What the Cubs Must Do (FanGraphs)

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JoeHawks is a fine gent
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Like Carlos Zambrano, I have reached my boiling point with the Cubs organization. There have been worse seasons than this one, but rarely has one seemed this disappointing. Perhaps that’s because one look at this roster and you realize: this modern era of Cubs success, 2003-2008, is over. An aging roster filled with bad salaries isn’t going to blossom into playoff caliber anytime soon. As I see it, there are two, and only two, moves that the Cubs can make:


1) Fire everybody.
2) Rebuild.


Preferably in that order. I have many written positive words about Jim Hendry, about Tim Wilken, about the Cubs front office in general over the last decade or so, as Hendry helped engineer an era of competitiveness. His mistakes were usually more subtle — the failure to sign Player X, Y or Z — although he’ll be remembered for ill-fated contracts given to Carlos Zambrano, Alfonso Soriano, and perhaps unfairly, Milton Bradley. But more, with talented rosters that were sometimes chosen by pundits to win a title, this front office and coaching staff never broke the curse that haunts the organization.


The Cubs now need a new leader, one with less personal ties to the assets in this organization, to begin anew. A person that would start with these moves:


1. Trade Ted Lilly and Kosuke Fukudome. This was the main point Jack Moore made in his “What Should the Cubs do” piece from last week, and since then, Lilly only lowered his ERA. The difference between that number (3.28) and his xFIP (4.63) is now staggering, and he represents the most typical mid-season trade chip the Cubs have. Trading Fukudome would mean eating salary in 2011, but if that means acquiring a decent prospect, it’s worth it.


2. Put Alfonso Soriano and Carlos Zambrano on waivers in August. This won’t work. But desperate times…


3. Keep Derrek Lee, Aramis Ramirez. This rebuild is not geared at success in 2011, so selling low won’t do any good. The draft compensation from Lee’s next signing will likely surpass his 2010 midseason trade value. Ramirez is a sure bet to pick up his $14.6 million player option for 2011, so I’m not sure you could trade him now anyway. But keeping him does allow for a bounce-back next season (while adding a year of development for Josh Vitters), which would allow you to trade him July 31, 2011.


4. Trade Marlon Byrd and Carlos Silva. Credit to Hendry where it’s due, as he may have created two assets out of thin air here. Byrd has been extremely valuable, and is signed to a team-friendly contract through 2012. A team like Atlanta, with their outfield problems and limited finances, would surely part with a good young player for Byrd. Silva’s value on the open market is a little less transparent, but given the Mariners commitment to his salary, he’d only come at $4 million for this year and $6 million for next year, without accounting for what the Cubs might kick in, too.


5. Trade Carlos Marmol. This would be wildly unpopular given Marmol’s quest to shatter the K/9 single-season record. But relievers tend to be overvalued in midseason markets, and Marmol would offer a team 2.5 seasons of arbitration-controlled salaries. He would, semi-deservedly, attract the biggest haul of the bunch. The Cubs could also afford to be stingy with their demands, as he might bring in just as much this winter.


Without question, these moves would be met with scrutiny from Cubs fans and media alike, but they also exist the only chance this team has to compete in a couple years. Hopefully the new person in charge could handle easy decisions like getting rid of the Koyie Hill temptation, returning Sean Marshall and Andrew Cashner to their rightful places in a rotation, riding the Tyler Colvin never-ending hot streak, etc. It shouldn’t be difficult.


Ownership groups are not remembered for the sponsors they land, or the renovations to bathrooms they finance. The Ricketts family must be decisive, and quickly, to salvage something from their inherited regime, and to ensure some eventual success.



Dear Mr. Ricketts: Fire them all. Start over. Faithfully, Bryan Smith.
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What the Cubs Must Do | FanGraphs Baseball


Thoughts, Cubs fans?
 

Diehardfan

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My favorite teams
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Like Carlos Zambrano, I have reached my boiling point with the Cubs organization. There have been worse seasons than this one, but rarely has one seemed this disappointing. Perhaps that’s because one look at this roster and you realize: this modern era of Cubs success, 2003-2008, is over. An aging roster filled with bad salaries isn’t going to blossom into playoff caliber anytime soon. As I see it, there are two, and only two, moves that the Cubs can make:


1) Fire everybody.
2) Rebuild.


You forgot one......

3) Nuke the Friendly Confines
 

Manticore

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Interesting write up. Of course it's a bit regurgitated from what "everybody's" opinions seem to be,aside from trading Carlos Silva and Marlon Byrd.

Moving Carlos Silva would definatey make sense at this point,considering,only now is he living up to the huge contract that he earned in Seattle. You would have to think that it's unrealistic that Silva continues to live up to his contract,and now that his stock is as high as it is now a contending team might consider him as a number 3,or 4 starter.

But for Marlon Byrd, he shares something in common with Carlos in that,he seems to be "overplaying" to what his presumed potential is.That aside,he's got a very manageable contract,and I don't believe you would recieve a whole lot in return for a guy like him. He's showing that he can be a solid starter, hitting in the .280-.300 range with 15-20 homeruns,good value for his contract.

I understand the Derek Lee argument from both sides. I still believe that he holds value to a few select contending teams. At this point in his career,you don't know what level of consistency or lack there of to expect from him. The point is to sell high on players,but will he hit that "high stock level" again?

Everyone is down on A-Ram and the "get rid of the bum" rhetoric is a bit old imo. He's been the most consistent hitter for the Cubs for a number of seasons and there's no reason to believe he won't continue to be,despite the poor season.

The biggest problem I think for the Cubs is Soriano. When he's hitting,he's worth having around but the run differential between his bat and his glove comes a little close to the red spectrum far too ofton. I don't know how realistic it is moving him from left to first,but I don't see too many other options considering his preposterous contract.
 

daddies3angels

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this team needs alot done...not just 1 or 2 not even 3 things done...ALOT
 

waldo7239117

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What to do:
Trade Kosuke, Nady, Lilly, Silva, Theriot, Baker, Fontenot, Wells
Try to trade Soriano (because of age), Ramirez (to man IF spects in minors, one can move to 3B), Zambrano, Grabow
Trade only if get good return Dempster, Byrd and Lee and Soto
Byrd, Lee and Dempster will be good role models to the young ones.
Keep everone else and call up the spects.
 

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