Nov/20/08 11:24 PM Filed in:
Pat Burrell
Longtime Phillie Pat Burrell
is a free agent after helping the team to the
World Series title this year. He likely will
command a large contract.
Today's debaters are Morning Call sportswriter Mandy
Housenick, who has helped with the Call's coverage of
the Phillies the past five seasons, and her husband,
Tom Housenick, a former sports editor and now a member
of the Call's universal copy desk.
Mandy Housenick: Absolutely not. I was hoping the
Phillies would have traded Burrell in previous years
when there were rumors [about it]. He's never put up
numbers worthy of the huge contract he was given. Can
anyone really argue that he did enough to validate the
more than $14 million he made this season? He's paid to
hit home runs and drive in runs. Yet, since being
called up in 2000, he's never hit 40 homers and
surpassed the century mark for RBIs only twice, with
the most recent time coming in 2005.
Tom Housenick: One thing we agree on is that Burrell
didn't earn his previous salary. But I believe that a
carefully structured, two-year deal worth a total of
$14 million would be a wise move for the Phillies, who
have dumped/should dump So Taguchi, Tom Gordon and Adam
Eaton from the payroll. That's a savings of $14.4
million from those three players. Burrell would have to
accept a significant pay cut, but if he really wants to
stay in Philly ... I have not seen anything offensively
from Geoff Jenkins or Greg Golston to believe they
could pick up the slack and join the outfield of Jayson
Werth and Shane Victorino. And Greg Dobbs is a great
pinch hitter. But his stats in games he starts aren't
nearly as good. Neither is his glove.
MH: You should know the greed of players by now. I
can't imagine Burrell would ever take that big of a pay
cut. But for the sake of argument, let's say he would
agree to. The Phillies still shouldn't keep him. He had
two downright lousy months this season and a couple
other shaky ones. In May, he hit just .227 with only
five homers. In August, his worst month by far, he hit
.181 with 29 strikeouts, just 12 RBIs and four home
runs. Throughout the postseason, his .227 average just
didn't cut it and 13 strikeouts well that's just
embarrassing.
TH: Lousy months? Do you remember the entire first half
of the season for Ryan Howard? He wasn't hitting my
weight, let alone his own. Pat Burrell is never going
to be an MVP candidate. He's never going to be the
superstar the Phillies thought he was when they drafted
him. He's going to be a decent, everyday player with a
good arm and the capability of carrying a team for a
month or two, like he did early in 2008. Plus, he's
well-liked in the clubhouse and by the coaching staff.
There's a lot to be said for team chemistry. The
Phillies have it. Burrell is an integral part of that.
MH: Howard came on like wildfire late in the season. He
was fantastic in September and wound up leading the
majors in RBIs and home runs for the entire year. When
that happens, I can overlook a slow start. Burrell
never rebounded with nearly that much success. On
another note ÂÖ why should the Phillies, now the world
champions of baseball, have to settle for decent? They
should be able to land a very good replacement. They
blew a chance when they didn't jump on Matt Holliday.
TH: Holliday was out of the Phillies' price range and
he's not a good clubhouse guy. Plus, they would have
had to deal top prospects such as Carlos Carrasco, Lou
Marson or Golston. When something works, really works,
why mess it up? The Phillies need a right-handed bat to
offset the lefty bats of Dobbs and Jenkins. Maybe
Burrell doesn't get 140 starts a year. Give him 120.
Give Dobbs more chances to start. Give Jenkins a chance
to get in a hitting rhythm. But Burrell is the best of
the three options currently available. And, see the
list of free-agent outfielders? Want Luis Gonzalez, Jim
Edmonds or Ken Griffey Jr.? They'd be eligible for
Social Security come 2010. Adam Dunn? Talk about a
strikeout machine.
(mcall.com)