St. Louis Cardinals
St. Louis Cardinals: Cardinals Opt Against Qualifying Offer for Brandon Moss
St. Louis Cardinals

St. Louis Cardinals: Cardinals Opt Against Qualifying Offer for Brandon Moss

Published Jun. 30, 2017 6:28 p.m. ET
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The news started dribbling out on Thursday that the St. Louis Cardinals will not present a qualifying offer to Brandon Moss.

The St. Louis Cardinals spent 2016 trying to decide how to get the most out of Brandon Moss.  Moss had some bright moments but also found himself mired in mediocrity like another lefty on the team with power promise, Matt Adams.  The Cardinals loved the reclamation idea of Moss but did it pan out?

Brandon Moss joined the St. Louis Cardinals during the 2015 season from the Cleveland Indians.  Yes, those Cleveland Indians who just lost in the World Series.  Those Cleveland Indians who sent Moss away in 2015 to play in the big series in 2016.  Coincidence?

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Moss started his career with the Red Sox who drafted him in the eighth round of the 2002 draft.  He made his MLB debut in 2007 for the Sox.  Six years later after being drafted he was traded as part of a three-team deal.  In this deal, Moss went to the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2008.

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Two years later he entered his first free agency.  That year- 2010- he was signed to a one-year deal by the Phillies.  After that single year, Moss entered his second stint of free agency and was snagged by the Oakland Athletics.  In 2014 with Oakland, Moss commanded his game and found himself playing in the All-Star game.  Here’s a look at that impressive year:

Year Age Tm G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2014 ★ 30 OAK 147 500 70 117 23 2 25 81 1 67 153 .234 .334 .438 .772

These numbers helped him find a new home through trade.  His value witnessed in 2014 coupled with his All-Star status, helped the Athletics trade him player-for-player for Joey Wendle, a then-24-year-old second baseman.  Wendle went straight to AAA and made his MLB debut in August of 2016.  Read anything here?

Back to the St. Louis Cardinals… The Cardinals grabbed Moss in 2015 when the team needed a player of his abilities to man the outfield spots as needed and to man first base as well.  The thought was that Moss could well spell some relief for Adams at first who was experiencing struggles.  It would have worked if Moss too didn’t experience similar frustrations.

2015 was to be a rebound year for Moss who had offseason hip surgery between the 2014 and 2015 season.  Mozeliak loves a good reclamation case and Moss was to be yet another.  The plan was to get Moss to St. Louis, ease him back into regular play, and then flourish with his power bat.  So how did he do in St. Louis?

Year Age Tm Lg G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
2015 31 CLE AL 94 337 36 73 17 1 15 50 32 106 .217 .288 .407 .695
2015 31 STL NL 51 132 11 33 7 1 4 8 17 42 .250 .344 .409 .753
2016 32 STL NL 128 413 66 93 19 2 28 67 39 141 .225 .300 .484 .784
10 Yrs 898 2771 378 667 145 17 138 423 291 840 .241 .319 .455 .773
STL (2 yrs) 179 545 77 126 26 3 32 75 56 183 .231 .311 .466 .777
NL (6 yrs) 379 1120 138 256 57 9 45 141 106 320 .229 .301 .416 .717
AL (6 yrs) 519 1651 240 411 88 8 93 282 185 520 .249 .330 .481 .811

Fans will remember the flashes of power but fans will also remember the too-much-like-Adams player that Moss became.  2016 was a great year for the home run from Moss and fans- myself included- wondered if a qualifying offer was in the works.  That was until the news of this year’s QO figure was released: $17.2M.

    Is $17.2M too much for Moss?  The St. Louis Cardinals certainly believe it is.  This is likely due to his cooling-off at the end of the season.  The power alone was simply not enough to warrant the QO.  Not especially since Moss is 33 years old and not especially since his almost-doppelganger Adams is only 28 and under team control until 2019.

    A quick note: no QO does not mean no contract.  I mention this to say that the Cardinals and Moss could negotiate a contract if the two parties would like to remain together.  Denying the QO simply means that the Cardinals aren’t willing to pay $17.2M.  Will they stay together or will the team focus on a figure for Adams to avoid arbitration?

    What do you think should happen?  Let us know on Twitter and stay with us as more and more news is released about our St. Louis Cardinals.

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