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Sox move Liriano to the pen


gmarais66

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Posted

I don't know that anybody should be surprised at this. Liriano has always started slow, peaked in June and July, and tapered off in the last part of the season. That's why I'm glad we moved him when we did, even if it was for a pittance. Better something than nothing.

Posted

Yeah, even if Eduardo Escobar is "only" a 4-6 year utility guy for the Twins, it was the right thing to deal Liriano. Pedro Hernandez certainly has a chance to be a back-of-the-rotation starter as early as sometime next year.

Posted
Yeah, even if Eduardo Escobar is "only" a 4-6 year utility guy for the Twins, it was the right thing to deal Liriano. Pedro Hernandez certainly has a chance to be a back-of-the-rotation starter as early as sometime next year.

 

It's going to be tricky for Hernandez to navigate his way through that back-of-the-rotation logjam the Twins have.

Posted
It's going to be tricky for Hernandez to navigate his way through that back-of-the-rotation logjam the Twins have.

 

The Twins will have to run a 10 man rotation to make use of all that talent.

Posted
It's going to be tricky for Hernandez to navigate his way through that back-of-the-rotation logjam the Twins have.

 

The Twins will have to run a 10 man rotation to make use of all that talent.

 

Not sure talent is the correct word to use.

Posted
Pedro Hernandez certainly has a chance to be a back-of-the-rotation starter as early as sometime next year.

 

Anybody with one arm and a pulse has a chance to be a back-of-the-rotation starter for the Twins next year.

Posted
Yeah, even if Eduardo Escobar is "only" a 4-6 year utility guy for the Twins, it was the right thing to deal Liriano. Pedro Hernandez certainly has a chance to be a back-of-the-rotation starter as early as sometime next year.

 

Escobar's already used two option years. If he's with the Twins after 2013, it either means he has been unexpectedly productive and the Twins never needed to demote their utility player, or he was so bad, no other teams want to claim him.

Posted

And to think of all hyperventilating in the wake of that trade and silly talk about how much more we should have been able to get for him.

 

He's the same player he's always been. He'll tease you with glimpses of greatness, but inevitably let you down when it counts.

 

This performance will always epitmoize Liriano to me:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/MIN/MIN200809260.shtml

 

2008. We had just swept the Whities at the Dome, the last win coming in dramatic walk-off fashion against Jenks. One series to go, 3 at the Dome against the light-hitting Royals. A series win puts us in the postseason. Liriano was our starter for the first game of that series, and he got shelled. At home. By one of the weakest lineups in the league. Momentum gone, took the wind right out of our sails. He comes through there, and there's no need for a game 163.

Posted

How Liriano has pitched has no bearing on whether or not the trade was a good decision. That's like saying the Twins should have traded Justin Morneau after 2009 because he got hurt in 2010. The only thing that matters when evaluating a trade is what was known about the player leading up to the trade.

Posted
How Liriano has pitched has no bearing on whether or not the trade was a good decision. That's like saying the Twins should have traded Justin Morneau after 2009 because he got hurt in 2010. The only thing that matters when evaluating a trade is what was known about the player leading up to the trade.

 

That's actually very true. Which means that, regardless of the whining over the return we got for Liriano, we should be glad that we made the decision to get that bad pitcher off of our roster. Of course, the validation ex post helps.

Posted
How Liriano has pitched has no bearing on whether or not the trade was a good decision. That's like saying the Twins should have traded Justin Morneau after 2009 because he got hurt in 2010. The only thing that matters when evaluating a trade is what was known about the player leading up to the trade.

 

And what was known about Liriano before the trade was that his pitching ability tended to be unstable, never being able to maintain his brief moments of success more than a couple of months.

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