Cubs trade Tony Campana to Arizona

In Commentary And Analysis by dmick8943 Comments

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Cincinnati Reds v Chicago CubsThe Cubs and Diamondbacks completed a trade that sends recently DFA'd Tony Campana to Arizona while the Cubs acquire two 17-year old pitching prospects.

The Cubs dealt popular speedster Tony Campana to the Diamondbacks for a pair of 17-year-old Venezuelan right-handed pitchers: Erick Leal and Jesus Castillo.

Campana, 26, led the Cubs with 30 stolen bases last season, but he didn't get on base consistently enough to utilize his speed. He was designated for assignment on Feb. 10. In 89 games last season, Campana batted .264 with a .308 on-base percentage.

"It's difficult to lose Tony from the organization," Cubs general manager Jed Hoyer said. "Great person, he's a fantastic base stealer and a guy we really enjoyed getting to know. But ultimately you can only protect 40 guys on the roster, and he got caught up in the roster crunch. We have a little bit of depth in the outfield and less depth in pitching, and given that, it led us to designate Tony for assignment."

Leal could play in the U.S. this year, but Castillo will likely stay in the Dominican Republic and play in the Dominican Summer League. Leal was 6-2 with a 2.44 ERA in 14 appearances for the DSL last season, striking out 70 over 70 innings. Castillo was 2-4 with a 5.40 ERA in 14 appearances in the DSL.

Impossible to know much about these guys based on their numbers at that age, but the fact the Cubs got something younger than 24 or 25 is kind of impressive.

From Ben Badler and John Manuel of Baseball America:

Castillo was Arizona's most expensive international amateur signing in 2011, when he signed for $250,000 from Oswaldo Camacho's program on Aug. 27, his 16th birthday. With his August birthday, he was one of the youngest signings in 2011 and pitched the entire Dominican Summer League season at age 16. Castillo is from Valencia but has also lived in Spain. He used to play soccer as well and his athleticism is evident in his smooth delivery, which he repeats well for his age. He has a long, loose arm stroke, a long stride and gets good extension out front. He signed throwing in the mid-80s with a lanky build, but he now touches the low-90s and has a good changeup for his age, although his breaking ball is still a work in progress. Castillo did post a 5.40 ERA last year, but if he were born a week later, he wouldn't have even been eligible to sign until July 2, 2012, so he's an intriguing arm for the Cubs to take a flier on.

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  1. Aisle424

    Cubs fans, of course, are losing their shit:

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  2. Rice Cube

    @ Aisle424:
    I had a similar reaction as the last tweet, except I wasn’t mad, I was euphoric because it was unbelievable that the Cubs actually pulled this off.

    Now I’m wondering if both prospects are broken somehow.

    Need more optimism goggles.

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  3. fang2415

    Uh, so hang on a sec, when you said “prospects”, it looks like you actually may have meant “prospects”.

    So,

    A) Is it just me or is getting two actual srs prospects for a DFA’d player kind of amazing, and

    2) How many Ericks are there in Venezuela?

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  4. Berselius

    The Cubs waited too long to trade Campana to AZ. If they did this earlier in the offseason, they could have traded him for Trevor Bauer, considering how little the DBacks valued him (dying laughing)

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  5. Author
    dmick89

    @ fang2415:
    I would assume that there are serious issues with both of these pitchers because, well, they were acquired for a DFA’d Tony Campana. It’s nice that these guys are young and all that, but for now, what we know about these two is this: they were traded for Tony Campana. Hopefully this works out and they become more than just that, but for now, I’d say the Cubs came away with a really good deal, but probably didn’t steal the next Verlander.

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  6. 26.2cubfan

    @ Aisle424:

    Ugh. Speed is only valuable if you can get on base, which Tony did about as well as Brett Jackson at. He slugs about as well as a decent hitting pitcher, and has a noodle for an arm. He’s NOT good at baseball. If another team who hopes to be in contention can use him as a pinch runner or to race a horse before the game, LET THEM HAVE HIM!

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  7. Author
    dmick89

    I think Campana has value as a defender and base runner. His WAR so far is pretty good and while that wont continue, he does have value. More to a contending team.

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  8. Lukas

    Don’t worry everyone. Campana will eventually be scraptastic enough to fight his way back to the cubs bench! His small size and incredible whiteness will make it happen!

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  9. SVB

    @ Aisle424:
    Marquise Goodwin (UTx), Tavon Austin (WVU), and DJ Monroe (UTx) are pretty fast. I guess the Cubs should draft them this spring and put them on the roster. We’ll be WS bound for sure.

    /Cubs Twitter fanned

    Who cares if their primary position is Wide Receiver.

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  10. Suburban kid

    @ GBTS:
    Besides the TV rights news, which can be summed up as “the WGN portion of games will be auctioned off to the highest bidder” prior to the 2015 season, I also learned about some potential stadium billboards. What’s up with that? Toyota-style, or Torco-style? Wouldn’t they need city approval for more inside the stadium billboards?

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  11. Aisle424

    Suburban kid wrote:

    Wouldn’t they need city approval for more inside the stadium billboards?

    Yes, they’d need to relax some rules and Tunney is currently being a bitch about it.

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  12. Author
    dmick89

    @ GBTS:
    Was that guy implying the Cubs are in for a Dodgers-like payday? They won’t get that. They’re not as popular as the Dodgers are. They’ll get more than some of the other teams who have signed huge deals, but they won’t come close to the Dodgers. I don’t know what fair market value is for a Cubs game, but I’d guess a sizable percentage less than the Dodgers. That’s still much more than they currently get.

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  13. GBTS

    @ Jeff:
    Because opposing teams have to THINK that he could come in and pinch run at ANY TIME, so it pressures them to throw more perfect games which leads to mistakes.

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