Archive for the 'Matt Sweeney' Category

Rays Lose Former Top Prospect In Rule 5 Draft

Matt Sweeney, Rule 5 Draft No Comments »

The Rays did not make any selections in today’s Rule 5 draft. They did lose two minor leaguers in the minor league portion of the draft. Catcher Gerardo Olivares was taken by the Red Sox in the triple-A portion of the draft. And Matt Sweeney was selected by the Orioles in the double-A portion of the draft.

Sweeney is a bit of a loss for the Rays, but more because he has failed as a prospect. Sweeney was one of the key pieces received by the Rays in the trade that sent Scott Kazmir to the Angels. At the time, Keith Law of ESPN.com ranked Sweeney as the 68th best prospect in baseball.

But in two seasons, Sweeney hit a total of 15 home runs. That’s not going to cut it for a corner infielder with no glove. And now the Rays didn’t even think enough of him to protect him from the Rule 5 draft.

Rays Prospect Matt Sweeney On Hitting (Video)

Matt Sweeney 2 Comments »

Matt Sweeney, who came to the Rays organization via the Scott Kazmir trade, talks hitting…

Second Annual Tampa Bay Rays Trade Pool

Andy Sonnanstine, Carl Crawford, Carlos Pena, Dan Johnson, Dan Wheeler, Dioner Navarro, Fernando Perez, Hank Blalock, Jason Bartlett, Justin Ruggiano, Matt Sweeney, Pat Burrell, Rafael Soriano 30 Comments »

Welcome to the 2nd Annual Tampa Bay Rays Trade Pool where members of the Rays blogosphere determine who is the best at predicting which members of the Rays organization will be traded this season (this contest is based loosely on the “Dead Pool“).

The Rules:

  • Each blogger submitted a list of 5 players they believe have the greatest chance to be traded this season. All players in the organization are eligible.
  • The bloggers ranked those 5 players, giving the highest rank (#1) to the player they think is most likely to be traded.
  • If one of the players they chose is traded prior to the end of the season, that blogger will receive points based on where the blogger ranked the player. If Carl Crawford is traded and a blogger has CC ranked first, they will receive 5 points. If they have CC ranked second, they will receive 4 points and so on.
  • The blogger with the most points at the end of the season wins.
  • We also want YOUR lists in the comments. Let’s see if you guys can beat the experts. And by “experts” we of course mean a bunch of people with too much free time on their hands.

First let’s sum up all the results and see who the group as a whole thinks is most likely to be traded. We summed up the ballots with an MVP-style ranking. A player received 5 points for each 1st place vote, 4 points for each second place vote and so on…

Three of the 10 bloggers picked Hank Blalock as the most likely player to be traded, and three picked Andy Sonnanstine. Twenty-three different players showed up on at least one list.

Now let’s look at each blogger’s ballot…

Notes on the rankings

  • The difficulty in these rankings is predicting whether the Rays will be “buyers” or “sellers” this season. If they are in the playoff hunt, they are more likely to trade prospects. If they fall off the pace they are more likely to try and move expensive veterans.
  • Hank Blalock and Andy Sonnanstine each appeared on the most lists (6).
  • 10 different players appeared on more than one list.

Thanks to all who chose to participate including…

Also, you might be asking “What does the winner receive?” We have no idea. Any suggestions?

Six Rays Among ESPN.com Top 100 Prospects

Desmond Jennings, Jeremy Hellickson, Matt Moore, Matt Sweeney, Tim Beckham, Top Prospects, Wade Davis 4 Comments »
Matt Sweeney

Matt Sweeney

Earlier this week Keith Law ranked the Rays as the third best organization in baseball. Now Law has released his list of the Top 100 prospects. Six Rays are in the top 100, including 4 in the top 30.

6. Desmond Jennings
15. Wade Davis
17. Jeremy Hellickson
29. Tim Beckham
68. Matt Sweeney
81. Matt Moore

Law also included his list of the top 10 prospects in the Rays farm system…

1. Desmond Jennings, CF
2. Wade Davis, RHP
3. Jeremy Hellickson, RHP
4. Tim Beckham, SS
5. Matt Sweeney, 3B
6. Matt Moore, LHP
7. Nick Barnese, RHP
8. Alex Torres, LHP
9. Alexander Colome, RHP
10. Reid Brignac, SS

Law is more bullish on Beckham than Baseball America is (BA has Beckham 6th), but has soured on Brignac who is still 5th in BA’s rankings.

In a separate piece, Law talk about three Rays prospects that could crack the top 100 next year

I mentioned Nick Barnese here last year, along with new top 100 addition Matt Moore, and Barnese will make the list with a full, healthy season. The Rays could also see one of two Latin American right-handers, Alexander Colome or Wilking Rodriguez, make the list. Colome’s further along now, with a mid-90s fastball and curve with tight rotation but limited feel for his changeup and below-average command.

A “full, healthy season” from Barnese might be asking a lot. He logged only 74.2 innings last season, and the Rays will likely limit Barnese to 100-120 innings in 2010.

The Scott Kazmir Trade Fallout: A Special GBT Sandwich

Alex Torres, Andrew Friedman, Matt Sweeney, Scott Kazmir, Stuart Sternberg, Wade Davis 25 Comments »

Following last night’s game, the Rays made it official, sending Scott Kazmir to the Angels. Let’s take a look at what we know and then breakdown the trade…

WHAT WE KNOW: The Rays will get three minor leaguers for Kazmir, two of which we know already. The players the Rays will receive:

  • Alexander Torres, a 21-year old lefty that was recently promoted to double-A. He was 10-3 with a 2.74 ERA with 124 strikeouts in 121.1 innings at high-A. He is 2-1 with a 4.20 ERA in three double-A starts.
  • Matthew Sweeney, a third baseman. He is 21 and was an 8th round pick in 2006. He is hitting .299/.379/.517 with 9 home runs in 58 games at high-A.
  • A player to be named later. (see below)

We also know that no money changed hands in this deal, which includes about $1 million this season, $8 million next year and $12 million in 2011. There is also a $13.5 million option for 2012 with a $2.5 million buyout. So the Angels are on the hook for at least $24.5 million.

We also know that Wade Davis will likely be called up to replace Kazmir in the rotation.

THE GOOD: The only absolute GOOD about this deal right now is the money saved. We know that before this deal, the Rays projected payroll for 2010 was about $77 million. We also know that the Rays needed to borrow from next year’s budget just to get the 2009 payroll up to $63 million. So the Rays needed to trim some fat from next year’s payroll and trading Kazmir goes a long way to getting the payroll back down to a manageable level.

There are other potential GOODs. Davis may be better than Kazmir down the stretch. One or more of the players acquired could become an all-star. Kazmir could lose his left arm in a freak koala bear accident while hiking the Outback this off-season. But until we actually see any of that happen, the only GOOD is the salary dump.

THE BAD: As far as the big league team is concerned, the Rays traded a known (Scott Kazmir) for an unknown (Wade Davis). Certainly one could argue that Kazmir has been below replacement-level most of the season, but recently he had been pitching better and right now we have ZERO idea what Davis will bring to the table.

The Rays say that trading Kazmir has no affect on their playoff chances. But when was the last time you saw a playoff contender give up a starting pitcher that was pitching well and replace him with a minor leaguer in August? In fact, we are struggling to think of any rookie starting pitcher that was called up in September and helped a team to the playoffs. Can you guys think of any? (see comments)

One can also make a strong case that the Rays would have been better off waiting until after the season to trade Kazmir. In August, the only team bidding was the team that won the waiver claim, the Angels. In the off-season, the Rays might have been able to open up a bidding war. And for all of Kazmir’s struggles, he is still only 25, a power-lefty with a good track record and a reasonable contract for the next two years. We have to believe more than a few teams would have been interested.

Finally, the trade just looks bad. For a franchise that is desperate to build a fanbase, trading away a solid starting pitcher for 3 minor leaguers in the heat of the playoff race, just looks cheap. And it looks like the team cares more about the bottom line than they do about winning.

In fact, on July 10, Stuart Sternberg said the following: “As long as we’re in the hunt I don’t see us, because of financial reasons, pulling back from that.” In other words, Sternberg said the Rays wouldn’t cut payroll and right now, that is exactly what it looks like the Rays did (h/t RaysProspects).

THE TELLING: Joe Maddon on the player to be named later: He is “a very interesting player that I’m very excited about.”

This tells us that the PTBNL is a minor leaguer on the Angels 40-man roster. A PTBNL cannot be on the 25-man roster, but players on the 40-man roster can only be traded if they clear waivers. In order to trade a minor leaguer on the 40-man roster, the teams will just call him a PTBNL and then move him after the season.

This is the key to the deal. There are some interesting names being bandied about. Brandon Wood’s name has come up quite a bit in the speculation. A player like that is going to make this deal more palatable.

And that PTBNL may not be the last part of this “move.” When we spoke with Andrew Friedman last October, one point he was adamant about, was that no single move is made in a vacuum. He said that there is always a bigger picture and every move fits within that picture.

Let’s assume for the moment that this move was not a salary dump. What if World B. Friedman wanted to add a player for the final month, but was not able to add the payroll. Maybe moving Scott Kazmir frees up the salary necessary to make another move. And maybe this mystery addition, along with Wade Davis, is indeed a considerable upgrade over Kazmir.

Andrew Friedman handles this team like a chess master. He is always thinking 2-3 moves ahead and he understands that winning almost always requires sacrificing the occasional rook.