Rockies React – Field2Court | Sports Media https://field2court.com A new and interactive way to experience the world of sports. Thu, 04 Feb 2021 19:58:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i1.wp.com/field2court.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/cropped-f2c-1.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Rockies React – Field2Court | Sports Media https://field2court.com 32 32 174261168 Nolan Arenado Has Been Traded To The Cardinals, So Now What? https://field2court.com/2021/02/04/nolan-arenado-has-been-traded-to-the-cardinals-so-now-what/ https://field2court.com/2021/02/04/nolan-arenado-has-been-traded-to-the-cardinals-so-now-what/#respond Thu, 04 Feb 2021 20:00:00 +0000 https://field2court.com/?p=11789 Unless you are living under a rock, or clicked on this article without reading the title, you have probably heard that superstar 3B Nolan Arenado has been traded from the Colorado Rockies to the St. Louis Cardinals for LHP Austin Gomber, OF Mateo Gil, RHP Jake Sommers, 3B Elehuris Montero, and RHP Tony Locey in what on the surface looks like one of the worst trades in modern baseball history. We won’t know who officially “won the trade” until years from now, but today, it doesn’t look good on the Rockies side of things.

So what now? Are the Rockies going going into a full fledged rebuild? Well, not exactly. There are two things that dispute this. First, in a presser on Tuesday afternoon, Rockies’ owner Dick Monfort and General Manager Jeff Bridich had implied that Nolan Arenado will be the only major change to the team due to the belief (albeit delusional) that the Nolan Arenado-less Colorado Rockies can compete in 2021. The Rockies would have preferred to go into the 2021 season with their now former star third baseman, but due to him demanding a trade he forced the Rockies’ hand.

Colorado Rockies’ Nolan Arenado reacts after swinging at and missing a pitch from Texas Rangers’ Kyle Gibson during the first inning of a baseball game Saturday, Aug. 15, 2020, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Second, do we really trust the Rockies’ upper management to tear down and properly reconstruct this team from the ground up? If you answered yes, then you must not have been a Rockies fan for very long. So what will the 2021 Rockies look like? We will likely see Ryan McMahon take over his natural position at third base, Trevor Story will continue to man shortstop (for how long remains to be seen), technical prospect Brendan Rodgers will probably replace McMahon at second, Josh Fuentes will look to continue from his coming out party in 2020 at first base(although don’t be surprised if McMahon and Fuentes switch). Raimel Tapia will be in left field, Sam Hilliard in center field, and Charlie Blackmon in right field (maybe also in temporary fashion). These are the likely starters for the 2021 Colorado Rockies.

Rockies shortstop Trevor Story could be on the trading block. (Ross D. Franklin | Credit: AP)

If this team has another lackluster season, which it looks like will be the case, then expect other ball clubs to push hard to trade for players like Story, Blackmon, and RHP German Marquez (and possibly RHP Jon Gray and LHP Kyle Freeland depending what type of year they are having). On the other hand, if the team competes like the Rockies’ upper management believes that they will, then we could see the opposite effect like the Rockies going and getting assets to help assist in their playoff push. Hey, the Nationals won the World Series the season after losing Bryce Harper to free agency, why can’t the Rockies do the same after trading away their franchise player? We are in a wait and see mode, and it is easy for fans to see what path this team is going down; the problem is the only people who have a say-so in the matter don’t see a thing.

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The State of the Rockies https://field2court.com/2020/12/20/the-state-of-the-rockies/ https://field2court.com/2020/12/20/the-state-of-the-rockies/#respond Mon, 21 Dec 2020 00:00:00 +0000 https://field2court.com/?p=10982 The state of the Colorado Rockies as of the end of the 2020 season is rather bleak. After coming off back-to-back playoff seasons in 2017 and 2018, the Rockies looked like a young, up and coming team who had a good core of homegrown players with solid, young starting pitching along with a good bullpen. Then 2019 happened. The Rockies would go on to have a 71-91 season which was good enough for 4th in the NL West.

What happened there? Stop me if you have heard this before: the Rockies’ pitching failed them. Kyle Freeland, after coming off of a dominating 2018 finishing 4th for the Cy Young award, completely dropped off allowing a ton of home runs. This required him to be sent down to AAA in Albuquerque where he would pretty much stay for the entire season. The $106 Million “Super Bullpen” (comprised of Jake McGee, Bryan Shaw, and Wade Davis) that GM Jeff Bridich built in 2018 completely flopped. However, they did re-sign superstar 3B Nolan Arenado to an 8 year, $260 Million extension with a 3 year opt-out and a full no trade clause.

Being sports fans, I am sure we have all seen teams be good for a year, be bad the next year for whatever reason (injuries the most likely cause), and then pop up and be good the again. Well, a lot of people, myself included, thought that would happen with the Colorado Rockies. Apparently Jeff Bridich and Co. in the Rockies’ Front Office thought so too because they spent literally no money after 2019 to sure up their roster.

So what is the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over again while expecting a different result. That is what the Rockies did, and currently are doing. Once the 2020 season happened, the Rockies came out like they normally do: hot. They came out to an 11-3 start with star RF Charlie Blackmon at one point hitting with a .500 avg. After that, they finish in typical Rockies fashion and just run out of gas. They would finish 26-34, which in a normal season would equate to yet another 70+ win season and finish 4th in the NL West.

So, where does this leave us? The Rockies have 3 decisions to make: they can enact the Doomsday Scenario, the Hail Mary Scenario, or the Stupid Scenario. The Rockies have key contracts that are up at the end of the year: Trevor Story, Nolan Arenado (option), Charlie Blackmon (option), and Ian Desmond.

The Doomsday Scenario

This is hard to swallow, but it is the way ultimately I think the Rockies should go. Jeff Bridich could find it within the best interest of the team to get what they can out of these players and add to a bottom 20 farm system to stock up for the future. Would it mean that we would be a bottom feeding team for 3 years? Probably, but I think it would be better to be at the bottom with hope for a future than being stuck in mediocrity with no hope of going over the top.

It would be a tough pill to swallow saying goodbye to these wonderful players, but let’s face it, the team as it stands right now is not going to catch the Dodgers, the surgent Padres, or the promising Giants. Nolan is already upset (and he has every right to be) about how the front office has handled these past few seasons, and with him being a once in a generational talent, and maybe when his career is all said and done the best 3B to ever do it, it makes sense to put him in a place where he has a legitimate chance to win. Story, arguably the best SS right now, deserves that same chance as well.

The Hail Mary!

This would be a fun one, but not one I think the Rockies’ front office has the gonads for. With all the expiring contracts, the Rockies sign a bunch of free agents trying to make a last ditch effort at a postseason run. We could see the Rockies bring in players like Yasiel Puig, a couple of relievers such as Brad Hand, or Kirby Yates, or maybe a Liam Hendriks. However, with the Rockies’ latest failed experiment it is hard to envision marquee free agents pitchers wanting to come and conquer the Coors Field monster.

In the event that this scenario is successful, we could see Nolan Arenado opt-in to the rest of the five years of his contract. We would pick up Charlie Blackmon’s option(s). We would need to maneuver some contracts, but we would make an attempt to lock up Trevor Story. However, with the way this is going, it is hard to see the Rockies going this way.

“This Is Fine!”

With how they were last year, doing Minor League contracts only, and how it is looking this year (actually making the team worse off-loading Tony Wolters and David Dahl), this is the most likely scenario that the Rockies will take. Much like last year, Jeff Bridich and Co. will insist that the team is just fine with where it is at (even though it clearly is not!) and we will end up having yet another 71-91, 4th place NL West type season.

In this scenario, at season’s end, we could see Nolan Arenado opting out of his contract electing to play somewhere else (probably to his hometown Dodgers). Trevor Story walks out not wanting to play for a horribly run franchise, and Charlie Blackmon forces the Rockies to decline his option so that he can also go somewhere else (probably to the AL where there is a DH). This would leave the Rockies with all of their talent already called up, they would still have a bottom 20 farm system, and they would receive absolutely nothing for all the star power that they had. Think of the absolute worst franchise that everyone makes fun of, the Jets or the Browns before this season for example, the Rockies would be on that level. They would have to build through the draft and through free agency (which at that point players would come to Coors Field to stat pad and leave). This is the scenario that we must do everything to avoid, and if Bridich keeps up his pace that is where we will be.

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