Marlins Sign Austin Slater To Major League Deal

March 25th: The Marlins announced today that Mazur has been placed on the 60-day injured list. In a separate announcement, the club made the Slater deal official. He’ll join Heriberto Hernandez as a righty outfielder off the bench behind Marsee, Caissie, and Conine.

March 24th: The Marlins are in agreement with outfielder Austin Slater on a major league deal, reports Craig Mish of SportsGrid. He just opted out of a minor league deal with the Tigers a few days ago. He’ll make $1MM plus bonuses, per Kevin Barral of Fish on First. The Marlins will need to open a 40-man roster spot but that should be as easy as transferring right-hander Adam Mazur to the 60-day injured list. Mazur underwent Tommy John surgery a few weeks ago and will miss the entire season.

Slater, 33, just had a strong camp with the Tigers. He stepped to the plate 36 times in 15 games and slashed .267/.389/.467. Detroit’s roster is fairly crowded, however. They are going to carry prospect Kevin McGonigle on the Opening Day roster and have bumped outfielder Wenceel Pérez to the minors.

The Marlins will take advantage of that roster crunch by scooping up Slater. In his career, he has generally combined solid defense in all three outfield slots with strong offense against left-handed pitching. His overall batting line is .248/.336/.384. That’s almost exactly league average, translating to a 101 wRC+. That includes a .267/.357/.430 line and 119 wRC+ against southpaws, compared to a .227/.311/.329 slash and 80 wRC+ otherwise.

That profile should fit well in the Miami outfield. The Marlins are slated to begin the season with Kyle Stowers on the injured list, which will leave Jakob Marsee, Owen Caissie and Griffin Conine in the outfield. All four of those guys are lefties, so Slater should have plenty of chances to slot in against southpaw opponents.

Photo courtesy of Brad Penner, Imagn Images

Joe La Sorsa To Stay With Pirates

March 25th: La Sorsa went unclaimed and will stay with the Pirates as non-roster depth, per Alexander.

March 22nd: La Sorsa has been told he won’t be breaking camp with the Pirates, so he’ll be triggering his clause tomorrow, Ari Alexander reports.

March 17th: Left-hander Joe La Sorsa has an upward mobility clause at the end of spring training in his minor league deal with the Pirates, reports Ari Alexander of 7 News Boston. If he triggers that clause, he’ll be offered up to the other 29 clubs. If any of them are willing to give him a roster spot, then the Pirates have to either give him a roster spot themselves or trade him to another club that will. If no club offers him a roster spot, then he can be sent to the minors as non-roster depth.

La Sorsa, 28 in April, agreed to a minor league deal with the Bucs right as free agency was beginning in early November. He hasn’t spent much time in camp because he joined the Italian team for the World Baseball Classic. The Azzurri went on a Cinderella run that just ended last night when they were eliminated by Venezuela in the semifinals. The lefty made four appearance for Italy, logging 2 2/3 innings, allowing two earned runs via two hits and one hit-by-pitch while striking out four.

His major league track record consists of 57 innings thrown for the Rays, Nationals and Reds over the past three years. In that time, he has a 5.21 ERA, 17.5% strikeout rate, 6.3% walk rate and 39.2% ground ball rate. In 2025, he only made five appearances in the majors. He spent most of the year in Triple-A, posting a 2.59 ERA in 48 2/3 innings. His 21.2% strikeout rate and 42.1% ground ball rate at that level were close to average but he walked 13% of batters faced.

With the upward mobility clause, La Sorsa will get a major league roster spot as long as one of the 30 clubs is willing to give him one, whether that’s the Pirates or not. The Bucs should have Gregory Soto and Mason Montgomery as their two primary lefties in the bullpen. Evan Sisk is also on the roster but he has already been optioned, so he should start the season in Triple-A. If La Sorsa does get a roster spot somewhere, he still has a minor league option remaining.

Photo courtesy of Thomas Shea, Imagn Images

Mariners Place J.P. Crawford On IL; Andrew Knizner Elects Free Agency

The Mariners announced their Opening Day roster, with a few moves of note. Shortstop J.P. Crawford will start the season on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to March 22nd, due to right shoulder inflammation. Seattle also selected the contract of catcher Mitch Garver, a move that was previously reported. Fellow catcher Andrew Knizner cleared waivers and elected free agency, which opened a 40-man spot for Garver.

It doesn’t appear as though Crawford is slated for a lengthy absence. His shoulder has been sore for most of spring training but being healthy for the Opening Day roster seemed possible until recently. Adam Jude of the Seattle Times reports that Crawford feels he’ll be back in just a few weeks and that Leo Rivas is likely to man the position in the meantime. Ryan Bliss got a roster spot due to Crawford’s absence and could factor in as well.

On the cathing side of things, the Mariners signed Knizner to a one-year, $1MM deal back in December. It seemed like he would be the backup to Cal Raleigh this year but Garver lingered unsigned into the second half of February, allowing Seattle to bring him back via a minor league deal. Garver didn’t have a great spring, putting up a .192/.290/.346 line, but Knizner’s .172/.226/.207 performance was even worse.

It seems the Mariners quietly put Knizner on waivers a couple of days ago and no one claimed him. Since Knizner has at least five years of major league service time, he has the right to reject an outright assignment and elect free agency while keeping his salary commitments. He’ll be paid $1MM this year regardless. If he signs somewhere else, another club would only have to pay him a prorated league minimum salary of $780K, with that amount subtracted from what the Mariners owe.

Photo courtesy of Matt Kartozian, Imagn Images

Cardinals Place Lars Nootbaar On 60-Day IL

The Cardinals announced that outfielder Lars Nootbaar has been placed on the 60-day injured list. That is presumably to open a 40-man roster spot for prospect JJ Wetherholt, as it was reported a few days ago that Wetherholt would make the Opening Day roster.

It’s an unfortunate development for both Nootbaar and the Cardinals. The outfielder is coming off a down season during which he produced a .234/.325/.361 line and 96 wRC+. That was a notable drop-off from his three prior seasons, as he hit a combined .246/.351/.426 for a 118 wRC+ during that span.

In October, he underwent surgery on both heels to shave down Haglund’s deformities, which are essentially painful protrusions of bone. In the wake of that procedure, it was expected that Nootbaar could have a chance to be ready for Opening Day. It became more and more apparent that he was going to start on the IL as spring training kept going on without him appearing in a game. Now he is not only landing on the IL but it’s the 60-day version. That allows the Cards to open a 40-man spot but means Nootbaar can’t rejoin the team until late May even in a best-case scenario.

The Cards are rebuilding, meaning their players nearing free agency were mostly traded in the offseason. Nootbaar is controlled through 2027, just like Brendan Donovan was, and likely would have been moved if not for the questions about his health. Ideally, he would have been back on the field in 2026 with his production back to his pre-2025 levels. That would have made him a notable deadline trade candidate this summer.

That all could still happen but the plan is going to be delayed and Nootbaar will therefore have less time to showcase his health before the deadline. For now, the Cards are going to be giving the outfield playing time to guys like Jordan Walker, Victor Scott II, Nathan Church, José Fermín and Thomas Saggese.

Photo courtesy of Daniel Kucin Jr., Imagn Images

Guardians Designate Johnathan Rodríguez For Assignment

The Guardians have designated outfielder Johnathan Rodríguez for assignment, per Zack Meisel of The Athletic. That opens a 40-man spot for first baseman Rhys Hoskins. It was reported a few days ago that the Guards would be selecting Hoskins to the Opening Day roster.

Rodríguez, now 26, was a third-round draft pick out of Puerto Rico back in 2017. He went unselected in the 2022 Rule 5 draft but then had a strong 2023 season, hitting 29 home runs in the minors. Cleveland didn’t want to risk exposing him in the Rule 5 again, so they added him to their 40-man roster in November of 2023.

Since that time, he has continued putting up huge numbers in the minors but hasn’t translated it to the majors. In 117 big league plate appearances, he has a dismal .176/.282/.304 line. His 12.8% walk rate is strong but he also struck out at a 30.8% clip.

At the Triple-A level over the past two years, he has stepped to the plate 881 times with 45 homers, a 12.1% walk rate, 24.3% strikeout rate, .305/.393/.529 line and 143 wRC+. His scouting report from Baseball America suggests this is a Pedro Cerrano situation. Rodríguez struggles against spin so big league pitchers just don’t throw him fastballs, which accounts for the big split in his major and minor league numbers.

He now heads into DFA limbo, which can last as long as a week. The waiver process takes 48 hours, so the Guards could take five days to explore trade interest. Rodríguez does still have one option remaining, so he could appeal to clubs looking for some outfield depth. If he is eventually put on waivers and clears, he would stick with Cleveland as non-roster depth. He doesn’t have three years of service time nor does he have a previous career outright. That means he wouldn’t have the right to reject an outright assignment in favor of electing free agency.

Photo courtesy of Ken Blaze, Imagn Images

Mets Designate Vidal Bruján, Bryan Hudson, Ben Rortvedt For Assignment

The Mets announced that infielder/outfielder Vidal Bruján, left-hander Bryan Hudson and catcher Ben Rortvedt have been designated for assignment. All three are out of options and had to be bumped off the 40-man roster if not on the active roster. Left-hander Richard Lovelady and infielder/outfielder Jared Young will get Opening Day roster spots, per Mike Puma of The New York Post. Rortvedt always seemed likely to be squeezed out as the third catcher behind Francisco Alvarez and Luis Torrens.

Bruján, 28, was once a prospect of note with the Rays but he has struggled to produce in the majors. That has led to him exhausting his options, therefore pushing him to fringe roster status. He played for the Cubs, Baltimore and Atlanta last year. Over the winter, he rode the transaction carousel some more, going to the Twins via a waiver claim and then the Mets via a small trade. He came into camp and hit .273/.400/.273 in 40 spring plate appearances.

It seemed there was a chance for him to stick on the roster to start the year. The Mets optioned Ronny Mauricio not too long ago, seemingly content to roll into the season with Bo Bichette as the de facto backup to shortstop Francisco Lindor. That would allow the club to keep Mike Tauchman on the bench and prevent him from triggering his opt-out. But then Tauchman suffered a meniscus tear, taking him out of the running for a roster spot.

The Mets have decided to give that spot to Young, which has bumped Bruján into DFA limbo. Back in November, Bruján and Atlanta avoided arbitration by agreeing to a deal that pays him $850K in the majors and $500K in the minors. If the Mets put him on waivers in the coming days and he goes unclaimed, he would have the right to elect free agency since he has at least three years of service time. But since he has less than five years, he would have to walk away from that money in exercising that right, meaning he would most likely decide to stay in the minors with the Mets.

It’s a similar situation for Rortvedt. He and the Dodgers avoided arbitration back in November by agreeing to a contract worth $1.25MM. He then went to the Reds, back to the Dodgers, and then to the Mets via waivers this winter.

For the Mets, they already had Alvarez and Torrens on hand but Rortvedt gave them a fallback plan if one of those two suffered a spring injury. They stayed healthy so Rortvedt stayed in the #3 spot on the depth chart. Since he’s out of options, he has been pushed into DFA limbo today. Like Bruján, Rortvedt would have the right to elect free agency if he clears waivers but probably wouldn’t since he would have to leave his money on the table.

Hudson, 29 in May, gave the Brewers 62 1/3 innings with a 1.73 earned run average in 2024. He struck out 26.8% of batters and limited walks to a 7.4% clip. He got some help from a .148 batting average on balls in play and 94.2% strand rate but his 3.60 FIP and 3.22 were still good marks. But in 2025, he struggled and got sent to the minors, later going to the White Sox via waivers. He finished the season with a 4.80 ERA in 15 innings.

The Sox designated him for assignment in February and flipped him to the Mets for cash. He didn’t have a good spring, allowing six earned runs in 3 1/3 innings. He exhausted his final option season last year and therefore had a tenuous grip on his roster spot. The Mets are going with Lovelady instead, bumping Hudson off the roster.

Unlike Bruján and Rortvedt, Hudson hasn’t qualified for arbitration. He wouldn’t have the right to elect free agency if he clears waivers in the coming days. If some other club does acquire him, he can be retained for five full seasons.

Photo courtesy of Jim Rassol, Imagn Images

Giants Select Caleb Kilian

The Giants announced their Opening Day roster moves today. Outfielder Jared Oliva and right-hander Caleb Kilian were selected to the 40-man. In corresponding moves, left-hander Reiver Sanmartin was placed on the 60-day injured list and outfielder Luis Matos has been designated for assignment. It had been reported yesterday that the Giants were likely to select Oliva and designate Matos. The Giants also announced that catcher Eric Haase has been released from his minor league deal and that Rule 5 catcher Daniel Susac has made the team.

Kilian, 29 in June, was signed to a minor league deal in the offseason. He had an impressive camp, tossing 9 1/3 innings while only allowing one earned run. He racked up 11 strikeouts while only issuing two walks.

That strong performance will allow him to make the roster of his original organization. Kilian was drafted by the Giants in 2019 but was flipped to the Cubs as part of the Kris Bryant trade in 2021. He only got to make eight appearances for the Cubs from 2022 to 2024. He was injured for most of 2025 and only made 11 minor league appearances.

Now that he appears to be healthy and pitching well, he’ll make it back to the big leagues. He is out of options and will have to be kept on the active roster or else removed from the 40-man entirely. He has less than a year of service time, so he can be retained for the long term if this season goes especially well.

The San Francisco bullpen has opportunities available because they traded Tyler Rogers and Camilo Doval last year and then lost Randy Rodríguez to Tommy John surgery. Their moves to replace those losses were mostly injury reclamation projects, such as Kilian himself.

Sanmartin’s transfer is not a surprise. A waiver claimee from November, it was reported a few weeks ago that he had suffered a significant hip flexor strain that was going to keep him out of action for at least three months.

Behind the plate, the Giants have Patrick Bailey but the backup job was up for grabs. In December’s Rule 5 draft, the Giants got Susac via a trade. The Twins technically selected him from the Athletics fourth overall in that draft but then immediately flipped him to the Giants for minor league catcher Miguel Caraballo.

The fact that the Giants actually gave up a player in order to jump the Rule 5 queue suggested they felt good about Susac’s chances of being an impact guy for them. He helped his own cause by putting up a .350/.386/.550 line in spring training. That was helped by an unsustainable .400 batting average on balls in play but it was enough to get him the job regardless.

As a Rule 5 guy, he can’t be optioned to the minors and will have to stay on the active roster all year long for the Giants to fully acquire his rights. If they want to cut him at any point this year, he could be traded or put on waivers. Any claiming team would take on the same Rule 5 restrictions. If he were to clear waivers, he would have to be offered back to the A’s.

Susac getting the job squeezes out Haase, who had signed a minor league deal in January. He had a huge spring, slashing .286/.375/.536, but also struck out in 14 of his 32 plate appearances. That’s fairly reflective of his big league career, as he has 48 home runs in 1,224 plate appearances but has been punched out at a 30.7% clip. He’ll head out to the open market to see what opportunities are available this week as all clubs shuffle their rosters.

Photo courtesy of Rick Scuteri, Imagn Images

Rangers Designate Dairon Blanco For Assignment

The Rangers announced that outfielder Dairon Blanco has been designated for assignment. That opens up a 40-man roster spot for Andrew McCutchen, whose contract has been selected. It had been previously reported that McCutchen would make the team.

Blanco, 33 in April, was just claimed off waivers from the Royals a few weeks ago. He made appearances for Kansas City in each of the past four seasons, essentially as a speedy depth outfielder. In 285 plate appearances, he produced a .257/.312/.416 batting line. His 99 wRC+ indicates he was just a hair below league average. He got solid grades for his glovework and stole 59 bases in 73 attempts.

The Rangers were intrigued enough to put in a claim but Blanco was ultimately squeezed off the roster. DFA limbo can last as long as a week but the waiver process takes 48 hours, so the Rangers could take as long as five days to explore trade interest. He still has options, so perhaps he could appeal to a club looking for a bit more outfield depth and speed.

Blanco has a previous career outright. That means that, if he passes through waivers in the coming days, he would have the right to reject another outright assignment in favor of electing free agency.

Photo courtesy of Peter Aiken, Imagn Images

Offseason In Review: Boston Red Sox

The Red Sox have been focused on the future for a while but that future became the present in 2025. They responded with a very aggressive offseason, making many notable additions to the lineup and pitching staff.

Major League Signings

2026 spending: $17MM
Total spending: $137MM

Trades and Claims

Option Decisions

Notable Minor League Signings

Extensions

  • None

Notable Losses

The Sox have essentially been rebuilding since the Mookie Betts trade in early 2020. They did quite well in 2021 but were around a .500 team in the three seasons after that. In that time, young players like Jarren Duran, Wilyer Abreu, Ceddanne Rafaela and Brayan Bello established themselves as valuable contributors, but the focus remained on a core of prospects consisting of Roman Anthony, Marcelo Mayer, Kyle Teel and Kristian Campbell.

Teel was flipped to the White Sox as the headliner in the Garrett Crochet trade last offseason. The other three all cracked the majors for the first time in 2025. Campbell and Mayer weren’t overwhelming in their debuts. The long-term outlook on Campbell is now a bit concerning but Mayer’s struggles may have been related to injury, as he battled wrist issues and ultimately required surgery. Anthony’s debut was excellent and he looks like a star in the making.

The Sox went 89-73 last year and earned a Wild Card spot. Though they were knocked out by the Yankees, that performance and the arrival of their prospects indicated they had moved well into win-now territory.

Before the offseason could even begin, the front office took a hit. In September, the Nationals plucked assistant general manager Paul Toboni and made him their new president of baseball operations. It appears that the Sox were planning to promote him to general manager, which would have cemented him as the #2 guy on the front office masthead, under chief baseball officer Craig Breslow. Instead, he became the #1 guy in Washington. Boston’s GM search appears to be on pause.

Once the offseason began, Breslow was clear that adding to both the lineup and rotation would be priorities. Though the Sox had a good season in 2025, there were some clear holes. They were giving starts to Dustin May and Walker Buehler late in the year despite both pitchers having ERAs near 5.00. Prospects Connelly Early and Payton Tolle were pushed to the majors even though they had barely pitched at the Triple-A level. Lucas Giolito became a free agent at season’s end. The struggles of Campbell and the Triston Casas injury left them weak at second and first base. Alex Bregman triggered his opt-out, opening a hole at third. Shortstop would at least have continuity, as Trevor Story decided not to opt out of his deal.

It didn’t take long for the rotation to be addressed. A few weeks into the offseason, the Sox reached a deal with Chaim Bloom, who is now the president of baseball operations of the Cardinals. It’s rebuilding time in St. Louis, which meant established veteran players were available. The Sox acquired Sonny Gray for younger pitchers Brandon Clarke and Richard Fitts.

Gray is still a good pitcher but he wasn’t needed in St. Louis. He’s 36 years old and going into the final guaranteed year of his contract. Some Boston fans were underwhelmed when looking at Gray’s age and his 4.28 ERA last year, but there are reasons to be optimistic. His strikeout, walk and ground ball numbers were all strong. His ERA may have been inflated by poor luck on batted balls, which is why his 3.39 FIP and 3.29 SIERA look much nicer.

Though the results have still been good, the contract was tricky, even beyond his no-trade clause. Gray’s deal was backloaded, paying him $35MM in 2026, followed by a $30MM club option with a $5MM buyout. That means he was guaranteed $40MM. The Cards ate $20MM of that to make the deal work and Gray agreed to a slight bump. His contract was reworked at part of the trade so he now gets $41MM, in the form of a $31MM salary and $10MM buyout on a mutual option.

Swallowing that kind of money was enough for the Cards to not just flip Gray but also get a notable return. Fitts is a useful depth starter with options in the near term. With the Sox planning to make rotation upgrades, he was going to get pushed down the depth chart to a point where he would have limited utility.

Clarke is potentially the long-term prize. He hasn’t yet reached Double-A and walks a ton of guys. He still needs a lot of polish but he has high-90s velocity and gets strikeouts. Given his uncertain future, he’s exactly the kind of prospect who should be going from a win-now club to a rebuilder. The Sox get a reliable near-term upgrade while the Cards get the long-term gamble.

Shortly thereafter, the Sox made another rotation addition, once again from an old friend. They made a five-player trade with the Pirates, who are now run by general manager Ben Cherington. The headliners in the trade were Johan Oviedo going to Boston and Jhostynxon García heading to Pittsburgh. García is an exciting upper minors prospect but has no path to playing time in the crowded Boston outfield, so the Sox cashed him in for another arm.

Oviedo is far less established than Gray but there’s intrigue there. He seemed to break out as a viable mid-rotation or back-end guy in 2023 when he gave the Bucs 177 2/3 innings with a 4.31 ERA. He missed 2024 recovering from Tommy John surgery, came back in 2025 and looked even better, though in a small sample. He only made nine starts last year but had a 3.57 ERA and 24.7% strikeout rate. His walk rate was high but that may have been rust after his long layoff. Due to his missed time, he is only making $1.55MM this year and can be controlled via arbitration for one more season.

Before the holiday break came, the Sox circled back to Bloom. This time, it was for a lineup addition, with the Sox getting Willson Contreras. The former catcher made a pretty smooth transition to first base last year. Defensive Runs Saved put him just a hair below league average. Outs Above Average put him six above par. The defensive switch didn’t impact his offense, as he slashed .257/.344/.447 for a wRC+ of 124.

His contract situation wasn’t as onerous as Gray’s, as he was owed $41.5MM over two years. The trade ended up structured similarly, though the Cards only ate $8MM this time, a reflection of the fact that Contreras’s deal was closer to market value. Like with Gray, it was restructured to pay him an extra $1MM.

Once again, the Sox flipped out a useful depth starter. Like Fitts, Hunter Dobbins was going to end up down the depth chart, so was sent to a club with more room. Prospects Yhoiker Fajardo and Blake Aita were also included and could be the more notable pieces in the long run. But neither has reached Double-A yet and Fajardo hasn’t even turned 20 years old. As with Clarke in the Gray deal, the Sox have exchanged long-term wild cards for a near-term upgrade, landing the right-handed power bat they’d made a priority entering the winter.

As the calendar flipped to 2026, the Bregman question hung in the air as he remained unsigned and the Sox still had infield holes to address. Many felt that a return to Boston was the most likely outcome but it was not to be.

Bregman settled for a short-term, opt-out-laden pact last offseason but was now hoping to cash in. Breslow has shown an aversion to long-term deals. Bregman’s three-year deal was the longest free agent contract on Breslow’s ledger, as of the start of this offseason. The Sox did make Bregman a long-term offer this time but watered it down. Reportedly, the Sox got to $165MM over five years but with deferrals stretching decades into the future. Instead, Bregman went to the Cubs. That five-year deal also has deferrals but seemingly to a less extreme degree, and with a better sticker price of $175MM.

It’s a bit of an odd look for Boston, in the grand scheme of things. They signed Bregman a year ago and pushed Rafael Devers off third base, upsetting the face of their franchise. The relationship was apparently so damaged that Devers later spurned a request to play first base when Casas got injured. The Sox responded by shipping Devers to the Giants. Presumably, the Sox didn’t anticipate the dominoes falling that way when they signed Bregman. Regardless, the end result is that they completely abandoned their future with Devers in order to get one year of Bregman, then let Bregman slip away by losing a bidding war by a marginal amount.

They didn’t have time to ruminate on that big picture stuff and quickly pivoted. When Bregman turned down their offer, they seemingly just gave all that money to Ranger Suárez. A few days after the reports of Bregman joining the Cubs, the Sox and Suárez agreed to a five-year deal. The $130MM sticker price for Suárez was south of the $165MM offer to Bregman, but the former came with no deferrals. The exact net present value of the Bregman offer isn’t publicly known but his Cubs’ deal came with an NPV of around $150MM. Assuming that Boston was offering more extreme deferrals, the NPV would probably have been pushed pretty close to what Suárez accepted. Regardless, it set a new benchmark for Breslow, as he blew past his aforementioned free agency limits.

The Suárez signing bolstered what was already a very strong rotation. He is not a dominant pitcher, with his fastballs averaging in the low-90s last year, but he clearly knows what he’s doing. He posted a 3.20 ERA last year with a solid 23.2% strikeout rate, excellent 5.8% walk rate and strong 46.8% ground ball rate. Dating back to 2021, he has a 3.25 ERA.

Boston still had work to do and the specter of the Devers trade would again hover around their next two moves. The first one was effectively a salary dump. They flipped Jordan Hicks to the White Sox, with Chicago taking on $16MM of the $24MM left on that deal. In order to move that money off the books, Boston sent out pitching prospect David Sandlin and two players to be named later. They did get back one prospect and one player to be named later, but this was mostly the Sox selling Sandlin to save money.

The next deal was not about financial concerns. The Sox addressed their infield by acquiring Caleb Durbin from the Brewers. They also added some infield depth by netting Andruw Monasterio and Anthony Seigler in the same deal, in addition to a Competitive Balance Round draft pick (#67 overall). Durbin had a solid rookie season in Milwaukee with a contact approach, rarely walking or striking out. He stole some bases and his defense was good. He doesn’t have a lot of power but his profile could play well at Fenway Park. He’ll take over at third base while the Sox will give Mayer a shot at second. Free agent signee Isiah Kiner-Falefa offers cover at both position in a utility role.

The Sox sent three players to Milwaukee, including starters Kyle Harrison and Shane Drohan. The inclusion of Harrison had some echoes of the Quinn Priester trade. The Sox had acquired Priester from the Pirates, watched him post some mediocre results for a bit, then traded him to Milwaukee. Priester immediately flourished with the Brewers after the deal. In this case, the Sox acquired Harrison as part of last year’s Devers trade. His results last year were so-so. Now he’s been traded to Milwaukee and will open the season in that club’s rotation. Time will tell if he’s as immediately successful as Priester.

Though Devers was sent to San Francisco less than a year ago, the trade tree has already shot up to the canopy. The Sox got Hicks, Harrison, James Tibbs and Jose Bello in that deal. They quickly flipped Tibbs to the Dodgers to get Dustin May last year. May was a rental, so he’s gone. With Hicks and Harrison sent out this winter, Bello is the only player in the deal still in the system. Baseball America doesn’t consider him one of the top 30 prospects in the system. Boston did get Gage Ziehl and a player to be named later in the Hicks deal but had to give up Sandlin and two players to be named later. The Milwaukee deal brought in three players but also sent out three, so the branches of the Devers deal will keep spreading out for years to come.

Another key component of the Boston offseason was something they didn’t do. With Anthony’s graduation to the majors, the outfield felt crowded, with Rafaela, Duran and Abreu all in the mix, in addition to Masataka Yoshida. It felt possible that the Sox would flip someone out of that group, most likely Duran or Abreu, but they never did. It seems they will try to find playing time for the four primary outfielders by using the designated hitter spot. That could leave Yoshida as an overpaid bench bat, at least until an injury opens up some playing time.

There has been a lot of roster turnover when looking at the past year but it all adds up to put the Sox in what seems like a good position. They have a lot of young and controllable pieces in the lineup and rotation. They have enough outfield depth that they would still be in a good spot even if there’s a significant injury. They have one of the best rotations in the league. Injuries will inevitably pop up but Tolle is waiting in Triple-A. Kutter Crawford and Patrick Sandoval could get healthy during the season. Casas could also be in game shape in the coming weeks. Perhaps injuries will open a path for him but he could also end up as a notable deadline trade chip now that Contreras is at first.

The AL East is tough to predict. All five teams feel like contenders but they can’t all make the playoffs. Some team will hit roadblocks and end up having a disappointing year. It happened to the Orioles in 2025 and the Blue Jays in 2024. There are no guarantees for any club but the Sox appear to be in a decent position to stay strong over a long season.

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MLBTR Podcast: The PCA and Sanchez Extensions, And Prospect Promotions And Reassignments

The latest episode of the MLB Trade Rumors Podcast is now live on SpotifyApple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you subscribe as well! You can also use the player at this link to listen, if you don’t use Spotify or Apple for podcasts.

This week, host Darragh McDonald is joined by Anthony Franco of MLB Trade Rumors to discuss…

Check out our past episodes!

  • Banged-Up Reds And Braves, Kevin McGonigle, And Spring Breakouts – listen here
  • Jesús Luzardo’s Extension, Atlanta’s Depth, And Zack Littell – listen here
  • Max Scherzer, The Red Sox’ Lineup, Spring Extension Candidates, And More! – listen here

The podcast intro and outro song “So Long” is provided courtesy of the band Showoff.  Check out their Facebook page here!

Photo courtesy of Kyle Ross, Imagn Images