When Aaron Harang was acquired in the deal that sent him and Joe Valentine to Cincy for Jose Guillen, the deal was met with disappointment by a lot of us. Most of us felt like we should of gotten more but Guillen was still at that time, a bit unproven. And some, like myself, felt Joe Valentine was the key to the deal. Harang had solid numbers in AAA for Oakland, but it looked like we were getting leftovers from Beane. It's not like I was upset with getting him, quite the contrary. An arm at that time was an arm plus I liked the minor league numbers. I just don't think many had high hopes for the kid.
While Valentine still does have a potential in the future, Aaron Harang has slowly made himself into the prized player acquired. It was a general thought that Harang had at best a #5 ceiling; a guy to stick at the backend who could do the job. Harang was a big fella (still is actually) but he was determined to get into great shape in 2004 and the results, while inconsisent showed that he needed to. He had a solid string of starts in the summer and ended up with double digit wins. And as a whole, looked like a more refined pitcher in comparison to the time he had with us in 2003.
Now, here comes 2005. Despite the ten wins, most of the papers and forums didn't want to gurantee him a roster spot, leaving him open to compete for either the 4 or 5 spot in the rotation. We were supposed to depend on our big money starters, sadly that hasn't worked out to Dan O's plan. Wilson goes strong.... for about three innings. Milton can look like an ace, then a scrub, from one start to the next. In fact, one could call these two the bash brothers. Not because they are skilled with the bat, but because batters love to face them (.295 BAA for Wilson, .301 for Milton.) Ortiz, being the happy go-lucky guy you want to see succeed has been plagued by injuries so it's not fair to judge him yet based off his two starts. And Claussen, has looked awful. Not only in terms of his stuff but with results. As a whole he is still having control problems and is now just getting crushed with hits in his outings, not a good combo.
This leads us to Harang. One of the backend starters who lack the big paycheck of our top three or the once hyped status of our number 5. And he's been the only solid pitcher in our rotation. He is still having problems finding his consistency, but his numbers overall are solid. He has the lowest homerun total of Milton, Wilson, and Claussen. He has kept his BAA against to a resaonable .256, ERA to under 4 and WHIP at 1.27. Now I am not saying Harang is a legit ace, far from it. My point is that it's pretty cool with his hard work and determination he's made himself into an appreaciated pitcher for us (at least by myself.) Now if the other pitchers pitched to performance, he wouldn't shine as greatly, that's why I enjoy the results he has given us to this point. I really think if he can continue to refine his control like he has over the past year or so, he could find himself being a decent #3 in a rotation.