MELBOURNE, Australia: With Spring Training beginning tonight, the long offseason is officially over. We've decided to take a look at each IBL team's most significant moves, whether positive or negative. The grades attached are, of course, the opinion of this reporter, and shouldn't be taken too seriously. They tried to take into account a team's direction (a rebuilding team would get a better grade for trading a player for futures, while that might hurt the grade of a team trying to compete this season). In alphabetical order:
The
Black Forest Foxes didn't do much this offseason. They lost pitcher
Oliviero Gómez, who compiled a 2.08 ERA in 86.1 innings, to free agency, as well as some mostly irrelevant minor league pieces. Their only addition was 2B/SS
Christopher Grotefend, who will likely platoon at shortstop and could also play backup at 2B. Grotefend hit .339 in a brief stint with Cairo last season, and at just $850,000 for one season, is a low risk, high reward signing. This is a "wait and see" season for the Foxes, who won the WBA Championship Series in 2125 and then failed to make the playoffs in 2126 with essentially the same roster. They didn't need to make many changes, and it's hard to criticize the Grotefend signing.
Overall grade: BThe
Cairo Pharaohs, defending Afro-European Division champions, had a rather confusing offseason. They're clearly trying to compete this year, but traded 3B
Bill Brown (who had a .341 average in a platoon role last year), SP
Adelmo Wagner (who was 16-7 with a 3.21 ERA), and last year's Pitcher of the Year,
Shigenaga Matsuo (18-5, 2.53 ERA) for picks and prospects. The return wasn't bad - Cairo got a lot of picks, including a 1st and 2nd rounder - and they did find a solid free agent, SP
Lloyd Young, who had a 4.23 ERA but accumulated 2.3 WAR in Mumbai's notorious hitters park. But any team who's still trying to win shouldn't be trading the defending Pitcher of the Year.
Overall grade: DThe
Karachi Falcons had a productive offseason. They only lost one important player - RP
Bartolomeo Nieto, who put up an 0.93 ERA in 19.1 pro innings last year - and made some valuable acquisitions through trade and free agency. The Falcons signed OF
Arturo Bramante, who hit .263 but slugged .442 last year with Northwest, and traded for SP
Alfonso Vásquez, who was 8-12 with a 3.52 ERA in Melbourne. Giving up a 2nd rounder for Vásquez is a reasonable price, and the Falcons look set to be better this year than they were last year.
Overall grade: B+The
Ljubljana Dragons didn't do a whole lot. Their only major loss was 1B
Pepe Alonso, who signed as a free agent in... Ljubljana. But the Dragons didn't really add anyone significant either, unless you count OF
José Perea, who plays plus defense in the corners but hit just .240 last year. But in fairness, Ljubljana has a lot of young, talented prospects who could make the jump to the majors this year, and they weren't all that far from the playoffs - they didn't really need to do much.
Overall grade: B-The
Manila Folders had several important pieces leave. Most prominent were 3B
Dustin Russell, who slugged .373 and put up 3.3 WAR, and 2B
Jacques Segura, who hit .295 and had 3.2 WAR in 125 games. Replacing them will be free agent pickups
John Butler at 3B, who had 3.3 WAR in Puerto Rico last season, and
Marco Stinzi, who hit .280 and slugged .412 in Rio. These replacements seem more than adequate, but Manila didn't really
improve by much this offseason - and led by a tandem of aging pitchers, it might not be enough.
Overall grade: C+The
Melbourne Meteors, unsurprisingly, had by far the busiest offseason. They traded OF
Mitch Qiao, SPs Alfonso Vásquez and
Diego Rangel, and RP
Gary Chalcott, and paid a draft pick to lose
Guda Baloch's salary. But they added OF
Nelson Ackland, SP
Boboy Espina, and RP
Jilenko Belgica, and gained a lot of picks and seven pretty good prospects - all via trade. For a team trying to win now, it wasn't the greatest series of moves, but Ackland will certainly provide a nice improvement, and they have plenty of pitching depth.
Overall grade: B-The
Mumbai Cobras didn't have the money to make a move, and, predictably, didn't make a move. Lloyd Young left for free agency, and nobody else of relevance joined or departed the team. The Cobras are the defending IBL champs, of course, and are seemingly not finding a need to make changes (justifiably).
Overall grade: C+The
Paris Fleur-de-Lis are in the middle of a long rebuild. They lost 2B
Du Chin, who hit .281 and put up 3.3 WAR. But on a team trying to tank for draft picks, losing Chin isn't really a negative. The Fleur-de-Lis also obtained several decent draft picks in exchange for taking on the contracts of Guda Baloch and
Claude Barbier. For a rebuilding team, this offseason went perfectly according to plan.
Overall grade: B+The
Rome Generals lost nobody of any significance, and added a group of pitchers relatively cheaply. SP
Ronman Sanahon (12-5 with a 3.89 ERA for Northwest) and
Juan Valadez (13-13 with a 4.12 ERA for Santo Domingo) joined the Generals as free agents, while they traded for SP
Tusya Alabyan, who was 9-12 with a 3.94 ERA but had 2.9 WAR in Santo Domingo last year. Rome also had the most significant free agent signing in the IBL this offseason, acquiring C
Du-sung Lee, who hit .313, led the ABL in doubles, and posted 4.6 WAR for Mexico City last season. Of course, the payroll went up correspondingly, but the Generals improved a lot without giving up too many assets.
Overall grade: AThe
Tokyo Shogun did almost nothing. They lost OF
Tony Haward (hit .273 and had 2.2 WAR) to free agency, and acquired nobody. As a rebuilding team, they didn't need to do anything, but Paris showed that there were plenty of opportunities for a rebuilding team to acquire futures, and it's hard to believe Tokyo couldn't have done the same.
Overall grade: C-Best acquisition (free agency):
Du-sung Lee, Rome GeneralsBest acquisition (trade):
Nelson Ackland, Melbourne MeteorsBiggest loss (free agency):
Jacques Segura, Manila FoldersBiggest loss (trade):
Shigenaga Matsuo, Cairo Pharaohs