THERE ARE STILL
MORE ISSUES WITH THE PAYROLL
The Pittsburgh Pirates payroll is always a hot topic of conversation,
especially during the offseason. The organization once again seems to no
to be spending.
Bob Nutting is the name of the least favorite person in
Pittsburgh. Why? Simple, he is the owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates,
the shot caller, the wallet of the team. The issue is that as the wallet
of the team, he sure as heck doesn’t seem to put any of that money back into
the team. It has been an issue since this regime took over in 2008.
While the Pittsburgh Pirates are in a lot better place than they were 10 years
ago, this is still an ongoing issue.
One of the biggest complaints is that during the years that
the team was successful, the team still made moves to get rid of money.
The first of the moves, or lack thereof, came in 2014 when the Pittsburgh
Pirates didn’t make a move at the trade deadline. This will go down in
history as one of Neal Huntington’s most famous quotes, “No move was the right
move.”
The team followed it up with a little more of an active
deadline in 2015, bringing in J.A. Happ, Aramis Ramirez, Joakim Soria, Michael Morse, and Joe Blanton. However, for all the
work they did, the team regressed the next offseason. Many fans wanted
them to sign J.A. Happ back to the team. Many expected Happ to get a
decent salary of $10-12 million, something that would be very affordable for
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Instead, the team traded away fan favorite Neil Walker (and his $10.5
million). The team brought back veteran starter Jon Niese and cash. Niese lost his
rotation spot the year before and quickly lost his spot here in
Pittsburgh. Meanwhile, Happ signed a three-year deal for $36 million, $12
million a year. When Niese blew up and Happ continued to pitch well in
Toronto, Bob Nutting once again heard about it.
Ever since that year, the Pittsburgh Pirates fanbase has
felt betrayed by the team’s front office. The Pittsburgh Pirates had the
second best record in baseball at the end of the 2015 season, and instead of
trying to sustain that they watched their best pitcher down the stretch go to
free agency, trade their second baseman, and simply not bring in any relevant
talent.
With 2016 already off to a rocky start with the Jon Niese
and the team struggling, the Pittsburgh Pirates did something that ticked fans
off even more. The team traded away their former left-handed ace Francisco Liriano. However, they also
dealt former first-round pick Reese McGuire and top 15 outfield
prospect Harold Ramirez to help offload
Liriano’s contract. If their moves in the offseason didn’t scream to save
money, then this one surely did. This was the move that completely
changed Pittsburgh Pirates fans perception of the organization, “Go Nutting’s
Wallet” was official.
Here we are in the 2018-2019 offseason and the perception of
the team is still the same. Last offseason, the Pittsburgh Pirates did
not sign one player to a Major League contract. They did bring in
outfielder Corey Dickerson via a trade, but of
course, dumped money in Daniel Hudson. The move worked out big time
and helped lead the Bucs to have a winning record in 2018.
Still, the biggest moves of the offseason were the
subtractions. The Bucs got rid of Andrew McCutchen, who was slated to
make $14.5 million and Gerrit Cole, who was set for $6.75
million and had one more year of arbitration. So while they brought in
Dickerson, they got rid of the two faces of the franchise. While the
moves, especially the Cutch deal, worked out, it still represented what fans
think of Bob Nutting, salary dumping cheapskate.
Even at the deadline, the Pittsburgh Pirates brought in two
quality names in pitchers Chris Archer and Keone Kela. While this gave a boost
to the fan’s moral, it was still noted that the team only made these moves
because they were on cheap control (not that there should be an issue with that).
So far this offseason, the team has made a trade for
infielder Erik Gonzalez and signed their first
major league free agent in two years in Lonnie Chisenhall. Chisenhall will
make $2.75 million dollars this upcoming season. Technically, the team
did also sign Jung-Ho Kang, but it was after they released him in what appeared
to be a predetermined deal.
So what does the Pittsburgh Pirates payroll look like
compared to other teams in their division? Do Pittsburgh Pirates fans
have the right to be angered by Bob Nutting? Here are NL Central payrolls
according to Baseball
Prospectus:
Chicago Cubs: 204 million
St. Louis Cardinals: 153 million
Milwaukee Brewers: 112 million
Cincinnati Reds: 94 million (102 million when Sonny Gray deal is official)
Pittsburgh Pirates: 67 million
Yikes, the Pittsburgh Pirates not only have the lowest
payroll in the division, but by a significant amount, even to the next lowest
spender the Reds. This is the same team who was somewhat in the playoff
picture for a portion of the 2018 season, a team that had 82 wins. So
what have the Pittsburgh Pirates done to improve for the 2019 season?
They have brought in a fourth outfielder and a utility infielder, is that
really going to push this club closer to 90 wins? Doubtful.
Now the organization mentions how the team brought in Archer
and Kela to not only help in 2018, but knowing they will contribute in
2019. That is great, and they were two of the biggest and most aggressive
moves made in the Bob Nutting regime. However, the team spent $86 million
in payroll last season; they are still $20 million under that mark.
They have a gaping hole at shortstop, could use another
starter, and as always could use bullpen help. While it is only January
and there are plenty of free agents left, the Pittsburgh Pirates need to spend
some money or else the fanbase will feel even more betrayed by Bob Nutting and
the Bucs front office. Why bring in Archer and Kela if you are going to
leave holes elsewhere. It is time for Bub Nutting to give the fans a
reason to come back to the ballpark in 2019.
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