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Chicago Cubs: Would Signing Free Agent Jorge Soler Be Good or Bad?

On March 7, Peter Gammons of the MLB Network reported that a scout thought that Cuban free agent outfielder Jorge Soler would sign with the Chicago Cubs for $27 million.

Today, Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports reported that Soler has been deemed a free agent by the MLB, so he may now begin fielding official offers and may agree to play for a ball club.

Jim Callis of Baseball America said Soler has “explosive bat speed” and could be a “classic right fielder.” The 20-year-old prospect has an extremely high ceiling, but is still incredibly raw.

Callis also compared Soler to the Kansas City Royals‘ hyped prospect Bubba Starling. This comparison is exciting, however, it may be premature.

Many fans may remember the courting of fellow Cuban free agent Yoenis Cespedes and jump for joy that the Cubs may be close to signing a similar free agent. While earlier this season Cespedes did impress many MLB critics and silence some of his doubters, as of late he has not proved worthy of his $36 million contract, batting only .236 with five home runs.

The striking difference between Soler and his fellow Cuban Cespedes is that when Cespedes was signed, he was 26 years old. Soler is only 20 and would have to spend at least one, if not two seasons in the minor leagues before making it as a Chicago Cub.

While many may see this long-term investment as a deal needing to happen, Chicago should hold off on signing Soler. The supposed $27 million deal is hefty and if Soler takes far too long in the minors, or worse flames out, the Cubs will remain with another big contract that does not pay dividends.

Raw ability does garner much attention in the baseball world, however, it often comes with high risk. The Cubs cannot afford to spend $27 million on a prospect that may bat .236 in the majors. If Chicago does sign Soler, Cubs fans should be excited, but they also should know that this is a bold gamble for the franchise.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Chicago Cubs Opening Day: Ryan Dempster Shines, Outplays Stephen Strasburg

One year ago on Opening Day, a Cubs’ pitcher Ryan Dempster gave up six runs off six hits with four walks, earning a loss against the Pirates.

Today, like last year, Ryan Dempster opened the season for the Cubs with a loss. However, Dempster’s performance today was near perfect against the Nationals.

Facing the strikeout superstar Stephen Strasburg, Dempster struck out 10 batters allowing two hits in seven and two-thirds innings. He actually recorded twice the amount of strikeouts that Strasburg recorded (yet Sportscenter seems not to have noticed).

Dempster pitched a solid seven innings, and almost finished the eighth, before he was pulled in favor of Kerry Wood, a decision manager Dale Svevum likely would redo.

Officially, Ryan Dempster was charged with one run in the game. This appears to be his slight gaffe of the game.

In the eight inning, Ian Dresmond recorded a hit off of Dempster. Dempster would eventually get pulled and Dresmond would eventually score. However Dempster was pulled because of pitch count and Dresmond scored because Kerry Wood walked the next three consecutive batters, sending Dresmond home.

Wood walked Dresmond from first to home without recording an out, making the run hardly the fault of Dempster. But as stats go, Dempster was charged with the run. However he did not record a loss.

Let’s look at the pitching battle between Stephen Strasburg and Ryan Dempster.

Both pitched seven full innings and recorded one run. Dempster allowed three fewer hits, and Strasburg walked two fewer batters. The real difference comes in strike outs and Dempster proved dominant.

Pitching inside strikes and taking control with his cutter, fastball, splitter and slider, Ryan Dempster struck out twice as many batters (10 total) than Strasburg.

Even though the “W” flag isn’t flying over Wrigley Field, Ryan Dempster should be proud of his performance today. With more pitching like that and hopefully more offense, Chicago is bound for wins and lots of them.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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