Don't complain about last-minute bait-and-switch deals though. They're just part of the madness.
Photo: Getty Images |
Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images |
For Beane's part, with two more years of control in Gray's deal, it certainly wouldn't hurt to hang onto him until the winter meetings when everyone hits the reset button and there would likely be a wider group of teams interested in making a play for him.
Meanwhile, in nearby aisles there are still the murmurs of Yu Darvish, Justin Verlander, Lance Lynn and other long shot deals allegedly stirring in case the Gray thing doesn't happen.
Which wouldn't be, like, the worst thing that didn't happen if it requires more to get done than losing a couple of prospects who are hopelessly blocked or several years from even potentially sniffing the Bronx and facing Rule 5 exposure.
If it does go down, though, and Gray suits up in pinstripes for that reportedly paltry price in prospects, Brian gets to keep his MLB heavyweight trade deadline championship belt a second season in a row, in my humble opinion.
Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports |
Either way, I think it's become clear Brian has stuck to the spirit of the rebuilding blueprint by only making moves that upgrade this year's team while making the most minimal of negative impacts on future objectives -- and managing in several instances to upgrade those as well in the bargain.
That makes today a sunny day in Yankee Universe -- whether Brian leaves the store with Sonny in his shopping cart or not.
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