I guess some of us don't see Bloom having much choice in trading Betts, but we don't want to bash Henry for not allowing him to spend, because JH has helped bring us 4 rings.
Whether Henry ever spends big again is an unknown, and I guess we're talking about new spending, and not covering the costs of past deals. Some of those big deals come off the books, this winter, so we may know an answer in a few months.
I was wondering about big spending happening again or not up until March of 2022, when seemingly out of nowhere, the Story signing occurred. I wonder, if it was a late Henry decision, or Bloom waiting out the market to snatch who he felt was more of a bargain. I am glad he signed Story over Seager or my guy, Baez, but I do wonder about the timing of the checkbook opening.
I think the Story signing is a hint Henry will spend big again, but I think he is laying back, until he thinks we have some young and cost controlled players in place, before deciding to pounce on a couple big names. It's just my opinion, but I don't think he views the young core of Sox players like he did the 2015-2017 foundation handed to DD. I could easily be wrong, but I think he chose Bloom to be the guy to rebuild the foundation, over time, by improving the farm and 40 man roster depth to try and reach a point where the foundation is sound enough where it looks like a couple big splurges can make us top contenders.
Is that this winter? I was hoping it might be before 2022 began, but now I'm not so sure.
I think JH wanted the team to remain competitive during the rebuild, and that actually makes rebuilding harder, as we saw at the deadline, when Bloom chickened out on a hard rebuild. It seemed that Bloom worked wonder in 2022, or we got lucky, but 2022 was either bad luck or simply rotten roster construction with a decent winter spending budget.
Personally, I only really disliked 2 moves, and the Diekman signing was just $4M x 2. The JBJ deal looked horrific from day one, to me. Does that equate to "rotten roster construction?" Not to me, but it seems like many don't think Wacha, Hill, Strahm, Schreiber and Refsnyder come close to outweighing the JBJ-Renfroe deal and maybe the residuals from the Beni deal. (I just can't count the Betts loss as being on Bloom, but I can see how many do.)
I think we are better than we were in 2020. Our farm looks stronger. Our budget has less dead money. I'm hopeful we are nearing the day when JH opens the wallet wide, again.