10 years ago today the Cubs traded Todd Hundley and Chad Hermanson to the Dodgers for Mark Grudzielanek and Eric Karros. It was not only the best trade that new GM Jim Hendry made in his tenure as GM, but one of the best trades the Cubs made in franchise history. Chris Jaffe writes about that trade today on The Hardball Times.
Eric Karros had one of the greatest first halves of his career. He entered the All-Star break batting a bizarrely high .323—and then he went 7-for-12 after the break. On July 22, he was hitting .338, which would dwarf his previous career high of .304.
Instead he flopped badly. He batted just .202 with eight extra base hits down the stretch, but his early heroics were enough to give him his best overall offensive season in four years. Still, as Branch Rickey had said, it’s better to trade a player one year too early than one year too late, and the Dodgers had just traded him a half-season too early.
Then there is Grudzielanek. Inconceivably, the 33-year-old enjoyed the best year of his career, batting .314. That proved to be no fluke as he hit .302 from 2003-08. Sure it can help leaving Dodger Stadium but it shouldn’t help that much—especially not for someone who was that old.
So the Dodgers traded Karros a half-season too early, and Grudzielanek a half-dozen seasons too early, all for a pair of players who gave them 10 hits.
As for the Cubs, behind the unexpectedly good production from their new first and second basemen, they made the postseason and nearly claimed the team’s first pennant since 1945.
That was one heck of a one-sided trade that occurred a decade ago on Dec. 4, 2002
Comments
@ dmick89:
I care a lot more about character in baseball when we’re watching a 60-win team. Contending for the playoffs can assuage a lot of dislike.
BerseliusQuote Reply
dmick89 wrote:
Quasi-Pope is doing them for espn now, they might be insider only. I think they’ll end up on fangraphs eventually though.
I haven’t heard anything yet from the Oliver guys, which is strange.
BerseliusQuote Reply
Dan Haren ———> Nationals
dmick89Quote Reply
@ Berselius:
It’s not that way for me. I’m not going to spending any time with him so I just don’t care what he’s like. Not to mention, I’d bet everything I own there is already a homophobic asshole on the Cubs. It’s fairly prevalent in sports.
dmick89Quote Reply
new shit: http://obstructedview.net/major-league-baseball/cubs-interested-in-brandon-mccarthy-and-yunel-escobar.html
dmick89Quote Reply
That trade! – I refused to hate Hendry through the rest of his crappy moves just because of it
SychophantQuote Reply
That was really on of best trades done by Jim Hendry during his tenure except that everything he had done is just simple crap. But due to that one deal Jim able to compensate his whole tenure as GM.
normes BenjaminQuote Reply
missed it.
normes BenjaminQuote Reply
This is the only appreciable trade done by Jim during his tenure.
RobertsQuote Reply
Eric Karros was a star and an immensely talented player.He had a great shining career for few years before he fumbled,dropped down and never reached that high.But I appreciate that he fought hard even during his low period and that shows his undiminished spirit.Unfortunately he failed to be chosen by reputed clubs as clubs apply strategies to benefit their own team and pick only in-form players.
Morgan skantQuote Reply
I too agree with Morgan. Eric Karros was a talented player. But he was not chosen by reputed clubs. Anyway though he is a great person. He overcame his problems with a brave heart. I admire him for his spirit.
Moore BriannaQuote Reply
Eric Karros was indeed a very talented player. The way he played was excellent. I would love to watch him playing. He proved that he is a true sportsman by keeping a level head even during his low period. He truly is a brave heart and a very good human being.
KayleeQuote Reply