I get the honor of daggering peekay, who grabbed the 1976 Dodgers just before I could. I think some revenge is in order. Besides the Dodgers he also has the 1926 Boston Braves, 1956 Washington Senators, and his 1st round pick, the offensive juggernaut that is the 1976 Boston Red Sox. Seems like I should have some good options. Let’s dive in…
Starting at C there seems to be a lot of good choices: Carlton Fisk, Clint Courtney, and Ed Fitz Gerald can all hit. The latter two are platoon C’s and don’t provide enough PA’s combined. There are some defensive platoon possibilities in Lou Berberet, Joe Ferguson, and Steve Yeager. Zack Taylor also has a gun for an arm. Not much damage we could do here.
I found the same issue at 1B (Cooper, Runnels, Yaz, and Garvey), SS (Bancroft, Burleson, and Russell), and OF (Brown, Lemon, Lynn, Rice, Smith, Sievers, Miller, Buckner, and Evans). Nope, not these guys. A lot of choices here.
3B is interesting. One of the reasons I was targeting the Dodgers was for Ron Cey. Good defense and a little pop in his bat. And he is under $6M. Past him there is Andy High and worst case is a solid glove albeit a little expensive for his lack of offense, Eddie Yost.
2B seems a little weak. You have a speedy sub-$3M Davey Lopes who plays average defense on 491 PA’s. Past him there is rangeless Denny Doyle at $2M but, he’s on the Red Sox. The rest are poor defensive platoon 2B’s (177-338 PA’s) who can’t hit, except Ted Sizemore who can at least play defense for half the season. This could be a pouring salt on the wound kind of pick. It’s already an open wound but we could make it a little more painful. Let’s check out your pitchers before we stick you.
Besides Cey and Lopes, the Dodgers also offer pitching. And lot’s of it. Sutton, Hooton, Rhoden, Hough, and Sosa are all possibilities. Sutton and Hooton may be your best two SP options. The Red Sox offer Rick Wise, Fergie Jenkins, Luis Tiant, and Reggie Cleveland. All number 4 pitchers or worse. The Senators and Braves have a couple of RP’s and then nothing but mop ups and inning fillers. A dagger here could be painful.
After giving it some thought, I think hitting a poor second basemen won’t hurt the offense or defense as much as taking out one of the two good pitchers you have. So say goodbye to 1976 Don Sutton. And along with him, no Dodgers Stadium.