The General Manager of the Cincinatti Reds, Wayne Krivsky, spent 11 years as the Assistant General Manager of the Minnesota Twins. He firmly believes in contact hitting and no strikeouts. The Cincinatti Reds prior to Krivsky’s arrival were deep in power and strikeouts. Wily Mo Pena, Felipe Lopez, and Austin Kearns, hitters who struck out more than 100 times for the Reds in 2005, have already been moved.
Adam Dunn has been linked in trade rumors for several years now, and this year is looking like this is the year he could be moved. Dunn, a first baseman and left fielder, hit .234/.365/.490 this past season for a .855 OPS, and has a career of an .892 OPS. He had two straight seasons of OPS’ over .900 and would have had a third if he did not hit for a .700 OPS in August and .598 in September.
Dunn strikes out a … ton. He K’d a staggering 194 times in 2006, and if the Red Sox acquired him, there’s no doubt that in late August of 2007, I’d be writing an article about how every time he struck out I gouged my eyes out repeatedly.
Nevertheless, his plate disclipine and power (HR total by year: 19, 26, 27, 46, 40, 40) make this an intriguing thought. Dunn, who has played first 108 times in his career (854 games total) could make the adjustment to first should the Red Sox acquire him. I’m not going to delve into who the Red Sox would have to send Cincinatti’s way, but the Red Sox would have to move Mike Lowell - and it’s possible he could be moved to the Los Angeles Angels or San Diego Padres.
Dunn will likely never hit for average (lifetime .245, and has hit as high as .266, so that’s what I’d suggest for his average if he moved to the American League) so we would have to content ourselves with his career Isolated Eye of a staggering .135 (Youkilis is at .104 and Abreu at .110) and his career .512 Slugging Percentage. Dunn’s career stats against righties come out to a .911 OPS, and .852 against lefties, which would afford Kevin Millar some (but not a lot) of playing time.
In addition, Adam Dunn is known as a clubhouse presence. As Lonnie Wheeler muses trading Dunn, he mentions that Dunn is “funniest, most self-effacing fellow in the Cincinnati clubhouse.”
Dunn would make $10.5 million next year, which tips the scales in favor of the Red Sox, for the Sox are a big market team. Trading Mike Lowell would mean the Red Sox only take on $1.5 million extra.
To give some measure of what the Reds may look in return for Dunn, Wheeler poses the questions of who they could get:
What, then, is his trade value? Is it the handsome sum of all the above, or what our eyes and exasperation tell us after six unfulfilling seasons?
Is it a starting pitcher who can stand next to Aaron Harang and Bronson Arroyo? An end-game reliever who can allow Todd Coffey, Gary Majewski, Bill Bray and Matt Belisle to come along in more comfortable roles? An outfielder with a package more complete? A starting shortstop?
It’s highly likely that if the Reds did call up the Red Sox about Adam Dunn, the price would be too high. In addition, we would certainly have to sacrifice young pitching - such as Craig Hansen, Manny Delcarmen … unless Theo pulls the wool over Krivsky’s eyes. Is it worth it to sacrifice one of these young pitchers to acquire Adam Dunn? Are we so in debt to the need of pitching that we have to automatically dismiss any trade acquisition resulting in the loss of a pitcher? I don’t know.
If Adam Dunn becomes available, the Red Sox should look into it. If Kevin Millar asks Boston to return as a bench player, the Red Sox should seriously consider it.
I am fully aware the Red Sox have problems. They have pitching problems, first and foremost. However, you cannot just concentrate on pitching. When you have a chance to improve somewhere, regardless of what position that is, you explore the opportunities there. In addition, if we traded Mike Lowell, perhaps we get a top pitcher in return (Scott Linebrink from San Diego?) and there’s where we are: Linebrink in the bullpen, Youkilis at third, and Dunn at first.
Let me just leave you with the 3-4-5-6 lineup of 2007 if Adam Dunn was a Red Sox:
DH David Ortiz
LF Manny Ramirez
1B Adam Dunn
RF Wily Mo Pena
Fireworks.