I hate November. It’s a terribly boring month. There is zero baseball, and the news all consist of rumors, nothing big going down. Football is not at the critical stage yet, and basketball is only just coming around. Since all my energy is poured into baseball, I only have passing interest in football and basketball until the playoffs. I’ve had to content myself with Mike Timlin getting signed, Mike Cameron getting traded, and Scott Eyre signing a lucrative contract. Is it April yet? It’s been a crazy month in my personal life too, so I haven’t said much recently. Let’s change that, there’s quite a bit to talk about.

I’m actually a little – just a little – happy that Theo’s gone now. Theo is one of, and probably the best, GM out there, but there’s something to be said for new faces. Lucchino is planning to hire someone who is heavy into scouting and player development, which I think is the way to go. Statistics are great and they’re here to stay and the Red Sox are so ingrained into statistics they won’t go away, but statistics while showing trends and whatnot are not the end-all be-all. What if someone hits for a three-year average at .250/.320/.375 and entering into his first year of arbitration? Under statistics, you’d drop him. But what if that offseason he found a new trainer, shed 20 pounds, added muscle, and matured to the point that he stopped partying? Maybe he’d hit .275/.350/.450 the next season. There are many examples out there of busts and surprises, all of which seemingly come out of nowhere. And you can’t convince me that statistics always show that busts or surprises come, because you can find (or if not – create it – that’s the point we’re at) any statistic to back up your opinion. The scouting department has to analyze players, their attitudes, their life-changing events. Yes, statistics are important, but at this juncture with the Red Sox, it’s also important to have an eye towards player development. Theo combined the two very effectively, but still tilted a bit towards statistics. Not a bad thing, but I was excited to get Moore who would have brought the same but tilted to development. But that’s not happening now.

Bill Lajoie is the acting GM right now but has no interest in making it a fulltime job, which means we can’t name him interim GM for a year. Just name Jed Hoyer interim GM for a year and try again next year. Don’t sign a GM just for the sake of getting one – get the right one. It’s not happening this year, so just go with an interim GM. It worked out well when Mike Port was interim GM for 2002, for we found the right one the next year.


However, it will probably be 2007 before any drastic changes because the first offense is no suspension, just mandatory retesting. I’m sure a lot of people will test positive, but they’ll continue to use it because they won’t be suspended and they’ll take the (good chance – you must be tested at least once per season but the rest is up to pure chance if you’re retested) chance that they won’t be retested. Much like 2005, it’s going to take a year for players to wake up and learn the effects. 2006 is going to be devastating in terms of steroid suspensions, but most people with the new agreement and effects of last year are going to go off. It’s going to take a year for amphetamine use to decline, so while we may see some decline of statistics this coming year, 2007 should change the face of baseball.

Perhaps signing a one or two year stopgap in centerfield is the way to go, but the only way we will do that is if we commit to retooling. The CF options out there that take 1 or 2 year deals do that for a reason – they’re not good enough to command a 3 or 4 year deal. They can have value, but they’re not neccessarily the best options out there. The next GM of the Red Sox is going to have to be extremely smart, because he’s going to be presiding over the watershed years of transition. These next three years are incredibly vital to the franchise.



Don’t be surprised to see Damon end up on the Tigers. He’s a Boras client, and the last two years big Boras clients who command so much money that literally no one is interested have ended up on the Tigers – Ivan Rodriguez and Magglio Ordonez. The Tigers could create incentive laden and easily attainable incentives for Damon in a contract. This way they’d be protected against a massive decline or injury from Damon – kind of like we were with David Wells in 2005.

Predictions (just for fun, no clue how it’ll really turn out)… Brian Giles to the Yankees, AJ Burnett to the Devil Rays, Matt Morris to the Rangers, Jarrod Washburn to the Yankees, Esteban Loaiza to the Orioles, Carlos Delgado traded to the Mets, Aaron Rowand traded to the Red Sox.
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