When I woke up Thursday morning there was grumbling the
Oakland Athletics might be in the Jon Lester sweepstakes. Within 20 minutes of
my groggy eyes checking in on MLB Networks on the television and twitter on my
phone I saw that Yoenis Cespedes was going to be part of the deal.
At first I was shocked that the A’s would trade a middle of
the order bat, and especially a guy like Cespedes, who said he wanted to play
his entire career in Oakland, would be traded to the Boston Red Sox in exchange
for Jon Lester.
As the trade began to formalize I saw the return of Jonny
Gomes and cash to the Oakland franchise while a competitive balance Comp B pick
would be heading to Boston to balance out the deal.
Overall, I was more shocked than anything. I thought the
July 5 deal with the Chicago Cubs for Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel were the
icing on Billy Beane’s 2014 cake, but boy was I wrong.
Within just a few hours after the Cespedes-Lester trade the
talking heads on MLB networks were talking about the second of the A’s moves.
This time it was a lesser deal. How could it have been any
bigger? Wait, let me retract that statement, they could have traded Lew Wolf
for a new owner. But back to reality, the A’s were trading a minor league, but
major league ready pitcher in Tommy Milone, to the Minnesota Twins for Sam
Fuld.
Milone had asked to be traded after being sent to AAA
Sacramento when the A’s landed Samardzija and Hammel in the deal with the Cubs.
But to trade Milone for a guy the A’s had DFA’d earlier in the season? It
almost seemed comical. That they had kept a guy like Daric Barton on the roster
in order to drop Fuld, and now were trading a major league ready pitcher away
to get Fuld back.
While obtaining Fuld makes sense with injuries to Coco Crisp
and Craig Gentry, the value to get Fuld back seemed a little much. But such is
baseball, and such is life.
The addition of Fuld, Gomes and Lester gave the A’s
the best and deepest rotation in baseball, and added to the depth in the outfield ... that is until the Detroit Tigers pulled out a
last second three-team trade with the Seattle Mariners and the Tampa Bay Rays to
land David Price.
The Cespedes-Lester trade might have been overshadowed by the Price trade but shouldn't be as the two teams might be on a collision course to face each other once again in the playoffs.
The Cespedes-Lester trade might have been overshadowed by the Price trade but shouldn't be as the two teams might be on a collision course to face each other once again in the playoffs.
The green and gold franchise would stand pat for the rest of
the day much like their cross Bay Area counter parts in the San Francisco Giants, as
general manager Brian Sabean did not pull the trigger on any trades before the
4 p.m. ET trade deadline on July 31.
While Beane and Sabean took totally different routes to get
through the trading deadline both are still on the look out for something that
could bolster their second base corps before the waiver-trading deadline is
reached at the end of August.
For both the Athletics and the Giants, the Philadelphia
Phillies’ Jimmy Rollins and Chase Utley look like the most eligible candidates
to fuel another chance at a World Series run, for one or both of the Bay Area
franchises.
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