In a Red Sox uniform, Manny was no longer being Manny; he had simply been a spoiled brat over the past two weeks, publicly ridiculing the organization that pays him $16 million to swing thirty-four inches of maple a dozen times a day.
Selfish. Just like his agent Scott Boras. Coincidence? Doubtful.
No, Manny never broke a sweat sprinting to first on routine grounders and never received an A for effort on anyone’ report card, but the smiles, the pointing, the boyish attitude, and oh, the home runs and RBIs were enough for us to shake our heads, smile, and look the other way.
But it finally got past the point of production. “The Red Sox don’t deserve me,” Manny told the media earlier this week, as he compared his situation to those of former Red Sox superstars Pedro Martinez and Manny’s new teammate in
Good comparison, Manny.
One player can never be bigger than the team. Unfortunately, that’s what unfolded along
Following Manny’s mockeries including a sign that read, “Trade me to Green Bay for Brett Favre straight up,” what kind of message would keeping him send to his teammates, players like Kevin Youkilis (the same Kevin Youkilis that Ramirez slapped in the dugout weeks ago) who put their heart and soul into every pitch night-in and night-out?
Not one that I’d like to divulge.
So now the Red Sox are stuck with
Yeah, Bay for Manny is a sixty cents on the dollar type of trade, but since there was a good chance that that dollar was on the verge of becoming more worthless than a Charles Barkley golf lesson, dumping Manny became inescapable.
My issues with the deal don’t revolve around the departure of the future Hall of Famer. My issues revolve around everyone else involved. Why did
It’s like getting your wallet stolen, then sending the culprit your ipod in the mail.
The Dodgers only sent two prospects to
In terms of the rest of the season for
Plus, the Yankees are coming! The Yankees are coming! Four years ago, I’d end this column with, “Here we go again.”
Today, I’m at a loss of words and answers.
So I’ll just shrug and end it with: ?
1 comment:
Derek,
Neither Hansen nor Moss is any great loss to the Red Sox, in 2008 or beyond. Moss may well have a lengthy career as a productive fourth outfielder (or third outfielder, in his best days) but those guys are easily replaceable. And while Hansen does have more upside, let's not forget that he's now thrown more than 70 major league innings over parts of three seasons, and his numbers across the board are very bad (6.14 ERA, 1.66 WHIP).
As you know, the list of failed first-round draft picks is longer than the list of successes. Perhaps a change of scenery will help Hansen, but either way I don't think he ever was going to pan out in Boston.
If you think getting rid of Manny (and finding an adequate replacement for the rest of 2008) was important (and I agree that it was), then parting with Moss and Hansen seems a small price to pay.
Post a Comment