Tagged: New York Mets

“Good Chance” Ryan Madson accepts Arbitration

UPDATE, 10:21 PM EST: The New York Mets have signed Jon Rauch to a one-year deal. They have also signed Frank Francisco to a two-year deal. Though it takes a destination for Madson and K-Rod off the board, it also takes two closers out of play instead of one. Less competition, but less destinations as well.

UPDATE, 9:20 PM EST: Jayson Stark reports that the Red Sox acquiring Athletics closer Andrew Bailey is a “real possibility” and that it should scare Madson and K-Rod. If Boston is taken off the board, that would leave only San Diego and Cincinnati as viable options, with the Mets getting close to a deal for Jon Rauch. The Rangers are lurking, though would only sign another closer under the “right circumstances”. Also, do not forget that Francisco Cordero, Cincinnati’s closer in 2011, is still in play. It’s essentially three closers and two viable jobs, so perhaps one of Madson or K-Rod will take the safe route and accept arbitration…The plot thickens.

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UPDATE, 7:47 PM EST: As is per the course, there will be conflicting reports. Peter Gammons tweets that there is no interest from Madson and K-Rod in accepting arbitration from their respective clubs. We’ll see which report is correct soon.

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I can’t say I expected it, but I can definitely say I hoped.

Jayson Stark reports that there are serious rumblings at the Winter Meetings that Ryan Madson will accept the Phillies offer of arbitration due to the lack of closing opportunities. Stark thinks that K-Rod could do the same with the Brewers. The move would deny the Phillies some prospects in this year’s draft, but this could set up one of the best bullpens the Phillies have had in a long time. Imagine a Phillies bullpen that includes Antonio Bastardo, Ryan Madson and Jonathan Papelbon. Top that with a rotation with Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee and Cole Hamels and the rumblings before next year won’t be the best rotation ever assembled: It may be the best Pitching Staff ever assembled.

Of course we’re ahead of ourselves. Ryan Madson still has to actually accept, which Scott Boras, the money-grubbing jerk that he is, is advising him against doing. However, the closer market is shrinking. The Marlins have nailed down Heath Bell. The Phillies have Papelbon. The Red Sox have Bard. The Angels are attempting to acquire Brandon League from the Mariners. The Brewers have Axford. The Blue Jays have Sergio Santos.

Does Madson really want to pitch in San Diego or New York (Mets) just so he has the opportunity to close? Would Madson take a closer position on a non-contender? If not, Cincinnati and Boston (if they are not confident in Bard) are your only options.

How much would Madson make in arbitration? $7 million? $8 million? Certainly not the $11 million he was going to make before his initial deal with the Phillies fell through. If Madson does make $8 million, then the Phillies would just about be limited to signing Jimmy Rollins this offseason. Aramis Ramirez may no longer factor into their financial plans. Madson accepting would also close the door on Brad Lidge returning to Philadelphia. The Phillies going through arbitration with Madson and signing Jimmy Rollins would leave them with some wiggle room during the season, which Amaro always likes so that he could make a mid-season move if need be.

There are so many questions, and so few answers. Would the potential of one of the best pitching staffs in the Majors be enough to entice Madson, like the rotation did with Lee? Would he accept less money to come back? Or would the opportunity to close be far more important, enough to make him pitch on a non-contender?

We’ll find out within the next 24 hours.

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Minor League Moves: Misch, Frandsen, Podsednik, Mathieson

The Phillies made a Quartet of Minor League Moves today, 3 of them being signings, and the last one being a relase. The Phillies signed Pitcher Pat Misch, Infielder Kevin Frandsen and Outfielder Scott Podsednik to Minor League Deals. Misch, 30, last saw signifcant time at the big leage level for the Mets in 2010 when Misch went 0-4 with a 3.82 ERA in 37.2 Innings, striking out 23 and walking 4. His WHIP was over 1.2 and his H/9 at an alarmingly high 10.3. In the Minors in 2011, Misch finished with an 8-9 record, and a 4.00 ERA in 141.2 IP. He struck out 94, walked 41, and had an even higher whip of 1.29. He managed to lower his H/9 to 9.0.

Frandsen, 29, spent 2011 with the Iron Pigs where he put up a .303/.356/.412 line with 4 HR and 40 RBI in 322 PA over 77 Games. He was 10 for 13 on the basepaths and committed 5 errors for a Fielding Percentage of .947.

Podsednik, 35, is a former All-Star and helped the White Sox capture the World Series Crown in 2005. He last appeared in the bigs with the Dodgers in 2010, and spent the entire 2011 Season in the minors. He split time between the Toronto and Philadelphia systems. He showed his age, suffering multiple injuries and limping to a final .245/.286/.396 line. He only played in 34 Games: 3 for the Phillies Florida Team in Rookie Ball, 3 for A+ Dunedin (TOR), 14 for AAA Las Vegas (TOR), and another 14 at AAA Lehigh Valley (PHI). Between the four squads, Podsednik was  .254/.340/.396 with no home runs and 8 RBI. He showed glimpses of his old speedy self, with 4 triples, and was perfect on the basepaths, swiping 6 bases.

Of the three, only Podsednik was reported to recieve an invite to Spring Training. If he can stay healthy, which is a big IF, he could possibly help the Phillies as an injury-replacement down the road. He still has speed, and when healthy is still one of the quickest around.

Honoring his wishes, the Phillies released Reliever Scott Mathieson, 27. A few hours later, he signed with the Yomuiri Giants of the Nippon League in Japan. With their closer out for the first few months of the season, Mathieson could potentially find a place in their bullpen on the big stage. Mathieson was once a promising prospect with a hot heater, but could never add movement to his pitches. The Phillies even brought in Hall-of-Famer Bruce Sutter to teach him his legendary Splitter, but failed. In three seasons with Philly, Mathieson had a career ERA of 6.75. With the bullpen packed with rising young stars, Antonio Bastardo, Justin De Fratus, Phillippe Aumont and Jacob Diekman among them, Mathieson didn’t seem to have a place in the Phillies organization. Best of luck to him as he pursues his opportunity with the Giants.

Phillies acquire UTL Wigginton from Rockies

The Phillies appear to be adressing one of their weak spots of 2011, which was their shallow bench. The Phillies acquired Utility Man Ty Wigginton from the Rockies for a Player to be named later or cash.

Wigginton, who turned 34 in October, has been on the Phillies radar for a while. The Phillies attempted to acquire him in 2010 during his all-star campaign with the Orioles (.248/.312/.415, 22 HR, 76 RBI), but the asking price from Baltimore was too steep for the Phillies liking. This time around, following his 2011 campaign with the Rockies (.242/.315/.416, 15 HR, 47 RBI), the Phillies got him for almost nothing. The Rockies included $2 Million in the deal, which means he will cost the Phillies only $2 Million in 2012. He has an option for 2013 at $4 Million, with a cheap $500K buyout. The Phillies must send Colorado either a PTBNL, which would likely be a no-name low-grade Prospect, or cash within the next 6 months or so.

Though he’s a lifetime .265 hitter, the Phillies acquired Wigginton due to his versatility. He would likely platoon with JMJ at First Base while Howard is injured, with perhaps Jim Thome starting once every so often. He can play second, third, and the corner outfield spots, giving Utley, Polanco and Pence breaks on occasion. He is only a year removed from a 20-HR season, so he does have some pop, though I wouldn’t expect much more than a dozen from him in 2012 if he’s lucky. Wigginton is pretty much a poor man’s Michael Cuddyer, and though the Wigginton deal doesn’t take the Phillies out of the running for his services, it makes him even more of a luxury, and makes a deal even more unlikely. Contributing to the fact is that on Baseball-Reference.com, Cuddyer scored a 934 on their similarity scale to Ty Wigginton, which is 7th among all big-leaguers.

Affectionately known as “Wiggy”, Wigginton has batted .265/.325/.443 with 158 HR and 548 RBI in 10 big-league seasons. He has played for the New York Mets, Pittsburgh Pirates, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Houston Astros, Baltimore Orioles and the Colorado Rockies. Of those ten teams, only the 2008 Houston Astros (86-75) have finished above .500. The Astros finished 3rd in the Central that year, so Wigginton has yet to experience the MLB Playoffs.

With the Wigginton deal, the Phillies essentially have 23 of their 25 players that will be on the 2012 Roster. All that’s missing is a Left Fielder and a Shortstop. The Phillies have around $18 million to spend on those two needs. That should be plenty to sign Jimmy Rollins to a 3-year deal, and perhaps a Josh Willingham-type as depth in the Outfield.

Have a happy thanksgiving.