""I found it interesting that despite all the flak you took here (from myself included), Scorp managed to write this on his site:""
Scorp pretty much nailed how I feel about Ciriaco. But last September aside, Huntington had Ciriaco on the 40-man roster. And he had options, so it wasn't like Ciriaco had to start the 2012 season on the 25-man roster.
I've never understood the Barmes signing. I've always felt that between d'Arnaud, Mercer, Ciriaco, and Navarro, the Pirates had enough at SS to get through the 2012 season, while having someone from that group emerge that would exceed Barmes' career average production of .249 BA, .687 OPS, and 76 OPS+. And it was obvious that even Barmes himself wasn't going to reach his average production this year, since he was going to call a pitcher's park home for the 1st time in his career.
Although, I never expected Barmes to be THIS bad. He's averaged 35 walks in the 3 years prior to this one, and hitter's park or pitcher's park, it's still 60' 6" from the pitching rubber to home. How his plate disclipline went completely to heII in one season is a mystery to me.
But the point is, the odds were pretty good that between d'Arnaud (age 25), Mercer (age 25), Ciriaco (age 26), and Navarro (age 24), someone was going to step up, given the opportunity. And then, SS is solved for the foreseeable future. All the Barmes signing was going to do, best case scenario, was delay the inevitable search for a long-term SS solution.
Which, IMO, was best done while the myriad bodies were in place for such a search.
And I know signing Barmes didn't directly lead to Ciriaco being taken off the 40-man roster. That actually occured about 2 weeks after the Barmes signing. But still, you'd have though Huntington had better choices of players to remove from the roster than Ciriaco.