I'll edit some thoughts in soon.
Update 1: On the decision to not offer Randy Wolf and Orlando Hudson arbitration:
"I think that the downside wouldn't have been horrible," McCourt said, "because he's a very good pitcher, and he pitched very well for us and he was a model citizen. From the area, really classy young man and so forth. But the judgment was made, and again, judgments are judgments. They're not perfect. No one has a crystal ball.
"I think anybody can pick one or two examples and jump to a conclusion," McCourt said. "Their opinion is valid -- I respect their opinion -- but it doesn't mean that their conclusion is right. There are 101 decisions that get made and judgments that get made every day."Basically a bunch of rhetoric about making lots of decisions and saying fans don't know what goes on behind the scenes and stuff. That's all well and good, but beating around the bush basically makes me think he is covering for a mistake.
Jon makes a great point about Frank's "investment" in the development of the team:
It's too difficult to say whether McCourt is right about this, because it's too difficult to measure the importance of what he's extolling. Will Camelback Ranch turn borderline major-leaguers into legitimate ones? If it's true, then the McCourt Dodgers have hit a home run in development, no matter how many Dodgers fans realize it.I guess these two paragraphs lead directly into the next section.
But how would anyone know? After all, this is a team that already has a 17th-round draft pick from hockey country, Russell Martin, and a sixth-round pick who specialized in basketball, Matt Kemp, who have each won a Silver Slugger and Gold Glove in the same year. Both were drafted before the McCourts bought the team and developed long before Camelback was even imagined. Cinderella stories are part of the game. Teams have always depended on those.
Update 2: Jon shares some insights on the Carlos Santana trade:
If there was a moment that really seemed to call into question the Dodgers' ability to commit to prospects, it was when the team traded Carlos Santana and Jonathan Meloan in mid-2008 for a three-month test run of Casey Blake. (Blake re-signed with the Dodgers as a free agent after the 2008 season.) It was widely reported, to the point that almost no doubt remained, that the Dodgers included Santana, a catcher who was having an explosive year in A ball, so that they wouldn't have to pay approximately $2 million in Blake's remaining '08 salary.Nothing to do with money? Uh...then this is even worse than I thought.
McCourt said in the interview that he had "no idea" about that aspect of the trade, that this was general manager Ned Colletti's territory. This is an example of the plausible deniability McCourt periodically exercises that seems not quite so plausible, given the level of detail with which he'll talk about other aspects of the Dodgers. Subsequent to the interview, neither Colletti nor anyone else with the Dodgers would comment about this on the record.
However, a source within the Dodgers organization insisted that the following was true: The Indians were not going to trade Blake to the Dodgers unless they got Santana in the deal. His inclusion had nothing to do with money.
Even if the original reports about the trade were true and the Dodgers did it to save $2 million, it's not like they haven't spent that $2 million and more elsewhere since then, and rather recklessly at times to boot (Guillermo Mota fits this bill rather perfectly). On the other hand, if my source is correct and the Dodgers simply believed Santana and Meloan for Blake was a smart move, was the team right to do it? It was debatable then, is debatable now even after Blake's presence on two division-winning Dodger teams, and will continue to be debatable for some time to come.It's not really debatable for me.
I understand that there's still a very real possibility that Santana and Meloan could be complete busts. However, even if that happens, I still don't like the trade, simply because giving up premium talent for three months of an average veteran isn't exactly the type of thing I believe any organization should make into a habit.
While everybody focuses on how well Santana and Meloan perform as major leaguers, the overlooked aspect is how having the two (especially Santana) could have worked to address needs at another point in time. Everybody was complaining about the Dodgers inability to get Roy Halladay or Cliff Lee or Adrian Gonzalez or some type of impact player at the trading deadline last year, right? Well, guess what the Dodgers lacked? An impact cornerstone type of player in the advanced minor leagues. So there has already been major league impact, if you look at it that way. That's why I feel, whether they bust or not, it was still not a wise trade to make because it showed poor asset management.
Frank again makes a cryptic and vague statement about the Santana deal in an attempt to basically move on:
"The Santana trade is an example of ... the pressure to trade players in course of season," McCourt said. "You give up real value for that. Sometimes you're able to -- sometimes it's worth it, sometimes it's not. Sometimes what you give up is less than what you thought it was, sometimes it's more than what you thought it was. There's always pulls and tugs on this."Okay, great. I think we all know there's pressure and that there's difficulty. Thanks for the information, brosef.
Update 3: Frank talking about spending money on the draft and going overslot on Garrett Gould:
"My personal opinion is that in the amateur draft, we do extremely well at living within the system that's in place," McCourt said. "We're one of 30 teams. And even though we're a big-market team, and we could step out and go on our own way and blow through the sort of recommended slotting for each of these, and just go ahead and turn our back on the other 29 clubs and go ahead and pay anything for anybody, I think it's the wrong thing to do philosophically. We’re one of 30 clubs. We should play by an overall understanding that the draft is designed for a reason. It was designed to give teams that didn't do as well the opportunity to sign the best players, if they were smart enough to identify those players, for a certain amount of money."Uh, the reason you went overslot is because you didn't have a first rounder in the first place. Sorry, but the fact remains that the Dodgers are at the bottom third in draft spending over the last three years.
As Jon later mentions, the draft problem is made worse by the fact that the Dodgers don't make many amateur signings, as Frank himself admits:
And even McCourt admits that there has been places of weakness in amateur signings under the current ownership.Big money amateur signings are usually overrated, so I don't mind passing on that aspect, but the Dodgers seem to be getting almost nothing from Latin America or Asian amateur signings.
"We have to do better in the international arena," he said. "That's to me as much of a function of our ability to actually identify the talent that we want to sign. I think we need to spend more money singing international players and young talent from around the world that we can bring here. Find me the talent, and we'll sign it. But you've got to find the talent. We need to do a better job, and Ned is doing that now. He is now focused on expanding our scouting and the quality of our scouting and the quality of our identifying these types of players."
Update 4: Frank on the Dodgers budget:
"Generally speaking, we do spend at that level just below the Yankees and the Red Sox," McCourt said. "I think our focus has to be on generating additional revenues so that we can spend and compete regularly. I'm not saying we're going to get to the Yankees' level, but I'd certainly like to close the gap."Nobody says the Dodgers need to spend like the Yankees, but there's a middle ground between being a huge market team that's trying to spend less than 100 million dollars, and spending 250 million dollars or whatever the Yankee payroll is at.
Like i've said a million times before, us Dodger fans are not complete idiots, stop treating us like we are. The Dodgers have a payroll just below the Yankees and the Red Sox? Ugh. Come on.
On the upside, Frank says he does understand that overreacting is not the way to endear himself to fans:
"To me, what I wouldn't do is do something that was rash and short-term and give up a bunch of young talent which would have impact for years to come, in order to do something in the short term. But the one thing about signing a free agent that is beneficial is, it's just money. It's just money. And if you've signed the right player, that can help you then and there, and you can keep your prospects intact, it can be a very, very smart thing to do."Actions speak louder than words. We're hoping.



