Addressing several of your points altogether. I generally agree that the Cards are smart and I also think they tend to make very good player valuations. If they can't get their value out of a player, they don't chase the player. I don't tend to fault them for that.Popeye_Card wrote:I think part of what makes them smart is that they generally stick to their valuations on players, and if they extend too far out of their range, then they walk. Sure, it would be nice to win some of those prizes sometimes (we did on Fowler). But sometimes folding on a big pot in poker is the smart play if you don't think you can win. I'm sure Cub fans are more upset that they "won" on Heyward than we are upset that the Cardinals "lost".
Same thing on trades. Cardinals are willing to put (IMO) competitive packages out there in many cases. I'm not a fan of going too far outside of a reasonable comfort zone just to make something happen.
"Puke point" is a fun way to poke fun at it, but the Cardinals have generally demonstrated that not extending that point has been wise. I would argue the bigger mistakes over the years have been not even getting in on the bidding on some big-dollar players, like Scherzer.
Sure, all of this leaves us with a lot of unspent "dry powder", and broken promises if we want to consider them that way. I'd rather the Cardinals continue to keep the franchise in a good, competitive spot then to extend themselves too far and end up with years of re-build. Maybe if we haven't had so much (relatively) recent success I would think differently. 2011 is 7 years ago now, but it still seems like yesterday to me--and I get that others may not have that same patience.
At the same time, there is a difference in properly evaluating the market and legitimately trying to compete. This whole conversation needs to carry a giant IF in front of it... IF Bill DeWitt 3 is right and we're happy to stay where we are, then it's more than fair to say that we are letting our evaluation of the market take priority over our desire to compete. No one can look at this team and say that signing Mikolas and Gregorson was the right and best way to fix a problematic rotation and bullpen that just lost players of Lynn, Rosenthal and Oh's caliber. Ozuna is a nice add and he'll be a good player for us. But, we would basically be bypassing an absolutely critical component of our possible success, a legitimate, proven closer, because we don't think we can get perfect return on our investment. There's no doubt that there were multiple good options available to us to fix our pen or rotation and we've let them pass based upon valuation. (Some of them were signed to extremely reasonable contracts, after all.)
When you are this close as a team -- and my frustration comes from the fact that we are so very close -- to being a real contender, then you just have to choose to pay more, give more, do more to bridge the gap. We've seen the Cubs do this numerous times over the past few years and they've been absolutely killing us since Theo came in both player acquisition and now the standings.
So, give the Rays what they want for Colome or go get whatever closer is still out there and I'll hush and go back to guarded optimism about our ability to catch the Cubs. But, if we pack it in now and take this team into the regular season with the plan of adding at the deadline (same valuation concerns immediately come up), and I call that a failure.



