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Edwin Jackson use to be an okay pitcher before it made it to Chicago. Maybe the stadium layout hurt his pitching style.
What pisses me off is Edwin Jackson has the EXACT SAME contract as Matt Garza for the Brewers.
Matt Garza has always put up better numbers, but is known for taking a yearly trip to the DL at some point in the season. So we backed off last season.
I'll never understand the thought process behind signing Edwin Jackson, unless they figured 4 years was the timeline when he signed that we would be ready and they had money to spend.
Garza was upset about the losing in Chicago, did he ever really consider coming back here after the Cubs traded him?
You and anyone with eyes.I'll go on the record and admit that I prefer Matt Garza to Edwin Jackson.
You and anyone with eyes.
No, he wasn't upset about losing in Chicago, he was upset the Cubs weren't opening up the checkbook for him, which turned fans against him because the front office made it seem that he wanted Clayton Kershaw money. He knew the future was bright, and he wanted to be the ace of the future. But he never wanted a ridiculous amount of money.
In 2013 offseason, Cubs signed Edwin Jackson for 4 year, $52 million.
In 2013 season, Cubs tried extending Matt Garza's contract, but the two sides were WAY off on money terms, according to both parties. So the Cubs traded him.
In 2014 offseason, Brewers sign Matt Garza for 4 years, $52 million.
No, he wasn't upset about losing in Chicago, he was upset the Cubs weren't opening up the checkbook for him, which turned fans against him because the front office made it seem that he wanted Clayton Kershaw money. He knew the future was bright, and he wanted to be the ace of the future. But he never wanted a ridiculous amount of money.
In 2013 offseason, Cubs signed Edwin Jackson for 4 year, $52 million.
In 2013 season, Cubs tried extending Matt Garza's contract, but the two sides were WAY off on money terms, according to both parties. So the Cubs traded him.
In 2014 offseason, Brewers sign Matt Garza for 4 years, $52 million.