Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Diamondbacks Break Record, Sign Yoan Lopez

PHOENIX - The Arizona Diamondbacks continued their pursuit of Cuban talent by signing RHP Yoan Lopez with a record breaking bonus. Thanks to new international prospect guidelines the Diamondbacks were able to offer Lopez $8.27 million, beating the $8 million bonus given to Cuban infielder Roberto Baldoquin by the Angels about a week ago. Thanks to bonus restrictions only a small handful of teams were able to meet Lopez's price tag. The Dodgers, Padres, Yankees, and Reds were all involved in the bidding process.

Lopez, a 21-year-old Cuban defector, has taken up residence in Haiti and is training in the Dominican Republic while working out for MLB scouts. He held a showcase in November of last year and participated in a number of private workouts, and he came away impressed with Tony La Russa and the Diamondbacks organization. One surprising bit of information that has leaked out is that Arizona was not the highest bidder, so La Russa must be doing something right. He should be invited to Spring Training, but most expect he will start the 2015 in Class-A.

Lopez is a very interesting prospect with a wide arsenal of pitches and a decent build, things could change with coaching but there is a lot to work with. Lopez's best pitch is his fastball that sits in the 93-95 range with reports of him hitting 100 at times, he also uses a cutter, changeup, curveball, and a slider.


Will Lopez be worth the trouble?

The signing of Lopez represents a risky move, but not just in terms of how he pans out as a prospect. The $8.27 million bonus, well over international signing limits for the period, essentially wipes out Arizona's ability to sign high-end prospects for the next two signing periods. The team will be limited to $300,000 bonus payments during that period, hardly anything, and with the team headed for one of the worst records in baseball it could wipe out a larger bonus pool. Once you take the future costs of signing Lopez into account, he could be the most expensive pitching prospect in history.

The Diamondbacks also announced the hiring of Ariel Prieto, also Cuban, to the Diamondbacks MLB coaching staff. Prieto will serve as a coach and a translator, the same role he served with the Oakland A's while working with Yoenis Cespedes. Prieto will likely work primarily with Arizona's other expensive Cuban import, Yasmy Tomas.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Gio Gonzalez Coming Back to Arizona

PHOENIX - After a long and drawn out bidding process Gio Gonzalez has decided to return to Arizona. Gonzalez drew initial interest from the Giants and Rangers, but the Giants dropped out after the offers started to get bigger. It looked like Texas was going to land him until the Twins stepped in and a late offer from the Pirates seemed to change his mind. Despite the flurry of offers, Gonzalez opted to stay with the Diamondbacks.

 The 29-year old free agent had a disappointing 2014 season in which he posted a career low in innings pitched, strikeouts, and career high ERA since becoming a full-time starter in 2010. Gonzalez has been almost a lock for 32-33 starts since 2010, but 2014 saw him only able to take the mound 27 times.

Gonzalez and Arizona agreed to a two-year $18.4 million contract through 2016 with a team option for 2017 that would take the total to $27.6 million. The deal will take him through his age 31 season which should see him hit the market again for one more contract.

Arizona needs Gonzalez to lead their staff.

Gonzalez went 21-8 with 207K and a 2.89ERA in 2012, but has failed to return to those lofty heights since. The Diamondbacks don't expect him to repeat 2012 every year, but they will need him to pitch 200+ innings, keep his WHIP under 1.20, and win between 12-15 games (if not more) every year in order for this deal to be worth it.