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01.04.2009 10:21 am

Which starter should the Cardinals seek?

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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With the loss of Aaron Miles and the closer’s job still open, the rotation hasn’t been discussed as much lately, but there is one spot to be filled. Your thoughts? Some of mine are contained below in the answers to your questions.

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Q: With the Cardinals needing another starting pitcher in the rotation for next year, why don’t they attempt to deal for Jake Peavy? The Cardinals were one of the last seven teams on his list a while ago. After talks fell through with the Cubs, why don’t the Cards jump in to get him? The Cards have outfielders for trading; the Padres have a mess in their outfield.

Ray

A: Ideally, a good idea. But the Padres don’t seem to have any large interest in any of the Cardinals’ outfielders other than Colby Rasmus, whom the Cardinals don’t want to trade. Ankiel and Ludwick will be making considerable money this season and the Padres don’t want to take on payroll when they’re unloading payroll.

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Q: First, belated congrats on your Hall Of Fame induction. Do you think the Cards have interest in Oliver Perez and if so what type of free agent contract would it take to land him? I think he’s still young enough that we haven’t seen his best just yet. My second question is what do you think it would take to acquire Bobby Jenks from the White Sox? It seems the Sox are looking to reduce their payroll and Jenks would make a nice fit here. Thanks for taking the time to read my questions.
Golferguy

A: Thanks for your kind words. The Cardinals have interest in Perez, but Perez probably has interest in a three-year contract, which does not suit the Cardinals’ desires. Let’s see what Derek Lowe gets and then some of the other pitchers like Perez will fall in line. I’d love to have Jenks, although you would have to decide if you want him to be your closer for several years or just one, until Perez and Motte are more ready.

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Q: Hi, Commish. I’ve seen early where the Cardinals may not be able to afford to sign Looper, but haven’t heard a word about him since. I would just as soon have him back than to sign Randy Wolf or Oliver Perez. Looper has progressed nicely since moving from the bullpen and now could very well be the innings-eater the Cardinals need. Would Looper cost more than Wolf or Perez?
Bill

A: Looper probably would cost less because he isn’t lefthanded, as Perez and Wolf are, in a market not rife with lefthanded starters. If the Cardinals can’t fill their starting pitching need another way, Looper would be a good fit. But he may not choose to wait and might want to sign elsewhere.

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Q: Mr. Commish, some thoughts have been rolling around in my head over the latest losses for the Cards. Even though the Cards do not like to give starter money to backups, hence the departure of Miles, what about sucking up that notion, moving Kennedy into a supersub (if he can handle the role, it would set him up nice for the future because he won’t be a starter after his showing in STL) and sign O. Hudson to take over second. It doesn’t give us a power bat like Tony would like, but it gives us consistency both on defense and offense. He could be a legit No. 2 hitter and possible leadoff man, depending on Schumaker. The other idea is signing Trevor Hoffman for a year or two to lead the bullpen and give Motte and Perez some wonderful guidance and teaching. Your thoughts?
Derek

A: If you sign Hudson, then you’re paying Kennedy $4 million to be a utility player and the Cardnals don’t want a utility player making that much. Hudson probably would cost that much and suddenly you have $8 million at second base, which the Cardinals won’t do. For whatever reasons, they have shown little interest in Hoffman.

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23 comments

Comments are closed.

I can not believe that we have not signed Will Ohman! In my opion he is a better fit than Fuentes. If Ohman was a cardinal last year, we would have
been in the post season. What about Jon Garland? If you dont want to resign
Looper, Garland or Wolfe are our bet options. I personally, am very weary
of our continous salavation over players that we have no chance to sign. I
would love to see Mulder in spring training with a chance to make the team,
along with Izzy, Johnson, Freddy Garcia, etc. I feel that Mr Dewitt has
failed to live up to the promises that he made when he was lobbying for a
new stadium. Garland & Ohman would likely make us a post season favorite!

— Howard Roberts
5:18 pm January 4th, 2009

Commish. I see where the Cardinals are in the final 3 for starting pitcher Kenshin Kawakami from Japan. The Orioles are worried about his arm. What can you tell us about him from his playing days in Japan age, arm problems,innings pitched each year? Is he a strike out pitcher?

— Bryan Cathey
9:41 pm January 4th, 2009

Hi Mr. H,
Thanks for answering our questions.
There seems to be a debate raging about TLR and what people see as his fear/distrust/dislike for using rookies and young players. I think Tony prefers even marginally talented veterans to using the less proven, though very talented rookies. When he uses a rookie it seems to be because he has no other options (Wainwright, McClellan) or because the player didn’t give him a choice (Albert, Ludwick after Duncan failing for the umpteenth time). LaRussa is a good manager but others sure seem alot better at using and developing young talent at the majir league level.
Your thoughts?
Thanks Commish

— Doodah
6:50 am January 5th, 2009

Bryan:

Here are some excerpts on scouting reports I found on Kawakami:

[Kawakami is known as a crafty veteran who is said to throw a 90 MPH fastball, a slow curveball, and a very good cutter. He has a reputation as a big-game pitcher who challenges hitters.]

[Kawakami is a smart, creative pitcher who is known for finding ways to get even the toughest hitters out in big situations. His heavy fastball is not overpowering, but his crafty assortment of off-speed pitches makes him a ground-ball specialist, which should draw interest from teams in the USA's smaller ballparks. His curve can be especially knee-buckling.]

Here are his stats (in English) from him Career:
http://japanesebaseball.com/players/player.jsp?PlayerID=1026

— Mark Varner
8:33 am January 5th, 2009

I still don’t see why the Cards don’t go after Peavy. Surely they have enough to trade with a 3rd team to get something SD wants. Assuming the Cards can only trade with SD straight-up to make this happen is the exact thinking the Cards are hoping the fans will fall for.

— Pat
11:15 am January 5th, 2009

The starting pitcher the Cardinals should have signed is gone signed with the Yankees. CC Sabathia who the Cardinals should have tried to sign last year when he was available would have probably won between 10 and 15 games.

Additionally, its too late now but the Cardinals should have built a 50,000 seat stadium instead of 42,5000 seat one. The addition seating would have generated more money to help sign these free agents. In building anything you should always plan ahead for possible future needs.

— flyer19999
11:15 am January 5th, 2009

Mark. THANK YOU for the info on Kawakami !!!!!!! Bryan

— Bryan Cathey
11:18 am January 5th, 2009

Dewitt has provided a championship if anyone remembers in the not so distant past of 2006, the cardinals just get trapped with not wanting to get rid of prospects because their farm system isnt usually very deep, we have a surplus of outfielders and decent reliever prospects…unload them for peavy hes worth it, and grab jenks as well until perez or motte is ready, if peavy isnt an option then get garland, or garcia, everyone forgets that dave duncan isnt a pitching guru

— Evan
11:41 am January 5th, 2009

I have no idea why no one is talking about Ben Sheets. The guy can easily step in and be a #1-#2 starter. We can probably get him for a 2 year deal and for under the going rate for a #1 arm. Why is he flying under the radar? The cards need to snatch him up before someone else wises up.

— supersleuth
11:45 am January 5th, 2009

Rick, I just wondered if you knew if the great Bob Burns was in the hall of fame or Bob Broeg?
Those guys were real class acts. I used to pick up a post and globe paper every morning on the way to high school and read every Benchwarmer column he ever wrote. One year they both came to our school for a talk in the autotorium and I got a chance to meet them both. Nicest guys I ever met.

— Mark
12:14 pm January 5th, 2009

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