Boilermaker Rick wrote:
One Post wrote:
I don't think anyone here is saying that is bad, in fact it is a great accomplishment. I think what some of us are saying is the following, given the choice between:
1. Winning absolutely nothing and have the #1 farm system; or
2. Winning absolutely nothing and have the #12 farm system.
The choice is pretty clearly 1.
Yeah, but the Sox would have to intentionally lose for the next 3 years to do that with the same exact timeframe of the Cubs.
Of course having the #1 farm system is better than having the 12th one. It just depends on the price that is paid. I would not want the Sox to intentionally lose the next 3 years even if it was guaranteed that at the end they'd have the #1 farm system in baseball.
That is why your whole point is bad. I would much rather the White Sox try and win the World Series the next three years even if they aren't able to accomplish #1 on the prospect rankings because of it.
Here is why your whole point is bad. We aren't talking in hypotheticals here, we are talking facts.
The Cubs intentionally didn't compete for the world series during the past three seasons because they wanted to build the best farm system in baseball. They accomplished that goal, and I would say accomplished it beyond anyone's expectations.
The Sox tried to win the world series during the past three seasons and wanted to improve their farm system. The sox were successful in improving their farm system, but from where they came from, it would have been impossible NOT to improve. I would say that they failed miserably in trying to win the world series, in fact, failed miserably is probably too much credit. In an era where it has never been easier to make the playoffs, they didn't even make the playoffs. In exchange for this, the Sox have basically a middle of the pack farm system.
So to get back to what you said, above, what is the price paid. The price the Cubs paid for having the best farm sytem in baseball (and not just the best in baseball, but probably one of the best in the past 25 years) is three years of bad baseball. The Sox had one year of average baseball, and two years of crappy baseball, and they price they paid for that was not having a better farm system.
We aren't talking about future hypotheticals, the results are in on this one.
It would be one thing if the Sox made the playoffs one of those years, or maybe made the playoffs and won a series, but they had absolutely the same playoff success as the Cubs - none.