Do you think they were going to the playoffs with Donny the next two years? And if, by a miracle, they did, would they go anywhere? Hint: the answer is a hard no to both.ICCFIM2 wrote: ↑27 Mar 2026 15:05 pmIt will take years to sort out this trade. I was hoping the Cards would get the pitcher they received plus Arroyo in return. Arroyo has a chance to be at least as good a hitter as Donnie and be hear during 2026, plus they would have a pitcher as well. Instead we received an OF, Thai Peete who has potential, but has struggled to date in pro ball and is likley ETA 2028, if ever. A middling OF prospect and 2 comp picks. It could turn out to be a total haul or just a pitcher with 4 busts.ClassicO wrote: ↑27 Mar 2026 08:04 am Melville thinks the Cards got fleeced on the Donovan trade. We’ll see. Again, he won’t say for whom the Cards should have traded him. Weak.
But let’s remember his prediction for Donny after the 2021 season when he said relying on Donovan (and Noot) as the LH solution to the team's woeful performance against RH pitching … would be utter foolishness.”
I understand the Mariners didn't want to trade Arroyo. But with them having Donnie, Emerson and Cole Young, it seemed they had the ability to trade Arroyo and still have a lot of young infield talent. In 4 years we can evaluate this trade.
So then it's just what they could get back for him while he still had value and 2 yrs. pre-FA. Reality: Donny has a career .772 OPS and he was below-average defensively everywhere except 3b. And if he stayed, one of JJ/Gorman/Herrera would sit.
We can argue about who they COULD have received that would be better than the combo of 3 players and two, 2026 picks at 68 and 72.
But you're right, we won't know much for maybe 4 years.
I just know that I trust Bloom exceedingly more than Melville, and far more than myself or anyone on this board when it comes to having good information on prospects.