Reds have trade bait as winter meetings open
By Marc Lancaster
Post staff reporter
The Reds scored more runs than anyone else in the National League last year. They also gave up more runs than anyone else.
In the most simplistic terms, general manager Dan O'Brien's goal this offseason is to do all he can to improve on the latter statistic without doing too much damage to the former.
That quest will kick into high gear next week, as baseball's winter meetings begin Monday in Dallas. The Reds didn't generate any buzz whatsoever at last year's gathering in Anaheim, but they did initiate a flurry of moves upon returning home.
That pattern could repeat itself this year, but there seems to be more of a possibility that the Reds will step into the limelight at some point next week, simply because of other teams' interest in a few of their players. And make no mistake, if the Reds are to address their perennial objective of improving the pitching staff, any significant addition probably will come via trade.
"Following up on the general manager meetings and leading up to the winter meetings, there has been a tremendous amount of interest expressed in a variety of our position players," O'Brien said on a Friday conference call with local reporters. "The focal point for us in all of these conversations revolves around pitching coming back to our ballclub."
With that in mind, O'Brien said he isn't limiting his focus to clearing up the longstanding logjam among core outfielders Ken Griffey Jr., Adam Dunn, Austin Kearns and Wily Mo Pena. In fact, he implied that he wouldn't be averse to holding on to all four if a better deal could be made for another piece of the roster.
"I don't think you can focus on the outfield situation, because at this point there are a number of different avenues with our position players that are available to us," O'Brien said. "It's basically a matter of looking at what would bring us the best possible package of talent in return. Whether or not that involves an outfielder remains to be seen. ... Sometimes you've got to have flexibility in considering moving people around the diamond to different positions."
If not an outfielder, the only players on the roster the Reds would consider trading that would bring the kind of return they're looking for likely would be first baseman Sean Casey and catcher Jason LaRue.
Plenty of teams are looking for catching help, and the arbitration-eligible LaRue could be an attractive bargaining chip for Cincinnati. Casey would appear less so, mainly because he'll be paid $8.5 million in 2006, the final year of his contract. If Casey is dealt, the Reds would be able to fill that hole internally by moving Dunn to first, but there is no in-house replacement for LaRue.
One other player who could depart in a minor deal or as a piece in a bigger trade is right-hander Ramon Ortiz, who is eligible for arbitration after the Reds declined their $4.55 million option on him for 2006.
Whether or not a deal is consummated in Dallas next week, O'Brien sounds determined to another crack at filling the pitching void that has troubled the Reds for so long. Last year's moves - trading for Ortiz, shelling out $25.5 million for Eric Milton and re-signing Paul Wilson - certainly didn't do the trick.
O'Brien didn't close the door to dipping back into the free-agent market for a pitcher, but indicated that the rapidly rising prices of the available arms make another Milton-level deal unlikely. That's especially true considering O'Brien said he is working with about the same payroll he had last year, about $60 million.
Raises due to the nine players eligible for salary arbitration this year probably will eat up a good chunk of the money the Reds will save by clearing the contracts of Danny Graves, D'Angelo Jimenez and others off the books, thus making it more difficult to contend in what is shaping up to be a free-spending marketplace.
"In projecting our budget for next year, we included all of the arbitration-eligible players, and right now we're prepared to have every one of them on the ballclub," O'Brien said. "Ultimately, certainly that impacts the extent to which we can be involved in the free-agent market."
The only sure thing heading into Dallas is that the Reds can't go to spring training with the same pitching staff that dragged the team down to a 73-89 record in 2005 and expect to do any better.