We all know who was a free agent coming into this year, and where they signed. We also now how these players are doing as of now. But so what? What can we expect in the future from these men on which so much is riding? Vinny Castilla is hitting now, but what can we reasonably expect him to do through his contract? Carlos Beltran? Carl Pavano? I will analyze these men, and their reasonable futures in this, an ongoing column.
The key word is reasonable folks, so no, I won't say your team's big signing will be a Hall-of-Famer unless I think he is. Of course, I reserve the right to be wrong and completely change my mind later. On to it:
Steve Finley
Anaheim Angels
Contract- $6 million in 2005, $8 million in 2006
What he is- An old slugging centerfielder, Steve Finley had been the slowly rusting anchor of the Diamondbacks for years. He's never walked much, but he's hit plenty of bombs to make himself a valuable player.
What he will be- At 40, it's his bat speed to watch. When that goes, he loses everything. His batting averages through last year don't portend a major decline soon. His defense has deteriorated along the lines of Bernie Williams, although he isn't Bernie bad out there. Maybe he will be by the end of this contract.
Mitigating Circumstances- Playing with an injured shoulder all year, Finley finally went to the DL for it, explaining his .225/.287/.408 line. The power is still there. We'll see if the average comes back when Finley does. He's struggles mightily at home. Maybe it's the high fence in right field at Angels Stadium?
Alex Sanchez
San Francisco Giants, I think
Contract- Who the hell knows at this point?
What he is- A slap-and-dash hitter, with a lot of speed he doesn't use effectively, in the field or on the basepaths. Guys like this live and die on wildly varying batting averages. Add to that his steroid suspension (which is inexplicable, not only because he has zero power, but as I said before, he can't even use his speed properly), and you have a screwed up Tony Womack with a centerfielder's glove. There wasn't an emptier .322 average last year's than Alex's.
What he will be- A drain on the Giants offense. Even if he hits .320 again.
Mitigating Circumstances-He hit .354 for the DRays, who were smart enought to lock in their gains and cut him quickly. Joining the Giants, he's done nothing you'd want to read about. That's the life of guys like this. The steroids are really a secondary issue. This just isn't a good player.
Carlos Beltran
New York Mets
Contract- $11,571,429 in 2005, $119 million through 2011
What he is- Beltran has shown that he is an elite-level CF, and had been one of the most underated players in the game. With great defense, efficiency on the basepaths, and emerging great power last year, he has a .282/.352/.486 career line through age 28. That's a Hall of Famer so far.
What he will be- With a huge contract for a very long time, there's always a measure of risk of injury or sudden decline. Even with that, this a man in his prime, who has excelled in all aspects of the game and consolidated them, unlike, say, and Andruw Jones, who people still expect to have a breakout year (he is already). There hasn't been a $100 million this relatively safe since Alex Rodriguez.
Mitigating Circumstances- A .266/.323/.431 line in 2005 isn't great, but there are some things to remember. Beltran has gone from big hitter's parks in Kansas City and Houston to the cavernous spaces of Shea, so there's bound to be some dropoff. The rest is batting average, which should bounce back over time. What does concern me are his lack of steals (only 4 for 6 this year). Either Willie Randolph forgets who he has, or the most succesful base-stealer ever has lost his speed.