
Andruw Jones would at least stop hitting home runs against the Mets. Then again he stopped hitting them last season anyway. (Photo by the Associated Press.)
Two years ago, Tony Soprano wanted to talk to the Mangenius. Today, Eric Mangini wants to talk to any team with a coaching vacancy. Things change quickly in the NFL.
They change quickly in Major League Baseball too. Take the case of Andruw Jones, for example.
One year ago, he was a highly sought-after free agent just one season away from a 41-homer campaign. Today, the Dodgers can’t give him away.
Which is what they are apparently trying to do with the Mets.
According to ESPN’s Buster Olney, the Dodgers and Mets are in trade talks for Jones, and it doesn’t even include them taking back Luis Castillo. This makes very little sense. With Carlos Beltran in the fold, there’s no need for Jones in center, which means the Mets would use him in right, where Ryan Church played last season. And what’s even more enfuriating is the Dodgers want to move Jones and then sign Adam Dunn. I don’t know how many more times I can write this, but why aren’t the Mets interested in Dunn?
But this isn’t a case of Dunn vs. Jones. It’s a case of Jones vs. Just About Anyone. For those of you slept through the 2008 season, Jones bottomed out in his first season in L.A. after signing a two-year $36 million deal. It was actually part of a two-year decline that started in his final season in Atlanta. Here are the bloody details.
2006 ATL — 565 AB, 107 R, 41 HR. 129 RBI, .262 BA, .363 OBP, .531 SLG.
2007 ATL — 572 AB, 83 R, 26 HR, 94 RBI, .222 BA, .311 OBP, .413 SLG.
2008 LAD — 209 AB, 21 R, 3 HR, 14 RBI, .158 BA, .256 OBP, .249 SLG.
This is what concerns me. Olney writes that there is a “perception within the industry that Jones, who played the first 12 years of his career in Atlanta, was just never comfortable with the Dodgers.” OK, then explain the drop-off from ‘06 to ‘07. Actually I could offer an explanation, but it’s nothing good.
And certainly nothing you want to trade for, especially if they’re not willing to take back the Mets’ own aging, underperforming, overpaid player.
Update (11:33 p.m.) — Crisis averted. MLB.com’s Marty Noble debunks the Jones-to-Mets rumors, noting there were discussions at the Winter Meetings that involved Castillo for Jones, but they were short-lived.
Much like this crisis.