Lets say the Cardinals get their payroll back up to $180M. How many $30M pitchers do you think that payroll supports, 1? 2? Do you want Dylan Cease to be the 1? Yes, his stuff has always been good. His results however have been very inconsistent. There were constant complaints on this board that Sonny Gray was not an ace. If you compare Gray to Cease, his results are light years better than Cease and his stuff is at least equivalent. No where did I claim Mikolas was better than Cease, I even stated that he was not. I will state that for 7/$210M I would not sign Cease. Signing mid range guys like him to long expense free agent contracts is how the Cards ended up where they are to begin with. Under the $180M payroll model, he precludes the Cards from getting a true ace.renostl wrote: ↑03 Dec 2025 13:47 pmDo you think Toronto sees a guy with stuff and durability.ICCFIM2 wrote: ↑03 Dec 2025 12:42 pmYou know that is their 2025 pitching line. What is silly about comparing pitching lines and then laughing at someone paying $210M for that? That is crazy. Like I said, I understand Cease is the better pitcher. Having said that, would you be happy if the Cards had signed him to that deal? In particular if that meant he was the only high priced pitcher the Cards would sign?Cardinals4Life wrote: ↑03 Dec 2025 12:28 pmAre those career numbers???ICCFIM2 wrote: ↑03 Dec 2025 12:22 pmPitcher A 31 Starts 8-11 W-L 4.84 ERA 156.1 innings 1.318 WHIPCardinals4Life wrote: ↑02 Dec 2025 19:32 pmWow, c'mon. LolICCFIM2 wrote: ↑02 Dec 2025 18:32 pmThe Cardinals were never going to add more than a Mikolas type this year or someone on a pillow deal. They have made that pretty clear with Bloom's comments. The SP prices are just sky high. If you look at Dylan Cease's statistics, he is Mikolas with a higher strike out rate. The sabre stats love him. The results sure are not different though. That guy got 7/$210M for very mediocre results...Youboughtit wrote: ↑02 Dec 2025 18:15 pm I have seen many reports that the Yankees Atlanta Giants Padres Toronto Philly and all the contenders will try to go with 7 or more SP following the Dodgers program last year of having 10 and limiting all their IP. Any discomfort and a brief IL stint. That is going to make the mid tier SP market thin fast and go above market. Hope Dewitt realizes this and attacks early. I fear a Mikolas type is best they will add when they really need to add to top of rotation. Libertore the #1 is really a #3-4
Pitcher B 32 Starts 8-12 W-L 4.55 ERA 168 Innings 1.327 WHIP
Which one is which? One of those pitchers is getting 7/$210M, the other might be on the way out of baseball...I understand one of them is the better pitcher. But $210M worth of a better pitcher is my point. I don't think so.
Comparing Mikolas to Cease is silly.
Its like comparing Gorman to Schwarber.
Enough stuff that his results really should be better if harnessed
and given more direction?
I'm sure they do along with the league copying the 6 SP 4-5 solid RP's
Then rotate with the minors. Will the Cards attempt to control the
innings with the youth even in the event of full health?
Copying the Dodgers model of more than 5 ML ready SPs is great. As far as I can tell, that is exactly what the Cards are trying to do by stockpiling young arms. I doubt the Cards ever get in on a Skubal or a Skenes. When you look at the top 20 SPs by ERA in the MLs, almost all of them are on contenders except for Skenes. It is hard to imagine any of these teams will part with one of them. Joe Ryan at #18 is with the Twins and has 2 years control remaining. Probably not in the Cards window. It seems to me the right answer for the Cards is to stock arms this offseason. That gives them a lot of trade capital to try and get the right guy in the 2026 offseason to hopefully give us the young ace we all covet. Just don't sign the Dylan Cease's of the world to long term contracts. That is a recipe for failure.