CSS Button No Image Css3Menu.com

Baseball Prospectus home
  
  
Click here to log in Click here to subscribe
<< Previous Article
Premium Article Rubbing Mud: Three Out... (08/24)
<< Previous Column
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (08/21)
Next Column >>
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (08/26)
Next Article >>
Premium Article Soft Toss: Setting Up ... (08/24)

August 24, 2015

Transaction Analysis

Marlon "Thunder" Byrd Flies the Coop

by R.J. Anderson

the archives are now free.

All Baseball Prospectus Premium and Fantasy articles more than a year old are now free as a thank you to the entire Internet for making our work possible.

Not a subscriber? Get exclusive content like this delivered hot to your inbox every weekday. Click here for more information on Baseball Prospectus subscriptions or use the buttons to the right to subscribe and get instant access to the best baseball content on the web.

Subscribe for $4.95 per month
Recurring subscription - cancel anytime.


a 33% savings over the monthly price!

Purchase a $39.95 gift subscription
a 33% savings over the monthly price!

Already a subscriber? Click here and use the blue login bar to log in.


IN THIS ISSUE

American League
National League

DETROIT TIGERS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Acquired LHP Randy Wolf from the Blue Jays in exchange for cash considerations. [8/20]

Is it worse that the Tigers needed Wolf, or that they had to give up something to get him? Anibal Sanchez and Daniel Norris are on the disabled list; Shane Greene is having his own health problems; Kyle Lobstein struggled in his most recent rehab outing; and Kyle Ryan is Kyle Ryan. Shy of resorting to a bullpen game (never an advisable strategy for Detroit) or rushing Luis Cessa or Michael Fulmer to the majors, the Tigers didn't have many internal choices. Hence Wolf.

Realistically, this could be Wolf's final big-league stint. Now 39, he had spent the season in the minors, where he pitched well, just not with the kind of stuff that normally works in the majors, including that slow, looping curve. Perhaps Wolf hangs around for another season, but odds are he'll pass on potentially celebrating his 40th birthday on a Triple-A bus. The Tigers just hope he can gnaw on some innings and buy time for their younger pitchers before he submits his retirement papers. —R.J. Anderson

MINNESOTA TWINS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Acquired LHP Neal Cotts from the Brewers in exchange for a player to be named later or cash considerations. [8/21]

Sure, why not? The Twins have faded recently, but technically remain in the race, meaning small upgrades still matter. Besides, Cotts will provide insight to Paul Molitor's thinking on platoon splits and sample sizes. If Molitor focuses on this season alone, he'll use Cotts as a LOOGY; if Molitor instead defers to the larger body of work, or to career numbers, then Cotts will be used against righties at least as often as lefties. Either way, Cotts' biggest problem with the Brewers was avoiding the long ball. Presuming a move to Minnesota helps curb that issue, he ought to be a cheap, worthwhile get for the Twins. —R.J. Anderson

TAMPA BAY RAYS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Recalled LHP Enny Romero from Triple-A Durham; placed LHP Jake McGee on the 15-day disabled list (knee surgery). [8/20]

McGee's absence for the remainder of the season means an already weak Rays' bullpen will require new faces in unfamiliar places. While Alex Colome is more likely to take on high-leverage work, Romero becomes Kevin Cash's only power lefty. In his first season as a reliever, he's shown an upper-90s fastball that has some tailing action. Unfortunately, his command has always been problematic, and he doesn't have a consistently above-average pitch. Should Romero make gains in those areas, he has a real chance to become an end-game fixture. For now, the Rays figure to use him as a long man. —R.J. Anderson

CINCINNATI REDS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Acquired RHP Stephen Johnson from the Giants in exchange for OF-R Marlon Byrd. [8/20]

Johnson gained some top-100 talk coming out of the 2012 draft, but concerns about his delivery and secondary offerings saw the right-hander from St. Edward's University in Texas fall to the sixth round. He has an elite fastball, occasionally touching the high 90s and sitting 94-96. He'll also show a power curve that isn't often in the strike zone, but the spin and late break keep hitters off balance and make it a swing-and-miss pitch. Unless he can learn to limit the walks, he likely won't be much more than a middle reliever. —Christopher Crawford

MIAMI MARLINS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Purchased the contract of RHP Scott McGough from Triple-A New Orleans; optioned C-S Tomas Telis to Triple-A New Orleans. [8/20]

The smaller piece of the Hanley Ramirez payout—literally and figuratively—McGough's arrival took longer than anticipated after he missed 2014 following Tommy John surgery. The Marlins wasted no time returning McGough to the fast track once he returned, promoting him to the majors following 32 minor-league innings. The hope has always been that he'd find enough consistency with his command and secondaries to maximize the effectiveness of his mid-90s fastball. The upshot here is a seventh-inning arm, but it's more likely he'll settle into a middle-relief role. —R.J. Anderson

PITTSBURGH PIRATES
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Signed OF-L Travis Snider to a minor-league deal. [8/19]

Perhaps Snider just missed Pittsburgh? Traded to Baltimore following a seeming breakout effort, Snider's numbers have looked more like, well, his old set. Truthfully, he had an okay season going until a 3-for-36, zero-extra-base-hit stretch that dropped his OPS from .734 to .659. The Pirates will try to get Snider straightened out—again—with the premise that he could provide value during the final few weeks as a left-handed pinch-hit option. He has a season of team control remaining, so this could be a relationship that extends into 2016. —R.J. Anderson

SAN DIEGO PADRES
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Acquired RHP Jon Edwards as the player to be named later in the Will Venable trade. [8/21]

Edwards has been in professional baseball since 2006, and the profile hasn't changed much since he was a 14th-round pick by St. Louis nine years ago. The fastball is above average and will touch 96, and he'll also show a fringe-average slider that sits in the mid-80s; he added a curveball this year to keep hitters off his two-pitch arsenal. That arsenal is only so-so, and is made worse by serious control issues (113 walks in just over 168 innings). As you would expect, his command is equally bad.

Websters doesn't define what an "up-and-down arm" actually is, but if it did, the editors could just paste in a picture of Edwards. —Christopher Crawford

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart
Return to Top

Acquired OF-R Marlon Byrd from the Reds in exchange for RHP Stephen Johnson. [8/20]

With the Giants thinking playoffs and Hunter Pence out for at least a few weeks due to a strained oblique, Bobby Evans needed to find an upgrade over Justin Maxwell. Mac Williamson seemed like the best internal option—he's 25 and has performed well this season in the high minors—but in the end Evans decided to grab a veteran stopgap. So what does Byrd bring to the nest—er, table?

Power. Lots of power. Byrd has continued his late-career surge by homering 19 times in his first 388 plate appearances, an important figure given he'd homered 20-plus times in a season just once before turning 35. It's a good thing Byrd has learned to leverage his strength more often, because his aggressive approach results in tons of strikeouts and few walks. There's also the matter of Byrd's declining performance against same-hand pitchers; his .268 on-base percentage versus righties would be the lowest single-season mark of his career by nearly 30 points. In theory, the Giants could use someone like Ryan Lollis to spare him against tougher righties, but it's unclear if that's in the plans.

What seems more certain is that Byrd won't be a long-term fixture in San Francisco. The Giants hold a cheaper club option on Nori Aoki than on Byrd, whose contract would call for an additional $2.5 million. Besides, Byrd's age and all-or-nothing approach make him a legitimate attrition risk heading forward. Best-case scenario: Byrd helps the Giants reach the postseason, and does so with enough offensive gusto to draw trade interest. —R.J. Anderson


R.J. Anderson is an author of Baseball Prospectus. 
Click here to see R.J.'s other articles. You can contact R.J. by clicking here

Related Content:  Trades

1 comment has been left for this article.

<< Previous Article
Premium Article Rubbing Mud: Three Out... (08/24)
<< Previous Column
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (08/21)
Next Column >>
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (08/26)
Next Article >>
Premium Article Soft Toss: Setting Up ... (08/24)

RECENTLY AT BASEBALL PROSPECTUS
Playoff Prospectus: Come Undone
BP En Espanol: Previa de la NLCS: Cubs vs. D...
Playoff Prospectus: How Did This Team Get Ma...
Playoff Prospectus: Too Slow, Too Late
Premium Article Playoff Prospectus: PECOTA Odds and ALCS Gam...
Premium Article Playoff Prospectus: PECOTA Odds and NLCS Gam...
Playoff Prospectus: NLCS Preview: Cubs vs. D...

MORE FROM AUGUST 24, 2015
Premium Article The Call-Up: Trea Turner
Fantasy Rounders: Sharknado
Premium Article The Prospectus Hit List: August 24, 2015
Premium Article Monday Morning Ten Pack: August 24, 2015
Premium Article What You Need to Know: August 24, 2015
Premium Article Minor League Update: Games of August 21-23, ...
Fantasy Article Player Profile: Carlos Beltran

MORE BY R.J. ANDERSON
2015-08-31 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Sometimes You Hit the ...
2015-08-28 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Roach Motel
2015-08-26 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: The Older the Cubs, th...
2015-08-24 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Marlon "Thunder" Byrd ...
2015-08-21 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Utley Confidential
2015-08-20 - Premium Article Painting the Black: The Transactions We Miss...
2015-08-17 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Steve the Cleaver Come...
More...

MORE TRANSACTION ANALYSIS
2015-08-31 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Sometimes You Hit the ...
2015-08-28 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Roach Motel
2015-08-26 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: The Older the Cubs, th...
2015-08-24 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Marlon "Thunder" Byrd ...
2015-08-21 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Utley Confidential
2015-08-19 - Transaction Analysis: The Shake-Up in Boston
2015-08-17 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Steve the Cleaver Come...
More...