I agree that Cardenas was a key guy in the deal, but I don't see how Cardenas was going to get us a Sabathia/Harden-like guy at the deadline
EXACTLY MY POINT.
No, Cardenas alone wasn't going to get Sabathia. The reason we can't go after Sabathia is because of trades like the Cardenas trade that deplete our farm system. So, this offseason, or next trading deadline, when we're again out of the running for the top of the line pitchers available in trades, and again settle for a 4th rate pitcher who might be effective half of the time because we don't have the depth in our farm system, you can think back to the Blanton deal as a type of deal that got us into that situation (along with brilliant moves like giving up on 22 year old former 1st round draft picks with ace stuff).
Here's a straight-forward question:
Do you want your team to make aggressive, in-season moves to try to win a championship?
Here's another question:
If the Phillies did not trade for Blanton, would they have made the playoffs this season?
And another question:
What other deal could the Phillies have done to bring a #4 major-league quality starter at the deadline for less than what they traded?
Answers:
- I want my team to make SMART trades. Complaining that you don't have the depth in your minor league system to trade for top flight pitchers, then trading two of your best minor league prospects for below average pitching, isn't smart.
- Impossible to say. I think we could have gotten similar production from someone already in our organization (Happ), while still keeping one of your top prospects (who's 20 years old).
- Are you a GM? I'm not. So I don't know how you can expect anyone to answer this. A bad trade is not better than no trade at all.
4th starters are fungible. You do not spend significant assets to obtain them. doing so leaves your farm system depleted and prevents you from having enough assets to get real difference makers (and that even completely ignores the possibility that those minor leaguers actually make the big leagues, and have an impact, like say Gavin Floyd).
I hate the term "innings eater". If he were a good pitcher, he'd be classified as a good pitcher, not an innings eater. Getting a lot of mediocre innings is not something to write home about.
And Blanton pitching 200 innings is irrelevant. He pitched 70 innings for us. averaging less than 6 innings per start for us.