What if, as part of the plan, the Cards acquire a lesser value closer, like the one the Rays are considering moving?Ronnie Dobbs wrote: ↑21 May 2025 07:07 am If they're still in the race by the deadline, they're not trading Helsley.
Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
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Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
Name a better closer. Somebody is going to pay for quality, it might as well be the Cards. Do you think Helsley is just going to stop being a top quality closer?An Old Friend wrote: ↑27 May 2025 14:04 pmAside from a 5 year deal being an abhorrent idea for any reliever… just because Helsley is the closer on your favorite team does not make him the best closer in baseball.CCard wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:06 am Or....Follow me here....Or...They could pony up and sign the best closer in baseball long term. I know it goes against everything St Louis stands for, but imagine not having to worry about closer for 5 or more years. And if things do happen to fall apart, they could always trade him sometime during that contract which would probably make him even more valuable to a team wanting him. Shocking common sense, right?
No offense, but what you perceive as common sense is nearly the exact opposite of actual common sense.
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
Why they wouldn't want to be competitive I don't understand.Melville wrote: ↑27 May 2025 08:48 amI advised that exact thing last off-season.CCard wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:06 am Or....Follow me here....Or...They could pony up and sign the best closer in baseball long term. I know it goes against everything St Louis stands for, but imagine not having to worry about closer for 5 or more years. And if things do happen to fall apart, they could always trade him sometime during that contract which would probably make him even more valuable to a team wanting him. Shocking common sense, right?
Makes far more sense to extend Helsley than to trade him.
STL should have made a serious offer last fall/winter.
To the best of our knowledge, they did not.
Foolish mistake.
They should correct that error in the next month or so.
Helsley could reject an offer, but the CORRECT BASEBALL DECISION is to make a truly competitive attempt to do so.
Easy.
Obvious.
Correct.
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
LOL...You're funny. Seriously, step away from the keyboard. Bruce Sutter, Lee Smith, "Goose" Gossage, Billy Wagner, Trevor Hoffman, and others would all like a word with you.Ozziesfan41 wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:23 amSigning a closer to a long term contract is not common sense it’s probably one of the dumbest things a team can do especially if it doesn’t have unlimited payroll. And it’s worrying every time he takes the mound this season because you never which Helsley you’re going to getCCard wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:06 am Or....Follow me here....Or...They could pony up and sign the best closer in baseball long term. I know it goes against everything St Louis stands for, but imagine not having to worry about closer for 5 or more years. And if things do happen to fall apart, they could always trade him sometime during that contract which would probably make him even more valuable to a team wanting him. Shocking common sense, right?
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Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
lol you’re funny. step away from the keyboard. we aren’t talking old school closers we are talking modern day closers and their spin rates and lack of consistency year in and year out. The way you talk let’s say starters are a great investment because Pedro Martinez and bob Gibson and others threw 200 innings per year. You would have probably been advocating signing Rosenthal to a long term extension or motteCCard wrote: ↑29 May 2025 12:47 pmLOL...You're funny. Seriously, step away from the keyboard. Bruce Sutter, Lee Smith, "Goose" Gossage, Billy Wagner, Trevor Hoffman, and others would all like a word with you.Ozziesfan41 wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:23 amSigning a closer to a long term contract is not common sense it’s probably one of the dumbest things a team can do especially if it doesn’t have unlimited payroll. And it’s worrying every time he takes the mound this season because you never which Helsley you’re going to getCCard wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:06 am Or....Follow me here....Or...They could pony up and sign the best closer in baseball long term. I know it goes against everything St Louis stands for, but imagine not having to worry about closer for 5 or more years. And if things do happen to fall apart, they could always trade him sometime during that contract which would probably make him even more valuable to a team wanting him. Shocking common sense, right?
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
Agreed.CCard wrote: ↑29 May 2025 12:17 pmWhy they wouldn't want to be competitive I don't understand.Melville wrote: ↑27 May 2025 08:48 amI advised that exact thing last off-season.CCard wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:06 am Or....Follow me here....Or...They could pony up and sign the best closer in baseball long term. I know it goes against everything St Louis stands for, but imagine not having to worry about closer for 5 or more years. And if things do happen to fall apart, they could always trade him sometime during that contract which would probably make him even more valuable to a team wanting him. Shocking common sense, right?
Makes far more sense to extend Helsley than to trade him.
STL should have made a serious offer last fall/winter.
To the best of our knowledge, they did not.
Foolish mistake.
They should correct that error in the next month or so.
Helsley could reject an offer, but the CORRECT BASEBALL DECISION is to make a truly competitive attempt to do so.
Easy.
Obvious.
Correct.
Makes zero sense to not make the attempt to lock up Helsey for another 4-5 years - before he hits the open market.
Very easily done.
And would provide a level of certainty concerning one very key role, leaving them free to address other roster needs moving forward.
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
just watched the ending of the PHllies/Braves
Romano is no closer.
7.29 ERA
got the save but looked VERY IFFY.
game ended with loaded bases.
Phillies could REALLY use Helsley.
Romano is no closer.
7.29 ERA
got the save but looked VERY IFFY.
game ended with loaded bases.
Phillies could REALLY use Helsley.
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Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
Just admit you're wrong and go on. Not going to argue with you about it, I posted the proof. LOLOzziesfan41 wrote: ↑29 May 2025 13:32 pmlol you’re funny. step away from the keyboard. we aren’t talking old school closers we are talking modern day closers and their spin rates and lack of consistency year in and year out. The way you talk let’s say starters are a great investment because Pedro Martinez and bob Gibson and others threw 200 innings per year. You would have probably been advocating signing Rosenthal to a long term extension or motteCCard wrote: ↑29 May 2025 12:47 pmLOL...You're funny. Seriously, step away from the keyboard. Bruce Sutter, Lee Smith, "Goose" Gossage, Billy Wagner, Trevor Hoffman, and others would all like a word with you.Ozziesfan41 wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:23 amSigning a closer to a long term contract is not common sense it’s probably one of the dumbest things a team can do especially if it doesn’t have unlimited payroll. And it’s worrying every time he takes the mound this season because you never which Helsley you’re going to getCCard wrote: ↑27 May 2025 07:06 am Or....Follow me here....Or...They could pony up and sign the best closer in baseball long term. I know it goes against everything St Louis stands for, but imagine not having to worry about closer for 5 or more years. And if things do happen to fall apart, they could always trade him sometime during that contract which would probably make him even more valuable to a team wanting him. Shocking common sense, right?
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
sure there is. Wacha was a comp pick.
When you make a comp pick you pick the best player out there based on your own extensive scouting and you have hundreds of options to choose from. When you trade for prospects, you get what other teams are willing to give up, and they will exclude their highest ceiling prospects and be more than willing to offer players they know have holes in their game. Once a prospect is in another teams system, they know a lot more about that player than anyone in the draft, and that knowledge can be used to beat us in a trade.
Also Helsley got little interest over the offseason for any prospects worth our time. His trade value has not risen in the mean time.
And finally, a team projected to make the playoffs cut doesn't trade away their closer, unless they are receiving MLB roster contributing talent in return.
Re: Cards need to decide whether trading Helsley or getting compensatory pick is better
If you are suggesting the Cards trade Helsley if they can get a piece that will help next year because who knows what happens 5 years from now and they won't add when they need to, I agree and disagree. I agree they have not added when they should have, see 2022 for the most recent example. At the same time, the club is competitive this year, so trading Helsley when they have a chance doesn't make sense. They can for certain add a relief pitcher at the deadline without breaking the bank. The team may then surprise in the post season. If yes, they can qualify both Helsley and Fedde as Tank2 suggested in this thread and go from there. Sure those picks won't help for 4-5 years and maybe never. But, go with the team that has a chance.Clubmaker2 wrote: ↑26 May 2025 23:40 pm you trade him for players who will help the team much sooner in years than the pick will at lower cost than RH will be over the next years. The ownerships tight hold on the wallet means they cannot blow past opportunities to get good young cheaper talent that helps next year, and not just wait for that pick to hopefully develop 5 years from now. This team has proven it will not pay for the next piece once it does one thing. So dont act like they will, and dont waste opportunities to do what needs to be done when they will not expand the budget. As posters have posted, walking the middle, not going for it and not setting up for future, pretty much gets the cards no where.
After watching the massive payroll increases by the Mets and Dodgers, to some extent, we can't blame the Dewitt's for not wanting to compete on payroll, they can't. But, if the team is competitive like this one, they can certainly add a piece or two and hope that they come through in October. That is the likely strategy going forward forever.
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