
Who needs $200 million anyway?
As I write this, the three lowest payroll teams in baseball (Marlins, Rays, and A's) have a better record than the top three payrolls (Yankees, Mets, and Tigers).
The Marlins continue to exceed expectations. They're three games back in the NL East and six games over .500. In the off season, they unloaded Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis in effort to cut a third of their payroll to a league-low $21 million. For what its worth, the Yankees pay Alex Rodriguez $28 million this year and find themselves with a worse record than the Marlins.
The Marlins have received huge contributions from unlikely guys like second baseman Dan Uggla (156 OPS+), third baseman Jorge Cantu (121 OPS+), and outfielder Cody Ross (.503 SLG). Neither of those three are making more than $500,000 this year. Cantu has replaced Cabrera at third and has hit more home runs and had a higher OPS than his predecessor so far this season. You didn't need me to tell you that he's making a fraction of what Cabrera makes.
And what about Andrew Miller? The 23-year old has a 2.77 ERA in his last 9 starts and has been one of the best NL starting pitchers in the months of May and June. And... you didn't need me to tell you that he makes a fraction of what Dontrelle Willis makes.
Once again, the Marlins seem to time the right moment to sell-high on their big players and find cheap, young players to fill in. I commented on Rich Lederer's recent column over at The Baseball Analysts and pointed out the 'Top 3/Bottom 3' phenomenon. Rich responded with "just as practice doesn't make perfect...perfect practice makes perfect, spending does not equal success...only wise spending equals success." I totally agree.
Now, lets just see if this can hold up throughout the rest of the season.
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