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Archives for June 2016

Opt-Outs: Joe Thatcher, Hak-Ju Lee

By Steve Adams | June 2, 2016 at 11:36am CDT

June 1 serves as a common date for opt-out clauses in minor league contracts, and as such, there figure to be a few players on the verge of free agency. It’s already been reported that Travis Snider won’t opt out of his deal with the Royals, and we’ll keep track of the rest of the day’s opt-out decisions in this post…

  • Veteran lefty Joe Thatcher has exercised the opt-out clause in his minor league deal with the Dodgers, tweets SB Nation’s Chris Cotillo. The Dodgers have until Saturday to add him to the big league roster or he’ll be a free agent. Thatcher, 34, spent the 2015 season with the Astros and totaled 22 2/3 innings of 3.18 ERA ball with a 26-to-12 K/BB ratio. Thatcher didn’t display his typical excellence against lefties, yielding a .241/.362/.321 batting line to same-handed opponents, but he’s an overall line of .232/.298/.348 to lefty batters in his big league career. He has a 3.86 ERA with a 20-to-5 K/BB ratio in 14 innings at the Triple-A level thus far in 2016 and could get a look elsewhere as a situational lefty if the Dodgers elect not to add him to the big league bullpen.
  • Shortstop Hak-Ju Lee has also exercised a June 1 opt-out in his minors deal with the Giants, MLBTR has learned (Twitter link). Lee, a former Top 100 prospect with the Cubs and Rays, is hitting .263/.343/.378 with three homers and four steals in 45 games/178 plate appearances with Triple-A Sacramento this season. San Francisco has 72 hours to add him to the active roster. The 25-year-old has played shortstop almost exclusively throughout his career but has logged a pair of games at third base this season. Lee’s career was slowed by a collision at second base in 2013 that left him with multiple torn ligaments in his left knee, and he hasn’t topped 100 games in a season since 2012 (though he’s healthy and on pace to do so in 2016). Baseball America wrote prior to the 2015 season that Lee possessed above-average range, a plus throwing arm and soft hands at shortstop.
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Los Angeles Dodgers San Francisco Giants Transactions Hak-Ju Lee Joe Thatcher

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Giants Place Hunter Pence On Disabled List

By Steve Adams | June 2, 2016 at 9:54am CDT

The Giants have placed right fielder Hunter Pence on the disabled list with a strained right hamstring, manager Bruce Bochy told reporters prior to today’s game (via Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle). Pence missed about a week late last month due to a balky hamstring but returned to the lineup over the weekend. However, he came up lame in an attempt to run out a grounder last night and was unable to even finish running to first base. He underwent an MRI this morning, after which Bochy told the media: “Unfortunately, he did a pretty good job on it. That’s a shame.” In other words, Schulman notes, Pence is dealing with a severe strain, which almost certainly rules out a speedy return to the lineup. Surgery has not yet been discussed, though Pence’s MRI still needs to be reviewed by team physician Kenneth Akizuki.

For the time being, the Giants have recalled outfielder Mac Williamson to take Pence’s place on the roster. The 25-year-old Williamson is currently sporting a fairly robust .287/.316/.503 batting line with Triple-A Sacramento, though it’s unreasonable to ask him to fill Pence’s shoes from a production standpoint at the big league level. Pence is currently batting .298/.375/.486 with seven homers on the season, but he’ll now join the Giants’ other corner outfielder, Angel Pagan, on the disabled list with a similar injury. That leaves the NL-West-leading Giants with an outfield mix of Denard Span, Gregor Blanco and the inexperienced duo of Williamson and Jarrett Parker. Brandon Belt could potentially see some time in left field as well; he’s logged just one inning there this season but played 96 innings out there in 2015 and has 355 big league innings at the position.

While there’s no definitive timetable on Pence’s absence, a prolonged stint on the disabled list would invite trade speculation. Pagan is said to be coming along nicely in his rehab and could return to the club sometime next week, Schulman notes, which could lessen the immediate need for some outfield help. However, Pagan doesn’t provide the same offensive skill set, despite a solid .275/.338/.383 batting line at the time of his most recent injury, and he’s also been very prone to injury over the past four seasons with San Francisco. It’s early in the summer still, but MLBTR’s Jeff Todd did recently compile a list of 10 of the game’s likeliest trade candidates while also mentioning several others to monitor as the deadline approaches.

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Newsstand San Francisco Giants Hunter Pence

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AL Central Notes: Anibal, Indians, Kepler, Snider

By Steve Adams | June 2, 2016 at 8:51am CDT

The Tigers have removed Anibal Sanchez from the rotation and replaced him with left-hander Matt Boyd, as Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press writes. Sanchez took the move as well as could be expected, manager Brad Ausmus told the media, and Fenech writes that Sanchez spoke with conviction about working to correct his flaws and reclaim his job. Sanchez, who is earning $16MM in 2016, the fourth season of a five-year, $80MM contract, has surrendered a 6.67 ERA through his first 56 2/3 innings of the year. He led the American League with 29 homers allowed in 157 innings last season and has allowed an even more alarming 14 long balls in this year’s 56 2/3 frames while also displaying his worst control since 2009 (4.6 BB/9). Sanchez is owed $16MM once again in 2017, and the Tigers hold a $16MM club option for the 2018 season that comes with a hefty $5MM buyout. With offseason signee Mike Pelfrey struggling so greatly as well, the Tigers are definite candidates to seek rotation upgrades this summer, though the emergence of Michael Fulmer and a recent string of solid outings for Daniel Norris at Triple-A may lessen the urgency.

More from the AL Central…

  • The Indians need to trade for an outfield bat in the wake of Marlon Byrd’s 162-game suspension, opines Paul Hoynes of the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Suspensions for Byrd and Abraham Almonte, combined with the shoulder woes of Michael Brantley, has left Cleveland with an outfield mix of Rajai Davis, Tyler Naquin, Lonnie Chisenhall and Jose Ramirez. As Hoynes writes, the Indians “have pretty much said” that top prospects Bradley Zimmer and Clint Frazier won’t play in the Majors this season, so neither Double-A outfielder seems like an immediate option. President of baseball operations Chris Antonetti said to Hoynes that the club will “take some time to determine” if a trade is necessary, and he also explained that the club “spent a lot of time working through” Byrd’s first positive test before electing to sign him. Byrd, of course, went three years between suspensions and passed numerous drug tests along the way.
  • Twins outfield prospect Max Kepler hasn’t seen much playing time in either of his first two stints at the Major League level, but manager Paul Molitor said that this time around, he’ll get more of a chance at regular playing time, writes MLB.com’s Rhett Bollinger. The 23-year-old German outfielder raked at a .322/.416/.531 clip at Double-A last season en route to Southern League MVP honors, and he batted .282/.367/.455 in 30 games at Triple-A after being demoted to Rochester earlier this season. Notably, Bollinger adds that the Triple-A coaching staff recommended Kepler over recently demoted Eddie Rosario, who is hitting .333 since a mid-May demotion but still hasn’t drawn a walk in 51 plate appearances.
  • Travis Snider will not opt out of his minor league contract with the Royals, per SB Nation’s Chris Cotillo (Twitter link). The 28-year-old had a June 1 opt-out date but will instead remain with Triple-A Omaha, where he’s batted .259/.377/.348 in 162 plate appearances. The Royals have lost Alex Gordon to a fracture in his hand for the time being, so perhaps the hope is that a need in the outfield corner will lead to a promotion in the near future.
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Cleveland Guardians Detroit Tigers Kansas City Royals Minnesota Twins Anibal Sanchez Bradley Zimmer Clint Frazier Max Kepler Travis Snider

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Marlon Byrd Receives 162-Game PED Ban

By Jeff Todd | June 1, 2016 at 11:45pm CDT

Indians outfielder Marlon Byrd was officially slapped with a 162-game suspension after testing positive for a performance enhancing substance, as Vince Grzegorek of Cleveland Scene first reported on Twitter. Byrd had previously been hit with a 50-game ban, meaning he was a second-time offender for purposes of the league’s more punitive current PED regime.

Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports noted via Twitter that Byrd chose not to appeal. The veteran has released a statement disclaiming fault, as has his attorney, both via Rosenthal (here and here). They suggest that a tainted supplement is to blame for the growth hormone secretagogue Ipamorelin that was found in Byrd’s system. Given his age and history, it’s fair to wonder whether this is the end of the line for the veteran, who has seen action in fifteen major league seasons.

Cleveland added the 38-year-old on a minor league deal to shore up an outfield that had several question marks — due, in part, to the PED suspension of presumptive center fielder Abraham Almonte. His own 80-game ban will finish up early next month.

Byrd had performed as hoped, posting a .270/.326/.452 slash with five home runs over 129 plate appearances. As usual, he’s done most of his damage against left-handed pitching. With his glovework in the corner outfield rating as at least average by measure of both UZR and DRS, and solid baserunning valuations added in, he’s been a sturdy contributor at the bargain rate of a $1MM annual salary.

Unfortunately for Cleveland, that wasn’t meant to last. With Almonte and Michael Brantley still out of action, the Indians are left with an outfield of Jose Ramirez, Rajai Davis, and Lonnie Chisenhall. All three have been rather productive this year, though it may be a lot to ask of that trio to make up an everyday unit.

The club has Michael Martinez on hand as a utility option, and seems likely to bring back Tyler Naquin to add another corner option. Naquin, 25, showed well earlier in the year, and both Joey Butler and Collin Cowgill provide depth on the 40-man roster.

Looking forward, the intriguing question is whether the loss of Byrd will add any motivation for a more dramatic move. Highly-rated prospects Bradley Zimmer and Clint Frazier are both raking at the Double-A level; while it’s unclear whether either would be considered in the near term, they could factor in down the line. Otherwise, it’s fair to wonder whether Cleveland will entertain an outside addition. The club can take its time assessing its needs and canvassing the market, but a significant strike can’t be ruled out with the division up for grabs.

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Cleveland Guardians Newsstand Transactions Marlon Byrd

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Quick Hits: Pence, Kelly, Profar, Gray

By Steve Adams | June 1, 2016 at 11:34pm CDT

Giants right fielder Hunter Pence left tonight’s game after re-aggravating a hamstring injury that plagued him for much of the past two weeks, and he’s headed for an MRI in the morning, writes Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle. The extent of the injury won’t be known until tomorrow morning, but Pence was unable to even finish running to first base on a grounder to third base in the fourth inning. Pence is hitting .298/.375/.486 with seven homers in 208 trips to the plate this season, and any prolonged absence for him would be a tough pill for San Francisco to swallow. Were he to require a stint on the disabled list, he’d end up alongside fellow outfielder Angel Pagan, who is on the DL with the same injury. Jarrett Parker is already on the roster due to Pagan’s injury, and Mac Williamson is an obvious candidate to come up and fill Pence’s 25-man roster spot if necessary.

A few more notes from around the game…

  • The Red Sox optioned right-hander Joe Kelly to Triple-A following a brutal start against the Orioles on Wednesday. Kelly last just 2 2/3 innings and was tagged for seven earned runs on seven hits and three walks with just one strikeout. That difficult outing and an 8.46 ERA notwithstanding, Kelly was caught off-guard by the move, writes Tim Britton of the Providence Journal. “Obviously I didn’t see it coming,” the right-hander said. “I’m just going to go down there and try to continue to get better at commanding the baseball…. I’ve got to try to get my mechanics right and get that fastball command where it was a couple starts ago and to where it needs to be.” Manager John Farrell said that Kelly is “blessed with a golden arm and tremendous stuff” but lacks execution on his pitches. As Britton points out, Clay Buchholz struggled in relief on Wednesday, while Henry Owens, Sean O’Sullivan and Roenis Elias all have their own red flags about them. For the time being, Noe Ramirez is taking Kelly’s roster spot. Boston can skip the fifth spot in its rotation entirely the next time it comes up due to an off day on the schedule.
  • Jurickson Profar has been impressive while filling in for the suspended Rougned Odor, but Rangers manager Jeff Banister cast some doubt on whether he’ll remain with the club following Odor’s activation on June 4, as Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram writes. “In Jurickson’s case, I think the concern and need with him is the everyday process,” said Banister. “When you haven’t played every day for two years, getting the body back up to speed to play every day and continue to play every day, we need to make sure we monitor that.” Banister said that four games a week would be enough to keep Profar on the big league roster, but as Wilson writes, Texas isn’t keen on putting him in the outfield or at third base, and getting him four starts per week between the two middle infield positions and at DH could be tough. Profar went 2-for-5 with a double tonight and is hitting .357 since his recall from Triple-A.
  • Sonny Gray’s target date for a return to the Athletics’ rotation is June 10, writes Joe Stiglich of CSNBayArea.com. Gray is slated for a bullpen session Thursday and a rehab start on Saturday at Class-A Stockton, and assuming all goes well, his stay on the disabled list will be a fairly abbreviated one. Gray hit the DL back on May 22 with a strained trapezius muscle, and the A’s are undoubtedly hoping that some time off will help him return to form; Gray has logged a dismal 6.19 ERA this season while displaying the worst control of his career, averaging 4.5 walks per nine innings and unloading a league-high nine wild pitches through his first 48 innings of work.
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Boston Red Sox Oakland Athletics San Francisco Giants Texas Rangers Hunter Pence Joe Kelly Jurickson Profar Sonny Gray

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Minor MLB Transactions: 6/1/16

By Jeff Todd | June 1, 2016 at 10:40pm CDT

Here are the day’s minor moves:

  • Just 24 hours after sending Brendan Ryan outright to Triple-A, the Angels have once again selected his contract, the club announced today. The team selected the contract of Javy Guerra, another recently outrighted veteran, from Salt Lake as well. Pennington and left-hander Chris Jones hit the disabled list today, creating an opening in the infield and in the bullpen. Ryan, of course, didn’t even have time to get a game in at Triple-A following his outright, but Guerra rattled off five innings of dominant relief following his recent outright. In that time, he yielded just one hit and struck out seven hitters without issuing a walk.

Earlier Moves

  • The Angels outrighted infielder Brendan Ryan to Triple-A after he cleared waivers, the club has announced yesterday. Ryan, 34, got into 11 games with the Halos, failing to reach base and recording six whiffs in a dozen plate appearances. Of course, he’s never done much damage with the bat: over ten seasons in the majors, Ryan owns only a .233/.293/.314 batting line. But the veteran has always been valued highly for his glovework, and he could have a new opportunity before long, as Cliff Pennington seems likely to return to the DL.
  • Righty Gus Schlosser is headed to the Dodgers on a minor league deal, as Mike Ashmore of MyCentralJersey.com reports. Schlosser dominated the Atlantic League this year with the Somerset Patriots, earning him a return to the affiliated ranks. The 27-year-old cracked the majors in 2014 with the Braves, allowing 7.64 earned per nine over 17 2/3 innings with eight strikeouts and six walks. He spent last year at the Double-A level in the Rockies organization.
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Los Angeles Angels Los Angeles Dodgers Transactions Brendan Ryan Javy Guerra

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Alex Wood Has Elbow Impingement, Won’t Throw For Four Weeks

By Steve Adams | June 1, 2016 at 10:24pm CDT

The Dodgers announced tonight that an MRI on the left arm of starter Alex Wood has revealed a posterior elbow impingement, which will require four weeks of rest (Twitter link). Per their announcement, he’ll be reevaluated at that time. With a layoff of nearly a month from throwing, Wood seems like a lock to require a minor league rehab assignment before returning, so an absence of at least six weeks (through the All-Star break) seems like a reasonable floor, and the potential for him to miss more time than that certainly exists.

Wood, 25, had rounded into form after a slow start with the Dodgers to open the year. Over his past six outings, a span of 35 1/3 innings, he’d worked to a 2.80 ERA with a scintillating 50-to-8 K/BB ratio and a 43.2 percent ground-ball rate. Wood’s unorthodox delivery has led some to tab him as an injury risk in the past, though this is the first time he’s landed on the Major League disabled list with an arm injury (or with any injury, for that matter). Last season, he totaled 189 2/3 of 3.84 ERA ball between the Braves and Dodgers, who acquired him from Atlanta in the much-maligned Hector Olivera trade.

The Dodgers had already placed Wood on the disabled list and brought Julio Urias back from Triple-A prior to the MRI, and it’ll be Urias who starts in Wood’s place for tomorrow’s matchup against the Cubs. Wood joins left-handers Brett Anderson and Hyun-jin Ryu as well as right-handers Brandon McCarthy and Frankie Montas as injured rotation options on the Dodgers’ disabled list. With him on the shelf, Los Angeles will lean on Clayton Kershaw, Scott Kazmir, Kenta Maeda, Mike Bolsinger and, presumably, Urias in the rotation for the foreseeable future. Other alternatives at the Triple-A level include Ross Stripling, Carlos Frias and Zach Lee.

The Dodgers’ rotation entered play today with the third-best ERA of any team in the Majors, though that mark is skewed to some extent by Kershaw’s dominance. As a collective unit they’ve posted a strong 3.41 ERA, but non-Kershaw starters have provided skipper Dave Roberts and his staff with a more pedestrian 4.14 ERA. The Dodgers clearly have a number of starters that could return from the disabled list to bolster the middle and back-end of the rotation, though given the uncertainties permeating the staff, the top-heavy nature of the rotation and the front office’s active nature, it shouldn’t come as a shock if the Dodgers are connected to potential rotation upgrades on the trade market this summer.

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Los Angeles Dodgers Newsstand Alex Wood

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Brad Boxberger Out 4-8 Weeks With Oblique Strain

By Steve Adams | June 1, 2016 at 8:51pm CDT

The Rays’ bullpen received a brutal blow today, as closer Brad Boxberger landed back on the disabled list with a left oblique strain, which Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times tweets will sideline the right-hander for anywhere from four to eight weeks. The club will re-evaluate Boxberger in one week’s time and get a better sense as to whether he’ll return toward the shorter or longer end of that spectrum.

Boxberger, 28, led the American League with 41 saves last season and posted a 3.71 ERA with 10.6 K/9 against 4.6 BB/9 in 63 innings of work. Prior to yesterday’s appearance, Boxberger had missed the entire season to date while recovering from core muscle surgery that he underwent in Spring Training. He’ll now head back to the DL with just two-thirds of an inning under his belt in the Majors this season (plus 5 1/3 frames that came on a minor league rehab assignment). Boxberger’s return was expected to be a boon to a Rays bullpen that entered play Wednesday ranked 20th in the Majors with a 4.08 ERA. Fellow right-hander Alex Colome has stepped up quite admirably to fill in the closer’s role with Boxberger on the shelf, racking up 12 saves with a pristine 1.23 ERA, 11.9 K/9 and 1.6 BB/9 in 22 innings of work.

The Rays, of course, thinned out their bullpen in an offseason trade that sent lefty Jake McGee to the Rockies in a trade that netted outfielder/designated hitter Corey Dickerson, and they also traded Kevin Jepsen to the Twins at last season’s deadline. As such, Tampa Bay has spent the entire season without the trio that anchored their relief corps for the entire first half of the 2015 campaign. The Rays, as it stands, aren’t clear-cut sellers, but they’re nine games out of the division lead. If the team does end up selling off pieces later this summer, Boxberger’s injuries could remove one natural trade chip from their hand. Conversely, if they fight their way back into the playoff picture, the bullpen seems like a potential area of focus for president of baseball operations Matthew Silverman and his lieutenants.

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Tampa Bay Rays Brad Boxberger

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Padres Chairman Ron Fowler Addresses Team’s Struggles

By Steve Adams | June 1, 2016 at 7:15pm CDT

The Padres just wrapped up a 1-7 road trip with a disastrous start from James Shields, and the 10-run meltdown from the team’s highest-paid pitcher was apparently enough to prompt owner Ron Fowler to speak on the matter. In an interview with Dan Sileo on Mighty 1090 radio in San Diego (audio link), Fowler called the team’s “embarrassing” and described the recent road trip a “pathetic.”

“I’m a very competitive individual,” said Fowler in the interview. “I think I’ve won a lot more than I’ve lost in my life. This baseball experience has been very frustrating, very embarrassing. … To have a starter like Shields perform as poorly as he did yesterday I think, is an embarrassment to the team, an embarrassment to him.”

Shields, who has been the subject of recent trade rumors (most notably involving the White Sox), tells Bleacher Report’s Scott Miller that he’s not embarrassed by the start but doesn’t enjoy losing any more than the team owner (links to Miller on Twitter). “I feel like I’ve pitched well all season long,” said Shields, who is in the second season of a four-year, $75MM contract that contains an opt-out clause at the end of the current campaign. “Obviously, I was the guy that tipped him over the edge. It is what it is. I don’t like losing either. I understand his frustration. As far as it being an embarrassment to me, I’m not embarrassed by it.”

Shields, of course, was one of the final pieces to a whirlwind 2014-15 offseason — general manager A.J. Preller’s first on the job. His four-year contract was just one in a litany of moves made by San Diego that winter, as the new Preller-led front office also acquired Matt Kemp, Justin Upton,Wil Myers, Will Middlebrooks, Derek Norris, Craig Kimbrel and Melvin Upton.

There were questions about the club’s defense and dearth of shortstop options, and the season proved to be a letdown for the Friars, who finished with a 74-88 record while receiving scarce production from the vast majority of their infield spots. However, the team elected not to act as a seller last summer (curiously, in the eyes of many) and instead retooled this winter with the hope of a better on-field product.

“It seems like at every turn — we have great pitching in ’14, what we’re going to do is add some offense to it, think we can make a run at it in ’15,” said Fowler. “That was a miserable failure. We’ve got some key players intact this year. We thought we’d be at least a .500 baseball team, and we’re anything but. … We rolled the dice with [Preller] on some Major League signings, Major League trades, and we have to collectively look at that and say it didn’t come together as well as we wanted. I don’t think there’s a brighter GM out there. I don’t think anyone works harder, but the results are not there, and I think A.J. would be the first one to tell you that.”

Asked specifically about his coaches, Fowler expressed praise for rookie manager Andy Green and his field staff, calling the unit “as good of a group or a better group” than he’s seen. Asked, then, if the problem should be placed on the players, Fowler replied: “It’s on the player, but the organization has to accept responsibility for probably having the wrong players. … part of it is on the players, but our job is to get the right players here who can be motivated and deliver at game time, and right now, we’re not doing it.”

Not lost on Fowler, though, is the chance to bolster the club’s long-term outlook with a significant draft bonus pool and a large swath of international signings. “We hired A.J. because we knew we had to develop a farm system and we had to do far better in international than we’ve done,” he said. “I think this draft coming up and the international signing period on July 2 will give us a far better view of A.J. I will say that he’s done a spectacular job of building the player development area, and I think the players we have in the farm system, as a group, are stronger than they were before.”

The Padres have the third-largest pool of any club in Major League Baseball, thanks to a pair of compensatory picks received when Ian Kennedy and Justin Upton signed elsewhere as well as a Competitive Balance lottery pick (Round B, No. 71 overall) that they won in last summer’s lottery. As such, the Padres have an enormous amount of flexibility and a wide variety of creative approaches to take next Thursday. The Astros, for instance, have had success by spending well over-slot in the supplemental rounds at the expense of some later-round savings — landing Lance McCullers with the 41st pick in 2012 and then picking up outfielder Daz Cameron, a one-time potential Top 5 selection, at No. 37 last season when he slid due to signability concerns. Beyond that, the Padres are rumored to be prepping to shatter their international spending pool, which would provide a significant boost to the lower levels of their farm system.

All that said, however, the team will be facing some difficult decisions as this summer’s Aug. 1 non-waiver trade deadline approaches. Though they didn’t sell off any pieces last summer, an arguably greater urgency to do so exists this summer. Fowler conceded that some moves could be on the horizon. “Well, to stay status quo, probably, unless we start playing a lot better is not likely,” he said. “But you’ve got to get value in return. You don’t just let somebody go unless you think there’s some value or unless you basically are just frustrated by any other options.”

The draft and international markets will be a boon to the farm system’s lower levels, but they’ll have little impact on the club’s big league roster in 2016-17 (though there are some Cuban veterans on the free-agent market, such as Jose Miguel Fernandez, that are more near-term targets). As such, whether it’s this summer or in the offseason, it seems safe to expect that the Padres will be making another significant wave of moves in an effort to inject more help for the current on-field product.

I should stress that the entire 11-minute interview is well worth a listen for Padres fans or any that are interested in their recent plight. Fowler seemingly acknowledges that the Padres’ woes are a collective failure for which both ownership and the front office are at fault, candidly stating: “…in a normal environment, if you’d performed as well as we have over the past three years, you’d probably be unemployed.”

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San Diego Padres

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Mariners Place Felix Hernandez On DL, Recall James Paxton

By Steve Adams | June 1, 2016 at 5:06pm CDT

The Mariners announced today that they’ve placed ace Felix Hernandez on the 15-day disabled list with a strained right calf muscle and recalled lefty James Paxton from Triple-A Tacoma in a corresponding move. As MLB.com’s Greg Johns writes, the injury isn’t believed to be overly serious at this time, and the M’s are hopeful that King Felix will miss just two starts, as the DL stint is backdated to Saturday.

The 30-year-old Hernandez is currently sporting a strong 2.86 ERA, but he struggled in his last outing (six runs on eight hits and a walk in six innings) and has displayed some other red flags throughout the 2016 season. Hernandez’s fastball is averaging a career-low 90 mph and has only shown minimal improvement over the course of the season, and he’s also averaging 3.7 walks per nine innings, although his command has taken a turn for the better after a rocky month of April in that regard (18 walks in 32 2/3 innings). Control problems and velocity decline aside, Hernandez still leads the Mariners’ staff in ERA and is second to Hisashi Iwakuma in total innings (63).

The 27-year-old Paxton will be appearing in his fourth season at the Major League level when he takes the hill tonight against the Padres. Injuries have slowed an otherwise promising career quite substantially, but the former fourth-round pick and top 100 prospect is off to a fine start in Triple-A this season, having logged a 3.97 ERA with 9.4 K/9 against 2.6 BB/9 in 47 2/3 innings of work. While that’s a fairly modest innings total to this point in the season, it’s worth pointing out that Paxton tossed just 103 innings last year between the minors, Majors and Arizona Fall League, and he worked just 87 combined innings in 2014. From a service time standpoint, Paxton is at two years, 27 days right now, so even if he were to remain in the Majors for the duration of the season (which seems unlikely, barring another injury elsewhere on the pitching staff), he’d fall shy of three years. He would, however, enter Super Two territory with another 100 days or so on the Major League roster.

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Seattle Mariners Felix Hernandez James Paxton

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    Astros Place Jeremy Peña On Injured List With Fractured Rib

    Tucker Barnhart To Retire

    Tyler Mahle To Be Sidelined Beyond Trade Deadline

    Reds Release Jeimer Candelario

    Dave Parker Passes Away

    Griffin Canning Diagnosed With Ruptured Achilles

    Pirates Reportedly Have Very Few Untouchable Players At Trade Deadline

    Griffin Canning Believed To Have Suffered Achilles Injury

    Recent

    Astros Sign Hector Neris

    Dodgers Not Planning To Add Third Base Help Before Deadline

    Braves Release Alex Verdugo

    Clarke Schmidt Expected To Undergo Tommy John Surgery

    Blue Jays Place Yimi Garcia On 15-Day Injured List

    Mets Sign Zach Pop, Designate Tyler Zuber

    Mets Interested In Mitch Keller

    Diamondbacks Activate Corbin Carroll From 10-Day IL

    Dodgers Release Luis Garcia

    Phillies Interested In Dennis Santana, David Bednar

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