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Archives for 2010

Amaro Talks Phillies Offseason

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 12:06pm CDT

Phillies GM Ruben Amaro Jr. talked about the Phillies' offseason at a news conference today, and David Murphy of the Philadelphia Daily News and Matt Gelb of the Philadelphia Inquirer have quotes.

  • Amaro said he wants Jayson Werth back and the Phillies can afford him, but he expects talks to go deep into the offseason.  He'll make contact with Scott Boras over the next 48 hours.  Despite the prolonged timeframe, Amaro seems to want to address the Werth situation first: "We're not going to feel comfortable on anything until we know where we stand on Werth and go from there."  Werth, for his part, said he's "open to anything" but "this is definitely a business."
  • Amaro downplayed Werth's season, saying, "Jayson had a good year. It wasn't an extraordinary year.  He had a tough time with men in scoring position. It wasn't as productive a year as he had in the past."  I wonder if Boras feels the same way. 
  • Kyle Kendrick's work as the team's fifth starter was described as "a pretty good performance," implying that the 26-year-old will be tendered a contract and the 2011 rotation is settled.
  • The Phillies exercised Jimmy Rollins' 2011 option in December of 2009, but his next contract will probably be discussed after the '11 season.
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Philadelphia Phillies Jayson Werth Jimmy Rollins Kyle Kendrick

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Yankees Notes: Eiland, Girardi, Jeter

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 11:53am CDT

The Yankees have fired pitching coach Dave Eiland, GM Brian Cashman told reporters today (Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News seemingly tweeted it first).  Cashman said his reasons for the dismissal are private.  Other Yankees notes of interest:

  • Cashman will meet with Joe Girardi's agent tomorrow about a new contract, tweets Joel Sherman of the New York Post.
  • The Yankees and Girardi need each other, says the New York Post's Joel Sherman, though he feels the manager regressed this year.
  • Cashman on Derek Jeter, from Feinsand: "He's going to be a part of this franchise. We'll work something out."
  • Cashman noted that the team's option decisions on Kerry Wood, Lance Berkman, and Nick Johnson are "all pretty obvious," implying that the three will be declined.
  • SI's Jon Heyman previews the Yankees' offseason, guessing they'd gladly sign Cliff Lee for five years and $125MM if he'd take it.  Instead, Lee could look for C.C. Sabathia money.
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New York Yankees Transactions Cliff Lee Derek Jeter Kerry Wood Lance Berkman Nick Johnson

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Free Agent Market For Center Fielders

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 11:07am CDT

The Royals, Braves, Marlins, Nationals, and Padres may be looking for center field help for 2011, but the free agent market is ugly and there are no interesting non-tender candidates.  Let's take a look.

Could The Big Names Switch Positions?

Scott Boras is prone to exaggeration, but he touted Jayson Werth's ability to play center field in a September conversation with Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports.  Werth played 171 innings in center this year, 62.3 in '09, and 233.3 in '08.  It's smart for Boras to position Werth as a center field possibility, given the market.

Carl Crawford has the speed for center but seems unlikely to make the move.  He hasn't played 100+ innings in center field since '04.

Probably Not Available

Though Coco Crisp played only 75 games this year for the Athletics, his contract is looking decent because of his performance and the $5.75MM club option for 2011.  Though Rajai Davis can play center too, the A's seem very likely to keep Crisp.  Crisp is the only free agent who played 600+ innings in center this year.  Only Jim Edmonds, who probably won't play center field next year, matched Crisp's offensive production. 

Capable Of Playing Center Field

With Edmonds talking about a backup first base role for next year if anything, only Rick Ankiel and Melky Cabrera remain as free agents who logged 300+ center field innings in 2010.  Both struggled offensively, though Cabrera was decent in '09.

Tony Gwynn could join the free agent ranks if the Padres non-tender him.  He didn't do much with the bat but the speedy 28-year-old did play 701.3 innings in center this year.  Non-tender candidates Scott Hairston and Reggie Willits can handle center on a part-time basis.

Corey Patterson has a case for a big league contract this winter.  He hit .269/.315/.406 in 340 plate appearances for the Orioles, which would be acceptable for a part-time center fielder.  Patterson hasn't played the position in the Majors much in recent years, though he did tally 67 minor league games in '09. 

Backups

Gary Matthews Jr., Reed Johnson, Jody Gerut, and Willy Taveras played 300+ innings in center last year.  They'll be signing minor league deals most likely.  Same goes for DeWayne Wise, a non-tender candidate for Toronto.

Summary

Assuming Crisp is retained by the A's and Werth stays in right field, there are no free agents you'd want playing center field on a regular basis.  We'll see later if the trade market offers anything.

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Free Agent Market

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Trade Market For Left Fielders

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 9:59am CDT

A week ago, we established that the free agent market for left fielders is weak for clubs that can't join the Carl Crawford bidding.  The Rays, Tigers, Angels, Braves, Reds, Diamondbacks, Dodgers, Padres, and Giants may be looking for help at the position; let's see what the trade market adds to the picture.

Solid Regulars

If the Nationals re-sign Adam Dunn or add another slugger and feel they can spare Josh Willingham, this offseason would be the time to make a deal.  Willingham, 32 in February, posted a solid .268/.389/.459 line in 450 plate appearances this year.  He's open to playing first base or the outfield corners and could make around $7MM in 2011 before reaching free agency.  He has faced injuries recently, however.

The Royals' David DeJesus played little left field this year, but has extensive experience at the position.  The team already picked up his $6MM option for '11.  His career-best season ended in July with a torn thumb ligament, just before the trade deadline.  If the Royals intend to move him, it may make sense to let him demonstrate good health first. 

Baltimore's Luke Scott is another name to consider, though he hasn't played 200 innings in left field since '08.  Scott had a strong offensive year and is due a raise on a $4.05MM salary, but there's been no indication the Orioles are looking to move him.

Bad Contracts

If you're willing to pick up a bad contract, the trade market for left fielders presents several options: Carlos Lee, Raul Ibanez, Juan Rivera, and Milton Bradley.  Lee's deal would be the toughest to stomach, at $37MM over the next two seasons.  His normally respectable numbers fell off a cliff this year at age 34.  Ibanez, with $11.5MM remaining, is still a useful hitter.  The Phillies might need him if Jayson Werth departs, though.  Rivera, owed $5.25MM for '11, may be shopped as the Angels look for more athleticism in left field.  He hit just .252/.312/.409 on the season.  Bradley says he can coexist with new Mariners manager Eric Wedge, but if not it'll be nearly impossible to find a taker even if the Ms assume most of his $12MM salary.

Out Of Favor?

Nolan Reimold and Gerardo Parra disappointed this year for the Orioles and Diamondbacks, respectively.  They could be trade candidates.

Non-Tender Candidates

Scott Hairston, Matt Diaz, Conor Jackson, Ryan Langerhans, Fred Lewis, Laynce Nix, Reggie Willits, Travis Buck, and Lastings Milledge are non-tender candidates.  Melky Cabrera has already joined the free agent ranks.  The non-tender candidates figure to be trade bait prior to the December 2nd deadline, especially borderline cases like Lewis, Diaz, Milledge, Nix, and Willits.

Summary

Willingham, DeJesus, and Scott would greatly improve the market for left fielders if made available.  Otherwise you're looking at bad contracts and players hoping to bounce back or establish themselves.

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Trade Market

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Arbitration Eligibles Series

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 8:05am CDT

Players with at least two years and 125 days but less than six years of Major League service time are arbitration eligible.  A player usually goes to arbitration three times in his career, though those classified as Super Two go four times. 

On December 2nd, each team will decide whether to tender contracts to their arbitration eligible players.  Those who are non-tendered become free agents.  Players who are tendered contracts are automatically under team control for 2011 at a yet to be determined salary.  Many players will reach an agreement before exchanging salary figures, which is formally done in mid-January.  Others will exchange figures and meet somewhere in the middle.  A handful of players will fail to reach an agreement with the team, resulting in an arbitration hearing in February.  In an arbitration hearing, an independent three-person panel hears cases from both sides and picks which of the two salary submissions they find appropriate.

MLBTR's arbitration eligibles series examines all 30 teams; links are below.  By our count there are 227 arbitration eligible players.  Click here to download an Excel spreadsheet listing all of them.  The Blue Jays lead with 14; the Cardinals trail with two.  Our speculative non-tender candidate list will come later, but that group should contain around 90 players.

AL East

  • Orioles (5)
  • Red Sox (5)
  • Yankees (6)
  • Rays (9)
  • Blue Jays (14)

AL Central

  • White Sox (4)
  • Indians (7)
  • Tigers (4)
  • Royals (10)
  • Twins (10)

AL West

  • Angels (9)
  • Athletics (11)
  • Mariners (9)
  • Rangers (10)

NL East

  • Braves (6)
  • Marlins (9)
  • Mets (5)
  • Phillies (3)
  • Nationals (12)

NL Central

  • Cubs (7)
  • Reds (8)
  • Astros (10)
  • Brewers (8)
  • Pirates (9)
  • Cardinals (2)

NL West

  • Diamondbacks (8)
  • Rockies (5)
  • Dodgers (6)
  • Padres (8)
  • Giants (8)
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Arbitration Eligibles

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Arbitration Eligibles: San Francisco Giants

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 7:11am CDT

Giants fans aren't thinking about the offseason right now, but let's finish off our arbitration eligibles series.

  • First time: Andres Torres
  • Second time: Jonathan Sanchez, Ramon Ramirez, Mike Fontenot, Santiago Casilla
  • Third time: Cody Ross, Chris Ray
  • Fourth time: Javier Lopez

Torres hasn't done much in the postseason, but the 31-year-old's impressive regular season work will get him a contract.  His salary will remain low, as he hasn't piled up big career numbers.

Had Ross remained with the Marlins, he probably would have been non-tendered this winter.  He's already earning $4.45MM and his power slipped in 487 Marlins plate appearances this year.  The Giants snagged Ross as a waiver claim in late August.  His performance picked up with his new team, and he even won NLCS MVP.  About a week ago, Giants GM Brian Sabean implied that he will tender a contract to Ross.

Ramirez, another midseason pickup, allowed only two earned runs in 27 innings for the Giants despite unimpressive peripherals.  He'll likely be retained.  Lopez, who came over from the Pirates, actually does have the peripheral stats to support his strong Giants ERA.  He's been a postseason force and should be tendered.  Ray is a borderline case – he'll remain affordable, but his performance this year was only passable.  Yet another acquisition, Fontenot, has been a useful backup infielder even if his '08 slugging percentage appears to have been a fluke.  He'll probably stick around.

Casilla represents one of the year's better minor league deals, as he compiled a 1.95 ERA and 9.1 K/9 in 55.3 innings.  He's staying.  Sanchez is a lock to be tendered, and is in line for a multimillion dollar raise following a 13 win, 205 strikeout breakout campaign.  He doesn't have the career numbers to get the $6MM salary other second-time arbitration eligible starters such as Jered Weaver, Matt Garza, John Danks, and Chad Billingsley will make.

It's possible the Giants will tender contracts to all eight of their arbitration eligible players, though contracts for Ray and Fontenot are less certain.

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Arbitration Eligibles San Francisco Giants

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Advertise With MLB Trade Rumors

By Tim Dierkes | October 25, 2010 at 5:00am CDT

Baseball fans obsess about free agent and trade rumors when the offseason approaches, trying to get the first word on who their favorite team might acquire.  MLBTradeRumors.com is the #1 destination on the Internet to find this information.

Though certainly not limited to this demographic, the most common MLBTR reader is an 18-34 year-old male.  If you're looking to reach this crowd, MLB Trade Rumors is the perfect place to advertise.  Since there is no ad agency acting as a middle man, MLBTR is able to keep rates low compared to other major sports websites.  If you are interested in advertising and would like to learn more, please contact mlbtradvertising@gmail.com.

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Amateur Signing Bonuses: Royals

By Mike Axisa | October 24, 2010 at 9:06pm CDT

Time to take our amateur signing bonus series to Kansas City…

  1. Eric Hosmer, 6MM (2008)
  2. Alex Gordon, $4MM (2005)
  3. Mike Moustakas, $4MM (2007)
  4. Luke Hochevar, $3.5MM (2006)
  5. Christian Colon, $2.75MM (2010)

You're looking at five of the Royals' last six first round picks, with the lone exception being 2009 pick Aaron Crow. He received a $1.5MM signing bonus as part of his $3MM major league deal. 

Hosmer, the third overall pick two years ago, was touted as one of the best high school bats in recent memory. He has lived up to that hype in the minors, crushing Single-A and Double-A pitchers to the tune of .338/.406/.571 with 20 homers as a 20-year-old in 586 plate appearances this season. 

Gordon was the best college player in the country when the Royals selected him second overall in 2005, but so far he hasn't delivered on the unrealistic and unfair George Brett comparisons. In parts of four seasons with the big league team, Gordon is a .244/.328/.405 hitter in 1,641 plate appearances, moving from the hot corner to the outfield in 2010. He's still just 26 though, plenty of time left for him to figure it out.

Drafted with the second overall pick in 2007, Moustakas holds the California high school record with 52 career homers. He's continued to mash in the minors, hitting .322/.369/.630 with 36 homers split between Double-A and Triple-A as a 21-year-old this season. Moustakas is Kansas City's third baseman of the future, and he and Hosmer represent prospects 1 and 1A in the game's best farm system.

The lone pitcher on the list, Hochevar was the first overall pick in the 2006 draft after spending a year in an independent league. The Dodgers selected him in the supplemental first round the year before, but after much drama the two sides were unable to work out a contract and he went back into the draft the next year. Hochevar has made 65 starts (and four relief appearances) for Kansas City over the last three-plus years, posting a 5.60 ERA with 6.0 K/9 and 3.1 BB/9 in 387.2 innings.

Colon was the fourth overall pick in this year's draft, and his pro debut consisted of a .278/.326/.380 batting line in 271 Single-A plate appearances. His coming out party is set for 2011. 

The Royals have the best farm system in baseball, and it's easy to see why. They spend the money needed to sign elite amateur talent, and that extends beyond the first round. Over the last three years, they've spent over $24MM on draft picks, the fifth most in baseball.

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Amateur Signing Bonuses Kansas City Royals

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Odds & Ends: Alderson, Marte, Jeter, Mets, Werth

By Steve Adams | October 24, 2010 at 7:42pm CDT

Some links to check out as San Francisco recovers from celebrating Brian Wilson's strikeout of Ryan Howard, which sent the Giants to the World Series…

  • Over at RotoAuthority, Tim Dierkes lists some Baltimore Orioles to watch for your fantasy team next season.
  • ESPNNewYork.com's Adam Rubin re-posted a selection of questions from a 2008 interview conducted with current Mets' GM candidate Sandy Alderson. Very interesting read. 
  • Damaso Marte underwent shoulder surgery this weekend and won't begin throwing until after the 2011 All-Star Break, writes MLB.com's Dan Mennella. If the Yankees want to look for some low-budget options, MLBTR's Ben Nicholson-Smith looked at some bargain southpaws last week.
  • Joel Sherman looks at the delicate situation that is Derek Jeter's free agency. Sherman concludes that Jeter is more valuable to the Yankees than to other teams, and that the 37-year-old will have to accept that it's not a "divine right" that he hit at the top of the order and play 150 games per season if his production doesn't improve. According to Sherman, Jeter's numbers may only warrant a one-year, $7MM deal or so on the open market, but the Yankees will bid higher. He offers up a speculative three-year, $45MM deal.
  • ESPN's Adam Rubin says the Diamondbacks will be pulling for Josh Byrnes to win the Mets' GM opening, as any money the Mets pay him will be deducted from what Byrnes is still owed from his five-year contract with Arizona. Potentially saving $1MM or so annually on their GM may be a factor if the two candidates end up being neck-and-neck, according to Rubin.
  • Jayson Werth's teammates don't see him returning to the Phillies next season, tweets SI's Jon Heyman.
  • Curt Young has declined the Athletics' offer to return as the club's pitching coach and will pursue another opportunity, according to a team press release. The San Francisco Chronicle's Susan Slusser speculates that he might be joining former Oakland colleague Terry Francona in Boston. That would make sense, given Toronto's decision to hire John Farrell. Slusser says the A's offered Young a raise of nearly 40% on a one-year deal.
  • The Boston Globe's Nick Cafardo, however, tweets that Young is likely on his way to the Diamondbacks' organization.
  • For A's fans thinking this could mean a reunion with Rick Peterson, Slusser also tweets a reminder that Peterson has one more year on his contract with Milwaukee.
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Arizona Diamondbacks Boston Red Sox New York Mets New York Yankees Oakland Athletics Philadelphia Phillies Damaso Marte Derek Jeter Jayson Werth Sandy Alderson

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Amateur Signing Bonuses: Astros

By Mike Axisa | October 24, 2010 at 6:29pm CDT

Next up in our series looking at each team's amateur spending, the Houston Astros…

  1. Ariel Ovando, $2.6-2.8MM (2010)
  2. Delino DeShields Jr., $2.15MM (2010)
  3. Chris Burke, $2.125MM (2001)
  4. Jason Castro, $2.07MM (2008)
  5. Max Sapp, $1.4MM (2006)

The Astros made a major splash on the Latin American market this summer by signing Ovando, a 16-year-old Dominican outfielder. The exact amount of the bonus isn't known, but it's easily enough to set the franchise record. Ovando's playing career will begin next season.

The son of the man once traded straight up for Pedro Martinez, DeShields was the eighth overall pick in this June's draft and signed for a bonus roughly $100K over slot. He started his career as an 18-year-old down in rookie ball, hitting .289/.337/.395 in just 83 plate appearances. Like Ovando, DeShields' career will begin in earnest next year.

Castro was a bit of a surprise with the tenth overall pick in 2008, but he has more than justified the selection by reaching the majors this June. He hit an unimpressive .205/.286/.287 in 217 plate appearances with the big league club, but that's not out of the ordinary for a 23-year-old rookie backstop. Castro is clearly Houston's catcher of the present and future.

Burke, the tenth overall pick in 2001, reached the big leagues in 2004 and spent the next three full seasons playing all over the field as a super-sub, getting over 350 plate appearances each year. A career .249/.319/.377 hitter with the Astros, Burke was shipped to the Diamondbacks in the Jose Valverde trade in December 2007.

Sapp, the 23rd overall pick in 2006, had his career derailed by a life-threatening battle with viral meningitis, chronic sinus disease, and seizures. He was released earlier this year after hitting .224/.310/.313 in 839 minor league plate appearances. Sapp hasn't played in a game since 2008.

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Amateur Signing Bonuses Houston Astros

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