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ast week the Mariners in a 3 way deal traded catcher John Jaso to conference rival Oakland and in return got Washington Nationals outfielder Mike Morse. You may recall Morse. He came
up to the Majors with the Mariners who then traded him to the Nationals in
2009. I remember seeing him at the “Safe”
(Safeco Field) in a game in 2005 in which he hit a long home run. He seemed to
me to have a good sense of himself at the plate.
On
first hearing of the trade I did not like it. Though playing only part time
last season Jaso led the Mariners in on
base percentage and in batting
average. He came up with a number of clutch hits, was a great pinch hitter
and I loved his approach at the plate. He is just the kind of player Oakland GM
Billy Beane goes for…a guy who gets
on base. Then I went and checked out Morse’s stats with the Nationals. After
doing that I did not feel so bad. Morse had a monster season in 2011 with 31
home runs and 95 RBIs while hitting .303 with a .360 OBP. Last year he played
through an injury most of the season and still hit .291 with 18 homers. Morse
says he is healthy now and if so another 30 homer season could be in the
offing. The Mariners could sure use that.
There
is, however, another aspect to this trade which I think may be the real reason
that Jackie Z (Mariners GM Jack
Zduriencik) pulled the trigger on this deal. Jaso is a catcher. The Mariners
also have a young player on their roster named Jesus Montero who is also a catcher and who has the potential to be
a great right handed hitter. He showed signs of this last year at the ripe old
age of 22. As good as Montero potentially can be though, he is not the catcher
of the future for the Mariners. That title belongs to the Mariners’ first round
draft pick in last season’s draft, catcher Mike
Zunino, who won the Golden Spikes
Award as the nation’s top amateur player in 2012 while leading the Florida Gators to the College World Series
for the third season in a row. Zunino completed his college career at Florida
and signed with the Mariners rapidly which allowed him to get some playing time
in the Mariners farm system last season. He tore up opposing pitching in his
stint with the Everett Aquasox hitting
.373 with 10 homers and an outstanding .474 OBP in 110 at bats. He did nearly
as well with the Mariners AA Jackson affiliate hitting .333 with 3 homers and a
.386 OBP in 51 at bats. Zunino is also reportedly an excellent catcher who can
handle pitchers.
Though
he does not have much professional experience, it is very possible that Zunino
is Major League ready now. Spring training will tell the tale. If he does not
make the roster out of spring expect him to be called up by mid season with the
Mariners bringing some other catcher in temporarily until Zunino is ready. But
I have a feeling he will come north with the Mariners after spring training.
With his power, average and high OBP Zunino will be a major upgrade for the
Mariners at catcher and very likely a future star. Since the Mariners are not
going to trade Montero, who is also a budding star, the only other option is
trading Jaso, a move which paves the way for Mike Zunino to complete his fast
track to the Bigs and also provides some instant offense in the return of Mike
Morse.
After
thinking this Jaso for Morse trade all the way through…I kind of like it now.
Copyright
© 2013
By
Mark Arnold
All
Rights Reserved
The trade makes sense...... add to that Jaso was at peak trade value, which makes it hard to do, especially from the fans perspective, but gives you the greatest potential return. Your article content about Mike Morse, his stats and history gave me confidence on the prudence of the trade.
ReplyDeleteGood point about Jaso being at peak value...but yeah, once I looked into it a bit more it started making sense. Apparently Morse isn't much of a defensive player but his bat, when right, speaks volumes. L M
ReplyDelete