DURING HIS
six-season tenure as the White Sox general manager, Ken Williams has completed
51 trades, the most by any G.M. during that span. Boredom, he likes to claim,
is the explanation for his tireless wheeling and dealing, but in truth Williams
has an appetite for risk and one of the game's shrewdest eyes for a bargain. In
building the 2005 World Series champs, Williams not only took a chance on
unconventional manager Ozzie Guillen but also, perhaps more important, spackled
the cracks in his roster with such underappreciated players as Jose Contreras,
Jermaine Dye and A.J. Pierzynski.
That contrarian
streak has driven Williams to take his greatest gamble yet. Exasperated with
what he calls the "market madness" of this past off-season, he has
begun a makeover of the White Sox that will almost certainly continue into next
winter. Unlike the bingeing Cubs, the White Sox took a pass on the latest
free-agent market and have instead been shedding established assets, including
two fifths (and very nearly three fifths) of their rotation, a spectacular risk
in these pitching-lean times. Williams sent big-game specialist Freddy Garcia
to the Phillies (for pitching prospects Gavin Floyd and Gio Gonzalez) and
young, hard-throwing righty Brandon McCarthy to the Rangers (for even younger
lefthander John Danks). He was very close to trading a third starter, Jon
Garland, to Houston before the deal fell apart because of medical concerns
about one of the Astros involved.
By the start of
next season, Dye and workhorse lefthander Mark Buehrle, both of whom are in the
final year of their deals, are likely to be gone. (According to sources, Dye,
33, recently cited the six-year, $100 million free-agent deal Carlos Lee signed
with Houston in November as a fair barometer of his worth.) Though he is not a
free agent until after the '08 season, slick-fielding third baseman Joe Crede
is a candidate to be moved next winter to make room for top prospect Josh
Fields.
Williams has been
spoiled by the top-tier talent he's been able to sign at ridiculously
reasonable prices. Dye is making $7 million this season, and last year the
White Sox got the Phillies to take on nearly half of the $46 million owed to
Jim Thome (42 homers in '06) through '08. "I look for a market correction
in the very near future," Williams says. "This madness can't continue
at this rate."
The
late-blossoming Dye is more likely to get his big payday with the Angels or the
Rangers, whose new manager, Ron Washington, is a close friend. Twice last
season Buehrle turned down a three-year, $35 million extension to stay in
Chicago. Though Buehrle went 3--7 with a 6.44 ERA in a dreadful second half
during which he lost velocity and command, his price surely has shot up; both
sides have publicly conceded that the lefty is virtually a goner, with the
Cardinals a good possibility to sign the Missouri native.
Not that the
White Sox are to be confused with the Marlins. The payroll is $109 million.
Williams, understandably, scoffs at the idea that he's running the Tight Sox.
"In Chicago they say we're pinching pennies. Yeah, we're pinching $100
million [worth]." There is one player for whom the White Sox might be
willing to break the bank. According to league sources, Chicago was among the
most aggressive of at least eight teams to make a run at Alex Rodriguez last
summer. If A-Rod opts out of the remaining three years of his 10-year, $252
million deal at the end of the season, don't rule out another run. More likely,
though, Williams will continue to parlay the overspending of his peers into
such discount pickups as Contreras and Thome. "We won with our payroll at
$75 million," he jokes. "Maybe we should get back to $75
million."