What has already been a nightmarish and pathetic offseason for the Atlanta Braves "Baseball Orginization", if you want to call it that, took the worst turn of them all today, when John Smoltz, who spent twenty years with the Braves, and compiled a 210-147 record, with 154 saves, numbers that should definitely get him to the Hall of Fame, signed with the Boston Red Sox.
This all happened for.. a difference of three million dollars. Yes, three million is a lot of money, but, to a baseball team that has already had an offseason where we could not trade for Jake Peavy, lost A.J. Burnett to the Yankees, and had Rafael Furcal supposedly renage on an agreed deal, to return to the Dodgers, this one is the cruelest blow of them all.
When Tom Glavine left Atlanta six years ago, he turned down a good offer from them. That was his doing, and, to be honest, I had a sense of satisfaction watching him struggle in New York.
Although Smoltz is 41 years old, when a guy posts the numbers he has, and comes back from two shoulder surgeries, including Tommy John Surgery, to pitch as he has, I say, that the Braves should have risked the extra couple of million. They supposedly had "thirty million" to spend this winter on players, and their whole winter's signing list has been... Javier Vazquez, a decent move, if combined with others. With Javier Vazquez, Jair Jurrgens, now no John Smoltz, and maybe no Tom Glavine, this team is going to be terrible in 2009. If you read Chipper Jones' comments in todays Atlanta Journal Constitution, it sounds very much like this may be his last year in a Braves uniform, as his contract is up, and he may well be playing somewhere else in 2010.
It would serve Liberty Media and the Braves hierarchy right if they lost, oh, say 106 games, (Their loss total in 1988, the year Smoltz came up), and if, in this terrible economy, attendance sank, to 1 million fans. Hopefully, after this year, the Braves will clean house. Bobby Cox will retire, and team president John Scherholtz, and GM Frank Wren, will either be fired, or will both resign in shame.
If anyone has a link to the Smoltz deal with the Red Sox, and could post it, it would be appreciated.
Mitch
This all happened for.. a difference of three million dollars. Yes, three million is a lot of money, but, to a baseball team that has already had an offseason where we could not trade for Jake Peavy, lost A.J. Burnett to the Yankees, and had Rafael Furcal supposedly renage on an agreed deal, to return to the Dodgers, this one is the cruelest blow of them all.
When Tom Glavine left Atlanta six years ago, he turned down a good offer from them. That was his doing, and, to be honest, I had a sense of satisfaction watching him struggle in New York.
Although Smoltz is 41 years old, when a guy posts the numbers he has, and comes back from two shoulder surgeries, including Tommy John Surgery, to pitch as he has, I say, that the Braves should have risked the extra couple of million. They supposedly had "thirty million" to spend this winter on players, and their whole winter's signing list has been... Javier Vazquez, a decent move, if combined with others. With Javier Vazquez, Jair Jurrgens, now no John Smoltz, and maybe no Tom Glavine, this team is going to be terrible in 2009. If you read Chipper Jones' comments in todays Atlanta Journal Constitution, it sounds very much like this may be his last year in a Braves uniform, as his contract is up, and he may well be playing somewhere else in 2010.
It would serve Liberty Media and the Braves hierarchy right if they lost, oh, say 106 games, (Their loss total in 1988, the year Smoltz came up), and if, in this terrible economy, attendance sank, to 1 million fans. Hopefully, after this year, the Braves will clean house. Bobby Cox will retire, and team president John Scherholtz, and GM Frank Wren, will either be fired, or will both resign in shame.
If anyone has a link to the Smoltz deal with the Red Sox, and could post it, it would be appreciated.
Mitch
Last edited: