 11:03 AM #15
One of the sweetest moments from the Jr interview. John: Hardy scores outstanding in defensive metrics. Jr: He does? Unreal.
-
10-31-2012, 11:30 AM #16
-
10-31-2012, 11:34 AM #17
I didn't have a problem with trading Hardy at the time. I think if they would have received two relievers who were at least decent it wouldn't have been so bad. But getting nothing for him, and then him going and having his one great year last year kind of combined to a perfect storm. I'm surprised he didn't win the Gold Glove last year when he hit better.
-
10-31-2012, 11:51 AM #18
By the time the Twins traded Hardy, they already had signed Nishioka, so it wasn't exactly a surprise. While he hadn't been an All-Star by any means, with the Twins, he certainly was an improvement over what we'd seen at SS prior to his arrival. Nishioka was an entertaining sideshow initially, but even among those of us who didn't see Hardy as being terrific, I think the reaction was more along the lines of, "OK, you think this is an improvement... you'd better be right." Obviously, the Twins weren't right and the fact that the players they got in return bombed just made things worse.
I'm happy for Hardy that he's been having success and congratulations to the Orioles on getting the best end of this particular trade.I post regularly on our Knuckleballs blog (http://knuckleballsblog.com/)
~You can get anything you want, at Alice's Restaurant~
-
10-31-2012, 12:11 PM #19Senior Member Big-Leaguer
- Posts
- 626
-
10-31-2012, 12:15 PM #20



LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks



Reply With Quote



Examining Oswaldo Arcia's recent struggles
Figuring hitters out, a baseball lifer told me recently, is like trying to untangle a giant knot. At first you just try to attack it in the easiest manner possible. If that does not work, you pick...
Today, 01:06 AM