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07.26.2008 2:25 pm

A. Reyes dealt for Cleveland minor leaguer

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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NEW YORK — By dealing the righthander who just a few years ago was the organization’s top prospect, the Cardinals finally found the change of scenery that Anthony Reyes has been looking for.

The Cardinals traded Reyes from their Triple-A rotation to Cleveland for a minor-league reliever on Saturday. In the deal, the Cardinals received reliever Luis Perdomo, a 24-year-old righthander, and cash.

“Obviously, we were getting to a point where we had to make a decision with Anthony and what his future with us is,” general manager John Mozeliak said after finalizing the deal. “We were looking to add some depth to the minor-league system (in the bullpen) and wanted to do something that would have some implication for next year. We wanted to add depth.” 

Reyes, 26, peaked as a Cardinal by winning Game 1 of the 2006 World Series, but never really found traction as a major-league starter. A 15th-round pick out of Southern Cal in 2003, Reyes was a determined fireballer, an approach that served him well at Triple-A but didn’t translate to the major leagues despite his attempts. The Cardinals worked with him on expanding his array of pitches and getting him to embrace a two-seam fastball, though he did so with vary degrees — and velocities — of success.

Reyes went 10-24 in the majors, including a 2-14 turn through the rotation last year.

The righthander began this season in the Cardinals’ bullpen, experiencing some success as a middle reliever. He got his first win of the season and the first save of his career in consecutive appearances in April. The Cardinals returned him to Triple-A in May to rejoin the rotation there and either enhance outside interest in him or pitch his way back to the majors.

In the meantime, the Cardinals elected to have three rookies make spot starts at the major-league level rather than recall Reyes.

The indications were Reyes was a change-of-scenery candidate.

“We were looking at a lot of different things (with Reyes), and as it got closer to (the nonwaiver trade deadline) July 31st, we didn’t think the market was going to shift all that much after it,” Mozeliak said. “We could have gotten into the offseason and looked at what was available, but to maximize his value we thought it was better to do something sooner rather than later.”

Perdomo was 5-1 with a 1.66 ERA in 40 appearances this season, split between the Class A and Class AA levels. Overall, he’s struck out 60 and walked 24 in 54 1/3 innings. He was a Carolina League All-Star as a closer for the Indians’ High-A affiliate. Perdomo was most recently with Cleveland’s Double-A affiliate, where he was 2-0 with a 3.52. Signed in 2003 as an undrafted free agent, Perdomo spent three years at the Cleveland’s academy in the Dominican Republic before making his minor-league debut in 2006.

He throws a fastball in the 90-mph to 94-mph range and has an effective slider. He projects as a setup reliever.

Perdomo has been assigned to Double-A Springfield.

Here are a couple Web sites to check out his statistics and vitals:

More on the trade, the possibility of Chris Carpenter starting next week in Atlanta and other news later tonight on StlToday.com or in Sunday’s Post-Dispatch.

-30-

24 comments

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we didn’t get n know to help cardinals

— ronald
6:03 pm July 26th, 2008

Great. How’s this supposed to help right now?

— Harry Carey
6:13 pm July 26th, 2008

Considering that Reyes was going nowhere in St. Louis, this trade can’t hurt. The trade that IS hurting is the one that Mo isn’t making. Sure, it’s important to protect prospects, but considering that we have so many, we can spare SOME. Look at what the cubs and the Brewers have done. Now look at what we have done. It’s as though Mo is unconcerned about winning this year. Tony has been brilliant in getting the most out of less-than-stellar pitching and nearly zero offense (with the notable exception of Miles) from the middle infield. Tony, the players and the loyal fans should be rewarded with something beyond a AA pitcher!

— MedallionV283
6:32 pm July 26th, 2008

I am happy with this deal, and people need to remember that Reyes struggled in the majors even when they allowed him to pitch more to his style as opposed to sticking with Duncan’s strategy. He never showed an ability to consistently put away batters and consistently ran his pitch counts up early in the game. I for one am happy that the Cardinals are taking a patient approach and trying to rebuild the farm system instead of giving up prospects for a bullpen arm. If the offer was there for an impact bat or a front line pitcher, I am convinced that ownership and Mozeliak would make the deal.

— Tom
6:44 pm July 26th, 2008

Ok I surely hope this isnt the biggest move me make before the trade deadline. This will not even help us this year. We need help in a big way and I’m not positive that Carpenter or Wainwright can right this sinking ship. If the front-office is commited to winning right now they need to make a move right now and not twiddle their thumbs while all the decent talent goes to the wayside. AJ Burnett is available from the Blue Jays that would be a HUGE pick up. What about Brian Fuentes from the Rockies also rumored to be trade bait that would be the left hander reliever we are looking for. Come on Mozeliak pull the damn trigger do something…..We want a winner not a wait an see what happens. Then its like opps guess theres next year!

— Johnny_B
6:58 pm July 26th, 2008

I am disappointed in this deal. Not that I don’t think Perdomo “Could” be a solid setup or closer type pitcher but at 24 and just reaching AA it is way too early to know. I really thought the Cards would try to use Reyes as one of the chips in a bigger deal. If you can package Reyes and another Minor League arm and then maybe some lesser prospects for a significant bullpen guy or a bat that could be a big impact this year (and possibly longer depending on the contract situation of whom we received and their willingness to sign an extension with the Cards) then we should have done it. I don’t want to deplete our farm system again but if you can win as many games so far with the group we have had to play with (especially with all the injuries) then why would you not want to make the one or 2 deals that could impact us for this year? But who knows…maybe no other teams were interested in Reyes in a deal…that could have been it…but I would be surprised at that considering the lack of quality, reasonably priced SP’s that have been available the last few years. If Tier 3 and 4 SP’s are getting $7-10 Million a year in this day and age why would you not want to grab a guy like Reyes for a bargain? Even if we only get Wainwright or Carp health for the remainder of the year (both would be a HUGE plus but lets be conservative in our thinking) then one solid move for a bat or a bullpen guy will be a big boast and could push us over the edge. I just hope this is not the only move we make as it will say a whole lot about what the Front Office really thinks about this years team. Enough ranting for now…I have to go out and drink now!

— JC
7:38 pm July 26th, 2008

“I think Molinia may be their best trade bait.”

That’s insane! Two things. A. If you do that, you’re qualifing yourself as a seller, which doesn’t send an amazing message to a team in a division race. B. Who replaces him? You’d trust Brian Anderson to take over entirly? Or LaRue? Besides, he’s batting over .300. What’s bad about that? The catcher is the teams quarterback, and you don’t up and trade him.

The Cards have to make moves in a couple days to solve our bullpen problem. As much as Tony says it’s not a prob, it is. We’d be put right back in the middle of things once we get that stopper in the late innings. Imagine the relief we’ll have is someone like Sherrill is introduced before the ninth inning…

— Daniel
8:23 pm July 26th, 2008

I think they should trade Tony. It looks like he is trying to prove a point and running Ryan Franklyn out there every 9th inning to serve up batting practice is getting VERY OLD.
He is a robot of a manager, and his style has run its course in STL

— K Soble
10:00 pm July 26th, 2008

John Mozeliak is joke. The most important part of this deal is the “cash” the Cardinals will receive. That money will go straight into Bill DeWitt’s pocket, just like all the rest. We will continue to see sub-par talent on the field and hope that we get lucky with a few players like Ludwick and Lohse. I am absolutely sick of Mozeliak and ownership. They should all be ashamed of their money-grubbing selves!

— Michael Williams
10:57 pm July 26th, 2008

Well…Franklin sure wasn’t the answer in the 9th again tonight, was he?

— Fernando Tatis
11:08 pm July 26th, 2008

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