civ ollilavad wrote:in Trade for Bauer Lars Anderson was a bit part; the main piece we gave was Choo in his final contract year. But it was still a great deal [we also got Bryan Shaw]. Here was the word on weird Trevor at that point in his career. The Dbacks at the time had a whole bunch of promising kid pitchers and they let all of them go. Indians at the time were thin on pitching depth which is hard to remember now.
"Much has been made of Bauer's struggles this past season in the major leagues—all 16 1/3 innings of them—for a guy who dominated the minor leagues and has frontline stuff. Bauer excelled in Triple-A, averaged 11.5 strikeouts per nine innings in the minors and has the upside of a No. 1 starter, a guy who could annually rank among the league leaders in strikeouts and contend for a Cy Young award.
Why did the Diamondbacks trade him? The relationship between team and pitcher deteriorated quickly. Bauer has worked out his own throwing and training program for years, and the Diamondbacks have said publicly they did not feel he was receptive to making changes they suggested.
The Diamondbacks' frustration is the Indians' gain. Bauer's fastball is a plus pitch that sits in the low-90s and touches 96, while his curveball is a wipeout offering that earns 70 grades on the 20-80 scale from some scouts. He rounds out his repertoire with a splitter, a slider and a changeup, all of which could be average or better pitches. Bauer does need better command, which got him into trouble once he reached Arizona, but his delivery is fine and he should be able to make improvements in that area. Bauer could start the year in Cleveland's rotation and might immediately be its best starting pitcher."
And yes it was a great deal. We wanted to unload Choo. And he ended up getting a highly regretable long term deal after leaving!
I do believe Choo to Cincy, and Didi Gregorious to Arizona (from Cincy) were primary pieces. Strangely resembling Bauer last season to Cincy, top minor leaguer to SD and Franmil + to us.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain