Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Can Rockies follow Diamondbac­ks’ or Rangers’ path to postseason glory?

- By Patrick Saunders psaunders@denverpost.com

NASHVILLE >> The Rockies’ road to contention is steep and narrow, with little room for error.

But is there hope for a team coming off a 103-loss season? The 2023 World Series says yes.

In 2021, the Texas Rangers lost 102 games and the Arizona Diamondbac­ks lost 110. Yet there they were, just two years later, playing in the Fall Classic, with the Rangers prevailing in five games.

The two organizati­ons followed different yellow brick roads to reach their destinatio­ns. The Rangers spent big in free agency and traded boldly. The D-backs developed their young players and made shrewd trades.

“(The Diamondbac­ks) have good young players,” Rockies general manager Bill Schmidt said last week during the winter meetings. “I said a year ago at this time that they were running ahead of us and were in the process of getting better.”

Although the D-backs and Rangers built their teams differentl­y, the clubs had a couple of things in common, beginning with a passion to win.

“That’s a credit to (general manager) Chris Young and the ownership, Ray Davis,” firstyear Texas manager Bruce Bochy said. “They were determined to get winning baseball back to the Texas Rangers. And when we met that’s what we talked about, that’s what they talked about to me. And they did everything they said they were going to do.”

Secondly, both teams got hot at just the right time.

Texas fumbled away the American League West title but claimed a wild-card spot and then rallied to go 13-4 in the postseason en route to its first championsh­ip. The D-backs won just 84 games and barely snared the final wild card, but they made it to the World Series for the first time since 2001. Arizona had a minus-15 run differenti­al during the regular season but became the first NL team to be outscored during the regular season and still win the pennant.

“It’s about getting in and getting hot,” Schmidt said. “The key is just getting in and then anything can happen. They proved that.”

The Rockies’ path to redemption will have to follow the Dbacks’ plan because Texas is out of the Rockies’ league when it comes to spending.

The Rangers’ total $251 million payroll, inflated by their free-agent spending and mid-season trades, was the fourth-highest in the majors. Texas’ investment of more than $800 million during the last two offseasons mostly paid dividends. Shortstop Corey Seager and second basemen Marcus Semien, signed for a combined $500 million on the same day (Dec. 1, 2021), finished second and third, respective­ly, in the American League MVP vote this past season. Former Rockies right-hander Jon Gray, as well as right-hander Nathan Eovaldi, were signed for a combined $90 million and helped revamp the starting rotation.

Arizona was much more frugal. Its $119.3 million payroll was the 10th-smallest in the majors, and the D-backs relied more heavily on homegrown talent. The Dbacks had 12 homegrown players on their postseason roster, trailing only Houston’s 13 among the 12 playoff clubs, while Texas ranked next-to-last with five. The Rangers’ nine free-agent signings tied the Phillies for the most, while the D-backs were secondto-last with five.

Unlike the Baltimore Orioles, who lost 115 games in 2018, 108 in ‘19 and 110 in ‘21, the Diamondbac­ks never resorted to a complete teardown and rebuild.

“Our approach to want to compete every year got torpedoed because our lack of farm system depth caught us in 2021 and into 2022,” general manager Mike Hazen told the Arizona Republic. “The goal was to contend the whole time. Everybody was like, ‘Oh, the Diamondbac­ks are going to rebuild.’ We didn’t rebuild in 2021. We stunk. That’s the facts.”

But Arizona didn’t reach the World Series on homegrown talent alone. Smart trades were essential to its rise. In 2016, a month after Hazen was hired, he made one of his best moves, shipping Jean Segura, Mitch Haniger and Zac Curtis to the Mariners for second baseman Ketel Marte and right-hander Taijuan Walker. Though Walker didn’t pan out for the D-backs, Marte has been their best player over the last seven years and won NL Championsh­ip Series MVP honors this year.

Hazen then traded hot shortstop prospect Jazz Chisholm Jr. to the Marlins for right-hander Zac Gallen at the trade deadline in 2019. Gallen was not a top-100 prospect at the time but he’s become the D-backs’ best pitcher and finished third in the NL Cy Young Award voting this season.

The trade that stands out for Rockies manager Bud Black was the December 2022 deal in which the D-backs acquired catcher Gabriel Moreno and outfielder Lourdes Gurriel Jr. from Toronto for outfielder Daulton Varsho. Not only has Gurriel helped offset the loss of Varsho, but Moreno has given them a skilled defensive catcher with a lot of offensive potential.

When the Rockies traded away first baseman C.J. Cron, corner infielder Mike Moustakas and outfielder Randal Grichuk near the deadline, they not only acquired much-needed pitching in return, but also freed up playing time for their young players.

“During the second half of our season, after the trade deadline, I think our team got more athletic,” Schmidt said. “I think we just have some better athletes now. I think you will see that (going forward).”

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