AZ_Cardsfan wrote: ↑21 Nov 2025 18:40 pm
I get it. Some here are reluctant to embrace a year of losing in 2026. No one likes it. But the sad reality is the state of the team right now can not be converted to competitive without either this rebuild or massive infusion of money. And that infusion would not be covered by revenues so don't hold your breath waiting for it.
I'm in the camp of being able to wait a year or two for the system to come together and create an organization that can compete year after year within reasonable spending constraints. If this team was competitive I believe the 3 mil fans would return and they could afford near a $200 mil salary structure. Which is enough IF the farm is delivering. But one short period where the farm is ranked high isn't enough. it needs to have a basis in scouting, development and coaching matching any team in baseball to compete with the Dodgers of this world.
This isn’t a 100 loss team. A .500 team with a top rated farm system has no need in further tanking.
And when you mention accepting another down year, I don’t think you’re necessarily in the “other”camp. They want to lose as much as possible for several more years (tank) and expect a wave of prospects to swoop in and turn the team around with no veteran presence and experience to help lead the way.
The team needs to spend, though they will never reach the Dodgers spending levels, even with the annual welfare check they get from the good teams that they only seem to invest in gambling and other non-baseball business ventures.
And I can acknowledge, the right players/deals might not materialize as soon as some of us hope. If that’s the case, so be it. We shouldn’t just spend foolishly on mediocre players, which is what the OP just assumes we’ll do. The OP also assumes every free agent we sign will be another Arenado situation and every prospect will shine.
Chances are one of Doyle or Wetherholt (maybe both) doesn’t even live up to the hype. Remember when Walker, Gorman, Carlson etc was the next big wave that was going to be the core to build a winner around? Right back at square one, as it often goes when putting all your hopes in kids that are just happy to be here with no competition to push them into survival mode.
These assumptions should not make for a gutless and losing-embracing mindset. Any sensible opportunity to improve that emerges should be at least be explored. Anything less is cheap, imprudent, and negligent.