Dan Johnson Clears Waivers
TUESDAY: Johnson cleared waivers and accepted a Triple-A assignment, reports Marc Topkin of the St. Petersburg Times.
FRIDAY: The Rays have designated Dan Johnson for assignment according to a team press release. Rob Delaney was also optioned to Triple-A, and the moves free up roster spots for Justin Ruggiano and J.P. Howell.
Johnson, 31, hit just .115/.179/.167 in 84 plate appearances this year. Though his left-handed bat seemed serviceable, Johnson lost his starting job and has only appeared in six games this month. The Rays signed Johnson before the 2010 season and saw him post a .343 OBP with seven homers in 140 plate appearances despite a .198 batting average.
Fred Wilpon On Payroll, Reyes, Beltran, Minaya
Fred Wilpon's media blitz was actually a two-part plan. Jeffrey Toobin's article in The New Yorker was the big story Monday morning, mainly because the Mets owner was so candid about his players and team. As informative as that article was, SI's Tom Verducci has more from an interview conducted with Wilpon last week.
- The Mets are "bleeding cash," possibly $70MM this year according to Wilpon.
- Wilpon talked about investing $100MM properly, an indication that the 2012 payroll may drop about 30% to that level. This isn't a surprise; I wrote on May 2nd that a $100MM payroll next year would still give GM Sandy Alderson around $20MM to play with before accounting for minimum salary players. So while Wilpon confirmed that the Mets are not likely to reinvest the money coming off the payroll after the season, it would have been nice if someone asked him how they'd handle a potential $10MM+ saved if veterans are traded during the season.
- Verducci says the Mets "have studied the success of the Boston Red Sox in letting top veterans play out their contracts and taking the compensatory draft picks," and would only trade Jose Reyes if they receive a first-round type talent who is close to the Majors, similar to when the Athletics acquired Brett Wallace for Matt Holliday. Does this mean the Mets won't consider trades built around top prospects who are not big league ready, such as the Giants' Zack Wheeler?
- On the Reyes topic, Wilpon said, "I know there's a great question about whether we can keep the shortstop, so we're preparing for that if that should happen." He admitted that Carlos Beltran "will be elsewhere" and the Mets hope Fernando Martinez could fill his shoes. Of Martinez, Wilpon said, "He's fragile, but he can hit."
- The Mets' new investor will be treated as a partner and will have some say, even though Fred Wilpon will remain the team's designated "control person" and Jeff Wilpon will remain the COO.
- On former GM Omar Minaya, Wilpon said, "It was painful to see what Omar did to himself. Why did he do that?" I'm not sure what Wilpon is referring to specifically here.
The Offseason Closer Market
I've seen some talk about the 2011-12 offseason featuring a strong free agent market for closers. However, it's possible the strength of this class has been overstated. Let's take a look.
- Heath Bell: Bell has yet to allow a home run this year in 17 innings, and he's generally pitching well. However, he's typically been good for at least a strikeout per inning and this year he's down to 6.3 per nine. That's come with an increase in groundballs, but if the lack of strikeouts continues it will have to give some teams pause before committing big bucks to a 34-year-old.
- Jonathan Broxton: Broxton has relative youth on his side, but he lost his closing job again and his numbers are lousy across the board. He's currently on the DL with an elbow injury and may have to take a one-year deal to rebuild value.
- Matt Capps: Capps has never been a top-shelf closer. He's showing fantastic control this year, but otherwise his strikeout rate is dangerously low and he's allowing tons of flyballs (and as you'd expect, home runs). He's blown four saves already; only one other closer (Craig Kimbrel) has done that without being ousted from the role.
- Francisco Cordero: Cordero has a $12MM club option the Reds figure to decline, even though the 36-year-old has a 1.77 ERA. He's improved his typically poor control and added groundballs, but like several other closers it's come at the cost of strikeouts. In general, teams figure to be reluctant to commit $8MM+ salaries and multiple years to relievers in their mid-30s who don't strike people out.
- Frank Francisco: Francisco's season began with a DL stint for tightness in his right pectoral muscle and inflammation in his biceps. That's a concern for a pitcher with a lengthy injury history. He's got his usual huge strikeout rate, but he's walked eight and allowed four home runs in 12 1/3 innings so far.
- Ryan Franklin: Four blown saves got him replaced as the Cardinals' closer, and he may not return to that role for any team.
- Brad Lidge: Lidge has a $12.5MM club option that will surely be declined. He's rehabbing a shoulder injury and could make his 2011 debut in June. Lidge probably won't close upon his return, unless something happens to Ryan Madson.
- Joe Nathan: Nathan's return from Tommy John surgery has not been smooth sailing, and he's another former great closer certain to have a big club option declined. So far his customary control has been missing. Like Broxton and Lidge, he'd do well to take a one-year deal and rack up 40 saves somewhere.
- Jonathan Papelbon: Quietly, Papelbon is having one of the best statistical seasons of his career. If he can put 2010 in the rearview, maybe he can challenge Nathan's relief record $47MM contract.
- Francisco Rodriguez: Though he's on pace, I still can't see the Mets allowing K-Rod's 2011 option for $17.5MM to vest with 55 games finished. The Mets could eat some salary and trade Rodriguez to a team for which he would not close. Of course, that team would be taking on a risk in that they might have little recourse but to turn to K-Rod to close if their ninth inning guy falters or gets hurt. K-Rod still whiffs a batter per inning with questionable control, but this year he boasts the best groundball rate of his career by far. His average fastball velocity is down to 90.4 miles per hour.
- Rafael Soriano: Perhaps he's unhappy as a setup man, but there's no way he opts out after a season that included an elbow injury and lousy numbers (so far). Soriano must choose between $25MM over the 2012-13 seasons or free agency and a $1.5MM buyout.
- Jose Valverde: His fastball is down a tick, but he is 11-for-11 in save chances. I imagine the Tigers will exercise his $9MM club option.
- Kyle Farnsworth: Farnsworth's customary strikeouts are missing, but he's got a fantastic 62.5% groundball rate. Did all the closers have a meeting about this? Farnsworth is fixing his reputation by going nine for ten in save opportunities, and the Rays will probably exercise his $3.3MM option.
- Ryan Madson: Thrust into the closer role with Lidge and Jose Contreras unavailable, Madson is nine for nine in save chances and has allowed one run in 19 innings. His peripherals are strong, including a career-best 62.8% groundball rate. This Scott Boras client is also mending his reputation and may jockey with Papelbon for the biggest contract for any reliever this winter.
- Vicente Padilla: He snagged a couple of save chances with Broxton unavailable, but is back on the DL with pain in his surgically-repaired forearm. Fun fact: Padilla's Major League debut in 1999 with the Diamondbacks was a save situation, but Greg Vaughn, Barry Larkin, Eddie Taubensee, and Aaron Boone got the best of him. We'll see whether Padilla can come back strong and remain the Dodgers' closer this year.
There are strong options here, though we all know the fickle nature of relievers. This closing class is weaker than expected given the poor pitching of Broxton, Capps, Franklin, and Nathan. Papelbon and Madson represent the best combinations of age, success, and strikeouts.
Chicago Notes: Montanez, Sox Rotation
Both Chicago teams are struggling this year. The White Sox sit at 22-27, 10 games out in the division and 4.5 back in the wild card. The 20-25 Cubs are seven games out in their division and six out in the wild card. Combined payrolls: about $262MM. On to the links:
- Outfielder Lou Montanez will have his contract purchased by the Cubs, Iowa manager Bill Dancy told Rick Brown of the Des Moines Register. Montanez, 29, was the third overall pick for the Cubs in 2000 as a shortstop. He became an outfielder in 2004, and after a stint with the Orioles signed a minor league deal to return to the Cubs in January. As Bruce Miles of the Daily Herald notes, the Cubs will have to create a 40-man roster spot for Montanez, perhaps by moving Andrew Cashner or Brian Schlitter to the 60-day DL. The team would also have to open a spot on the 25-man roster, and ESPN's Bruce Levine speculates that that could be accomplished by putting Matt Garza on the DL.
- The White Sox will likely bump someone from their six-man rotation after the current road trip, writes Daryl Van Schouwen of the Chicago Sun-Times. Bumping Phil Humber might create the fewest waves, since he's the only starter earning less than $5MM. However, he has the best ERA of the group and the Sox are talking about doing what's best for the team because some starters can't pitch with eight days rest. It'd be very interesting to see John Danks or Edwin Jackson moved to the bullpen, as Danks has a big arbitration raise coming and Jackson will be a free agent.
- You can follow MLBTR's Cubs rumors via Facebook, Twitter, and RSS. Check out MLBTR's Sox rumors via Facebook, Twitter, and RSS as well.
Tigers Designate Robbie Weinhardt For Assignment
The Tigers designated righty reliever Robbie Weinhardt for assignment to create room on the 40-man roster for lefty Adam Wilk, according to the team. Wilk takes the spot of Phil Coke on the 25-man roster, as Coke hit the DL with a right foot bone bruise.
Weinhardt, 25, had an 8.80 ERA in 15 1/3 Triple-A relief innings this year after posting a 1.57 mark in 34 1/3 frames at the level in 2010. Prior to the season, Baseball America ranked Weinhardt 12th among Tigers prospects, 15 spots ahead of Wilk. To put that in perspective, BA ranked the Tigers' farm system 25th overall. BA says Weinhardt uses a near-sidearm delivery to generate groundballs with his sinking fastball, and also employs a slider.
Olney On Reyes, Crisp, Braves
The latest from ESPN's Buster Olney…
- The Mets must avoid diminishing or marginalizing GM Sandy Alderson, writes Olney. A source told the ESPN scribe, "If he gets some space, there is a lot of potential for great things to happen."
- The Mets have not engaged Jose Reyes' agent Peter Greenberg in contract talks, reports Olney. Mets owner Fred Wilpon told Jeffrey Toobin of The New Yorker on April 20th that Reyes "thinks he's going to get Carl Crawford money," but Olney's source says Wilpon isn't in a position to know what Reyes wants. Perhaps Wilpon simply heard the Crawford comparison via the rumor mill.
- Olney feels that center fielder Coco Crisp "would be in the shop window" if the Athletics look to move pieces. Crisp, 31, is hitting .278/.308/.420 in 170 plate appearances on the season and earns $5.75MM. Still, even after dropping six in a row the A's are only three games back in their division.
- Olney speculates that Crisp would be a natural fit for the Braves, who will employ Jordan Schafer in center field while Nate McLouth is on the DL. Right fielder Jason Heyward is also on the DL. Olney says the Braves would love to add a leadoff hitter, something Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports wrote about on May 16th.
2012 Contract Issues: Los Angeles Dodgers
The Dodgers are next in our 2012 Contract Issues series. Here's what the team faces after the 2011 season:
Eligible For Free Agency (11)
- Starter Hiroki Kuroda, 36, is rolling along with another strong season. I'm guessing the Dodgers will have another shot to sign him to a one-year deal after the season, as Kuroda has a full no-trade clause.
- Jonathan Broxton lost the closer job again this season, and he's currently on the DL with an elbow injury. At one point he seemed destined for a monster free agent contract, but instead he might want a one-year deal to rebuild value.
- Rod Barajas leads all NL catchers with seven home runs, though it doesn't get much worse than a .260 OBP. The Dodgers may give some thought to re-signing him on a one-year deal.
- Jamey Carroll has been quite valuable filling in for Rafael Furcal; his .374 OBP leads all MLB shortstops. Carroll should top his last two-year deal and ought to seek a team that will play him every day. Before then, he could be popular at the trade deadline.
- Vicente Padilla had the Dodgers' closer role for a short period of time, but then landed on the DL with more forearm concerns. We'll have to see how the rest of his season goes before assessing his value.
- Lance Cormier has been terrible, and might not make it to the end of the season with the Dodgers.
- Dioner Navarro missed most of April with an oblique injury and hasn't done anything yet.
- Marcus Thames hasn't played much this year due to a quad injury. Vision problems have sidelined Jay Gibbons.
- Mike MacDougal is doing his usual tightrope act, but the beleaguered Dodgers bullpen needs him right now.
- Aaron Miles is also eligible for free agency. The Dodgers could see quite a bit of turnover next year.
Contract Options (3)
- Rafael Furcal: $12MM club option with a $1.3MM buyout. Furcal's latest Dodgers contract has been a frustrating one due to injuries. I can't picture the Dodgers exercising this, and I can envision them moving him this summer depending on what his no-trade clause allows.
- Casey Blake: $6MM club option with a $1.25MM buyout. Blake is finishing up rehab for an elbow injury. He was hitting well before that in a small sample.
- Jon Garland: $8MM club option with a $500K buyout; vests with 190 IP. At his current pace, another 22 or 23 starts would not be enough for Garland to reach 190 innings. It'd be the first time he's failed to do so since he was a reliever a decade ago. I don't picture the Dodgers exercising at a $7.5MM net price.
Arbitration Eligible (7)
- First time: Clayton Kershaw, Ramon Troncoso
- Second time: Tony Gwynn Jr.
- Third time: Matt Kemp, James Loney, Hong-Chih Kuo
- Fourth time: Andre Ethier
The Dodgers have an interesting arbitration group. Kershaw should top Jered Weaver's first-time record for a starting pitcher, though David Price may beat Kershaw and in a way the record is technically and should remain the Giants' $8MM filing for Tim Lincecum last year. Kemp and Ethier both kept their final arbitration years open, and now it's time to get paid. Ethier is operating from a higher salary point, but each player should be able to exceed $12MM. Targets for their agents may include Mark Teixeira's $12.5MM in '08 or even Prince Fielder's $15.5MM this year.
Loney probably should have been non-tendered or dealt last offseason; he's highly unlikely to be tendered a contract this time. Kuo, on the DL with anxiety disorder, is an unknown. Troncoso and Gwynn could be cut, though they wouldn't cost much to retain. For my rough estimate I'll put Kershaw at $6MM and Kemp and Ethier at $13MM each, plus Kuo at $3MM for a total of $35MM.
2012 Payroll Obligation
The Dodgers' 2012 payroll obligation, according to Cot's, is $48MM if you include all three buyouts on the options. Our arbitration estimate puts them at $83MM, a solid $37MM short of this year's payroll without considering minimum salary players. The big question, of course, is the team's ownership situation. If by November Bud Selig successfully removes Frank McCourt from the picture entirely and installs a new owner, the Dodgers figure to be major players in free agency. If not, I have to think payroll would be cut. In that case GM Ned Colletti would still have some spending money, just not for the big names.
Quick Hits: Herrera, Bautista, Blevins
Today the Brewers claimed Danny Herrera from Cincinnati, the Reds optioned Edinson Volquez to the minors and Josh Hamilton homered in his return from the disabled list. The connection? Back in December of 2007, the Rangers sent Herrera and Volquez to Cincinnati for Hamilton. Here are the latest links from around the league…
- The Brewers optioned Herrera to Triple-A Nashville and moved left-hander Manny Parra to the 60-day DL, according to Tom Haudricourt of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (on Twitter).
- One Blue Jays person told Danny Knobler of CBSSports that Jose Bautista is “our Derek Jeter.” Bautista hit homer #19 today as the Blue Jays defeated Jeter’s Yankees.
- Mike Axisa of River Ave. Blues points out that recently-designated southpaw Jerry Blevins could be an appealing option for the Yankees if they're looking for more upside than Randy Flores offers.
- Earlier today, MLBTR's Tim Dierkes suggested that the Yankees are one of many contenders that could look for lefty relief.
What Wilpon’s Comments Mean For The Mets
Mets owner Fred Wilpon offered some not-so-constructive criticism for his star shortstop, his highest-paid position player and his franchise third baseman in Jeffrey Toobin’s recent New Yorker article. Soon after the Mets comment publicly on what Wilpon (pictured) said about Jose Reyes, Carlos Beltran and David Wright, the reaction will subside and the focus will return to the field. But before long the 22-24 Mets may have to consider trading players, including Reyes, Beltran and Wright. Here’s what – if anything – Wilpon’s comments mean for the trio of Mets stars going forward.
Jose Reyes
"He thinks he’s going to get Carl Crawford money. He’s had everything wrong with him. He won’t get it." – Wilpon.
Wilpon's comments suggest the Mets are shying away from Reyes' apparent asking price of $142MM. The Mets owner sounds hesitant about paying top dollar for Reyes when the shortstop hits free agency after the season. That would eliminate one bidder for Reyes' services after the season, but won't necessarily prevent the 27-year-old from floating an exorbitant price tag.
As for Reyes' trade value, rival executives tell ESPN.com's Buster Olney that Wilpon's comments reduced the Mets' leverage (Twitter links). GM Sandy Alderson faces the perception held by some general managers that the Mets must trade him because they won't be signing him after the season.
Carlos Beltran
"We had some schmuck in New York [Wilpon himself] who paid him based on that one [2004 postseason] series. He’s sixty-five to seventy per cent of what he was." - Wilpon.
Beltran had trade value before the article came out and Wilpon’s comments haven’t changed that. Speculation has already begun regarding possible suitors for the outfielder.
Agent Scott Boras is well aware that Beltran is having a resurgent season and that figures to boost his asking price in free agency after the season. Wilpon’s comments about Beltran’s current contract won’t prevent Boras from obtaining a shiny new deal for his client. But at age 34, Beltran is almost certainly not going to sign another $119MM deal, even if he matches his historic 2004 postseason performance.
David Wright
“A really good kid. A very good player. Not a superstar." - Wilpon.
Alderson knows full well that Wright has had some superstar caliber seasons, and so do the rival GMs who might try to trade for him. If anything is limiting Wright's trade value, it's his pedestrian .226/.337/.404 line and the lower back stress fracture that has him on the disabled list.
Wright’s free agency is a long way off, as he’s under team control through 2013. He said this spring that he “can't imagine ever asking out" of New York and stated today that Wilpon is a “good man.” Could the owner’s comments change Wright’s stance on sticking it out with the Mets? It’s certainly possible, but we can’t assume that will happen.
Photo courtesy Icon SMI.
Rosenthal On Rodriguez, Tejada, Brewers
MLB executives tell Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports that the struggles of large market teams such as the Mets and Dodgers have helped build competitive balance in baseball this year. Here are Rosenthal’s notes from around the league:
- Though Francisco Rodriguez has 15 saves (16 chances) and a sparkling 0.76 ERA, his fastball velocity (90.4 mph) continues to drop and two scouts say his stuff is diminished. That perception could affect the right-hander’s trade value this summer.
- D’Backs GM Kevin Towers told Rosenthal that righty Josh Collmenter’s arm angle almost makes him look left-handed and helps create deception.
- While Miguel Tejada has struggled this year, he’s heating up at the plate and the Giants aren’t about to quit on him, according to Rosenthal.
- The Brewers are pleasantly surprised by Yuniesky Betancourt’s defensive work this season. If you haven’t seen these plays, you’re in for a pleasant surprise yourself.
- Rosenthal confirms that the Mariners figure to call top prospect Dustin Ackley up before long.

