DeRosa has been traded to the Cleveland Indians for minor league pitchers Jeff Stevens, Chris Archer and John Gaub. DeRosa will likely slide into Cleveland's opening at third base.
I'm sure this will irk fans who long for the Twins to do something and especially those who would like the Twins to add someone they've heard of before, but DeRosa wouldn't really be a significant upgrade.
In related infielding news, the Cubs signed Aaron Miles. Elsewhere, I've seen the total value of the contract listed at 2 years/$4.9M.
For these two infielders, some internal options, and other names we've heard this offseason, let's look at projected wOBA (as determined by Marcel the Monkey), and career OPS+.
.394 wOBA, 147 OPS+ -- A-Rod
.350 wOBA, 97 OPS+ -- DeRosa
.335 wOBA, 105 OPS+ -- Blake
.329 wOBA, 97 OPS+ -- Harris
.323 wOBA, 93 OPS+ -- Buscher
.308 wOBA, 77 OPS+ -- Miles
.299 wOBA, 74 OPS+ -- Punto
.290 WOBA, 67 OPS+ -- Cesar Izturis
DeRosa's a little younger than Blake, which is likely the main reason his projected wOBA is better than Blake's. DeRosa has been much better than his career averages over the last three years, which is likely the main reason that his projected wOBA is better than Harris'.
First we see that none of the non-Rods are elite hitters and Punto isn't so bad when you compare him to other guys who have gotten similar 2-year deals this offseason. If we're considering these guys as potential full-time players, let's look at how many runs above average their wOBA would make them over 550 PA:
29.7 -- A-Rod
8.6 -- DeRosa
1.4 -- Blake
-1.4 -- Harris
-4.3 -- Buscher
-11.5 -- Miles
-15.8 -- Punto
-20.1 -- Izturis
DeRosa is better at the plate than Harris and Buscher, by maybe about one win over the course of the season. Then it becomes a matter of how well everyone can field. Defensive stats are a bit of a mess for a number of reasons, but let's take a look at career UZR per 150 games at third base for these guys. There are definitely sample size issues here, and I don't think all of these ratings make sense, but it will give us a place to start the conversation.
18.7 -- Punto
8.2 -- Izturis
0.9 -- A-Rod
??? -- Miles
-3.4 -- Blake
-4.1 -- DeRosa
-12.8 -- Buscher
-18.3 -- Harris
First things first--I think that Punto's rating and Harris' rating are each too extreme. No one else seems to rate Punto that high at 3B and I would guess that he's closer to a +10 defender at 3B. Harris, on the other hand, has started only 39 career games at 3B, so there are extreme sample size issues with that number. UZR has him as a -3.9 runs/150G defender at 2B and a -9.9 runs/150G defender at 3B. Compared to other metrics, I think that's generous, but given his tools and the information from 200 games started at 2B/SS, I think it's reasonable to expect that Harris can be a -5 defender at 3B. Optimistically, I would guess he's average and pessimistically, I think -10 is about right at 3B.
Taking those things into consideration, and rounding to emphasize that these are rough measures, here is how I would rate those players as defenders at third base, in runs above average:
10 -- Izturis
10 -- Punto
0 -- A-Rod
0 -- Miles
-5 -- Blake
-5 -- DeRosa
-5 -- Harris
-10 -- Buscher
Using those defensive estimates, we get, for overall value at third base, in runs above average:
30 -- A-Rod
4 -- DeRosa
-4 -- Blake
-6 -- Punto
-6 -- Harris
-10 -- Izturis
-12 -- Miles
-14 -- Buscher
Of the group, I also have the least confidence in Buscher since he had an awfully weak history before the last couple of years and I'm most concerned about his defense, which could very well be worse than -10.
The more I look at it, the more I would lean towards making Harris the full-time 3B, with Buscher playing against tough right-handed pitchers or when we're not as concerned about infield defense. Harris seems more or less to be Casey Blake from 6-8 years ago, and we doesn't cost us anything to acquire him.
I think DeRosa would have been an upgrade. But he would have been a small upgrade, and for an extra $5.5M in salary, plus giving up more talent than the Indians gave up. I'm not sure at all about how good those minor league pitchers are (I suspect they aren't very good), but I'm sure that they have some value. $5.5M and low-value prospects are more than I would have given up for one extra win.
The Twins did a lot last offseason, and they did have done very little this offseason, but given their performances in 2007 and 2008, I think that makes sense. In 2007 we had a number of below-replacement-level performances. Upgrading from awful to mediocre is the easiest kind of improvement that you can make.
In 2008, a big reason that the Twins improved is that they had barely any below-replacement-level performances. Monroe and Everett, for instance, were annoying, but as a group they were only as far below replacement level as Darnell McDonald, Matt LeCroy, and Chris Heintz were (as a group) for the Twins in 2007. Mike Lamb was all kinds of fail this year (especially when you include his glove), but that's nothing compared to the devastation that Rabe, Garrett Jones, Luis Rodriguez, Rondell White, Alexi Casilla, and Nick Punto brought us the year before.
All totalled, the Twins improved from -76 runs in below-replacement-level performance in 2007 to just -19 runs in below-replacement-level performance in 2008. That's a 5-6-win improvement in just replacing your worst players with barely adequate players. That's very nearly as good as the difference between A-Rod and a replacement-level third baseman.
I think that's a pretty overlooked part of the '07 to '08 improvement, but it also means that we've more or less exhausted the cheap and easy ways to improve the team--at least in position players. We ought to be scouring the waiver wires and looking for interesting NRIs to shore up the bullpen and rotation depth. Even there, I don't know how much you can realistically expect improvement. On results, Bonser sucked last year, but I suspect he'll be at or above replacement level this year. Bass was also bad, but he wasn't even below replacement level based on runs allowed--so I wouldn't expect for miracles in improving the bullpen.
The Twins have a roster that can be substantially improved for 2009 in three main ways:
1) Fleece someone in a trade
2) Trade future value for present value
3) Spend $$$$ to improve spots where we are okay but not great
The first option always sounds great, but you can't always depend on deals with suckers to come through. The second option probably doesn't make sense for the Twins because money is a very scarce resource for them and prospects usually costs less money than players you would acquire in a trade. The third option doesn't work because we're not lucky enough to be sitting on a 25-million-resident gold mine.
I didn't really plan on coming back to this, but here I am again. For as much as some people want to be delusional about the advantage that the Yankees have, it's ridiculous to think that small-revenue teams like the Twins aren't at a significant disadvantage compared to large-revenue teams when it comes to assembling their roster. I can hope that the Twins can turn fool's gold into gold, but it's not reasonable to expect that, and I see no obvious, significant upgrades for this team.
Terry Ryan built the basis for this team by being patient and not trading the future for one wild run at a ring. Bill Smith would be wise to follow that precedent. Our offseasons are bound to be boring not because of our management, but because of our budget. Until MLB decides to do something about that, it's just the way it is.

Recent Letters to the Editor
In Response to Cup of Coffee: March 11, 2010,
socaltwinsfan wrote: No way the Dodgers are even considering going after Mauer. They're payroll is lower than the Twins now and they have a good young catcher in Russell Martin. And it wasn't like the Angels were…
Milt on Tilt wrote: 2 reasons. His looks and Vote For the Worst. Teenage girls and their texting have a huge influence on the results of the show.
socaltwinsfan wrote: I think you're right. That's what Teixeira got just last year and Mauer is younger, a better hitter and plays a far more critical defensive position. It would be difficult to see him taking less…
Algonad wrote: I've only watched two times but how is Urban still there? He's awful! I know he looks like the kid from High School Musical, but still!
Algonad wrote: if the athletes aren't making the dough then the owner is. … "How much is enough?" question has to be applied to the Pohlads as well as Mauer. What's a few more million per…
socaltwinsfan wrote: I guarantee they are. They realize that Mauer is in position to set the market and he has every possible negotiating advantage and yet because of his ties to the area and the team, he…
Milt on Tilt wrote: You know what's happening tonight? American Idol elimination night! 4 of 16 singers are getting the boot tonight. Here is the MoT power ranking for week 3. Remaining at the top for the third…
janus wrote: How much can someone who gets $20 million in salary per year expect to bank after taxes in MN? I (sort of) recall reading about how Mauer (or anyone else, I suppose) could save…
Milt on Tilt wrote: Let me be clear, I was talking about the amount that will be enough to sign him. Ah..I thought you were acting like StribGuy, $20M is more than I'll make in my life....just sign already!
cheaptoy wrote: I don't think I'll have a cherry stout for you (not a homebrew, from New Glarus) because I'm having a hard time not drinking them. But fear not, I do plan to put together…
In Response to Cup of Coffee: March 10, 2010,
frightwig wrote: Wasn't there a Dominican, or perhaps a Latino from another country, who made a similar comment sometime in that last couple years? The guy also felt like MLB prefers to target the Latino talent pool…
brianS wrote: quality episode. Mrs. S has gotten me hooked.
spookymilk wrote: Yeah, I'm losing 3-2 and 2-0. I've only given up one homer, to Cam, and I've hit one with Kubel (and got close with plucky rookie third baseman Kelly Wells). I'm playing with the Twins,…
In Response to Your Second Chance to Predict the Number of Twins Wins in 2010,
SBG wrote: Toyota would have to be the party and it might be tough to prove damages, I don't know.
twayn wrote: Mr. Lee might have some damages here, too. Like spending 2 1/2 years in prison and being blamed for the deaths of three people. Just curious, who would be the liable party? Toyota, I assume?…
E-6 wrote: I love Strib Guy!
SBG wrote: John's gonna need to sign with a team before we can trade for him, but otherwise, well thought out.
Strib Guy wrote: I voted for 81-85 with Nathan on the shelf... The Twins don't have anyone to replace him... Guerrier is good but unreliable, he would blow at least 7 saves... Crain is not an MLB quality…
spookymilk wrote: Yeah, it was wrong to imprison him in the first place...he took the fall for what was obviously an accident.
SBG wrote: The delicate fact here, of course, is that prevailing in a civil suit against Toyota would probably require exoneration of the driver. Even still, this case stinks and the conviction seems a miscarriage of…
spookymilk wrote: Even given the new situation, it is truly amazing that he's able to separate the situation from the man and say this. Most people will cling to their blame.
UncleWalt wrote: Typically, in cases like these, the family of the victims aren't all that interested in helping a convicted felon get another shot at freedom. I noted that as well. Here's the quote from the Shelbyville paper:…
FirstTimeLongTime wrote: I feel the feature "You Choose" really lends itself to comments from Strib Guy.
In Response to This Week In Ex-Twins,
freealonzo wrote: I thought I read somewhere that Eddie G. was released.
In Response to Post-Oscar Review,
brianS wrote: Moss' point is that the American public thinks (anymore) that WWII was all about Europe, and that it started on D-Day. I'd wager that a significant portion of the American public thinks (anymore) that we fought…