November 24, 200322 yr I just heard on ESPN radio 1000 updates Jon just signed a 1 year deal worth 2.3 mil. I think this is a good deal for both the sox and Jon.
November 24, 200322 yr Blah. $2.3 million for a mediocre, .500 pitcher with no consistency. Overpaid in my book.
November 24, 200322 yr Jon Garland is going to win the CY Young award if he ever gets his head on straight. He is only 24.
November 24, 200322 yr Blah. $2.3 million for a mediocre, .500 pitcher with no consistency. Overpaid in my book. I was thinking the same thing. That sounds awfully high for a guy with Garland's limited success. But he does have ability, and if the light goes on he could be very good.
November 24, 200322 yr If they would have signed him to a muti-year deal they could have had him cheaper, 2.3 mil isn't that bad though.
November 24, 200322 yr I just heard on ESPN radio 1000 updates Jon just signed a 1 year deal worth 2.3 mil. I think this is a good deal for both the sox and Jon. this is good news! thanks...
November 24, 200322 yr I agree, not bad for a good #4 starter who can work up higher in rotation with another year or two experience. Not everyone gets it together in one or two years.
November 24, 200322 yr official white sox email (beware, it allows for a secret internet presale) JON GARLAND SIGNS ONE-YEAR CONTRACT CHICAGO – The Chicago White Sox and pitcher Jon Garland have agreed to terms on a $2.3 million, one-year contract, avoiding arbitration. Garland, 24, went 12-13 with a 4.51 ERA (96 ER/191.2 IP) in 32 starts for the White Sox in 2003. The 6-foot-6, 210-pound right-hander lowered his ERA nearly three runs after May 8, going 10-10 with a 3.97 ERA (69 ER/156.1 IP) over his final 25 starts. He made 18 quality starts and matched his career high in wins (12 in 2002). Garland is averaging 11 wins, 190.1 IP, 108 strikeouts and 31 starts over his three-year career.
November 24, 200322 yr They will sign him long term at some point this year. Good move though...I like Garland.
November 24, 200322 yr I have always been a Jon Garland fan. If he can build on how he finishes a season, which is usually good, I think he can be a 20 game winner. However, $2.3M is pretty good for a guy averaging just 11 wins a year. If he only wins 11 in 2004 that computes out at $209090.90 per win, $12105.26 per inning or $74193.54 per start. No wonder baseball is in economic ruin. He has got to step up this year and earn that salary.
November 25, 200322 yr That is too much for his underachieving ass Well, you can either pay him 2.3 mil or nontender him, which one would it be?
November 25, 200322 yr Garland really picked it up the 2nd half of the season. Jon's done nothing but improve in Chicago; like people have said, Garland's only 24. He could easily win 17-18 games this season.
November 25, 200322 yr I wonder what Garland's story in life is. Does he have a dad? A former coach? Somebody who could take him under his wing and light some incredible fire? It's obvious he is a talented pitcher who needs some work upstairs. I could be off base but reading between the lines I bet he is one of those guys players like Pudge Fisk hated. Ones who don't want advice. Garland is a stud who needs some pitching coach/authority figure to get him to want it. Or perhaps I don' t know what the f*** I'm talking about, but it's a theory, anyway.
November 26, 200322 yr Blah. $2.3 million for a mediocre, .500 pitcher with no consistency. Overpaid in my book. According to Elias Sports Burea, the guideline used for arbitration compensation, Jon was a B player. However he was the top B player, That being said it would have been great for us to get him signed at this level for a few years. He will almost certainly be an A player for the rest of his career. Good job signing Garland I just wish it was longer. The last 2 years jons pitche 384 innings and won 24 games. what more There's plenty of teams out there you'd pay more than 2.3 MIL for that kind of production.
November 26, 200322 yr For those of you that have run of patience waiting for Garland to emerge, read this paragraph from a Boston newspaper regarding Curt Schilling: Approving a trade will return Schilling to the organization in which he began. A second-round pick by the Sox in 1986, he was traded (with Brady Anderson) to the Baltimore Orioles [stats, schedule] in July 1988 for veteran right-hander Mike Boddicker. He made it to the majors late in the '88 season but only showed occasional flashes of brilliance with the Orioles (1988-90) and Houston Astros ('91). Schilling didn't develop into one of the game's top pitchers until being acquired by the Phillies in '92. A guy like Mark Prior who can step onto a major league mound and be an ace from the very beginning is rare. It takes time to learn how to be a major league pitcher. Even for someone who is a very intelligent person, like Schilling. The article said he bacame a top pitcher in '92. His record that year was 14-11. Jon Garland is, at least, in that neighborhood. Schilling did not have a 20 win season until 2001.
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