Throwback Thursday: Comparing the Phillies’ Byrd Trades of 2005 and 2014

53251841

Wednesday afternoon, the Phillies traded Marlon Byrd, 37, to the Cincinatti Reds in exchange for right-handed pitching prospect Ben Lively, 22.

Lively was ranked the 12th-best prospect in the Reds' organization according to Baseball America's 2015 Prospect Handbook. In 26 starts combined with A+ and AA ranked teams within the organization,  he posted a 13-7 record with a 3.04 ERA over 151 innings.  In order to acquire Lively, the Phillies had to eat half of Byrd's 2015 salary, or $4 million according to FOXSports.com's Ken Rosenthal.

Byrd began his career in Philadephia when he was drafted in the 10th round of the 1999 amateur draft, and later signed on June 4th of that year. 1,192 days later, he made his Major League debut with the Phillies on an early-September, Sunday matinee, where he went 0-3 with a walk and a run scored.

The first go-around for Marlon in Philadelphia wasn't as successful as last season. Although he finished fourth in the National League Rookie of the Year race in 2003, the table below shows he was essentially a complete, different player in the early years of his career.

Year Age Tm G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB
2002 24 PHI 10 36 35 2 8 2 0 1 1 0 2 1 8 .229 .250 .371 .621 13
2003 25 PHI 135 553 495 86 150 28 4 7 45 11 1 44 94 .303 .366 .418 .784 207
2004 26 PHI 106 378 346 48 79 13 2 5 33 2 2 22 68 .228 .287 .321 .608 111
2005 27 PHI 5 15 13 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 .308 .400 .308 .708 4
2014 36 PHI 154 637 591 71 156 28 2 25 85 3 2 35 185 .264 .312 .445 .757 263
PHI (5 yrs) 410 1619 1480 207 397 71 8 38 164 16 7 103 358 .268 .324 .404 .728 598
 
Byrd first began to show signs of offensive development in his first season with the Texas Rangers in 2007, when he hit 10 home runs and delivered 70 runs batted in. His season with the Phillies in 2014 was amongst his best, as he hit 25 home runs along with 85 runs batted in within a lineup which largely was not feared by opposing pitchers.
 
While Lively is an intruging return for Byrd, he isn't the only player the Phils have ever received in exchange him. On May 14, 2005, he was traded to the Washington Nationals for outfielder Endy Chavez. The trade largely occured, according to general manager Ed Wade, so that Byrd could "go and re-establish himself somewhere else."
 
Stephen Miller of The Morning Call wrote his opinion of the Chavez acquisition at the time of the trade:

Chavez, a 27-year-old who was at Triple-A New Orleans at the time of the trade, was acquired to add flexibility to the Phillies' bench. He is a lefty who can play all three outfield positions and steal a base.

Chavez hit .277 and stole 32 bases in 132 games as the full-time center fielder when the Nationals were the Montreal Expos last season. He began this season at New Orleans but was recalled on May 4. He hit .222 in seven games with Washington before being sent back to New Orleans on May 11.

With the Phillies in 2005, Chavez hit .215 with three doubles and three triples, however he lacked power with zero home runs and just 10 runs batted in. For a player largely considered to be a threat on the base paths, he stole just two bases with a .243 on-base percentage. Fielding-wise, Chavez saw every position in the outfield, with most of his playing time in center field. He committed only one error in 185 innings of work, with 45 putouts and 4 assists.

Granted free-agency by the Phillies in December of 2005, he soon signed with the Mets for the 2006 season where he would eventually appear in a total of 10 postseason games (three against the Dodgers and seven against the St. Louis Cardinals), hitting for a .229 batting average with two doubles.

The once Royal (2001) and Expo/National (2002-2005) prior to joining the Phillies, and with the Mets (2006-2008), Mariners (2009, 2013-2014), Rangers (2011) and Orioles (2012), Chavez too has 13 seasons of playing experience under his belt like Byrd. He has a respectable .270 career batting average, and has a stolen base success rate of 71.62%.

It is interesting to see the different returns the Phillies received for Byrd amongst the relatively large span of years, from struggling at age 27 to being a valuable power-asset nine years later at age 36. Time will tell how Lively develops and how effectively he contributes with the Major League Club.

The Byrd-for-Lively swap is a prime example why the Phillies signing veterans this offseason (such as the rumored Aaron Harang and Wandy Rodriguez deals) is not a bad idea when looking to build for the future. They can be easily flipped for prospects by the July 31st trade deadline, or even the August 31st waiver deadline. Nothing is guaranteed with any prospect received in a trade, however the Phillies have nothing to lose if they need innings-eaters on the mound to buy time before players like Aaron Nola and Jessie Biddle are ready to go.

Matt Rappa (@mattrappa) is a contributor to Philliedelphia.com.

Go to top button