MLB Trade Rumors is proud to present our 13th annual Top 50 Free Agents list! For the entire list of free agents, plus the ability to filter by signing status, position, signing team, and qualifying offer status, check out our mobile-friendly free agent tracker here.
New to MLBTR? You can follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook, follow us on Instagram, and download our free app for iOS and Android.
MLBTR writers Steve Adams and Jeff Todd joined me in this collaboration, debating free agent contracts and destinations for many hours. We vetted these as much as possible, but with 50 predictions and a volatile free agent and trade marketplace, we know we’ll be off on some. Let us know what you think in the comment section! On to our Top 50 free agents:
1. Bryce Harper – Dodgers. Fourteen years, $420MM. Labeled a baseball prodigy at age 16, Harper was so good he chose to leave high school after two years and enroll in a junior college, fast-tracking him into the 2010 MLB draft. He went first overall to the Nationals and made his MLB debut as a 19-year-old, winning Rookie of the Year in 2012. In his seven seasons with the Nats, Harper made six All-Star teams and won the NL MVP in 2015.
Harper was easily the best hitter in baseball in 2015, though his only other top 10 finish in wRC+ was in 2017. As absurd as it sounds, it feels like Harper should have accomplished more in his seven seasons with the Nationals. A typical three-year look back (inconvenient given the timing of Harper’s monster year) places him just 34th among position players in FanGraphs Wins Above Replacement. Though he’s faced three significant injuries at different points in his career, Harper has mostly quieted health concerns by playing in at least 147 games in three of the last four seasons. A right fielder by nature, Harper has also dabbled at the other outfield positions during his Nationals career.
The Mike Trout-Bryce Harper debate has been settled, but Harper can reasonably be considered one of the 15 best hitters in baseball. He’s a middle of the order left-handed bat with the ability to hit 35-40 home runs and draw 120 walks. He also has a limitless ceiling, as evidenced by his MVP campaign. That brings us to his long-anticipated free agency. Given his unique path to the Majors and choice not to sign an extension with the Nationals, Harper reaches free agency having just celebrated his 26th birthday. There’s some similarity to Alex Rodriguez’s epic free agency, in which A-Rod signed a 10-year, $252MM deal with the Rangers and made his debut with them several months before turning 26. Though Harper is not as accomplished as Rodriguez was, he’s still in position to sign the largest contract in baseball history. Harper comes with a qualifying offer, though that won’t deter his suitors.
The current contract record belongs to Giancarlo Stanton, who signed a 13-year, $325MM extension with the Marlins four years ago — two years before the slugger was slated to reach free agency. The free agent contract records both belong to A-Rod, who topped his own $252MM benchmark by signing for $275MM after the 2007 season. Those three contracts and many other megadeals included opt-out clauses, which have become de rigueur for marquee players. Harper is represented by Scott Boras, outspoken negotiator of many of the game’s largest free agent contracts. We’re predicting that Harper may take a page from the Stanton contract, and set aside average annual value records in search of maximum total dollars. Strange as it sounds, an unheard-of 14-year term could benefit both sides, pushing Harper up past the coveted $400MM mark but limiting his luxury tax hit to a relatively reasonable $30MM per year. A well-placed opt-out clause or two would have immense value to the player as well.
The Nationals may yet make a play to retain Harper, but otherwise, more teams can afford him than you might think. We see the Dodgers, Cubs, Phillies, Yankees, Giants, and Cardinals as the most likely suitors. The Cubs were the pick here until the very end, and they are still a good match, but payroll concerns pushed us to switch to the Dodgers. The Braves are a long shot for Harper, but we should note that they have the means to sign him and an opening in right field. While it may seem hard to fathom, it is also worth noting that there are a few rebuilding teams, such as the Tigers, that could afford Harper (or Machado). Whether or not any will seriously consider such a bold move is unknown, but you can bet that Boras will pitch them on the idea in order to build up the market. And it is worth bearing in mind that he ended up placing Eric Hosmer on the Padres last winter.
Signed with Phillies for thirteen years, $330MM.
2. Manny Machado – Phillies. Thirteen years, $390MM. As generational as Harper’s free agency may be, Machado’s case is just as compelling. Machado, only 102 days older than Harper, draws significant value from his ability to play on the left side of the infield. A shortstop by choice, Machado spent the bulk of his career as a Gold Glove defensive third baseman with the Orioles. He was derailed with knee injuries in 2013-14 but averaged 159 games in the following four seasons. The Orioles (and eventually Dodgers) gave Machado his preferred shortstop position in his contract year, and results were mixed. Machado’s defense at shortstop seemingly improved after leaving Baltimore, but there’s not much data to go on. It’s unclear whether Machado will force the issue and demand to play shortstop for his next team, or if he’ll be open to returning to third base. Machado comes free of a qualifying offer by virtue of his midseason trade.
Beginning in 2015, Machado blossomed into an excellent hitter. In fact, he hasn’t been far off Harper’s pace in recent years despite a down 2017. Given his aforementioned defensive abilities, Machado compares favorably to Harper in WAR over the past three years. Machado may indeed be one of the 10 best position players in baseball heading into 2019, a case which probably cannot be made for Harper. Both players, interestingly, have been perceived as villains by fans in recent years. Machado’s reputation is perhaps more deserved based on recent actions, and the criticism is two-pronged: that he’s a “dirty” player, and that he doesn’t always hustle. The latter charge, which has also been leveled at Harper at times, was worsened by a quote from Machado to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal in October in which he admitted, “I’m not the type of player that’s going to be ‘Johnny Hustle.” Machado’s full quote was far more nuanced, as he went on to acknowledge his mistake and expressed desire to improve. Perhaps unsurprisingly, many chose only to focus on the more damning part of the quote — either not knowing or not caring that they weren’t looking at his complete sentiments. As to the “dirty” charge, everyone (teams and fans alike) will have to assess for themselves. These three plays provide evidence to critics, though they certainly aren’t representative of Machado’s daily interactions on the ballfield. The postseason Machado narrative is overblown, as these things always are. But record-setting contracts are ownership-level decisions. If Machado’s current narrative reduces the motivation of even one owner of a potential suitor, as Jon Heyman of Fancred Sports has suggested, it would certainly impact his earning power.
Machado, who is represented by Dan Lozano of MVP Sports Group, projects to land a contract similar to that of Harper. Both players should pass Stanton’s $325MM record. As for which of the two actually does better, we don’t have a clear answer. Machado’s suitors could include the Yankees, Phillies, Cubs, Cardinals, and White Sox.
Signed with Padres for ten years, $300MM.
3. Patrick Corbin – Yankees. Six years, $129MM. No player in recent memory has done more to increase his value in one season than Corbin. The 29-year-old southpaw dominated in his 200 innings for the Diamondbacks this year, posting a 3.15 ERA, 11.1 K/9, and 2.2 BB/9 in 33 starts. Corbin had a breakout year in 2013 for the D’Backs but went down for Tommy John surgery in March 2014. He had some stumbles post-surgery, particularly in 2016, but progressed from solid in ’17 to possibly one of the five best starting pitchers in baseball this year. Corbin’s velocity took a dip in May, setting off alarm bells, but it didn’t seem to affect his performance and actually crept back up past 92 miles per hour in the second half. Corbin ramped his slider usage up past 40 percent this year to great success.
Back in April, before Corbin seemed like a potential $100MM guy, the pitcher admitted to Bob Nightengale of USA Today that it would “definitely be great” to pitch for his childhood team, the Yankees. The Yankees have the money and the need, but teams like the Astros, Braves, Phillies, Nationals, Dodgers, Giants, Angels, and Twins make sense too. With age on his side, we foresee a bidding war taking Corbin up past Yu Darvish money. He has been tagged with a qualifying offer by the Diamondbacks.
Signed with Nationals for six years, $140MM.
4. Dallas Keuchel – Nationals. Four years, $82MM. Keuchel, 31 in January, won the AL Cy Young award in 2015 and has since settled in as a solid but not quite spectacular starting pitcher. He and Corbin were two of only 13 pitchers this year to reach 200 innings. Keuchel is not a big strikeout guy, but the lefty has good control and keeps the ball in the yard due to a ground-ball rate that perennially ranks among the league leaders. His groundball rate actually rose as high as 66.8% in 2017, which was the best in baseball, though it fell back to 53.7% this year. Keuchel’s worm-burning tendencies pair with a sustained knack for limiting hard contact, helping him to limit home runs far better than the league-average pitcher. In 2018, he trailed only Jacob deGrom, Max Scherzer and Zack Wheeler in terms of generating weak contact, and his opponents’ hard-contact rate was the fifth-lowest of any qualified starter (as measured by Fangraphs). That wasn’t a fluke; Keuchel ranks among the best in the league in those regards on a yearly basis.
Keuchel may top out at four years but should command a premium average annual value despite coming with a qualifying offer. His suitors should be similar to those of Corbin.
5. Craig Kimbrel – Cardinals. Four years, $70MM. Kimbrel has been one of the best closers in baseball since taking the job for the Braves in 2011. In his eight full seasons, he’s made the All-Star team seven times and placed in the Cy Young voting five times. Over the past three years, he’s struck out 42.3% of batters faced, leading all MLB relievers. He’s third among relievers during that time with an average fastball of 97.6 miles per hour. Like many closers, Kimbrel’s control is not a strong suit, but he’s so hard to hit that it generally doesn’t matter. We think Kimbrel is more likely to beat Wade Davis’ average annual value record for relievers ($17.33MM) than he is to reach Aroldis Chapman’s record-setting $86MM total. Because Kimbrel signed an extension with the Braves in 2014, he reaches free agency more than a year older than Chapman and Kenley Jansen were when they hit the open market. A return to Boston could be possible, or teams like the Cardinals, Angels, Cubs, Braves, Phillies, Mets, and Twins could get involved. Kimbrel was issued a qualifying offer from the Red Sox.
6. Yasmani Grandal – Nationals. Four years, $64MM. Grandal is the best available free agent catcher. He turns 30 in November and his 116 wRC+ ranks fourth among all catchers from 2016-18. He’s second among all catchers with 73 home runs during that time. Grandal is a switch-hitter and is above average against both righties and lefties. Though Grandal took his lumps defensively in the postseason and does allow a lot of passed balls, he’s one of the game’s best pitch framers and has been above-average in terms of caught-stealing rate over the past four seasons. Overall, Grandal is one of the better catchers in baseball, and he has a shot at the five-year contract standard reached by Brian McCann and Russell Martin. While many teams will prefer trading for Marlins backstop J.T. Realmuto to signing Grandal, only one can get Realmuto and the prospect cost will be substantial. The Dodgers have issued Grandal a qualifying offer but could otherwise move on. The Nationals, Rangers, Twins, Red Sox, Astros, Angels, Phillies, Mets, Braves, and Rockies could be suitors.
Signed with Brewers for one year, $18.25MM.
7. Nathan Eovaldi – Red Sox. Four years, $60MM. Eovaldi, 29 in February, has long been one of the hardest-throwing starting pitchers in baseball. He averaged 97.2 miles per hour on his fastball this year, second only to Luis Severino and Noah Syndergaard. The key piece for the Marlins in the 2012 Hanley Ramirez trade with the Dodgers, Eovaldi moved on to the Yankees in a 2014 swap. He went down for his second Tommy John surgery in August 2016 (his first one was in high school). Eovaldi remained in the AL East this season, working for the Rays and Red Sox. Despite the premium velocity, 2018 was the first season Eovaldi managed to strike out more than 20 percent of the batters he faced. Even more than last year’s early-market darling, Tyler Chatwood, Eovaldi is a tantalizing power arm with remaining unlocked potential and figures to be a popular free agent. That popularity could push the bidding to four years despite the fact that a player with this lack of durability has never reached that plateau. The Red Sox could try to bring him back, and otherwise the Astros, Rangers, Braves, Phillies, Nationals, Dodgers, Angels, Giants, and Yankees could be in the mix.
Signed with Red Sox for four years, $67.5MM.
8. A.J. Pollock – Giants. Four years, $60MM. Like fellow free agents Bryce Harper, Manny Machado, Josh Donaldson, Andrew McCutchen, and Matt Harvey, Pollock was one of the best MLB players of 2015. Unfortunately, that was the only time Pollock exceeded 113 games in the past five seasons. His injuries have run the gamut: a broken hand, an elbow fracture, a groin strain, and this year a thumb fracture. Pollock, 31 in December, just doesn’t seem to have the durability to merit the five-year deals landed by Lorenzo Cain and Dexter Fowler, even if some of his injuries have been fluky in nature. Nonetheless, he put up a healthy 110 wRC+ with the bat this year and reached 134 at his peak. He also plays an acceptable center field in a free agent market where the only real alternative is Adam Jones. The Giants, White Sox, Indians, and Phillies could be possibilities, though Pollock comes with a qualifying offer attached.
Signed with Dodgers for four years, $55MM.
9. J.A. Happ – Angels. Three years, $48MM. Happ, 36, has emerged as one of the top starting pitchers in this free agent class. The lefty experienced a career resurgence upon a 2015 trade to the Pirates, with success that largely continued throughout a subsequent three-year contract with Toronto. Happ was dealt to the Yankees in July of this year and recorded a 2.69 ERA in 11 starts. He can be prone to the long ball, but Happ put up a career-best strikeout rate this year and generally limits walks. Rich Hill was signed through his age-39 season, so it’s plausible Happ could be inked through age 38 on his own new three-year pact. Quite a few contending teams could see value in installing the quality veteran, particularly those that fail to land or aren’t enamored of higher-priced options.
Signed with Yankees for two years, $34MM.
10. Michael Brantley – Braves. Three years, $45MM. Brantley, 32 in May, hit .305/.362/.459 over the last two seasons as the Indians’ left fielder. He has spent his entire Major League career in the organization following his inclusion in the 2008 CC Sabathia trade with Milwaukee. The concern is Brantley’s health, as he was limited to 101 games from 2016-17 due to shoulder, biceps, and ankle injuries, all of which involved surgery. He still should have enough interest to land a three-year deal coming off a 143-game season in which he was typically excellent at the plate. The Indians could bring him back if they can fit him into the budget, though they chose not to issue a qualifying offer. He’ll otherwise have a similar market to McCutchen, though Brantley hits from the left side and has historically carried fairly notable platoon splits.
Signed with Astros for two years, $32MM.
11. Andrew McCutchen – Cubs. Three years, $45MM. Aside from Harper, Brantley and McCutchen are the best corner outfielders on the free-agent market. McCutchen, 32, is several years removed from his MVP-caliber stretch with the Pirates but remains a very good hitter. After nine seasons as the Pirates’ center fielder, McCutchen was traded to the Giants and switched to right field. After hitting only three home runs in the season’s first two months, Cutch went on to hit .259/.374/.447 in his final 452 plate appearances for the Giants and Yankees. He could fit with the Cubs, Indians, Rays, Cardinals, Braves, White Sox, or Phillies.
Signed with Phillies for three years, $50MM.
12. Yusei Kikuchi – Padres. Six years, $42MM. Kikuchi, a 27-year-old lefty starter, has pitched for Japan’s Seibu Lions for the past eight years. The Lions will reportedly honor Kikuchi’s request to be posted this winter, thus freeing him to negotiate with any MLB team. He battled shoulder issues this year and has only once exceeded this season’s innings total of 163 2/3. Kikuchi profiles as a mid-rotation arm in MLB. He’ll be the first player subject to the new NPB-MLB posting agreement, which should serve to lower fees for MLB teams by tying the player’s release fee to the size of his contract. For example, a $42MM contract would result in a release fee of $7.975MM, placing the total commitment in this scenario around $50MM. Kikuchi will draw interest from contenders and rebuilding clubs alike.
Signed with Mariners for four years, $56MM.
13. Josh Donaldson – Cardinals. One year, $20MM. Donaldson, 33 in December, presents a potential impact bat on a short-term deal. He’s a late blooming third baseman who became a star for the A’s in 2013 and won the AL MVP award in 2015 after a trade to the Blue Jays. He missed significant time due to a calf injury in 2017, but went nuts with 22 home runs over the final two months that year. Donaldson hit the DL this year in April with right shoulder inflammation and then went on the shelf again in late May for his calf. That involved a 60-day DL stint, with Donaldson being traded to the Indians before he was activated. Donaldson did make a brief but promising return to action late in 2018 and could land a multi-year deal on the strength of his offensive ability. That said, he’s arguably better served to take a one-year pact and re-establish his health; we’re guessing the famously competitive Donaldson will bet on himself. The Cardinals, Twins, Angels, Phillies, Braves, and White Sox could be options.
Signed with Braves for one year, $23MM.
14. Charlie Morton – Phillies. Two years, $32MM. Morton, 35 in November, emerged as one of baseball’s top dozen strikeout artists (among starters) over the past two years with the Astros. Among those with 300 innings over that span, Morton ranks sixth with a 95.4 mile per hour average fastball velocity. He’s aged like a fine wine, adding velocity and changing his game from the ground-ball pitcher of his Pirates years. Morton, a family man with four children, wasn’t sure as of April whether he’d pitch in 2019. More recently, he’s said he will keep going, adding that he would like to re-sign with Houston. The Astros surprisingly chose not to issue a qualifying offer, which could be an indication that they’re thinking of moving on from Morton for some reason. Morton will entertain many two- or even three-year offers on the open market, especially unencumbered by a QO. If he doesn’t return to the Astros, Morton has cited proximity to his wife’s family in Delaware as a major factor. That could put the Phillies and Nationals as frontrunners.
Signed with Rays for two years, $30MM.
15. Wilson Ramos – Astros. Three years, $36MM. With just a week left in a breakout 2016 contract season, Ramos tore his right ACL — the same one he’d torn four years prior. Dreams of a monster four or five-year deal evaporated, and Ramos took a two-year, $12.5MM guarantee with the Rays. He rounded back into form this year, catching nearly 800 innings for the Rays and Phillies and leading all backstops with a 131 wRC+. The 31-year-old seems primed for a solid three-year deal, perhaps with a team that can give his knees a break with some time at designated hitter. The Astros, Red Sox, Athletics, Angels, Rockies, or Dodgers could work, as could a return to D.C.
Signed with Mets for two years, $19MM.
16. Marwin Gonzalez – Twins. Four years, $36MM. Gonzalez, 30 in March, has been a valuable super utility player throughout his seven-year Astros career. He’s capable of playing all four infield positions, as well as left field, prompting agent Scott Boras to nickname him “Swiss G.” A switch-hitter, Gonzalez has been every bit as productive as McCutchen and Brantley over the last two years, though much of his success is concentrated in a breakout 2017 season. Gonzalez was shockingly one of the dozen best hitters in baseball that year, but dropped back to a 104 wRC+ in 2018. He did at least manage a stronger 122 mark from June onward. Gonzalez has never reached 600 plate appearances in a season, nor has he tallied 700 innings at any one position. Whether it’s as a super utility player or a regular, Gonzalez is an easy fit onto more than half the rosters in baseball. The Twins, Cubs, Angels, Brewers, Tigers, Blue Jays, Phillies, Nationals, and Rockies are among the many fits.
Signed with Twins for two years, $21MM.
17. Jeurys Familia – Twins. Three years, $33MM. Familia, 29, excelled as the Mets’ closer from 2015-16, posting a 2.20 ERA and 9.8 K/9 in 155 2/3 innings. He was arrested on a domestic violence charge in November 2016, but the charge was dismissed the following month. The following year, MLB gave a statement on the matter and suspended Familia for 15 games. Early in the 2017 season, Familia was diagnosed with an arterial clot in his right shoulder, which resulted in surgery and more than three months on the DL. This year, Familia hit the DL in June for shoulder soreness, though he missed the minimum 10 days. He closed out his season in Oakland after a July trade to the A’s. Only a dozen relievers threw harder than Familia this year, and he could even be popular enough to warrant a four-year deal.
Signed with Mets for three years, $30MM.
18. Zach Britton – Astros. Three years, $33MM. Britton might have been the best reliever in baseball upon the conclusion of his dominant 2016 season for the Orioles. The lefty had allowed just four runs in 67 innings, generating ground-balls at a historic 80 percent rate — the highest mark since the stat began being tracked. However, a strained forearm cropped up in April 2017, which quickly recurred after he was activated from the DL in May. He missed two months after that and was also shut down early in September with a knee injury. Worse yet, Britton ruptured an Achilles tendon in December 2017, delaying his 2018 debut until June 12th. He joined the Yankees’ elite bullpen in a July deal. Despite a 3.00 ERA over the past two seasons, Britton’s 7.3 K/9 and 4.5 BB/9 were unimpressive. However, he’s still throwing over 95 miles per hour from the left side, and he’s still getting ground-balls more than 70 percent of the time. Given Britton’s three-year stretch of dominance as the Orioles’ closer from 2014-16, his market should be robust even if he’s yet to return to form. There might not be a better arm to dream on in the current class. The Astros, Cubs, Red Sox, Twins, Angels, Cardinals, Mets, Phillies, and Dodgers could be involved.
Signed with Yankees for three years, $39MM.
19. David Robertson – Mets. Three years, $33MM. Robertson, 34 in April, has been a paragon of durability, pitching 60+ relief innings in each of the past nine seasons. He became the Yankees’ closer in 2014, serving in that role for the White Sox as well until being traded back to New York in 2017. Robertson is difficult to hit and continually puts up huge strikeout rates, getting the most out of a fastball in the 92 mile per hour range due to incredible extension. Robertson has made the interesting choice to represent himself in free agency, and we think he has a good case for a three-year deal despite the fact that he’s entering his mid-30s. Robertson, Jeurys Familia, Zach Britton, and Adam Ottavino make up a second tier of relievers who should do quite well in free agency.
Signed with Phillies for two years, $23MM.
20. Hyun-Jin Ryu – Dodgers. Three years, $33MM. After dominating the Korea Baseball Organization with the Hanwha Eagles from 2006-12, Ryu was posted for MLB teams, and the Dodgers won his negotiating rights. The two sides hammered out a six-year deal, which went quite well for the first two seasons. Unfortunately, the big lefty made just one big league start from 2015-16 due to shoulder and elbow injuries. Those issues are in the rearview, but Ryu still only made 39 starts from 2017-18 due to hip, foot, and groin injuries. That said, Ryu was excellent in his 82 1/3 regular season innings this year, posting a 1.97 ERA, 9.7 K/9, and 1.6 BB/9. Given his injury history, teams may be reluctant to commit a third year to Ryu, who enters his age-32 season. However, that might be the cost of doing business given his success when he does pitch. He’ll need a team willing to tolerate health risk, and a return to the Dodgers could make sense for both sides. The Dodgers are obviously already rife with rotation options, but no team in the game has prioritized rotation depth — or shown a willingness to take health risks — like Los Angeles in recent seasons. And, retaining Ryu could make it easier for them to explore trading from that depth as they pursue other upgrades. The Dodgers’ choice to issue Ryu a qualifying offer suggests they are indeed interested in a “Ryu-nion.” Sorry, had to do it.
Accepted one-year, $17.9MM qualifying offer from Dodgers.
21. Adam Ottavino – Yankees. Three years, $30MM. Ottavino, 33 in November, will use an excellent contract year as a springboard to a strong contract. Originally a Cardinals first-round draft pick, Ottavino had some success out of the Rockies’ bullpen from 2012-14 before requiring Tommy John surgery in May 2015. He came back strong for the second half of 2016 but hit the DL in May 2017 with shoulder inflammation. That became a lost year in which Ottavino walked more than 16 percent of batters faced. Then, as wonderfully detailed by Travis Sawchik for FanGraphs, Ottavino rebuilt himself out of a vacated Nine West shoe store during the 2017-18 offseason using advanced technology. He went on to rank eighth among qualified relievers in strikeout percentage (36.1 percent) and should be able to land a three-year deal.
Signed with Yankees for three years, $27MM.
22. Nelson Cruz – Twins. Two years, $30MM. Cruz, 38, has averaged 41 home runs per season over the past five years for the Orioles and Mariners. Though he is easily one of the best available bats, he’s strictly a designated hitter at this stage in his career. The Mariners, who are tight on payroll space, might choose to let him leave. American League contenders with fully open DH spots are hard to come by, but the Twins, Astros, White Sox, and Royals could be options. Because Cruz has previously received a qualifying offer in his career, the Mariners aren’t able to issue one when it would otherwise look likely. That he is free of draft-pick compensation certainly doesn’t hurt his case.
Signed with Twins for one year, $14.3MM.
23. Jed Lowrie – Athletics. Three years, $30MM. Only two second basemen — Jose Ramirez and Jose Altuve — have been better than Lowrie by measure of WAR over the past two seasons. Injury and performance issues had clouded Lowrie’s outlook, but since the start of 2017 the switch-hitter boasts a 121 wRC+ and has appeared in 310 games. Lowrie will turn 35 next April, however, so he’ll be fighting to land a third year on his contract. There’s mutual interest in a return to Oakland, while the Twins, Orioles, Blue Jays, Angels, Cubs, Brewers, Nationals, Rockies, and Dodgers could also be in the mix. We think his value could max out at three years, but it’s also possible he takes a slightly more team-friendly two-year pact with Oakland.
Signed with Mets for two years, $20MM.
24. Andrew Miller – Red Sox. Three years, $27MM. Britton and Miller are the top lefty relief options on the market, and both should do well based more on past success than on their 2018 results. Miller, 33, tallied a 4.24 ERA in 34 innings in a season that was shortened by a hamstring strain, knee inflammation, and a shoulder impingement. He dominated from 2014-17, posting a 1.72 ERA, 14.5 K/9, and 2.3 BB/9 in 261 innings for the Red Sox, Orioles, Yankees, and Indians. He’ll likely have his pick of contending clubs from which to choose.
Signed with Cardinals for two years, $25MM.
25. Joe Kelly – Angels. Three years, $27MM. With an average fastball velocity of 98.1 miles per hour, Kelly is one of the hardest-throwing relievers in baseball. The 30-year-old has struggled to marry that velocity with results, with a problematic walk rate and fewer strikeouts than you might expect. Still, Kelly left a great lasting impression by allowing just one run in 11 1/3 postseason innings for the Red Sox, with 13 strikeouts and no walks. His upside should be tantalizing enough to net him a three-year deal.
Signed with Dodgers for three years, $25MM.
26. Kelvin Herrera – Dodgers. One year, $8MM. Herrera was part of the Royals’ vaunted bullpen trio of 2013-15, along with Greg Holland and Wade Davis. Soon to be 29, the righty owns a 2.82 career ERA, flashing elite strikeout and walk rates at times but not consistently. For example, he walked only two batters in 25 2/3 innings to start the season as the Royals’ closer this year, but had a 3.9 BB/9 after being traded to the Nationals in June. His strikeout rates have been as high as 11.4 per nine and as low as 7.6 per nine. He’s continued to pump 97-98 mile per hour gas all along and would have scored one of the largest relief contracts of the winter, but he went down in late August for surgery on the Lisfranc ligament in his left foot. As of right now, Herrera’s recovery timeline is a total unknown, at least to the public. He’s young enough that a one-year deal, once a timeline is established, will give him a nice opportunity to rebuild his stock in search of a big multi-year deal next winter.
Signed with White Sox for two years, $18MM.
27. Gio Gonzalez – Athletics. Two years, $24MM. Gonzalez, a 33-year-old lefty, can offer stability to the back end of a team’s rotation. He’s averaged 32 starts per year over the past four seasons, mostly with the Nationals. Gonzalez has always had issues with control, but with the right defense and a bit of good fortune he’s capable of a sub-4.00 ERA. While his fastball velocity has fallen off sharply, landing at just over 90 miles per hour over the past two seasons, Gonzalez still gets as many swings and misses as ever. Teams like the A’s, Angels, Reds, Braves, and Giants could be in the mix for a player with this type of stability.
Signed minor league deal with Yankees.
28. Anibal Sanchez – Giants. Two years, $22MM. Sanchez, 35 in February, flourished early in his career with the Marlins and landed a five-year deal with the Tigers after the 2012 season. He finished out that contract with a 5.67 ERA over the final three seasons. The Twins inked him to a cheap, non-guaranteed, one-year deal in February this year and let him go when they signed Lance Lynn in March. Sanchez hooked on with the Braves on a minor league deal. He dealt with a hamstring injury in April but found his way into the Braves’ rotation by late May. Over the season’s final four months, Sanchez posted a 2.81 ERA, 9.0 K/9, and 2.6 BB/9 in 21 starts. By measure of ERA, only nine MLB starters were better, but his success runs much deeper than that. Sanchez adopted a cutter that proved to be a dominant weapon. Astonishingly, no starting pitcher in baseball allowed less hard contact or a lower average exit velocity, by measure of Statcast. His turnaround was legitimately remarkable and could result in a multi-year deal.
Signed with Nationals for two years, $19MM.
29. Matt Harvey – Reds. Two years, $22MM. Though it was interrupted by 2013 Tommy John surgery, Harvey’s early Mets career consisted of 65 starts of 2.53 ERA ball, plus a high point of a dominant start in Game 5 of the 2015 World Series. In 2016, the wheels started to fall off. He hit the DL in July that year with thoracic outlet syndrome, resulting in season-ending surgery. Harvey recovered in time for the 2017 campaign, though he was suspended by the Mets in May after failing to show up for a game. Harvey then hit the DL in June 2017 due to a stress injury to the scapula bone in his right shoulder. The Mets tendered Harvey a contract for 2018 despite the two lost seasons, but he was bumped to the bullpen in April for poor performance. Soon after, he was designated for assignment and traded to the Reds for Devin Mesoraco. Harvey’s performance with the Reds — a 4.50 ERA, 7.8 K/9, 2.0 BB/9, 1.48 HR/9, and 42.6 percent ground-ball rate in 24 starts — wasn’t great. But he avoided the DL and brought his average fastball velocity up into the 95 mile per hour range. At 30 years old in March, Harvey remains a starting pitcher a team can dream on. The Reds declined to trade him this summer, suggesting they’d like to retain him, but some other clubs will also likely view him as a functional back-of-the-rotation arm as well as an upside play.
Signed with Angels for one year, $11MM.
30. Trevor Cahill – Blue Jays. Two years, $22MM. Cahill, 31 in March, began his career with five solid seasons as a starting pitcher for the Athletics and Diamondbacks. His career went sideways in 2014, and he rebooted with success out of the Cubs’ bullpen. Back in the rotation, Cahill showed flashes of brilliance for the Padres and A’s over the past two years. He also logged only 194 innings in that time due to a lower back strain, shoulder injuries, an elbow impingement, and an Achilles injury. Given his 8.7 K/9 and 54 percent groundball rate over the past two seasons, teams might be willing to look past Cahill’s injury history. Pitchers who miss bats and keep the ball on the ground at that rate are hard to come by.
Signed with Angels for one year, $9MM.
31. Daniel Murphy – Angels. Two years, $20MM. Murphy took his offense to another level with a ridiculous 2015 postseason, though his ensuing three-year contract with the Nationals never really lived up to the narrative that his October showing earned him millions. Perhaps it should have, because the improvement was real, and the Nats reaped the benefits with over 10 WAR from 2016-17. Murphy underwent knee surgery in October 2017, and Opening Day optimism disappeared as his recovery dragged out and resulted in a June 12th season debut. After some early scuffling, Murphy posted a 126 wRC+ over the season’s final three months, with the Cubs picking him up for the stretch drive. He’s a high-contact, professional hitter in today’s high-strikeout world. He also turns 34 in April and played a poor second base this year. It’s easy to see him landing in the AL, where he can moonlight at DH in addition to second base and perhaps first base. The Angels and Twins were among the teams we considered when pondering a landing spot.
Signed with Rockies for two years, $24MM.
32. Brian Dozier – Nationals. One year, $10MM. Looking at second basemen from 2014-17, only Jose Altuve was more valuable than Dozier. He compiled nearly 19 WAR for the Twins, smacking 127 home runs in that span. A solid four-year deal seemed possible for Dozier at one point, but his bat just died this year outside of July and August. The Twins shipped him to the Dodgers in the middle of that decent run. Now, the 31-year-old may be best-served looking for a one-year deal and prioritizing playing time as a way to rebuild value.
Signed with Nationals for one year, $9MM.
33. DJ LeMahieu – Tigers. Two years, $18MM. LeMahieu earned the Rockies’ starting second base job in May 2013, keeping the gig by virtue of strong defense despite providing little value at the plate. LeMahieu bumped up his offensive production starting in 2015, peaking with a batting title in ’16. Since then, he’s managed a 90 wRC+, which will likely remain his level for the next few years. The 30-year-old isn’t an exciting option at second base, but he should provide a steady two wins above replacement. LeMahieu has a chance at a three-year deal. If the Rockies let him go the Nationals, Tigers, and Twins could be options.
Signed with Yankees for two years, $24MM.
34. Joakim Soria – Mets. Two years, $18MM. Soria, 34, continues to find success with his combination of a high strikeout and low walk rate. He was able to avoid the long ball despite a precipitous drop in ground-ball rate this season, which he split between the White Sox and Brewers. With a fastball under 93 miles per hour, Soria isn’t a flashy choice, but he still provides plenty of value.
Signed with Athletics for two years, $15MM.
35. Mike Moustakas – Royals. Two years, $16MM. After hitting a Royals-record 38 home runs in 2017, Moustakas’ free agency went terribly awry. Despite a qualifying offer, MLBTR predicted a five-year, $85MM contract. Instead, the third baseman wound up back with the Royals on a one-year, $6.5MM deal. Sam Mellinger, talking to two league sources, said Moustakas turned down approximately $45MM over three years from the Angels. Agent Scott Boras told Mellinger, “There was never a multi-year contract offer made to Mike Moustakas by the Angels or any other major-league team.” Who you believe will color a prediction on what Moose can do this winter, after a slightly worse season but with no qualifying offer. A multi-year contract is a possibility here, but it seems clear today’s GMs don’t value Moustakas’ high-power, low-OBP profile as a premium skill set.
Signed with Brewers for one year, $10MM.
36. Lance Lynn – Rays. Two years, $16MM. Like Moustakas, Lynn was one of the free agents who got body-slammed by the 2017-18 market freeze. MLBTR projected a four-year, $56MM deal for Lynn coming off a solid season for the Cardinals, yet the righty fell to the Twins in March on a one-year, $12MM deal. He struggled in 20 starts for Minnesota, as his already-high walk rate got out of hand. The Twins sent him to the Yankees at the trade deadline. Lynn wound up making nine starts for New York, with a 4.60 ERA but a 2.17 FIP, 3.03 xFIP, 10.0 K/9, and 2.5 BB/9. Despite the small sample, those peripherals are intriguing and should land Lynn a rotation job — if not a two-year deal — somewhere.
Signed with Rangers for three years, $30MM.
37. Cody Allen – Braves. Two years, $16MM. Allen dominated as the Indians’ closer from 2014-17, posting a 2.62 ERA, 12.1 K/9, and 120 saves. This year, an increase in home runs and walks allowed torched his value. Just 30 in November, Allen shouldn’t have a hard time finding a team willing to bet on a return to form. Perhaps his camp even prefers a one-year deal with an eye on reentering the market next season, but multiple years should still be possible if the goal is to take max dollars now.
Signed with Angels for one year, $8.5MM.
38. Nick Markakis – Phillies. Two years, $16MM. Markakis had a couple of excellent early-career years with the Orioles, eventually landing a four-year deal with Atlanta after the 2014 season. The right fielder was a one-win type of player from 2015-17, but then for the first four months of 2018 Markakis unexpectedly posted a 129 wRC+. In truth, he’s probably a league average hitter, and he’ll turn 35 in November. Aging corner bats of this mold have not been valued highly on the free-agent or trade markets in recent years.
Signed with Braves for one year, $6MM.
39. Derek Holland – Reds. Two years, $15MM. Holland, a 32-year-old southpaw starter, had a solid run in the Rangers’ rotation from 2011-13 before injuries torpedoed his next few seasons. Coming off a terrible year with the White Sox in 2017, Holland joined the Giants on a minor league deal in February. Due to injuries to the Giants’ veteran starters, Holland joined the rotation and wound up posting a 3.67 ERA and 8.5 K/9 in 30 starts. His 3.87 FIP and 4.07 xFIP lend some credence to the notion that he’s returned to his status as a viable starter, even if his ceiling seems limited.
Signed with Giants for one year, $7MM.
40. Bud Norris – Indians. Two years, $12MM. Norris, 34 in March, has transitioned successfully from the rotation to the bullpen. This year for the Cardinals, he managed a 3.59 ERA, 10.5 K/9, 3.3 BB/9, 1.25 HR/9, and 42.6 percent ground-ball rate in 57 2/3 innings, including 28 saves. His ERA sat at 2.85 in August 28th and ballooned after a rough week in September. Another factor to consider is that Norris is decidedly old school in the clubhouse, and was revealed as Mike Matheny’s bullpen monitor in Mark Saxon’s July story for The Athletic. A two-year deal seems likely.
Signed minor league deal with Blue Jays.
41. Brad Brach – Brewers. Two years, $12MM. Brach, 33 in April, had success out of the Orioles’ bullpen with a 2.74 ERA and 9.5 K/9 from 2014-17. He even earned an All-Star nod in 2016. After a rough 39 innings to begin his 2018 campaign, Brach was traded to Atlanta. The top line result — a 1.52 ERA — was strong, but Brach’s peripheral stats didn’t support it. He remains a useful righty arm, but his stock took a hit in 2018.
Signed with Cubs for one year, at least $4.35MM.
42. Wade Miley – Brewers. Two years, $12MM. Miley, 32 in November, had a decent run for the Diamondbacks and Red Sox from 2012-15. His ERA jumped to 5.48 from 2016-17 for the Mariners and Orioles, which is why he settled for a minor league deal with the Brewers in February. He sprained his groin in the spring but made his way to the big league club in May. In his second start for the Brewers, Miley strained his oblique, knocking him out for over a month. Once he returned on July 12th, Miley posted a 2.66 ERA, 5.6 K/9, 2.8 BB/9, 0.36 HR/9, and 53.3% ground-ball rate in 74 1/3 innings across 14 starts. Miley had a .274 batting average on balls in play and a 5.7% home run per fly-ball rate during that time, neither of which seems sustainable. It was a useful run for the Brewers, but it’s not clear Miley is a different pitcher than he was before 2018.
Signed with Astros for one year, $4.5MM.
43. Garrett Richards – Tigers. Two years, $10MM. Richards, 30, has spent his entire career with the Angels, with his best work coming in 2014-15. He’s made only 28 starts over the past three seasons after deciding to treat a torn UCL with a platelet-rich plasma injection. He also endured a biceps strain in 2017 and a hamstring strain this year before succumbing to Tommy John surgery in July. The 2019 season is out of the picture for Richards, who could sign a two-year deal in the vein of those inked by Drew Smyly and Michael Pineda. A team would be paying entirely for Richards’ 2020 season. Just about any club that wants to plan ahead and has some payroll space and mild tolerance for risk could be a candidate.
Signed with Padres for two years, $15.5MM.
44. Jesse Chavez – Cubs. Two years, $10MM. Chavez, 35, nearly saved the Cubs’ beleaguered bullpen by posting a 1.15 ERA in 39 innings after coming over in a July trade with the Rangers. Putting the Rays’ Ryan Yarbrough aside, Chavez led MLB with 95 1/3 relief innings. Among relievers with at least 60 innings, Chavez’s 4.5% walk rate was third best. He was much more hittable and homer prone before joining the Cubs, so there is reason to hesitate. Chavez seems to want to return to Chicago, which would be a win for both sides.
Signed with Rangers for two years, $8MM.
45. CC Sabathia – Angels. One year, $8MM. Sabathia is winding down a potential Hall of Fame career and aims to pitch one more season. He’s served the Yankees well for a decade, even as he’s faded into a back-of-the-rotation starter. The 38-year-old lefty could wind up near home on the West Coast if the Yankees move on, and the Angels (where former Yankees exec Billy Eppler is GM) had interest last winter.
Signed with Yankees for one year, $8MM.
46. Adam Jones – Indians. One year, $8MM. Jones, 33, completed his 11th season in the Orioles’ outfield. He’s well beyond his 2012-14 heyday, with his bat dropping to league average and his center field defense drawing extremely poor marks over the past three years. Jones vetoed an August trade to the Phillies, as he did not want to move to right field and play part-time. If playing time is the priority, Jones could look to join the Indians, a contender with plenty of outfield vacancy and previous interest in July.
Signed with Diamondbacks for one year, $3MM.
47. Martin Maldonado – Rockies. Two years, $8MM. Maldonado, 32, spent five years as a part-time catcher in Milwaukee before being traded to the Angels in December 2016. The Halos gave Maldonado regular playing time in 2017, resulting in an American League Gold Glove, but traded him to the Astros at this year’s deadline. With Maldonado, the value is entirely in his defense. He’s one of the game’s better pitch framers and perhaps the very best at throwing out attempted thieves. He should continue to find semi-regular playing time.
Signed with Royals for one year, $2.5MM.
48. Kurt Suzuki – Brewers. Two years, $8MM. Suzuki, 35, has been in a job share with Tyler Flowers on the Braves the last two years. Among catchers with at least 650 plate appearances during that time, Suzuki’s 116 wRC+ is second only to Buster Posey and J.T. Realmuto. Of course, those catchers played much more than Suzuki did. Defensively, Suzuki is a below-average pitch framer and has struggled even more to stop the running game. He’s a bat-first option at catcher — one who can play as many as 100 games if necessary.
Signed with Nationals for two years, $10MM.
49. Ervin Santana – Mariners. One year, $6MM. Santana, 36 in December, has served as a respectable innings eater throughout his 14-year career. He underwent a surgical procedure on his right middle finger in February that wound up ruining his 2018 season. He returned to the Twins for a five-start stint in July and August, but just wasn’t himself with a massive drop in velocity. It’s impossible to guess the state of that finger for Opening Day 2019, but if Santana can get past the injury he could be a bargain buy.
Signed minor league deal with White Sox.
50. Drew Pomeranz – Royals. One year, $6MM. Pomeranz had a fine year in 2016, when he made the All-Star team and authored a 3.32 ERA in 30 starts for the Padres and Red Sox. After the trade, drama developed about the Padres’ disclosure of medical information. In 2017, Pomeranz overcame an early forearm flexor strain to make 32 starts for Boston, again posting a 3.32 ERA. A left forearm flexor strain again surfaced in March of this year, resulting in an April 20th season debut. Pomeranz was knocked around over an eight-start span before hitting the DL for biceps tendinitis. That sidelined him out for the better part of two months, and after he returned he spent most of his time in the bullpen. Pomeranz’s lost season could not have come at a worse time, but on the cusp of his 30th birthday, he’s an intriguing signing if he can stay healthy and recover some of his lost velocity. He’ll probably prioritize a clear path to innings in a big park over signing with a contender.
Signed with Giants for one year, $1.5MM
Honorable mentions:
- Robinson Chirinos – signed with Astros for one year, $5.75MM
- Justin Wilson – signed with Mets for two years, $10MM
- Adrian Beltre – retired
- Asdrubal Cabrera – signed with Rangers for one year, $3.5MM
- Josh Harrison – signed with Tigers for one year, $2MM
- Tyson Ross – signed with Tigers for one year, $5.75MM
- Ryan Madson
- Clay Buchholz – signed with Blue Jays for one year, $3MM
- Jose Iglesias – signed minor league deal with Reds
- Ian Kinsler – signed with Padres for two years, $8MM
- Oliver Perez – signed with Indians for one year, $2.5MM
- Adam Warren – signed with Padres for one year, $2.5MM
- Tony Sipp – signed with Nationals for one year, $1.25MM
Notable deals for unlisted players:
- Michael Fiers – re-signed with Athletics for two years, $14.1MM
We realize that a Top 50 Free Agents list with one set of specific team predictions will leave some fanbases dissatisfied. A few notes on certain clubs:
- Most teams will meet some needs through trades and free agents who fell short of this list.
- The White Sox, Orioles, Pirates, Marlins, and Diamondbacks did not end up with any free agents from this list. Certainly they might be in play on some of the more affordable names, at least, with the Chicago organization perhaps also potentially going after some more premium targets.
- The Yankees have spending capacity well beyond the players we gave them here. They could easily go bigger, and/or take on significant salary in trade.
- For the first time in recent memory, the Rays appear to have decent spending capacity. It’s difficult to ignore precedent and project them to sign a bunch of top free agents, but it is more possible than it had been.
- The Giants are particularly difficult to project, not knowing who their next GM will be.
- The Angels, Nationals, and Cardinals might not have the spending capacity to sign all the players we listed for them, though we think each pick is reasonable on an individual level. In general, teams have ways to clear payroll and we don’t always know when payroll will be increased.
jjd002
Fourteen years kind of makes you take a second look…. That would be unreal!
bigkempin
Well Stanton got a 13 year extension that kicked in when he turned 27 so 14 years for a 26 year old isn’t that absurd…..but to an NL team it is.
xabial
Stanton was given that contract by a crook who planned to sell team before it reached backloaded portion of it. One has to assume owners won’t get played by the agents like a fiddle, especially after Machado’s post-season and Bryce’s inconsistency.
deweybelongsinthehall
Stanton got his contract a few years ago and this year will tell whether there’s been a shift into bigger average, shorter contracts or not. I just don’t see either Harper or Machado make that much for that many years. If so, what is Mookie Betts going to be worth? Aaron Judge? Harper’s defense is average at best and his bat has been more hype than substance. Throw out one season and what is he? Machado’s temperament makes him a long term risk.
Phanatic 2022
Stanton wanted it back loaded. He had an agreement that Loria would spend the current saved money on getting better players.
Vedder80
Throw out his MVP season where he was the best bat in the game that year and he is still a .900+ ops guy every year who hasn’t even gotten to his prime years yet.
deweybelongsinthehall
It was mainly back loaded because Loria knew he’d be selling the team and would never have to pay the big money years.
deweybelongsinthehall
Hard for me to argue because I’m not a saber metrics person. He fails the eye test IMHO if he’s to be paid at the top of the chart. If the Phillies sign him, my guess is he gets traded before the five and ten rule kicks in.
sandman12
How is Harper’s defense anywhere near average? His minus 22 runs was epically awful. He’s virtually unplayable in the OF at this point.
ExPitcher22
Thanks, You said the same stuff I was thinking and was going to say, but I couldn’t have said it better!
Samuel
OK – this is nuts.
How many players – even Hall of Famers – had 10-15 solid years? And these guys don’t resemble dominant players. If you were talking a 26 year-old Lebron James in basketball, that’s one thing.
I guarantee this – no matter what team(s) sign(s) Harper and Machado, they’ll regret it.
Missing from the article……
The owners that signed A-Rod and Stanton…..won nothing and had to sell their franchises.
deweybelongsinthehall
When Stanton’s contract was signed, it was already known that the team was going to be sold or he was going to be traded before the huge dollars kicked in. Turns out both.
Samuel
Yes.
The Yankees bailed out both the Rangers and Marlins owners. But make no mistake, they didn’t pay full price – financial considerations were made in the background.
The Rangers were in the dumper for years after that. The Marlins are now. Both resembled expansion teams.
Marc (Phillies Phan)
I am not wanting Machado for 13 years unless there are mutual options, so I concur with many others.
Lance
ARod was outstanding for the Rangers. That the team did lousy was hardly his doing as he had three of greatest seasons in MLB History. Remember, he was only 25 when that contract was signed so the long term contract was hardly a bad deal. The problem was owner Tom Hicks media empire had financial reverses and he had to cut payroll and eventually sell the team to the current ownership group.
ohyeadam
The first ARod contract, while shocking at the time, proved good value. The Yankee extension later was the albatross.
JimmyBaseballFan1
That contract was nothing but trouble for everyone associated with the Marlins, buyers and sellers both. It was probably predicted that Stanton would be traded or fire saled based on Lorias history of doing things like that but it was certainly not already known that the team would be sold when that deal was made with Stanton. The Marlins are more valuable without such a huge albotross contract so it doesn’t make sense to offer such a contract while planning to sell the team for as much as possible.
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
These predictions are crazy..13 14 years.. one for a guy who admitted he doesn’t like to hustle.. you pay him $390M.. lol.. even if someone is crazy enough to give him 300.. you are sill almost 100M off..
ExPitcher22
And my Yankees ended up with BOTH those over rated BUMS- (OK, so GayRod (sry, IMHO he’s a total femme bot LOSER on and off the field and so annoying in ESPN’s broadcast booth!) -had a couple good/decent years, but ONLY when he was on STEROIDS and everyone knows it, so don’t forget that!) and GayRod did NOTHING for us AT ALL, 99 out of 100 homers he hit as a Yankee were meaningless solo shots after we were already down a bunch of runs or ahead by a bunch, so yeah, meaningless homers!
And now Stanton is doing NOTHING except live on the I.L. and/or swinging at EVERY pitch he sees and wiffing even more than Stevie Wonder (umm, in case you don’t know, he’s blind) probably would at the plate!
In fact I’m willing to bet that Stevie can hit more homers per season than Stanton!
Stanton IS an OVER RATED BUM with NO skill and NO talent!
Giancarlo HAS to GO!
Too bad he has NO trade value and would never be wanted by any other MLB team, except maybe the Reds or Padres who would be glad to have ANYONE on the AAA…oops I mean MLB rosters!
Caught Looking
How did that contract look a mere three years later when the Marlins had to buy down the remaining 10/$295M by $30M.
Cat Mando
They only pay if he does not opt out after 2020.
GeoKaplan
And he’d opt out only if he can do better from another team than $210M+ guaranteed in his current deal. He’ll be 30 in his opt-out season, making it highly unlikely any team will offer more than the balance of that current contract for the downside of Stanton’s career. Besides which, his later years will be as a DH, so the prospective list of teams which could sign Stanton was just cut in half, listing only the AL.
So no, he’s not opting out. There is no plausible scenario for that. I’m sure Cashman knew when he made that trade he’d own Stanton until the end of the contract.
RedRooster
Yeah, Stanton isn’t gonna opt out. He’d have needed to repeat his 2017 production in 2018, 19 and 20 to even have a chance.
Dave P
No NL club will go 14 years…and pay a 40 year old to play the outfield…so Dodgers and Phillies for Harper and Machado makes NO SENSE TO ME!! Owners are slow to realize peak years are 25 to 32…but, they are learning!!
dazhk
Harper to the Dodgers? No way! He’s going to the Yankees. Kimbrel to the Cardinals? Fat chance. Donaldson also going the Cardinals for 20 mil? Yeah that’s not gonna happen! Not sure how this list got out together but I think Hellen Keller would have done a better job!
lammyj34
Harper isn’t gonna sign with the Yankees, we have so much of our money obligated to Stanton and the amount that Harper is asking would basically bankrupt the Yankees. If anything he signs with the Dodgers, they’re trying to win now and with a market as big as the Yankees he would sign in a heart beat. Plus they’ve made the World Series two years in a row, adding a power hitting LH bat would be the smartest thing to do since they have Berlinger, Pederson, Seager, Muncy…. all left handed power hitters
xabial
From 2014 to -17, the Yankees spend an average of $256 million per year in payroll and penalties combined, per Cot’s. This season, they are likely to end up around $195 million. The Yankees, in other words, just cut payroll by $60 million. And not only that: because they drew 300,000 more fans than last season and also face a more modest revenue-sharing burden under the new CBA, New York likely ended up with $100M more in 2018.”
“Right now, the Yankees project for a competitive-balance tax payroll of roughly $163M, including benefits and minimum salaries. That’s roughly $100 million lower than paid 2014 through -17, when they were drawing a quarter of a million fewer fans and paying more money into revenue-sharing.”
“The Yankees have an enormous amount of payroll room and virtually no limits on players they can acquire. With their exit from the playoffs, it’s now up to them to decide which players they want for next season.”
fangraphs.com/blogs/the-yankees-have-a-lot-of-payr…
brodafett
Typical yankee fan. Kimbrel and Donaldson both make sense for the cards. I’m not saying they will sign them, but they will be in on both. Kimbrel is what they desperately need in their pen, and they were the team to nut up and sign Holland as the big ticket reliever last year which obviously failed so they need to address it again. Donaldson has been rumored to St Louis for years, and is rumored to be interested in playing there. Why wouldn’t they take a chance on him if he does sign a one or two year deal? As for Harper to the Yankees why? Seriously he would be a marginal upgrade at a premium price. You need pitching period. If you sign Harper over pitching well enjoy playing second fiddle to the Red Sox for the next several years.
Knowthemarket
I don’t buy the Yankees signing Harper. I know it’s not impossible but it sure is a lot more work for them then other teams. They aren’t moving Stanton without a very large effort and Stanton is pretty damn good anyway. They would be crazy to move Judge so nothing else’s is needed to be said there.
So Hicks? He is still young, has produced back to back outstanding seasons and is cost effective. Hicks is a very valuable asset in his own right. Harper makes less since for the Yankees than other teams.
RedFeather
Dodgers still won’t win the WS with Harper haha
Marc (Phillies Phan)
I have said this before. I will be shocked if Harper goes to NY. Not with Gardner re-signing. No room unless Cashman can move one of the existing outfielders. I could see Machado there before Harper. It makes no sense.
bandit
Harper is going to the Cubs
ExPitcher22
Harper is also a headcase and clubhouse cancer, things in many players the Yanks always shy away from!
There have been many players who have seemed great on paper and that you’d have thought the Yanks would get, but due to some mental flaws/issues, the Yankees didn’t pursue them!
Not everyone is Yankee material, no matter how well they can throw, hit or catch.
Plus, I think the Yankees learned some lessons way back with Mike Witt (and that huge weakling BUM Jerkoby ElsBurried and a few others not even worth mentioning) they gave him too many years and all he did was live on the I.L. for about 5 years!
Wish I could get paid MILLIONS to have zero talent, zero skill, be a ttal woosie and not have to even show up for work due to some lame sissy type injury!
Hey, not to brag, but I once threw a 1 hit complete game, 9-inning shutout while striking out 15, and all with a sprained wrist and bruised ribs after a car wreck (nah, I was NOT the driver of the vehicle lol) and it had to be 105f that day!
I wasn’t missing any starts!, I feared I’d get sent packing! (nah, I never told the team, but it did come out a bit later!)
You don’t and WONT ever see that no more!
Way too many softy gurlybois in the sport nowadays who get coddled and pampered like little diaper wearing babies!
Why just look at how all the coddling ruined Joba Chamberlain’s career! He could have been great, but all the STUPID limitations/restrictions made his mond and his body way too soft to last!
But I must say, this prediction list was stupid AF last year and it’s even more silly now seeing how Moochado didn’t get signed til recently and he isn’t doing damn thing except wiff, wiff and wiff and boot plays left and right!
Washed up or what?
Taxmancometh
The Dodgers already have a logjam in the outfield with Alex Verdugo waiting in the minors. They need help elsewhere and would be wise to address their pitching issues with that money.
Nes
14 for Harper, 13 for Machado, at $30 mil til they’re 40? I’d be looking for a new gm
smith_matd
The owner would be the one making that sort of decision in nearly every case. You would be looking for a new you if you were the MLB team-owner version of you, you know?
ronnyalton
Not a chance Harper gets 400+. Hes an above average player with “Natitude” , ultra hype and one solid year of mvp baseball. The stats are there, which are okay at best but not 400 mil worth. If you wouldve told me Trout was getting that much I wouldve been on that train easily.
RedFeather
I feel like MLBTR pulled these predictions out of a hat. I would be surprised if they got 10% of these correct. It’s going to be a really interesting offseason with top teams trying to stay competitive and adding new talent, middle of the run teams that will make a splash, and those surprise teams like Atlanta and Philli building off their great seasons.
RedFeather
They got it all wrong. Harper will sign with Tampa Bay Rays for 17 years at 527 million. Write that down!
ExPitcher22
LMMFAOOOOO!
citizen
Just take a look down the road with pujols’s contract and MLB owners supposed collusion last year on a slow market.
Some team could give machado or Harper a decade + contract, but it’s the possibility of an albatross after year 5..
GONEcarlo
Are you guys going to bring back the free agent prediction contest this year?
Chucky25
Sure hope so,kinda cool seeing all the different thoughts from everyone
xabial
420M?!! What are you smoking 😉
Slevin
When has Harper ever even remotely linked to the Dodgers? My guess is the Phillies will make a serious run at both Harper and Machado. There’s maybe one saving grace 3+4=7…
justin-turner overdrive
Angels too could get both of them – even though they need pitching more, that’s such an Angels move.
hk27
Improbable. Not enough money in the bank to gamble so recklessly. Angels could probably spend about 30-40 million and, possibly, empty the farm for one splashy trade (not that they would, but that’s about the most they can do) to fill multiple needs.. Neither Machado nor Harper fits the picture given that they’ll eat up the entire budget. What MLBTR projects–one above avg starter, one solid but not superstar reliever, and one good, but not too exp, hitting position player, adding up to 35 million AAV, actually makes good sense. Not sure if the players they picked would be correct, but it is def the kind of signings to expect from them.
Jean Matrac
No one team is getting both Harper and Machado. Odds are against getting even one of them.
GeoKaplan
Nope. Neither Harper nor Machado answers a need for the Angels. The team has an all-world SS, and can fill decent production at 3B more cost-effectively than the sorts of numbers mentioned widely with Machado. Likewise, Harper is great when he hits the HR, not so much when he’s on the DL or making RF look much harder than it is.
If the team is going to write that kind of a deal, it will be an extension for Trout, who has better work ethic than Machado, and more consistency than Harper.
jrwhite21
Joe Kelly is more volatile than he is solid
justin-turner overdrive
Angels don’t operate in terms of “need” – as a fan, you need to realize that front offices don’t think like you, or even logically sometimes.
GeoKaplan
Apparently, you haven’t paid much attention to Billy Eppler. He has a plan, and he’s working it. He’s not prone to wild, spastic trades or signings.
bandit
Y – but he just came thru on the biggest stage and he does have the talent
philsphan1979
That’s what I’m saying..Dodgers? Haha..not once have I ever heard him being linked to the Dodgers. Especially not now since they inked Kershaw to a 93 mil/ 3 year deal
deweybelongsinthehall
Shocked they gave him a third year at basically the same money. Where was he going to go for more?
bandit
I agree – Christmas came early for the Kershaw fam
southi
He grew up in the Las Vegas area so it isn’t too far a leap to imagine LA could be sorta like heading home to him even if it is a few hours drive.
Android Dawesome
You must be from the East Coast. That not a few hours drive. Its doo doo
southi
Everything I checked said in the 260 to 275 mile range. That should be a few hours on good roads. Only a short hop in a small plane. While admittedly I haven’t driven that specific stretch of interstate before I frequently average over 70 mph on similar interstate distances (which puts the time at under 4 hours). I guess it depends on what you call a few hours and the specific nuances if those roads.
ateam043
That drive is around 5 hours maybe 6 out here with our awesome traffic.
That’s assuming it’s not a holiday weekend or you may as well camp out on the highway.
Flint03
Don’t know why the concern. He or his family, won’t drive
bruceperdew
The drive only takes that long if you leave in the middle of the day. Traffic sucks on the 210 heading east. If you leave in the morning, or after rush hour, its less than 4 hours.
Slipknot37
To be honest, I haven’t heard any link between the two. And it’s not like they are not crammed enough in the outfield. I’d like to see what moves they would make after/before the signing if they end up being the highest bidder
Thronson5
Just because you haven’t hear them linked to him means nothing! I mean they did put a claim for him at the waver daeadline didn’t they? Just couldn’t get a deal done. But I’m sure there’s been plenty of times a team hasn’t been linked to a player and they’ve signed him. I think this happened when the Angels shocked everyone and signed Pujos
Slipknot37
Correct me if I’m wrong, but the Dodgers reported only claimed him because they didnt want him to go to any other contender. The nationals were certainly not going to trade him unless it was for something big. They really wanted to keep him and it’s definitely still a possibility
thebare54
Cub fan if he is over 200 mil we don’t need orwant him hear that Theo
Thronson5
Yea that may be true, they may have done it to block other teams but I still highly doubt they aren’t interested in him and just because there hasn’t been talk about them going after him doesn’t mean it won’t happen. I think that’s completely foolish to assume. How many times does the “mystery team” strike? Pretty often.
thebare54
I hope the NL get a DH and MANNY and BRYCE get 200milion grow up last year first year owners used there Brains
#Fantasygeekland
Free agency starts today, anything linking them before that would be considered tampering. So it’s just speculation that has been linking teams to players up until now.
Chris79stl
No kimbrel in stl!!!!!!
makaio6
Why not? That would be awesome. Would love it if they could land him. Could create a great late inning tandem with Hicks.
Chris79stl
He couldn’t throw strikes at the end of the year, we don’t need any more of that
robbiecraig
No way Cards spend $70 mil so soon on a closer after Greg Holland bombed. They have much cheaper options that could turn out nicely.
thebare54
Tru Dat
baseballpun
They already wasted a pick on Holland. Not gonna use another on Kimbrel.
619bird
Holland and Kimbrel aren’t on the same level. Dewitt was the clown who wanted Holland.
They need a guy who can close. IMO Hicks is not ready yet. The should go after Kimbrel but Ottavino is likely the play unless they deal for one.
If they did that they could go out and get a lefty for the pen and got out and get a bat. They need a little of everything. Pitching, Defense and some offense.
dazhk
Not sure where you got your info but Goold wrote an article when the Cards signed Holland that MM was the one pushing to sign him NOT Dewitt.
EndinStealth
Yeah it was Matheny, but the fair weather fans want to blame DeWitt for everything.
bighiggy
I’d like to see them go after Robertson. I think he would be a great bullpen piece without being super expensive. I think ottavino wouldnt be a wise decision. I’d also like a brantley signing, if they could dump Fowler. Wonder if the Orioles would take Fowler and a prospect for cobb?
We’re_Pham-ily
Ew
stan lee the manly
Doesn’t seem likely to me. If any ex Red Sox signs with the Cards, I would think it would be Joe Kelley. Everyone loves a reunion
mikecws91
The White Sox not only don’t get a free agent; they don’t even get mentioned in the list of teams that don’t get a free agent!
turner9
The White Sox did not get rave reviews
simschifan
I think this is the year they get some big names. If they don’t start now someone else in the central will start getting better. Machado to me makes sense. It could be his team for years
ChiSoxCity
Yes, the move makes sense, but when have the Sox ever done anything that makes sense. I give them credit for stopping the charade of “contending” with cheap FAs and actually rebuilding. However, the verdict is still out on whether Jerry Reinsdorf can be trusted.
econ101
Put me down as one of the first comments to suggest that you guys are INSANE. There is no way any team pays $400M, and no way they commit themselves to 13+ years. I’ll gladly eat my words if I’m wrong… but I’m not wrong. They will be lucky to crack $300. Stanton’s extension was dumb then, and dumber now.
turner9
There will most likely be opt outs after 3 4 5 6 7 8 years etc.
And unless one of them tanks so badly in years 1-3, the opt outs will almost certainly be exercised
econ101
Disagree. The only reason there is talk of that much $ for these guys is their ages. When they are 30, even if performance is still solid, they are not getting more than what is suggested here. No one is paying these prices. MLBTR must be trying to make waves/headlines or something.
turner9
In a free open market you’re going to get overpays.
I’m not suggesting its smart or good business, but most teams are short sighted and willing to sacrifice next decade for this, especially GMs who know 99% they wont be around the following decade
You sign Harper to 14/420. With an opt out after years 3 4 or 5 and you HOPE hes the mvp each year so he will opt out. And you HOPE you win a WS or 2 and it’s all worth it.
He resigns with a different team after 4 years and it’s no longer your problem
It’s only a problem if he forgets how to play baseball for 5 or 6 years or has a career ending/changing injury that prevents him from being able to opt out
Short term it works.
Slipknot37
Besides the tigers not being in contention, I feel like lemaheu with them would be a great fit
User 4245925809
LeMaheu and Dozier both could wind up as bargain guys the FA season. Don’t really buy what is projected here that they will receive and if both manage to find a bit too much? detroit can probably sign old friend Kinsler for an acceptable amount.
2b is pretty thin outside of Lowrie and his injury history is going to hurt his market some.
Kenleyfornia74
14 years handed out by the Dodgers. Very bold. On a lighter note that McCutchen contract seems like a stretch. Dont see a market like that for a declining OF.
Knowthemarket
Even his declining years are pretty solid. In 2017 his OPS was 849 and this year it was 792. He still managed to put together 2.7 war this year.
Aril
but playing in LA?? all the hitters get a huge hit in their numbers playing here, just look at Machado – Reddick before and after
oneear
No way he ends up on the Cubs, who have tons of outfield options.
bigkempin
14 years and $420M? I personally think Bryce and Boras would be thrilled with something in the 10/$350M range. One would have to think that Boras’ main goal is to surpass Stanton’s total value and Greinke’s AAv. Don’t really see a team (especially an NL team) paying Harper $30M/year when he’s in his late mid to late 30’s. A shorter term/higher AAV seems more realistic if he goes to an NL team. Also doubt Machado and Corbin reach those totals but the rest seem to be pretty on point.
jv32
13 YEARS FOR MACHADO
Judge Judy
13 years for the 13 year old. Fitting.
Mattimeo09
Poor baby Yanks fan. It’s okay buddy, you’ll get another wild card berth next year
yanks02026
Sorry I love your guys site but i think a lot of these predictions are CRAZY.. I doubt the Red Sox would give Miller 9 million a year, also why wouldn’t the yankees give him that but they will give 10 million to Ottavino.
JA Happ for 16 million a year, pretty sure the Yankees would do that also.
Samuel
I like the one where the Yankees let Robertson go to the Mets then sign Ottavino in his place for a whopping 10% less.
And the Mets paying out over $15 a year to 2 guys for back-end bullpen help, when Gsellman and Lugo did fine after they dumped Familia (duh -wonder why they traded him?). I see the Mets signing Allen as a rehap project – Callahan developed him in Cleveland, and Eiland developed the dominant Royals bullpen. As John Hart famously said – “closers fall out of trees”. The Mets need offense, not relief pitching.
I was stunned at how little the authors understood about the teams and how their FO’s and Managers are bringing along players. This is a fantasy league site. It works for teams such as the Cubs and Phillies – where they spend to fill holes from the previous year, as opposed to building a winning team.
steelerbravenation
Mets absolutely need bullpen help
Allen I could see going and I could see Robertson there as well but hope not I would like Robertson on the Braves
MrMet33
Wait, what? The Mets had the 3rd worst pen in the majors last year.
justin-turner overdrive
420, lol
The Angels are probably going to give him that, not Dodgers. We always forget the Angels always go after the #1 and usually get them. Hamilton, Pujols, Ohtani to name a few. Upton-Trout-Harper is an unbelievable OF.
angelsfan1391
It hasn’t always been the case. Free agents were scared away for a bit. (Crawford, and Beltre to name a few)
juicemane
Harper to the Angels bc they’re moving to Vegas. Its a done deal. They already are having stadium location discussions.
Cat Mando
Source? I don’t recall the owners voting yet to allow a move.
petfoodfella
There’s a few blogs that are questioning where they’ll land since they opted out of their deal and LA prices are sky high.
Portland
Las Vegas
Charlotte
Those are the top 3 I’ve heard.
dazhk
MLB has other problems with the Florida teams and the A’s situation before they allow the Angels to move. Don’t see that happening anytime soon regardless of their opt out.
Vickers
Source?? Links??
GeoKaplan
If anyone is seriously suggesting the Angels would move to Portland, Las Vegas or Charlotte, that is the clearest sign you should never, ever read anything written by that person.
The team has years left on a lucrative TV deal in SoCal, which would be lost if the team left the area.
The Portland, Las Vegas and Charlotte metro areas are each approximately 2.2M, while the Angels share the LA metro area of 19M. Kind of hard to find a good reason to downsize the base of prospective fans by about 90%.
In addition, the Portland move would be fought by the AL team already claiming Portland, the Mariners; Charlotte has a fantastic AAA stadium which can’t be expanded beyond its 10,000 capacity due to location; and Las Vegas goes through horrible boom/bust cycles due to the hospitality/gaming industry.
So, no…those are all terrible, unworkable, impractical ideas.
Bartis
Nashville
hawkny11
Geographically, Oklahoma City..
Slevin
Where in the wide world are you getting this?
turner9
I’m all for the Jay’s signing kikuchi or Harvey (to flip at the deadline). But not a fan of cahill
justin-turner overdrive
Beane saying “Im spending big on SP this year” means…Jed Lowrie and Gio Gonzalez to you? Think bigger. Think Keuchel, CC and Eovaldi. Ryu if he hits the market. Kikuchi too.
damon389
I’m an A’s fan, and think that you are way off. Kikuchi perhaps; but I believe that Gio, CC or Sanchez are more realistic targets. Keep in mind that their biggest “signing” would be a new contract for Davis. We sign one – two solid arms and sign Davis long-term then I’m happy. Not sure about Lowrie. Would like to see what Barreto can do and I’m concerned that Lowrie’s starting to get a bit long in the tooth. Perhaps his best playing days are in the rear-view mirror.
Thomas Walker
I like Khris Davis, but a long term extension for him seems like a major risk. The high 40s HR total isn’t going to increase, and frankly, while the .247 BA 4 years in a row is kinda awesome because that’s so fluky, that’s gonna dip with age too. If he would lock up around 3/40- 4/52 range, I wouldn’t see that as a bad move, but if his people want to be rewarded for past HR production, I think they will be disappointed. I think Lowrie can be productive for 2 more years, but I would draw the line there, as far as contract goes. One of their best players last year.
justin-turner overdrive
“I think you are way off, I only like about half the picks you made” – lol, what do you want from me? Those are all perfectly viable options, I can absolutely see the A’s throwing $90M at Keuchel for 5 years – just because they sign him doesn’t mean they won’t trade him later if things go bad – this site says $82M gets him, maybe the A’s will need to put up more than everyone else to get him to Oakland. He’s exactly the win-now ace they need and Beane himself promised to get Melvin a better rotation this offseason.
Now, imagine pairing him with say…Corey Kluber? 🙂
Mattimeo09
That’ll cost the A’s a boatload of prospects.
You’re dealing for a 2-time Cy Young winner on a team friendly contract controlled for the next 3 years.
justin-turner overdrive
A’s have said boatload of prospects and have long term players locked in at 3B, 1B, CF, DH, SS and RF AND are in win-now mode.
They won 97 (!) games this year with ZERO good SP options. Kluber is exactly what they need to win a title, pair him with Keuchel and they’re finally breaking through.
Slipknot37
what about carlos Gonzalez or daniel descalso? Just surprised they didnt make the honorable mentions
zachary08
If these are the pitchers the Reds sign, brace yourselves Reds fans, here we go again
MCTX
The same as last year but a much more expensive Matt Harvey. I don’t think much thought was put into the lowly Reds needs.
tv 2
agree. they need a guy as good as geo or better. if not they should wait a year. they got lots of cash. really Harvey should be a 2 for 10 kind of guy. after years of injury he only had a half a season of good ball.
tv 2
Harvey 2 for 22 is way to high. 2 for 16 sounds ok. anyone else would need to have a 4.10era or less to really help enough. might be better to shed some infield depth and make a trade. of course it’s a tight market when the reds actually have some cash.
hamelin4mvp
Some of these make sense but most of them don’t. I’m not seeing it for most of these guys – location and cost (high and low).
HalosHeavenJJ
I wanted the halos to sign CC last year to provide some reliable, quality innings. Not sure I’d be happy about handing Joe Kelly that much money, especially not if we could get Familia who has better control.
angelsfan1391
Totally agree. I’m kinda hating reagins more than usual for trading Corbin and Skaggs for haren back in the day
ChrisEnvy76
So the Cubs who talked about righting the offense, pick up McCutchen and resign Chavez and call it a day? McCutchen isn’t remotely an upgrade.. I cannot understand that in any way.
justacubsfan
Yeah, that’s what I’m thinking. They’ve signed multiple free agents each of last two years (3+) top names. I just don’t see them half-assing it. Cubs would be better served to not spend a dime then to spend it on them.
simschifan
Apparently they are pretending like they are broke. Sounds to me like they got what they want and now they want to start pinching pennies
bkbkbk
Trash list. Angels can’t count on any dude as
A DH given the Ohtai Pujols situation. I’d expect them to sign; CC, Kuechel, flyer in Herrera, maybye try to snag Ramos on a deal and then try for 1-2 bullpen arms.
kc38
These are really really terrible lol
MCTX
I’ll take the under on Harper and Machado
Bartis
This!
chound
I just couldn’t get behind my franchise spending that kind of money on a player! So put me in the under as well!
Coast1
Kudos for doing this. It’s truly speculative and puts you out there. I’m sure you’ll get a lot of “no way my team will pay this for that guy” or “no way my team wouldn’t sign that guy at the price.”
sandman12
Sorry fellas, you are 33% high on those top two, And Grandal won’t come close to your number. 3/39 max
Wilmer the Thrillmer
Grandal will accept the QO.
punchandjudy
As a Dodger fan, I just threw up in my mouth.
bleacherbum
Nice call with Kukuchi going to San Diego. Preller was oh so close in luring Ohtani last year as the dark horse favorite team. I think they get their guy this time around.
jamess-7
I don’t think he’s serious about pursuing Kikuchi. He cut Makita who could’ve helped convince him to come here.
RedRooster
Preller wasn’t close to luring Ohtani. He was always going to sign with an AL team. He wanted to DH on the days he wasn’t pitching. He couldn’t have done that with the Padres.
Ha!
Wow, I just registered an account to tell you how off base your list is. Pretty bad guys.
tv 2
reds need to make a move oh happ. getting rid of Billy will save then 6 million and they can add at least 20 more.
swanhenge
You lost me at Cutch to the Cubs. You’re out of your brain.
justin-turner overdrive
Yes, that one really made them look really bad. Talk about nonsense and a horrible pick anyway, because Bryant is probably going to end up in LF anyway, and Heyward has the other spot, and then there’s Schwarber/Almora/Zobrist/Happ. The last thing the Cubs need is an OF. Harper makes a little sense if they’re just trying to reunite him with Bryant, but then you HAVE to trade Almora, because that’s just cruel watching him rot away on the bench when he’s probably an all-star if he gets everyday reps somewhere. Schwarber is meh he’s probably a 4th OF anyway but a fine guy to have in case of injuries/form etc. McCutchen is probably going to the White Sox or Braves.
simschifan
I could see Cutch on the south side. A veteran presence
rondon
I think there’s a good chance that they will trade Schwarber, Happ and Russell. Those guys have each had their shots and it seems like the time has come to move on.
justin-turner overdrive
Not sure you can trade a suspended player, or who would even want to trade for a suspended player anyway.
slasher016
Mark it down… Wade Miley to the Reds.
ffjsisk
So the Braves, with upwards of 60 million to spend, bring in a consistently injured Brantley and an inconsistent reliever? They will take a huge step back if that’s the case. Especially since, according to you guys, the Nats and Phils are gonna sign any and everybody.
RunDMC
Agreed, I, too, was a little shocked, but Brantley would be an upgrade over Kakes – even with more injury risk. I think they can do better than Cody Allen, though I think he’d be a buy-low candidate that would interest them. This does not account for trades – and if it did – you’d see a flurry of activity. That’s what I’m assuming anyways, considering how much AA has emphasized that it’ll be through the trade market and not free agency where most of their presence will be felt.
I love seeing all the money spent by WSH/PHI – go ahead, please blow it to the wind. WSH loses Harper and attempts to fill that hole in their heart with Dallas Keuchel and Yasmani Grandal. I guess WSH isn’t concerned about Grandal’s no-show in the playoffs knowing the Nats won’t get the playoffs – so no worries. 🙂
doxiedevil
Braves won’t sign either. They are cheap but have more sense than those two.
mj-2
I can see Brantley as a real possibility if they can’t find anything on the trade market. There’s really not a whole lot of options in free agency to fill RF. Harper is too expensive, a lot of Pollock’s value is predicated on playing CF which the Braves have covered. Brantley is probably the 3rd best outfielder to be honest.
But I agree I think they’ll be better off trading to fill that void. I’d see if we can match up with the Padres for one of their extra outfielders they hold. I’d be happy taking a crack at bringing Hunter Renfroe over and sending some young pitching their way in exchange.
As for Allen I couldn’t agree more. The list makes no sense to me because the Braves highest priority is fixing the bullpen in my opinion and the best they gave the Braves is Allen? LOL I don’t think so. I’m still holding out hope for the Kimbrel reunion, I know some think he won’t be worth the contract but I disagree. If they choose not to go big on Kimbrel there’s still way better options than Allen on this list that the Braves will be well suited and able to sign. Familia or Herrera wouldn’t shock me if they pass on Kimbrel
PhanaticDuck26
been so much talk about Bryce going to the Phillies just because they could easily be willing to offer him the most money. yes, money talks, we know that, and im not going to pretend that Bryce is any different; im sure he wants that richest contract in baseball history. But, in considering the long-term nature of this contract, he has to be looking at teams chances of winning it all in the near future, especially after having such good regular seasons in washington but no postseason success. the phillies, while trending upward, are more than a Harper away from competing with ATL WAS and even NYM in the east, and Harper has to know this. In other words, with the amount of suitors (probably 6 teams) willing to offer him at least 350million, he will get that biggest contract while also choosing the team thats the most competitive, and i just dont think the Phillies are it.
brucebochyisthemarlboroman
You’re frigging on crack. The Phillies have more money than god to spend this offseason and you think the Braves are so much better than both Philly and WSH? Seriously whatever you Braves fans are smoking you should be put in a supermax prison for possessing it.
braveranger9erknick
Please tell me the last huge contract the Phillies gave out that was worth it. $25mil a year for a 4 era under .500 record starting pitcher named Jake??? He’ll be 33 next year Not a good deal. Money doesnt fix MLB teams like it used to. Top tier Free Agency signings are like a payday loan. Prospects are the new currency in baseball and the phillies farm system is ranked 18th in several polls. Go ahead and google the Braves farms system rank even without Albies,Acuna,and Touki. So the Phillies might sign Harper and should get a bat whisperer to fix Odubel’s Nomo like batting mechanics, Good!!!!Phillies and the Nats can watch from their straw and stick houses as the Braves build a sound structural team.
Niekro
Any reason for the Cardinals guess on Donaldson? Just about every team in baseball would offer him that deal and wonder why you would see him switching leagues at this point in his career for the Cardinals? Does he have some connection to them?
dazhk
I don’t think Donaldsons contract comes any where near 20mil. Whoever signs him it’s going to be a heavily incentivized contract.
jakec77
I think there are less teams in play for Harper and Machado. Yes, plenty of teams can afford to pay $35 million plus in 2019 on a presumably productive Harper/Machado. But, it is a much smaller number than can risk having a potentially big albatross contract in six or seven years.
And I know that they may well get it, but if I’m an owner no way am I giving a huge contract like that with an opt out- there’s no upside for the team, with potentially disastrous downside.
baseball365
If either player receives contracts in the range of the MLBTR estimates, I might actually protest and not watch next year. I’m not a fan of either player and you’re right, the market is exceedingly small for them. We know the Giants and Cards were in the Stanton sweepstakes last off season and I do see one of them as the most likely destination for Harper (if not resigning in Washington). Harper is not going to the Dodgers. Machado and the Phillies on paper, does seem to make the most sense. I’d be very concerned however if the Phillies are not at that crest of contention yet, because I see Machado dogging it on a .500 team thus making a $32.5M annual salary an albatross. People throw around big numbers without considering so many other moving parts.
Funny enough, I actually think Machado would be perfect in Boston at 3rd and I loath the Red Sox, but it just makes sense to me.
Caught Looking
If the Red Sox sigh Machado, I’ll protest and stop watching next year too. Makes zero sense on several levels. And I’m a Red Sox fan.
Dave P
I am a 50 year…life long Red Sox fan…NO WAY they waste money on Machado ( I would never go to or watch another game!). BoSox offense led all of MLB last year…what they will spend money on is PITCHING…one Starter…and at least one Reliever…:)
justin-turner overdrive
lol remember when they almost had A-rod, his big-bro/mentor? ITS HAPPENING AGAIN!!!!!
chound
There’s no if, they won’t.
CuddyFox
I know lone of the Cardinals beat writers, Derrick Goold wants the Cardinals to talk with Boras about Harper. I think he will be consider to go to STL.
puigpower
I’m not jiving with a lot of these. Also the Dodgers are not signing Harper to anything like that. I mean, no.
xpensivewinos
The fun and speculation begins!
It helps take the edge off the long, cold, lonely winter………..
baseball365
Luckily this is an open forum where we can “all” air our opinions, but there is no way either Harper or Machado are getting those contracts. Both have lost some luster this year. I think Harper tops out at 9 years and $275M and Machado at 8 years and $260M. In fact I’m willing to bet $5K (any takers?) that both their contracts come within 5% of these estimates
PhanaticDuck26
not gonna wager 5000 on it, but youre insane if you think Stanton will still have the record contract come Opening Day, 2019. Harper aint gettin 420 but he’s getting at least 350.
baseball365
Stanton definitely going to retain that title for now. Trout is the only living player that should exceed that.
Mattimeo09
SHOULD is the key word. I agree that Trout Should be the only other player to exceed Stanton’s total.
But he won’t be
Mattimeo09
So for Harper you’re predicting $262-288MM & Machado 247-273MM?
I’d totally put money down that you’re wrong
AUTiger7222
Braves signing Michael Brantley for 3/45 and Cody Allen 2/16. Man, I’d be so thrilled with adding both former Indians players. Trade for Corey Kluber make it a Grand Slam!
simschifan
That would be a triple
Altanta Barves
Exactly no one should be thrilled if their team acquired injured pile of trash Michael Brantley. He will be a waste of a roster spot wherever he goes. I hope he retires.
bobtillman
This is a tough room…..Jeees give these guys a break……and what makes anyone think the owners won’t put on a “freeze” and a lot of these numbers won’t be significantly lower…..
The new realization is in…the difference between what a McCutchon gives you and a AAA vagabond OFer gives you MIGHT be worth a million….doubt if its anything more…..Owners have another year before they have to make nice with the union,,,,,TV ratings are in the toilet, streaming sites the same…..the goose might not be as golden as it has been….
Lots of factors to consider…..
sufferforsnakes
smh…..
southbeachbully
Markakis, on a 2/$16 mil is a steal and the Yanks should be all over that.
driftcat28 2
No room for him
Slevin
There’s certainly room, but not for him.
southbeachbully
Why not? Yanks have an opening in LF and they need a left handed hitter. Overall, the Yanks need a lefty with good contact hitting skills who can take a walk and not strike out 150 x. How is he NOT a good fit? Plus he crushes at NYC historically.
thetruth 2
You’re describing Harper.
ASapsFables
Clearly he’s talking about Nick Markakis and not Bryce Harper, not that either should be a top priority in the Bronx this offseason.
Frank kemble
The Phillies signing machardo, morton, and markakis.. Interesting prediction, but I don’t hardly think. Machardo probably, and as much experience as Morton would bring, I think they will try and add a lefty to the rotation in some capacity; And while Markakis would be a handy bat, I don’t think that’s the direction. Middleton wants to fill the seats and will probably put some pressure on Klentak to make a few splashes, especially after falling apart. The cool thing about signing several free agents too, is it gives the Phils some leverage and excess to work with. Guys like herrea, hernandez, franco, pivetta, I still think could be trade bait for a big improvement..and there’s also the closers role. They like the badass closer concept in philly..from lidge to pappelbon, back to Billy Wagner and Mitch williams. With kimbrel, britton, Allen all available, guarantee ya Klentak signs a closer. His bullpen signings last winter were ineffective so I’d say it’s given.
PhanaticDuck26
pretty solid evaluation there, Frank. while britton may not fit that “badass closer” characteristic, i do think the phils offer him a very competitive contract–as will various other teams, though. keuchel had a down year and doesnt seem to be gettin much love, but id be more than happy for the phils to get him into that rotation. man, i cant wait for this offseason to get FIRED UP! go Phils 🙂
bringoutthegimp
Any team agreeing to a 14 year contract is going to regret it! A 12 year too!!
Vizionaire
not for trout.
bringoutthegimp
Not even for Jesus!
sufferforsnakes
That would be an eternal contract. I accepted.
bobtillman
Jesus Sucre????????
wiggysf
Aguilar?
ASapsFables
Like Bo Gentry, I have it on good faith that he also had some trouble with the curve!
jmi1950
Eovuldi to the BoSox is very likely. I do not see them signing any expensive closer. A trade for someone like Leclerc makes more sense; for one of Dalbec or Chaivis and a Pitching prospect.
punchandjudy
I wanted Leclerc on the Dodgers badly at the trade deadline, and I think it would take a king’s ransom for the Rangers to move him, with so much team control still left.
johnrealtime
I usually agree or can see where you are coming from with your predictions MLBTR, but your top 2 are just plain bonkers
JrodFunk5
Agree. Well said. Even the Dodgers aren’t that foolish.
Vizionaire
pirates have great pitching coaches. angels not so much. happ in the angels will go back to his lowest point in career.
angelsfan1391
Well considering the angels have a new coaching staff I’m not sure that’s a reasonable assumption
Vizionaire
just wait and see.
Wilmer the Thrillmer
A packed list if Adrian Beltre, Clay Buchholz and Ian Kinsler don’t make the top 50. Corbin had a great year but Buchholz was very good also.
I think the numbers on the top 3 are way too high both in terms of common sense and the actual numbers we will see. I think both Harper and Machado will get less than $300m and Corbin will get less than $85m.
Wilmer the Thrillmer
Harper has hit in the .240’s two out of the last three years and Machado stepped on the first baseman’s ankle twice and dogged it down the line twice during the World Series. Everyone compares their cases to Stanton’s contract. News flash: Stanton’s contract was and is horrible. Machado and Harper are great young players but in my opinion they are not THAT great.
Jean Matrac
BA is not the best way, in fact it’s far from the best way, to judge a player’s value.
Stanton’s contract may be horrible, but the Yankees took it on, and both the Giants and Cards were willing to as well. Face it, it may seem like insane amounts of money, but teams are going to bid against each other, and spend big for a coveted piece.
Wilmer the Thrillmer
All true, but could you imagine Mike Trout hitting .249?
Jean Matrac
That’s irrelevant. Clearly Trout is the best player in baseball, I think everyone would agree, but he isn’t a FA. A comparison of more germane career numbers would be:
Harper – .900 OPS, 139 OPS+ 140 wRC+
Trout – .990 OPS, 175 OPS+, 172 wRC+
Harper’s numbers, though significantly less than Trout’s, are still impressive. And, if you want to be objective, look at career stats, because of the larger sample. Harper has a .279 career BA, BTW. Trying to diminish Harper by cherry-picking one stat from one season is an obvious attempt to demean.
sandman12
Harper’s 2015 numbers no longer mean crap. He’s clearly not that player – or anything close to it.
TampaGators
There is not a chance in hell that Friedman would ever give Harper a deal that even came within a mile of that prediction, in dollars and especially years.
lwayne
The poor Rangers lost none, had none and will sign none. Pitiful front office. They are their own Triple A team.
imindless
Lol these predictions are obviously done by some yankee homer. No way dodgers spend that much on a bum like harper. Also find it funny how yankees manage to fit in so many free agents with limited cap space lol this is horrible.
yanks02026
Yankees have 80-100 to spend.
driftcat28 2
Yankees got like 2 guys in the list?
TooToughToScuffle
Hope you’re right about Eovaldi going back to the Sox. If they lose Kimbrel and Kelly though, boy are they short on relievers. Their #2 and #3 relievers, Barnes and Brasier, are not ideal to slot into the 8th and 9th innings.
baseball365
I’m pretty sure that Machado is going to sign with the Red Sox and many might not understand that, but I think it makes so much sense, it would be ridiculous not to happen. Pedroia is toast, Devers is a terrible fielder (and those that think he’ll just “learn it” now are delusional) They also have a large free agent class coming in the next season or two.
So I might be the first and only to predict it, but Machado to the Red Sox for 8 years and $260M to play 3rd. Book it. Harper to the Cards or Giants for 9 years and $275M.
TooToughToScuffle
Why is it delusional to expect Devers to improve at Third? If he has to move to first that’s not a big deal either. There’s two Third Baseman in the minor league system alone that Devers is presently blocking.
Caught Looking
Why not add that Pedroia and Bogaerts will be there to introduce him at the press conference and forgive him for trying to take them both out.
Dave P
you really should try to rejoin reality…it is honestly more fun!!
Bank On It
The Cardinals should have plenty of money to spend
PhanaticDuck26
Kapler says be bold, so here we go!
Bryce Harper to the Houston Astros–12 years, 375 million
Bring on the prediction contest, boys! please! im begging you! i usually only got like 2% correct but it just makes the offseason so much more awesome!
bringoutthegimp
Harper can get more money than $275!
Caught Looking
If that is what Ryu is pegged at (three years and $33MM), I’d roll the dice and take the QO and believe I can get better than a 2/$15.1M deal next offseason without the QO tag attached.
Youtube.com/@PINGTR1P
Sorry Tim, but this is very bad. The Braves are only signing 2 players? Allen I could see, but Brantley? He can’t play a full season if his life depended on it at this point. I’d be surprised if they sign him, let alone for 3/45. Laughable.
realgone2
Yeah I cracked up when I saw that.
fatcat1
Rangers?
joedirte4life
So in interpretation of this list and prediction they subliminally have the Braves trading for JTR
petfoodfella
I can see them making a strong attempt. I’d prefer Allard and Gahora to headline the deal.
sportsfan101
I love this site, check it multiple times a day for all sports, but this article is garbage and is so off. Teams would be stupid to hand out 75% of those contracts. Just wow!
petfoodfella
I mean, they’re not that foolish and compared to previous years, they’re pretty good at it. Just because you don’t agree doesn’t make it garbage.
Slipknot37
I was wondering the other day if this offseason would be like last. Not alot of contracts have worked out so far between injuries and/or poor performances. It’s very possible someone will give these guys a ton of money. But I have a feeling some of these guys will have to wait till later to sign contracts that may end up being a lot less. Especially if certain teams are going to have tight payrolls
joedirte4life
I still think with 60 mil to spend the Braves take someone better than Michael Brantley
petfoodfella
I agree. I also think they’ll make a play for Andrew Miller as well as Allen.
66TheNumberOfTheBest
Phillies sign Bryce Harper.
Pirates sign Yangervis Solarte.
Kennypowers999
Dodgers won’t get any of the one you listed except ryu and grandal. They will not do much for free agency and trades.they will probably get a cheap and crappy relief pitchers and keep the same outfielders. Harper will go somewhere else. If the dodgers do not go and get bullpen help and offensive help then I’m done with them.
Aril
Grandal will block our young catchers unless he take the qo or take a 2 year deal
Balk
I guess they figure the Giants want to get even older then they already are! Lol. Don’t see them going after either of those players they have listed. But if they’re trying to squeeze the talent out of a few guys before bringing in the new core then I guess it’s possible. Would hurt my eyes though! Lol
RadioPirate
Considering Pollock was just tendered, I don’t see the Giants giving up that hard-won high draft pick in ’19 for an injury-plagued outfielder in his 30’s… I mean, Bobby Evans won’t be calling the shots anymore. And Sanchez? Why not just bring back Matt Cain? I think he’s younger than AnnaBelle.
jekporkins
If the Giants sign Pollack I will certainly boycott going to games next year. He’s injury prone and past his prime. The last thing they need is that crap out there for 100 games a year, keeping a roster spot and CF lukewarm while they shuffle 4th outfielders out there to cover for him.
BronxBomber7
Some of these predictions make no sense. Why would the Mets? Of all teams sign DRob, and not the Yankees? And you only have them signing one pitcher. I think they sign Corbin and one more.
mets1536
You are seriously CRAZY IF YOU THINK THE ONLY THE METS WILL DO IS ADD 2 Bullpen Arms ….. They will be very active in getting a Top Tier Catcher.
LeylandsLung
I will take what ever you are smoking. This is ridiculous.
Rich Hill’s Elbow
God I hope the Twins sign Cruz. Kelly and Allen too.
coocoo
Imposssssible!!!! You have the Yankees losing like 5 pitchers. And bringing back one. Cc for 8 mil yanks would sign him in a heartbeat
goardo9691
I agree that the Phillies go get Machado. As a fan, I’m not excited about 13 for 390, but that’s probably what it will take. I can see them getting Morton too, but I’d rather see a lefty. I doubt they’d go for Markakis…unless they were to trade Odubel Herrera or Nick Williams who are both lefty hitters as well.
restingmitchface
14/$420M for Bryce actually doesn’t sound too bad. But projecting him to the Dodgers seems…unlikely.
Keep in mind, even after today’s Kershaw deal, this FO has never even handed out a $100M contract — let alone $400M+.
jakethesnizake
You all are baked if you think the only guy the Yankees sign is Patrick Corbin. Especially after the Red Sox just won the world series.
They’ll be in on Happ and Eovaldi as well and if they happen to lose out on either of them and/or Corbin, you can rest assured they’ll jump into the markets for Machado and/or Harper.
I also expect they’ll bring in a bullpen arm and it won’t be Adam Ottavino.
camdenyards46
No way they get 14 and 13 years…that would be crazy.
ChiSoxCity
Boy, if the Cubs miss out the top bats this offseason, it’s going to be a long, hard year in ‘19. I kinda feel bad for Cubs fans, because they are getting shafted hard if the signings work out according to these predictions.
theoepsteinhof
Thanks for your sympathy, but we’ll be just fine.
The entire lineup is just approaching their prime years. You’ll see massive improvement just having guys return to normal production. The SP is full with 5 guys who have proven track records in the front of rotations. Bullpens will be constant re-shuffling for most teams as staff usage has changed.
Good luck to our South Side neighbors!
ChiSoxCity
Legendary optimism aside, Cubs fans buy A LOT of tickets, and provide tremendous support for the organization over the years. There’s no reason why they can’t address needs immediately like some of the other “rich” franchises. The Cubs need another reliable bat in the lineup, one with an established track record. There is no excuse why they don’t go hard after Machado or Harper. None.
simschifan
They don’t need Machado or Harper. They can spend money elsewhere like a real closer a setup man and another infielder to replace Russel. Kimbrel, Miller or Robertson and Josh Harrison.
ChiSoxCity
The Cubs need more run production in their lineup. That alone will take pressure off their bullpen and starting rotation. Adding an elite bat minimizes those close, low scoring games they found themselves losing all the time. You can’t score 2 runs in a playoff game and expect to win. Not happening unless you have a Scherzer or Verlander on the mound. The Cubs have a solid rotation, but they’ll give up 2-3 runs a game. That’s fine if you have guys who hit consistently in your lineup. The Cubs don’t have that. It’s not 2016 anymore. What you have right now are free swingers and declining hitters. That doesn’t translate to an elite offense. Adding more bullpen arms is moot if you lack consistent run production from somebody in your lineup.
Bryant has been terrible at the plate for nearly two seasons now. Rizzo is declining. Schwarber, Happ and Contreras have hit a wall. Almora is decent, but lacks power. Heyward is basically a bench player at this point. It doesn’t take a genius to see what is needed gor the Cubs to get back into WS contention. Adding Kimbrel or Miller ain’t it.
dcart1021
Bryant has been terrible at the plate? What are you smoking? In 2017, he hit ..295/.409/.537. In an injury riddled 2018, he hit .272/.374/.460. Now you do have to hope, as a Cub fan, that his shoulder injury is behind him, but if he can put up anywhere close to 2017 numbers again, he’s one of the best players in baseball.
Schwarber improved dramatically in 2018 owing mostly to his defense. At this point, he probably is what he is. An average (or slightly below) defensive left fielder with 2 tools (OBP and power) against right-handed pitching.
Almora’s greatest deficiency is OBP. Always has been.
The Heyward contract is an albatross. Especially as his defense erodes.
Personally, I think the Cubs need to sign at least one or two dominant relievers this offseason. I would take more offensive production, but I suspect that comes from them retaining Daniel Murphy.
EndinStealth
Wait…. what….. I didnt see Bartolo anywhere on this list. Say it ain’t so.
sufferforsnakes
I was looking for the Melk man.
bobtillman
….he was having dinner…..Bartolo, that is…..the Melk man was busy with yonder maiden…….
jordsmac26
This article is so disrespectful to the Rays it’s embarrassing and automatically means this site deserves zero respect.
Rays have a payroll of approx 30 mill, they are usually at around 75 mill.
They have made it well known they will be active have an obvious need for a big RHB(Cruz to Twins made me LOL), have obvious need for a catcher and a closer.
And the ONLY predicted signing is Lance freaking Lyn? Is this some kinda sick joke? He wouldn’t even make the rotation and the Rays want to be a 95 win playoff team and this is the respect you show them? My god delete this garbage.
jakethesnizake
I’m not a Rays fan by any means, but I do also find this guess list to be a bit….well…laughable.
They have two guys going to the Yankees and one is a middling reliever. No way they settle for Adam Ottavino over bringing back Robertson.
That’s actually some serious cash for the Rays to spend, will believe it when I see it. They certainly deserve to have some investment from ownership, especially with how unexpectedly well last year’s team did.
jordsmac26
Ottavino is actually someone who makes a ton of sense for the Rays.
I get people see the past and think the Rays are cheap and spend nothing but they have a ton to spend and will spend it….ignorant articles like this just show they haven’t done any research.
jakethesnizake
Yeah, I don’t know a lot about Ottavino, but I just assume that they’d prefer a DRob type over him…more familiar.
Would be nice to see the Rays go out and get a couple difference makers. If they’re willing to spend $45m in free agency, that would be a legit arm, an impact reliever, and a decent bat.
What positions are they looking to fill?
jordsmac26
DH – RHB. If he flexibility that’s cool (They’ll have interest in Cruz, JD and MCCutchen).
No 2/3 starter
Catcher – preferably right handed / Chirinos or Ramos are ideal.
Closer or Late inning reliever to go with Alvarado.
Those are the 4 main spots.
restingmitchface
“For the first time in recent memory, the Rays appear to have decent spending capacity. It’s difficult to ignore precedent and project them to sign a bunch of top free agents, but it is more possible than it had been.”
Seems like a fair characterization to me…?
jordsmac26
Previous years don’t mean this year will be the same. They can afford anyone outside the top 2 and want to be a contender and aren’t going to offer Cron because they want to upgrade….so it’s pretty obvious they will be spending.
Players like Cruz, Donaldson, Ramos, Morton, Ryu, Ottavino, Familia all make sense.
Not sure why on earth the Rays would sign Lyn for 8 mill per? If they are going to add a starter he will be an impact guy otherwise they have better already on the 40 man.
The Rays 40 man rosters is extremely strong and they aren’t adding bargain guys because they won’t even make roster. As the GM said this offseason the moves we will make will be impact guys.
Jean Matrac
“Previous years don’t mean this year will be the same.”
Really? Maybe not exactly the same, no team does that, and situations are fluid year to year. But the way GMs and FOs have operated in the past, plus how free owners are with the purse strings, are an excellent guide to how teams will approach free-agency and how they might fix problems and fill out the roster.
jordsmac26
Like I said before this is the first ever. Rays have been in this position with this type of flexibility….so yeah it is kinda irrelevant what’s happened in the past.
Rays have been rebuilding for the last 4 years putting themselves in this position and apparently they aren’t going to do anything? That’s not how baseball works.
Jean Matrac
You’re looking at this thing all wrong. They aren’t saying the Rays aren’t going to do anything; that’s absurd. But, there are only 50 supposedly top FAs, with 30 teams competing for them. Each guess is for the team they think is most likely. Given the low payroll, TB has never spent big on FAs. Plus, with their park and attendance issues, it is much more likely that the Rays will not be making a lot of top 50 FA signings. That’s not to say they won’t, it’s just more likely that teams with bigger payroll space will have an advantage. You, as well as many other here, need to look at this less literally and see it with a little more nuance.
jordsmac26
I understand what you’re saying. Some of these teams aren’t going to spend a lot tho. Indians are one. Mets I doubt are going to go crazy, Cubs don’t have tons of flexibility. Rangers aren’t gonna go crazy neither are the Angels.
As I mentioned before Twins signing Cruz makes no sense at all.
I understand Rays have a lay pay roll but the point is it’s 45 mill lower than it usually always is…so they likely have more flexibility than over half the league maybe? And a lot of teams don’t want to spend a lot because they know they likely aren’t going to win. Rays go in cycles, next 5 years Rays will be all in to win. Like they were from 2008-2013 where they were close to winning a WS. They have the talent, just need the impact players to supplement them.
I didn’t expect them to predict a number of fa’s to the Rays but a couple guys like Cruz / Ramos and a reliever made tons more sense than adding Lyn. Who just makes no sense at all.
LarryBiitnersGhost
Can’t see any way the Cubs come out of this with only Cutch – nor do I see a Theo Epstein led club signing a declining FA
Tim Dierkes
So you’re saying Yu Darvish was at his peak a year ago?
ASapsFables
He’s correct in saying that Theo doesn’t usually invest in declining free agents when they actually ink their deals including Yu Darvish last offseason. Unfortunately, some of his FA’s went into a steep decline immediately after signing like Edwin Jackson, Jason Heyward and Tyler Chatwood. The jury is still out on Yu Darvish, especially since his poor season was mostly attributed to physical issues.
Sky14
Think you guys are a bit aggressive on the contracts, but if you’re not there’s going to be a lot of regret down the road. I wouldn’t want to touch any of the contracts in the top ten.
mafiaso316
Kimbrell at 17.5 per year for 4 years?? Why not just accept the qualifying offer of 17.9 and next year not be bogged down with the Q.O. and not be hampered with draft pick compensation?
restingmitchface
Because pitchers get injured all the time and $70M is a hell of a lot more guaranteed money.
tv 2
Holland for 8. lol
Basebal101
WOW, who wrote this garbage! 13 and 14 yr contracts?! ZERO chance on Harper to the Dodgers for more then 7 years. A lot of you say you’ve never heard the 2 as a match, but you must live under big rocks because it’s about 50/50 between them and the Nationals depending on what you read.
Slevin
The Dodgers have not been linked to Harper compared to the Yanks, Cubs, or the Phillies. Maybe you’re reading nothing but Dodgers blogs, or Bill Plaschke.
CuddyFox
Should read more. The Cardinals is also going to go into the Harper sweep-sticks.
Slevin
I’ve seen the Giants linked also.
imgman09
Wouldn’t touch the top 2 or Kimbrell
chound
Very reasonable in all honesty!
Jordan 5
Tim your smoking crack. No way dodgers pony up to 14 years yet alone 420 million. Not happening. At least not with the dodgers
Cat Mando
Tim has a smoking crack? He should see someone about that.
Mads_expos
What is mlbtr thinking 420 or 390… if a team gives more then hosmer or darvish money they are reallllly dumb.
Even if both are young and produce a lot they wont make you win.
Both were in playoff teams that didnt advance except MM with the LAD.
I say they get max like 7 x 30m.
There s no market for them.
chound
Without a major move to ditch salary, I don’t either.
Soldierofgod619
I could see Harper getting 11/330 and Machado 10/300 tops but anything more would be ridiculous.
theoepsteinhof
I don’t think anyone comes even close to $400m.
The new sweetener is multiple opt-outs to protect players for performance and to protect owners from themselves.
restingmitchface
Opt-outs don’t protect owners from anything.
Slevin
They should write in opt-outs for teams…
jorge78
These contract values are WAY
overdone. It’s a new analytical day. Teams that pay these bloated numbers will sink.
Buyer beware!
OCTraveler
Harper to the Dodgers makes little sense unless the NL is adopting the DH! Their outfield is already overcrowded with Petersen, Puig, Bellinger , Taylor and Verdugo and getting another “feast or famine” type of hitter doesn’t help their situation unless they’re planning on packaging players to fill their real need for help in the bullpen and behind the plate.
Jean Matrac
Yeah, what a mistake replacing Pederson with Harper..Seriously, they could trade Puig while his value is high, and move Taylor to the IF. Pederson’s bat is useful, but not so much his glove. His trade value is up right now. They might get someone useful for him. But he’s not a guy you would keep and pass on someone like Harper for.
shoewizard
The market is going to be repressed. Attendance is down. World Series Ratings are down. A recession in the next 12-24 months is looming. Owners will pull back on what they will shell out, much as they did last year.
Yes, Yankees and Dodgers got under luxury tax threshold, and there areother teams with money. But Harper is going to get just 8/240 at most and Machado less than 300M guaranteed as well.. Say what you want, but he cost himself a lot of money with all his B.S. this off season.
Lanidrac
The Dodgers and Phillies can have Harper and Machado if they’re going to be stuck paying them top dollar until they’re 39 or 40 (especially the overrated Harper). Haven’t front offices learned by now the folly of giving out huge contracts into a player’s late 30’s (or even older in some cases)? I thought the idea of these superstars hitting free agency at 26 was so that teams could sign them to something like a 10 year deal with relatively little risk of them becoming albatrosses at the end.
billysbballz
Wow if these predictions are accurate which we all know will not be but if they are then atheism Yanks has an awful free agent season.
Adam Ottavino 3 years at 34yo????
We don’t sign Daniel Murphy who goes to the Angels and to boot the Angels sign CC? We also lose Happ to the Angels. Wtf? The Yanks did nothing! Why Cash? Wtf are you doing over there? Lol
billysbballz
Not Atheism!
Should have said the Yanks!
Dam spell check now I’m really annoyed. First with Cashman not doing anything really to improve the team and then the spell checker!
justacubsfan
I would be f’ing pissed if the cubs thought paying McCutchen 45MM and signing only Chavez as the improvements. The shedding salary is overblown as is the Yankees saying “we’re not interested in Machado or Harper.” I still think Phillies will get Harper or Machado, and it’s feasible that the cubs don’t get either, but for them to not target any relievers would be asinine. Theo basically said they will start valuing production over talent. I sense that means moving guys like Russell, maybe Schwarber, Ian Happ, Almora. I would be shocked if they didn’t move two of them. The cubs are printing money, instead of worrying about another bust go after the top talent. Harper is a generational talent as is Machado. The rest of these guys will be overpaid hardcore.
Lanidrac
While they could certainly use him and have the money for him, I don’t know if the Cardinals are all that interested in Kimbrel given the Holland disaster and what are currently bad looking deals for Cecil and Gregerson.
Capn
Exactly what I was thinking. He’s not getting any younger either. They have plenty of choices for the back of the bullpen and they would be better off signing six other guys on cheap minor league deals on the off chance that they get lucky on one of them.
I really don’t think I can come up with five guys on this list that the Cardinals would be less likely to sign. That’s with what, three catchers on the list.
Z-A 2
As a Phillies fan, I 100% want Harper or Machado, hell why not both. But, .211 and .213 BA respectively in the Post-season is like that hope “A-Rod will eventually turn his post-season woes around” and it amounted to 1 WS in 12 trips and $441M and he is the 2nd best player of the last 30 years, and was on a team with Derek Jeter. Going to be a hard pill to swallow as an owner, coach, fan if they get all that money and win nothing.
Z-A 2
That being said, they have cash to spend… and these are my moves:
IN: SS – Manny Machado LF – Carlos Gonzalez SP – Dallas Keuchel
Out via Trade: Santana, Franco, Crawford
IN via trade: Whatever it takes to get Mike Trout, if it means taking on all of Albert Pujols’ 3/87M you do it. You only do it if you landed Machado or Harper though.
Shoots his shot…but you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.
1B – Pujols
2B – Hernandez
SS – Machado
3B – Kingery/Franco
LF – Hoskins
CF – Herrera
RF – Trout
C – Alfaro
SP 1 – Nola
SP 2 – Keuchel
SP 3 – Arrieta
SP 4 & 5 – Toss ups, probably guys that will be traded.
andrewgauldin
That adds 100M to their salary. Let’s be realistic please
simschifan
It’s pretty far fetched and will never happen but they do have the flexibility.
GeoKaplan
Yeah…Trout isn’t waiving his NTC to go play RF for the Phillies or any other team, and the Phillies don’t have enough spare talent to give up for Trout.
Besides that, you seemed to be so excited about building your imaginary lineup, that you apparently lost interest in the pitching. Nola and the Four Prayers isn’t much of a concept to entice any FA, much less Trout, to join the Phillies.
Just go back to sleep.
Bartis
Uh…
chound
Not big on the Phillies, but it is possible for you all to snag both. Would be historic if you did it also.
Rich Hill’s Elbow
Could definitely see a bidding war between the Twins and Rays for Cruz, although I’m not sure who’d win. Hopefully the Twins since they have more enough money, but at the same time I could also see them forfeiting due to Cruz’s price tag and the fact that they have other areas of need as well (infield and bullpen).
RedRooster
Where are the know-it-alls Pads Fans, Sharocko and eduardoaraisa98 who SWORE that Freddy Galvis would sign an extension with the Padres? Don’t they feel cheesy n’ stupid now LOL
justin-turner overdrive
You know these call-out posts are super pathetic, right? No one gives a F, stop it.
RedRooster
And for that matter where did all the morons who said Manny Machado would sign an extension go?
TexRanchHand
LMAO @ this whole article.,
ColossusOfClout
Harper’s natural position is catcher not right OF.
niched
Manny feels like damaged goods after his villainous dirty play in the playoffs. I’d be surprised if he gets more than $20 million a year for 10 or 11 years. He just feels hexed now.
Bryce is hard to figure out. One year he’s Mike Trout and then next he’s Ruben Sierra. I doubt he reaches $30 million/year. for more than 9 or 10 years.
h aldrich
Someone is smoking something. harper isn’t worth more than $25 millions a year, he’s had one excellent season plus he’s injury prone. Machado’s new attitude is going to cost him a lot,., and neither of them should be signed for more than 7 years.
Altanta Barves
THE BRAVES ABSOLUTELY BETTER NOT SIGN THAT WORTHLESS, ALWAYS-INJURED BRANTLEY. HE BELONGS IN A TRASH CAN.
Altanta Barves
I want to know who would downvote this and why. Come out from your hiding and explain why you’d want Brantley on your team.
Altanta Barves
That’s what I thought. A bunch of downvoting cowards who know Brantley is trash.
Altanta Barves
The fact that you resorted to name-calling proves that I’m in the right. It’s your fault that my passionate statement about my extreme opposition to the Braves signing Brantley triggered you.
You clearly aren’t a Braves fan, because a true fan wouldn’t want the Braves to overpay for someone who’s going to miss 80-100 games a year. I don’t think it’s a coincidence the one year he stayed healthy was his walk year. He probably hasn’t moved from the couch — eating cheetos and drinking cream sodas and beer — since the season ended.
PhanaticDuck26
…and…”cowards” and “trash” are not name-calling? can’t wait to see Brantley suit up for ATL
Altanta Barves
Calling someone out for being cowardly isn’t name-calling. And Michael Brantley doesn’t comment on this website, so I wasn’t personally attacking anyone here where I referred to his on-field performance (or lack thereof) as “trash.” He’ll miss 80-100 games a year.
rivera42
This has to be a joke. The Yankee lose Happ, Robertson, and Britton, and only sign Corbin(no thanks) and Ottavino? They have three openings in the rotation and a ton of money to spend. I strongly believe they retain Happ. Also, they’ll add to the offense as well.
Dave P
And Red Sox lose Kimbrel and Kelly…and only sign Miller? I don’t think so…
sufferforsnakes
This whole thing is insane.
Nick Baratta
Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
There is a 0.00% chance that the Yankees let Robertson go to the Mets of all teams for 11m per year….
This has to be one of the worst predictions that I’ve seen on this site.
I don’t normally post on this site because I feel like the opinions are usually pretty well represented in posts. However, this opinion is laughable at best. There is a 0.0% chance that the Yankees will replace Robertson and Britton with Ottavino. The Yankees are resigning Robertson 90+% of the time….In the scenarios that they don’t sign Robertson its because they’ve found better alternatives. AKA They decided to sign Britton on a similar deal which is unlikely
Jean Matrac
The Yankees have zero to say on where Robertson signs. He’s a FA. Their only chance to keep him from the Mets, or whomever, is to overpay for him.
rivera42
Why would they need to overpay to sign him? If he is given similar deals from the Yankees and Mets, which do you think he’ll take?
bobtillman
I say we send the Fifth Infantry to stop the caravan of Free Agents trying to play for the Royals…….oh wait…….
simschifan
The first two are laughable.
realgone2
Boy these are kinda ridiculous predictions
tigerbreak
Cubs should be in on Marwin Gonzalez, Joe Kelly, Jesse Chavez and Britton/Miller. Theo should call DiPoto and talk him in to taking Chatwood’s salary on for a prospect.
Priggs89
Throw in Amaya and I bet Rick could talk Reinsdorf into taking on that garbage contract. Heck, maybe Coop could even teach Chatwood how to throw a strike. He did it with Kahnle…
johnny53811
I’m seeing 8-9 teams who will not be even trying to be in contention next year. A couple more like A’s and Rays likely won’t want to spend. I don’t think the rest of the teams will spend all of this money.
jordsmac26
Do some research. Rays have 45 mill in flexibility and have openly stated they will spend. Don’t post nonsense
justin-turner overdrive
Beane literally said “I’m spending big this offseason on SP’s” in front of the owners.
tsc32
Kikuchi to Texas makes a lot of sense. We’re looking to compete when the new stadium opens so him being young works well. He’d get a year to settle in and build up his stamina for a full MLB season.
I also like the idea of paying a team friendly deal for Garrett Richards’ 2020 season.
Throw in Mike Minor and maybe Smyly if JD likes what he gives us in 2019 and you could have the makings of a solid group for that 2020 season:
Minor
Kikuchi
Richards
Smyly
Taylor Hearn or Joe Palumbo
Macho King OG
What a steaming load. The Yankees just sign Corbin (For 6 years no less), and this nobody named Ottovino9 for 3? The Mets get Robertson, hahahahahaha! The Red Sox get everyone they want at the price they want, what a joke.
justin-turner overdrive
Ottavino is a local NYCer, typical clueless disrespectful Yankees fan. Least respectful fanbase in MLB.
jedimarcus22
If the Cubs don’t go after Harper, they shouldn’t go after any outfielders. They have too many as it is and Almora should be playing everyday. I just don’t know who I would trade between Schwarber or Happ. I like Schwarber more for his bat, but Happ has a great glove…
Priggs89
Ian Happ has a “great” glove? I think that’ll be news to many in the baseball community.
mike127
As a Cubs fan, Priggs, I quite often shake my head at some of the stuff I read. Happ—-average to slightly below glove….probably more slightly below.
megaj
You must not watch very many Cubs games…. Happ is not an upgrade defensively over Schwarber.
jeralves79
Did Scott Boras write this? These numbers are completely ridiculous for 75% of these guys.
KB R.
Am I missing something with Harper?
First off….. if anyone gives him a 14 year deal I guarantee that GM is fired within 3 years.
Second….. is Harper worth such a deal? All he’s proven throughout his career is he’s injury prone, is now lackluster – to put it kindly – defensively in the outfield, and at the plate he is one of the most inconsistent hitters in the game. I mean just look at his last 4 years…… and then his 3 decent but not $30M per year for the next 14 years, decent…. unless you think a .270 hitter with a .360 OBP is worth that kind of money…… if you do – you’re nuts.
People here in Chicago seem to be wanting him and then trade Schwarber. My question….. why? Harper has hit 30+ HRs only twice in his 7 year career. Schwarber, if given everyday ABs from a manager who changes his lineup card daily, hits about that many HRs, 30, each year…… in only about 420 ABs. If Schwarber was given 550 ABs that HR pace he’s posted the last two years would equate to about 38-40 HRs a year…… and he’s only got 2 full seasons under his belt – he could get better yet. Then there’s the fact that Schwarber costs a FRACTION of what Harper would cost. I still think at the VERY least Schwarber could be at a minimum .250 hitter with a .360-.370 OBP and belt about 40 HRs a year in an every day capacity. That’s pretty conservative I think. It’s only a 10 point bump in both BA and OBP from what he’s already shown. Optimistically…… I think he could be a .280 hitter with a .390ish OBP….. and 40 HRs. And as for defense…. in this day and age where (fake) stat nerds seem to rule the baseball world (off topic, I can’t help but notice the decline in baseball popularity recently coincides with the era of “sabermetrics”….. doesn’t necessarily means it’s killing the game….. just….. interesting) I don’t get how “experts” can rag on Schwarber’s fielding ability and claim he’s only a DH and needs to go to the AL. In his career, mostly in the OF, he has a -2.5 dWAR. Harper in his 7 years….. -3. Other than Harper’s rookie year his fielding has been pretty much below average. IMO they’re at the very least equals when it comes to playing their positions. BUT….. I’d take Schwarber’s canon of an arm in LF over Harper’s arm any day.
So….. Harper’s slightly better at the plate, currently. Is as “good” a fielder as Schwarber. And Harper will cost about 10 times as much as Harper, at least for 2019…. using MLBTR’s arbitration estimations and projected Harper AAV here. Schwarber’s projected to make $3.1M in 2019. They have Harper’s new deal worth $30M AAV…. for the next decade and a half. Yes….. I get that the media has been hyping the crap out of Harper the last 7 years despite his numbers not really deserving such hype…… other than what is looking like his one FLUKE year in which he was MVP. Take Harper’s ONE season out of his SEVEN his numbers look to be about a .275 BA, .370-.380 OBP, and averages about 24 HRs…… while missing a minimum of 10-20 games a year. THEN…… there’s the personality/ego to deal with.
Bottom line….. I just don’t get why people and the media act like Harper is this “generational talent.” Why? Because he had one random excellent year in which he won the MVP? I find it odd people 1) ignore his awful defense while make that a focal point for pretty much any other player – not just Schwarber, and 2) think ONE year out of SEVEN is a good way to judge a player. It reminds me of the one year Mauer hit 20+ HRs. EVERYONE thought that power was legit. I was skeptical. People on message boards said I was pessimistic and negative for the sake of being negative. I refuted with “look at his other seasons….. there’s no indication the guy can regularly hit 10 HRs let alone 20 year in and year out.” I was called crazy. We all know how that turned out. It’s the same situation here. People are acting like Harper is lock each year to hit his 2015 numbers, 40+ HRs, .330 BA, .460 OBP, and 1.109 OPS.
I’m not saying Harper isn’t a good player. I just don’t think he’s worth remotely close to what people and the media are saying he’s worth….. and in the media’s case – what they’ve been saying he’s worth before he even made his MLB debut. Their hype and drooling over his balls is quite possibly the most annoying thing in MLB.
mike127
A little too much KB—-and don’t even mention Harper’s defense—by the time they get to the first opt out—the DH will be part of the National League. It’s coming. It’s a tough sell remotely comparing Schwarber to Harper….Schwarber has hit .246, .211, and .238. Sure you can absolutely sell that Harper may not be that generational player, worth a decade of years and a lifetime of lottery winnings, just don’t use Schwarber as a measuring stick.
norcalblue
There is NO WAY Andrew Friedman or Stan Kasten would agree to give a 14 year deal to Harper for even $350 mils. Absurd. Come on man, that’s a deal George Steinbrenner would have never agreed to.
Harper is going back to Nats.
chound
Of course there is a way they would, I just don’t think they do.
norcalblue
That’s fair. Someone is gonna take him; but those numbers are just crazy stupid. This isn’t 2008 where there was just more stupid money out there. Harper and Machado (and their agencies) are going to be surprised by just how few teams there are willing to entertain even 10 years.
vacommish
This is a bizarre list. Braves have $40-$60m to spend and all they come out of free agency with on this list is a 32 Michael Brantley and a closer in Cody Allen. While I know they won’t spend as much as they will ultimately acquire via trade, I’d have to think a better RF is in the mix unless they find a platoon partner for Duvall (who may go in a package for Realmulto). At any rate, praying for a more favorable outcome than listed here.
SKbreesy
The Red Sox won’t sign Miller or Eovaldi, since the Yankees 5 year outlook looks so much better, The Sox are going to trade all the killer Bs, Sale, and everyone else they can, so they can restock the farm system. On top of that they’ll probably fire Cora because he was lucky to win the title, and only reason why he did was he batted JD 3rd some of the games instead of 4th…
ASapsFables
How does Dave Dombrowski fit into this scheme of yours? As a younger GM he built teams in Montreal, Miami and Detroit from the ground up. Boston was his first job in which he inherited a team ready to win and he reached the pinnacle 3 years later.
At 62 this may be Dombrowski’s last job as an MLB executive. I just don’t see him completely tearing things down in Boston. Total rebuilds are not something the Red Sox or Yankees have done in recent times. Reloading and retooling maybe. Gutting a team? Not so much.
SKbreesy
I don’t actually believe this, but this has been the ongoing posts of 2 supposed lifelong Red Sox fans.
stoth15
give a 1.3 war player 420million dollars keep dreaming
its_happening
Ambitious predictions.
Absurd. But Ambitious.
steelerbravenation
1. Harper to Giants
2. Machado to Phillies
3. Corbin to Yankees
4. Kuechel to Brewers
5. Kimbrell to Red Sox
6. Grandal to Angels
7. Eovaldi to Red Sox
8. Pollock to Seattle
9. Happ to Yankees
10. Brantley to Twins
Braves I hope sign Robertson, Markakis & Soria
Trade for Realmuto & Greinke
punchandjudy
The Dodgers have a boatload of money to spend this winter, so it’s hard to imagine that they don’t come away with some major free agents.
justin-turner overdrive
Can people look at the Giants payroll ONE time please? They have the 3rd overall highest payroll at $202M – there’s ZERO chance they sign anymore big without moving any of Posey, Shark, Cueto, Longo, Crawford, Belt and Melancon. None. They aren’t pushing the payroll to $300M you freaks. lol
HaloShane
If this is correct, it sounds like your typical Angels move. Go after the has beens with a “name” because the fan base does not know any better….
RadioPirate
As a Giants fan, man, these predictions are disheartening. I appreciate the caveat regarding the fact that the Giants are hard to predict since they don’t have a GM but if the new guy/gal follows these predictions, he/she should be fired on the spot.
stansfield123
So the Yankees are gonna only commit $30M of their 2019 budget to free agents? That would put them at $170M-ish payroll for 2019. Meanwhile, your predictions would put the Red Sox at $240M, plus a bunch of luxury tax, and $12M they owe Rusney Castillo….putting the total at around $270M.
I guess it’s possible that they Yankees will take on $70-80M worth of payroll in trades alone, but, more likely, they will spend on at least one more starting pitcher (Happ, Morton, etc.), sign Daniel Murphy because they need a left handed hitter, and at least one more reliever (since they’re losing two to free agency this year, and then Betances next year).
stansfield123
Okay, so my numbers above are pretty far off the mark. I should’ve looked them up and then posted. But I looked them up now, on Cot’s Baseball (arbitration money is estimated, everything else is exact), and here they are:
Red Sox current payroll for 2019: $219M
Yankees: $165M
Red Sox also owe $12M to Castillo, on top of that, and they pay a higher rate of luxury tax.
So the Yankees have a lot more money to spend. There’s no way they limit themselves to two signings, at a total of $31M/year.
indiansfan44
When have the Dodgers under this ownership payed for a big time free agent or resigned a player for star money other than Kershaw? And 14 years is crazy and stupid and any GM that wants to offer a contract like that should be immediately fired by the owner. Because of Harper and Machado being so young a 7 or 8 year deal might be ok but has there ever been a contract of 8+ years that didn’t result in crippling the organization financially when the player was hurt/declined or trading them to a big money team for next to nothing? I can’t think of any.
ASapsFables
Contracts of 8+ years in MLB are pretty rare so not a huge sample size to work with. Joey Votto’s 2012 extension with the Reds that added $225 million over 10 years to the last two seasons of his previous contract looked pretty good until 2018 when his power output took a nosedive. I would imagine that if Votto agreed to waive his no-trade rights this offseason the Reds would still find a few willing takers despite his 35-year old age and the 5 guaranteed years of $25MM (+ one option year) still remaining on his deal.
jekporkins
While I actually agree the Dodgers and Phillies sign those two, I can’t see a team being insane enough to offer 13 or 14 years. I don’t care if these guys are 26.
Would you rather have one player for $30 million or three for $10 million and a whole lot less years? This isn’t the NBA where one player is going to take your team to the playoffs no matter what. In fact, Harper didn’t take the Nats anywhere this year and Manny didn’t exactly impress with his attitude at the World Series.
thetruth 2
The Cubs have Heyward’s bad contract stuck in RF and Kyle Schwarber who they’re high on in LF. They’re not moving Heyward to CF and making that contract worse. They’re not signing any outfielders.
Harper to LAD is unlikely. They have the money but their current ownership avoids such big contracts.
ASapsFables
I’d be very surprised to see the Cubs pursue Andrew McCutchen this offseason unless they feel he could solve the problem they have had at the leadoff spot for the past two seasons. I also believe the Cubs would be more likely to sign either A.J. Pollock or D.J. LeMahieu to fill that role, neither player even being suggested as a possibility on the North Side of Chicago in this article.
nik
Don’t sleep on the Mets this time. The only two GMs to get Wilpons to spend on stars were Omar & Steve Phillips. The two people running the show now are,… Omar & a player agent/ salesman who always gets them to overspend.
The cash is there and Omar is the Latin Whisperer… If the Mets wake up and want Machado, they’ll likely get him.
I think BVW is here to create a winner while Fred Wilpon is alive to enjoy it,
stansfield123
Remember when Cespedes was gonna be the flashy signing that creates a winner? Signing Machado would be a repeat of that plan, on an even bigger scale….and result in an even more epic failure.
When something isn’t working, you don’t double down on it. You learn from others’ success: you look at what their strategy was, and adopt it.
The winning strategy is to rebuild first (by turning the few big stars you have into young, controllable talent, and then, once you only have a few holes to fill, spend big. That’s what every winning team has: a base of controllable, young talent, and then free agents brought in on top of that.
nik
Are you really comparing Ces to Manny Machado? lol C’mon now.. At 27, Machado has had twice his career already.
It’s not doubling down, it’s building this properly. The team already HAS a young core. Why reset when you already rebuilt? The point of rebuilding is to finish the team, not just reset all the time.
From July 1st, they had the BEST record in the NL East as-is. They’re NYC with a massive revenue stream, plus they have been holding back DWrights insurance money from payroll in case he came back.
They need one proven power hitter who doesn’t get hurt, a decent catcher, a couple of bullpen arms and the team will win.
Machado gives them a dynamic young infield when you add-in Alonso. Or, you can swap Rosario for Realmuto, slide MM to short, move McNeil to 3rd and bring back Murphy or Cabrera for 2B. The outfield is fine with Nimmo, Bruce and Conforto. The rotation is excellent and the bullpen needs two back end pieces. It just takes some cash and a sales pitch.
This feels like the year they got Pedro & Beltran.
NickyNoodles
“The winning strategy is to rebuild first (by turning the few big stars you have into young, controllable talent, and then, once you only have a few holes to fill, spend big. That’s what every winning team has: a base of controllable, young talent, and then free agents brought in on top of that.”
So what you’re saying is…
1B – Peter Alonso (home grown)
2B – Jeff McNeil (home grown)
SS – Ahmed Rosario (home grown)
OF – Conforto, Nimmo (home grown)
SP – deGrom, Syndergaard, Matz, Wheeler (2 of 4 are home grown, all are under controllable contracts for the next 2 to 3 years)
The Mets absolutely have the nucleus to build around. Cespedes hasn’t been healthy but, when he has been he’s lifted that offense. He’ll likely be out until late July/August. I’m not saying they’ll open the bank but…they’ve got a new GM who has already hinted at spending money and doing what it takes to win. Also, their owners, the Wilpons quoted their lack of FA spending on the ex-GM Alderson. I wouldn’t sleep on the Mets this off-season.
chound
Until the Mets are sold to a new owner, I’ll “sleep on the Mets” every season here on out.
GeoKaplan
The idea of the Angels signing both Sabathia and Happ, while planning on Heaney and Skaggs, would be 4 LH SP in the rotation. Doubtful they’d do both. Sabathia makes sense because he apparently has a little left in the tank, wants to play on West Coast, and wants only one year deal before he retires at end of season, so when Ohtani is ready to return to the rotation, the spot would be open.
Happ, on the other hand, doesn’t feel like an Eppler move. I can see him getting excited over former Yankee Eovaldi, but probably not if bidding war breaks out.
punchandjudy
Happ’s appeal for the Angels would be that they DESPERATELY need innings. Even if Happ became a 4.00 ERA guy, he would provide steady innings. That rotation has to have that. Every single pitcher in their rotation this season came with injury concerns or were just coming back from injuries. Happ’s dependability, at least in my view, could be appealing to them.
GeoKaplan
Of course, you could be right.
But Eppler has made numerous references to the “volatility” of pitchers. He was speaking more about relievers and why he wasn’t in the market for the various closers and setup men last year, but also with SP. it doesn’t fit his profile to pay top dollar over multiple years for a 36-year-old, unless they’re outrageously team-friendly terms ( like low base, vesting options, etc). Happ figures to receive stronger offers than that.
bernbabybern
So the Yankees have up to 80-90 mil of payroll space and their top signings are going to be Corbin and Ottavino?
augold5
Arguably the top SP and RP available in free agency. What are you complaining about??
RedRooster
PSA: Opt outs in contracts do not benefit the team. Those who say that the opt-out can benefit the team by saving them from the decline years are forgetting two key details:
1. If the player opts out, his production will just have to be replaced. And doing so will cost more than whatever money he is leaving on the table.
2. Even in a scenario where the team just wants to get out from under the decline years regardless of how well the player is playing now, if not for the opt out, the team would still be able to get out from under the decline years by trading the player and would probably be able to get back a good prospect or two in the trade. Easily beats losing the player for nothing.
In the end, the fact that most players with opt outs that actually use them end up re-upping with their original team for more money should tell you something about how much opt outs benefit teams.
csamson11
?????
If Miller, Allen, Brach, Herrera, Murphy, and LeMahieu sign for such small deals, the Cubs will end up with two of them in my opinion. Also not sure where the Cubs would put Cutch, because he isn’t platooning for 15mil and I don’t see him starting barring some sort of trade involving Schwarber.
Jean Matrac
Schwarber has improved his “D”, but he’s still nowhere near the defender that Cutch is. Schwarber has gone from an absolutely terrible, defensive liability to barely adequate. Switching out Schwarber’s 1.5 WAR, for McCutchen’s 2.8 WAR would be a good move for the Cubs.
ChiSoxCity
Adding McCutchen to the mix does zip for the Cubs—other than sending a rather dubious message your players and fans.
Third largest media market in the U.S.;multi-billion dollar tv deal pending; worldwide following thanks to wgn; record home attendance; embarrassing collapse to what should have been another WS appearance; and the best you can do is add a 32 yr-old declining OF whose played for three teams in two years? If they don’t sign one of the top two bats available, they better do SOMETHING to shake things up. Trade some combination of Schwarber, Happ, Almora, or Russell for an impact bat or high ceiling prospects. Sign Pollock and a few more bp arms… SOMETHING. Otherwise, you can forget about making the playoffs anytime soon with this team as constructed. It was a good run, but it’s over.
megaj
Happ, Almora, and Russell could be trade pieces but definitely not Schwarber. Even though he has been hitting 30 hrs per season and has a solid OBP., he has underachieved and should not have altered his swing. If can close the gap on his splits vs. lefties, and get more at bats from Maddon, the guy can easily top 40 homers a year.. Only a tool would give up Schwarber at this point, Now, if he has another disappointing year, then I am all ears, but not yet!
megaj
He is more than “barely adequate” and he has a great arm out there as well.. If his dope manager gives him more at bats in the middle of the lineup, he easily hits 40hr and 100rbi. Why would you trade that away and pay someone else more???
Will32
I understand that the fact that the Giants don’t have a GM in place makes it difficult to predict who they’ll target in free agency. But I don’t understand your logic with your predictions relating to them. They’re in dire need of outfield help in a decently strong outfield class this year but you don’t have them signing any outfielders. They simply can’t go into next season with Duggar, Slater, and Hernandez as their starters. I also don’t understand why they sign and pay more for Anibal Sanchez when they could re=sign their own guy, Derek Holland, for less.
I think it’s safe to say they add an outfielder and a starting pitcher. Perhaps a second baseman depending on what they do with Joe Panik.
Jean Matrac
Dude, what are you talking about? They have Pollock, who’s #8 on their list, going to the Giants.
Zamarrda
Wrong side of 30. We’ve been (and still are)there before.
Jean Matrac
You missed the point. He was complaining that no OFers, SF’s greatest need, were predicted to be going there. I just pointed out that was not the case. Whether Pollock is the right guy or not is an entirely different discussion.
Will32
Yea, my bad. I guess when scrolling I just missed it. But still, Pollock would be a poor signing, in my opinion. Flashbacks of Aaron Rowand plague me just thinking of it… Would much rather see them go after Brantley. But I still don’t understand the Sanchez prediction.
Jean Matrac
No big deal; it’s an easy oversight. I too prefer Brantley to Pollock, but both come with health gambles. My guess is the better choice of the 2 will be the one that can stay healthy, and your guess is as good as mine.
Will32
Whoops. Just noticed you have Pollock going to the Giants. Aaron Rowand 2.0
hopper15
He’s better than Rowand but the Giants are in no position to be surrendering draftpicks right now. There rebuilding whether they want to admit it or not.
Tko11
“There”
Zamarrda
Couldn’t help but laugh when I saw the only Giants pick ups being pollack and sanchez. Just what they need-2 more guys on the wrong side of 30 (31 and 35). Trust me, they won’t be making that mistake again because if they do they will be playing ball in an empty stadium.
As for Harper-good luck with that prediction and if it happens I hope it’s to the dodgers because whomever pays close to a half billion for 1 player is setting their organization up for failure for decades to come.
jordsmac26
Not sure who put the down vote on this but you ain’t wrong a lot of this makes no sense. Whole of the AL east, Giants and Braves would all be fuming wth this trash
justin-turner overdrive
Do you really think the giants will have a $300M payroll? Get out of here with that nonsense.
NuckBobFutting
Pirates make a run at LaMahieu
justin-turner overdrive
Good call.
BBW
Harper to LA? Good idea. Roberts & management would love a harper/kemp platoon. Hahahaha Dopey analytics nerds
Disco Dave
420 for Harper eh? niiiice…roll me one too…
silverbackjack
I don’t think the jays are going to do a lot but… Trevor Cahill? yah ok.
punchandjudy
I like the fit of Wilson Ramos to the Dodgers.
PhanaticDuck26
if only there were some kind of contest to see if all of these haters could actually out-predict Tim and the gang…
gomerhodge71
Nobody is going to commit to 13 or 14 years. Ten max. McCutcheon goes to the Mets. Sabathia stays with the Yankees. Kimbrel to the Cubs. Keuchel to the Angels.
emt126
Easily the dumbest article written on the site.
driftcat28 2
Yankees will get two pitchers at least, between CC, Corbin, Happ, & (dark horse candidate) Eovaldi. Also no way they let Robertson walk to the Mets, just to sign Ottovino.
dtstlou66
I just wanted to comment that Trade Rumours comprehensive free agent list was well thought out and was one of the more informative articles covering free agency. I printed it out and will use it as a reference checklist during the hot stove season.
Nice job!
bravesfan
All I know is if the braves go get Brantley and a declining Allen like this article suggest, instead of getting 1 or two elite bullpen arms (which this market is flooded with) I will lose my freaking mind. MB is a really good ball player but any money is to much money for someone that can easily sit the bench all year with health problems.
Trade rumors should do a separate article once the season is done to see how many they got right and/or how close they were on the contract
Wainofan
Kimbrel to Cards for 4 years 70 mil? What would help a bullpen more, not just cards but any team needing bullpen upgrade, Kimbrel at that cost or two of Robertson, Miller, Kelly, Ottavino, Britton at roughly same AAV? Usually with bullpens it’s quantity. For cards say Miller and Kelly makes more sense. Bullpen of Miller, Kelly, Hicks, Brebbia, Waino, Hudson and Reyes would be as tough as anyone with no set “closer” role, just bring in whoever depending on situation
gomerhodge71
Any team that commits four years to Kimbrel is committing suicide. He has problems. Arm, elbow, mentally, whatever. There’s an issue there. Kelly to the Cards makes sense. He’ll get a lot of offers following his WS performance.
strostro
2/22 seems a bit high for Cahill, and Moustakes is definitely not going to the Royals for only 2/16
justin-turner overdrive
You think 1-tool Moustakas is worth more than that but Cahill and his 3.54 FIP don’t deserve 11 mill a year? Wrong on both counts. Moustakas will be lucky to get 1/4 this offseason and someone might throw 3 years at Cahill.
greenmonster08
MLBTR is a reasonable source but I am going to predict they’re going to be wrong virtually across the board here. If I was a betting man (I am) and the O/U was 5.5 on correct destinations I would take the under. I hope they are off on the $ and terms as well as if they are even close it’s getting way outta hand.
zaneduarte
The only thing this article gets right is that the Mariners won’t be in on any legit Free Agent- Ervin Santana is the only player they list going to Seattle. For a team that holds the longest playoff drought in North America, that’s saying something- We will continue to spin in mediocrity and eventually fall to becoming a perennial 100 loss team. Hopefully this time around they will learn to pick great players in the draft and then develop them properly without rushing them to the majors. I believe the Mariners are at least 6 years away from becoming a playoff team.
justin-turner overdrive
DiPoto is the worst GM in MLB. Easily. Massively, MASSIVELY overrated. Just because you make a lot of trades does not mean you have a clue what you’re doing. Seattle needs to move on from him and do a proper rebuild, with the assets they have, they could do a quick 18 month turnaround, not a 3 year one.
thatdudetg
I guess we forgot the Rangers existed? No free agents, and not even a mention on teams that don’t get a free agent.
Hard to believe they don’t go after a pitcher.
I generally enjoy y’all’s post here. However, this is a little insane.
southpaw2153
I think Harper and Machado are in for a surprise when it comes to the offers they are going to receive. They are both going to get paid a lot of money- hopefully not by my Yankees – but neither is getting more than an 8 – 10 year deal.
I really would like to see Corbin in a Yankee uniform, I just hope it doesn’t take a 6-year deal to do it.
Would also like to see Happ back. No CC, tho
steelerbravenation
CC will be in Oakland next season
justin-turner overdrive
If the A’s Opening Day rotation is going to end up Kluber-Keuchel-Bauer-CC-Luzardo, lol that’s video game style – watch out world!!!
steelerbravenation
If the money/years are expected to be the same I would much rather have McCutchen over Brantley for the Braves although I really don’t want either of them
I would much rather resign Markakis due to his leadership and intangibles. I understand he fell off the 2nd half but to me he was batting in a spot in the order that doesn’t fit his strengths. To me he would be a great 2 hole hitter batting in front of Freeman and behind Acuna. I say go all in and do what you gotta do to get Realmuto and he bats 4th. Where I would expect more of the 2nd half Markakis than the 1st half I do expect more of a step forward from Albies/Swanson/Camargo and a rebound from Inciarte to help with the step down from Markakis. Plus keep Duvall to be able to give Markakis a consistent breather that he wasn’t afforded last year. This young team needs leadership and you know what you get with Markakis.
Gohora, Riley & Contrares plus a lower prospect should be able to get Realmuto and Allard & Julio should get Greinke with them eating some money.
Use the some more of the money to shore up the bullpen with Robertson & Soria. They are both strike throwers and the bullpen needs that.
Also Mark Reynolds would be the perfect bench piece. Could play 1st to give Freddie a day off and would be a great pinch hitter option for a team that truly lacked one last year. Would prefer Pearce but I think he priced himself out of the Braves with the postseason he had.
start_wearing_purple
-Harper to the Phillies, 8 years at 35 per year. Front loaded with an opt out after 2 years.
-Machado to the yankees, 10 years at 27 per year. Opt out clause after 3.
Why so much for Harper and less for Machado. I think the Phillies want to make a splash and they’ll overbid. I think Machado hurt his case taking a few bidders out of the running and he’ll take what ever major offer the yankees make.
-Corbin to the yankees, 5 years at 24 per year. The Steinbrenners are making the noise that suggest they’re gonna do what their father used to do when disappointed.
-Keushel stays with the Astros, 4 years at 20 per year. Though I think he’ll wait for Corbin to sign to set the market.
-Kimbrel to the Cubs, 5 years at 18 per year. It just seems like a Theo-esque move.
swanhenge
I agreed all the way to Kimbrel. Theo has historically stayed away from signing closers to big contracts. Papelbon, Foulk and Chapman immediately come to mind. I think they’re still on board w Morrow. I could see Brach being signed to help w 6-8 innings.
start_wearing_purple
Fair points and I’ll admit my Kimbrel prediction is more of a shot in the dark.
ChiSoxCity
Kimbrel will be underutilized in Chicago if they’re not scoring runs. I’d rather see them give 36MM to Machado than 18MM to a closer per year.
Gordon Lightfoot
Harper is not as accomplished as Alex Rodriguez, at age 26, and neither is Harper a steroid abuser. All of ARoid’s stats can be thrown out, guy has no business being involved in baseball.
Interesting list, though I don’t see anyone getting more than a 10-year deal full of opt-outs. No way I give the undeniably lazy Machado 13-years – no way. Also, Eovaldi ends up being overpaid in Oakland. He’s the classic hyped-up, recent playoff-run guy – Dexter Fowler.
sidewinder11
I’d like to see Maldonado end up with Arizona. He fits the mold of what their FO has been looking for with catchers and he comes with more offensive upside than Jeff Mathis, who has really only stuck with the club because he’s Greinkes personal favorite
reflect
What is the logic behind Harper getting more money than Machado? The latter has been far more valuable over the last few years.
to4
1.Bellinger CF
2.LeMahieu 2B
3.Seager SS
4.Turner 3B
5.Harper RF
6.Kemp/Taylor LF
7.Muncy/Freese 1B
8.Barnes C
9.Kershaw SP
If I was the Dodgers, after consecutive WS losses, nowthst they have Kershaw, I would go all in on Harper, LeMahieu and low cost high reward RL, Britton and Miller. all 4 players is something the Dodgers really need if they want to put an end to it.
Erik
They’ll be lucky to get two things on this list even close to being right
tigertom0210
Any GM who signs McCutchen for more than one year @ $4 million will get his walking papers.. Andrew will be waiting until April, and have to take a spot with some rebuilding team.
tigertom0210
Bryce Harper is only averaging about 4 WAR a season in the bigs. Take away 2015, and his WAR goes down to 3 a year. No way he’s worth $30 million a year for 14 years. Haven’t they learned not to give long-term contracts to sluggers that last into their mid to late 30s? Have any of them ever worked out? In five or six years he’ll be limping around as somebody’s DH.
Mike Rubin
The Giants apparently only end up with AJ Pollack, another athlete in decline who, between age and ballpark effects, will struggle to have a league-average season. Another long year for San Franciscans, if you are correct.
Mike Rubin
And Anibal Sanchez, too. Even more pathetic. As bad as the existing roster’s arms can be, they can eat innings as effectively as Sanchez over the course of a season.
Carter1515
That article was rather humbling and depressing as a Pirates fan. So frustrating how the MLB is structured and their lack of a salary cap. The World Series consisted of the largest payroll and 3rd largest payroll. A few bad drafts ultimately do you in as a small market team. They don’t have the funds to make up the difference.
ChiSoxCity
Agreed. It’s shameful that three teams are encouraged to feast on the other 27 every off-season. A salary cap would allow teams like the Pirates, Rays, A’s to keep their core players and remain competitive for the fans. Sadly, the purists in the media and executive offices don’t care about people, only $$.
moviejay
I think this list slightly overestimates what some of these hitters will get as I believe the 30+ yr-olds will continue to see something of a freeze. Adam Jones at about $8m seems right, but Cutch at $15m per? I don’t think so. Expect more of a 2/$25ish or 3/$36 for him.
My Jays are going to mostly let the kids play and sort themselves out in ’19, so I’m not sure about them signing Cahill. After the failed signing of Garcia and Estrada’s struggles with injuries, I feel like the Jays may want a Shields just for the sake of eating innings, or possibly a Bucholz or Richards.
hammertime510
I hope the A’s go after Kikuchi and trade for Realmuto.
swanhenge
Kluber is getting traded to ATL and that will shake up everyone’s plans.
Watch PHIL make a big push for either Corbin/Kuechel. I can see Donaldson ending up here as well.
WASH will get the one PHIL doesn’t sign and finally parts w Robles to get Realmuto.
Cubs are lurking for either Harper/Machado. One of those two will be a Cub next year.
Yanks make a big push for Carrasco, but settle for Ryu and Justus Sheffield wins rookie of the year.
Boston gets either Britton or Miller. If they had the farm, they would make a run at Realmuto. Also it would be awesome to see them resign Eovaldi and make him their closer. I know, I know…but it’s my list, lol.
swanhenge
I also think last off season was the beginning of how teams view FA players. Vets w any sort of mileage on them (Cutch, Moose, Cruz, etc) will have to temper their expectations. Pride will hold them out until Jan/Feb, but teams no longer pay for past performance. Expect lots of 1 year deals or even 2 year w low AAVs. Last season is the new normal.
YourDaddy
Carrasco is the most likely Cleveland starter to be traded. That won’t shake up much.
Phillies starters were 3rd best in the NL and everyone is coming back. No way they pony up for a starting pitcher.
Franco hit .270/.314/.467/.780 with 22 HR in 11 starts at 3B for the Phillies. That does not sound like a hole in the lineup to me that would necessitate spending big bucks on an over the hill Donaldson.
The Cubs just made a trade strictly to lower payroll so they could afford a $20 million Hamels. Why would you think they would spend $30+ million AAV on a long term deal for either Harper (who plays the same position as the Cubs most expensive player right now) or Machado (who plays the same position as Baez)? That makes absolutely no sense to me.
The Yankees will make a big push for Corbin and possibly Kikuchi if they can’t resign CC. No way they go big in trade for Carrasco.
The Red Sox probably do make a run at Miller to replace Joe Kelly in the pen. They will also make a big run at Kimbrel who has been exceptional for them putting up a 2.44 ERA with 305 SO in 184 IP over the past 3 seasons.
Sun Singh
Haha. Silly rabbit…Th Yankees are the fat kid about to jump in the deep end of the pool from a height of 25 feet. Good job but this list is fundamentally flawed from the jump. Red Sox fan, Cleveland Fan, or a Bronx Bomber…..there is no way you can believe that the Yankees will be denied a piece of that Harper-Machado potato pie.
Wallets are open. All eyes are on the Cashman and the Yankees who need to respond to the Bo Sux 2018 chip. This will be a 2009 Xmas revisited. The presents are on the shelf. Let’s wrap them up and bring them home. We have close to $50M in unpromised salaries that can be dispensed….. Picking up Corbin, Machado, Harper, and Kluber (for Sheffield, Andujar and Frazier) is the only NYC thing to do. Is it a good move to execute this plan? Probably not.. Will it most likely happen? YES…. Promise.
ChiSoxCity
All they need to win a championship is two quality starting pitchers. The rest is excess, whatever. Might as well just hand the cash over to a worthy charity in exchange for a ring, and get it over with. Rating will fall thru the floor for another 8-9 years like it did the last time the Yankees bought a championship.
Sun Singh
YES viewership is higher than its ever been. Where r u getting your facts from?
ChiSoxCity
Serious online discourse has been destroyed by people just like you, who struggle with context and nuance. Do everyone a favor and stick to instagram.
Begamin
The Red Sox just “bought” their ring by having the highest payroll in the league (unless the Nats beat them out) with a win against the Dodgers (who has tried so very hard to buy one for the last 5 years at least) and ratings are fine. But ratings will go down when the Yankees get one or two pitchers? Please, most of the Yankees key players are homegrown. They build their team through the draft and trading market and its still not enough for you?
Bitter white sox fan, just because your team wont pump squat into the payroll doesnt mean people will stop watching baseball if the Yankees add an arm or two
jmi1950
Really?? The NYYs have spent over 2 BILLION the last 9 yrs for ZERO trips to the WS. They get under the Lux Tax for one yr and suddenly they are the model “reasonable ” payroll team. In the last 15 yrs the NYYs have paid 341 MM in Lux Tax mostly for high priced FAs. The Sox a mere 25 MM for 4 WS titles. So get real NYY fans. Your team spends the most and gets the least per $.
JKB 2
@Sun Singh
You “response” commentators crack me up. Yankees are always trying to improve. They even won 100 games themselves. They are not “responding” to anything other than always trying to improve.
They do not need Harper or Machado and you think they want both?
arc89
Am I the only one that feels those prices are way extreme what they will be when the season starts. Corbin is not going to get $20 million a year for a long term deal when he hasn’t pitched that many innings the last few years. So many others that will not be getting those big contracts. The team that will lose the most money is the team that signs machado. He is no winner but a bad attitude that will bring a club down.
redsfan48
Why would the Reds sign Harvey at 2/$22M if Gio Gonzalez gets 2/$24 and Anibal Sanchez also gets 2/$22? I think both are superior pitchers to Harvey
Begamin
I can see the Yankees signing both Corbin and Kikuchi, and then let Sheffield take the #5 spot to open the season. We cant forget that they have Jordan Montgomery who quietly put up some decent seasons before his injury. But thats at least thats what I want to happen.
I have a feeling Eovaldi wont go back to NYY, as they kicked him to the curb after getting TJ again. Maybe the Yankees go after Kuechel?
No way does Robertson sign with the Mets. I know he is representing himself in free agency but he cant make that big of a mistake
bruinsfan94 2
Am I missing something? Where is Steve Pierce? Not even a mention???
JKB 2
Why is it worth noting that Boras place Hosmer with the Padres when discussing Harper?
Harper will have a market and numerous offers. Boras did well to create one for Hosmer and con the Padres but there will not need to be a market created for Harper. It already exists
coocoo
Corbin will be a Yankee. Resign cc and happ. Let Sheffield and Adams pitch relief and spot start
ThatBallwasBryzzoed
Harper is not getting 14 years and anywhere near 430 million
Cubs dont need Cutch
Why would Joe kelly leave the red Sox he just won a world series with them .
The only prediction that seems right is mike moustakas going back to the royals.
I think wade miley will leave Milwaukee as well.
Sabathia is not leaving New York.
joew
I love Cutch, but no way 3 year 45. Last season it looked like he was going to have another 2016 stinker of a season.. but turned it on there for a while. Frankly surprising to see him so high up in the rankings.
In fact a lot of these prices seem rather high. except for the obvious top 5-10 or a team with an EXTREME need I can see a lot of these guy throwing around a ball in free agent spring training if they’re expecting those prices.
Matt Rox
My stab at top 20
Bryce Harper – 15 years 435 Million (DODGERS)
Manny Machado- 10 years 350 Million (DODGERS)
Patrick Corbon- 8 years 272 Million (DBACKS)
Dallas Keuchel – 3 years 85 Million (GIANTS)
Craig Kimbrel – 7 years 147 Million (YANKEES)
Yasmani Grandal – 2 years 55 Million (DODGERS
Nathan Eovaldi – 5 years 75 Million (RED SOX)
AJ Pollack- 4 years 65 Million (WHITE SOX)
JA Happ – 3 years 60 Million (ANGELS)
Michael Brantley – 2 years 50 Million (GIANTS)
Andrew McCutchen – 2 years 30 Million (CARDINALS)
Yusei Kikuchi – 6 years 70 Million (PADRES)
Josh Donaldson- 2 years 40 Million (CARDINALS)
Charlie Morton – 1 year 25 Million (ASTROS)
Wilson Ramos – 2 years 30 Million (TIGERS)
Marwin Gonzalez – 3 years 36 Million (TWINS)
Jeurys Familia -1 year 17 Million (A’s)
Zach Britton – 3 years 45 Million (Red Sox)
David RObertson – 3 years 45 Million (Mets)
Hyun-Jin Ryu – 5 years 40 Million (With heavy incentives if he can stay healthy) (Dodgers)
ThatBallwasBryzzoed
You want the Dodgers to spend over a billion dollars? And 785mill for 2 players for 25 years. Grandal is not staying with the Dodgers. He nearly blew the NLCS single handedly. He was awful in the world series.
Why would Dallas Keuchel go to a guaranteed last place team. He would never go there. He has zero chance to win.
I can see you’re either a brewers fan or just hate the Cubs. They’ll sign at least one of the players listed in this article
Ron Stearns
Please put the hucha pipe away. These are all so ludicrous it is hard to even single one out but Grandal 2 years $55 million…really?
megaj
McCutchen or Harper to the Cubs? That would either force Schwarber to be traded or move Heyward to CF, both of which downgrade the Cubs because Heyward is being paid to win gold gloves in RF and Schwarber is a 40HR beast just waiting to crack his shell.. Epstein is not a fool, so that isn’t happening. The only logical pickup for the Cubs outfield is picking up AJ Pollock. As mentioned above, most of his injuries have been flukes and fractures and he has won a GG as well. Anything close to 2015 Pollock, and the Cubs have a serious spark at the top a very good lineup.
ThatBallwasBryzzoed
The Cubs have 3 players that are winning gold gloves this year. Possibly an mvp with Baez. As much as yelich had a great second half. The mvp is a reward for the entire season not for 2 and half months. Baez was consistent all year.
ASapsFables
Any other prognostications oh great seer? You were one for three with the Gold Glove predictions and your namesake had to settle in sharing the honor with a more deserving Freddie Freeman this season. You can also forget about Javier Baez winning the 2018 NL MVP award as well. That will go to Christian Yelich who was most responsible for the Cubs losing the NL Central down the stretch this season.
YourDaddy
GG has nothing to do with defensive performance. It has to do with notoriety.
Baez and I have the same shot at an NL MVP in 2018. Zero. Yelich, Rendon, or Arenado. No one else is in the conversation.
Yelich – .326/.402/.598/1.000 with a .422 wOBA and a 164 OPS+ and a WAR 43.4% higher than Baez. Over 2 full points higher – 7.6 vs 5.3.
Baez – .290/.326/.554/.881 with a .366 wOBA and 126 OPS+
That is a no contest. Say goodnight Gracie.
tigerfan1968
I checked my calendar to see if it was April 1 and it was not. Then I wondered if player agents have slipped the writer some money under the table. Teams have figured out a long time ago that one player does not make you a winner and will offer much less in guaranteed money and years. There will be opt out clauses galore for the big contracts. Machado as good as he is will likely have only four or five teams bidding for him. I am bookmarking this article so I can have some laughs as I look out at the February snow. If this was Vegas I would take the UNDER on every prediction.
slider32
One thing for sure neither Machado or Harper will ever live up to thier contracts, and they may actually keep their teams from building a world series winner.
stansfield123
Yeah okay, you know the future.
Roll
Doesnt have to look into the future, history has shown there are more busts than wins for 100M+ contracts especially at the back end of the contracts.
YourDaddy
Eovaldi to the Padres. 4 years, $58 million with 5th year option and $2 million option buyout.
stansfield123
Question: are there rules in the CBA limiting the length of contracts? Something that would keep the Dodgers from making the Harper contract a front loaded 20 years, $420M, instead, to reduce their luxury tax payroll even more?
Or is it at the discretion of the commissioner to allow it or not?
Roll
I dont believe they have a limit to the years but they do have a calculation where they use average dollars so if you front or backload a contract it is still worth the same every year so as not to game the luxury tax.
sportingdissent
Is there no free agent prediction contest anymore?
Slipknot37
Tim said during a chat that he will try for it next year
Ryan George
“The 30-year-old isn’t an exciting option at second base”. I don’t get this. LeMehieu is a career .298 hitter just 2 years removed from the NL Batting Title. On top of that, he’s a 3 time Gold Glover. Sure he’s not going to hit 30 home runs a year but I don’t think that’s any reason to downplay the impact he could have on a team as a free agent signing.
The Yankees could look at signing him to fill in the void from Didi’s injury. Gleyber could slide back to his natural position at shortstop and DJ would take over at second. This would be a pretty good consolation prize should Machado sign elsewhere.
Ron Stearns
I am a Braves fan and would be very happy with these predictions. The last thing I want to do Is overspend on free agents. I cannot imagine paying anyone $30 million a year EVER! Can you imagine Harper even still playing at 40 years old and what he would actually be worth in reality then? I just really can’t think of very many whose teams are as happy on the back end as they are on the front end. It’s like people talking about trading for Trout, I really don’t care what his value is because I am not willing to pay it. No one person is worth it. Even if Harper hits 80 homeruns (which he won’t) he wouldn’t be worth that money in my opinion.
Lance
suppose the Braves dominate baseball the next decade….win 9 pennants and 5 world series and harper wins 4MVP’s? if that happens, the braves new stadium would be packed every night and their tv/radio revenues would skyrocket. it’s always a gamble. the Angels lost with Pujols and Hamilton. The Tigers lost with Miggy. The Braves won it with Maddux. The Dodgers are probably reaching with Kershaw and his medical problems. But great pitchers are rare. The Rangers signed Nolan Ryan when most thought he was over the hill but he gave Texas several very good years and was a HUGE drawing card. I think Boston has to be pretty happy with JD Martinez and David Price….but…they struck out on Panda.
Rose Henderson
Would be thrilled adding Soria and Robertson to the backend of the bullpen on those deals. They are both proven late inning arms that have closer experience and long track records of productivity. google street view
bjhaas1977
Wow these predictions are way of the mark!
koolga
Someone needs to update the players that have already signed. Lots on here that have and still not marked off.
Also would be nice to have top 50 list in a simplified version with just ranking and signing info listed.
Willy
I have to laugh… have any of these come true? Seems like a giant waste of time to make this list. Just off the top of my head the following players went somewhere else: Corbin, Happ, Brantley, McCutchen, Donaldson, Morton, Ramos, Familia, Miller, Kelly. Lord knows there’s probably a bunch more. If you miss on 90% or more then it’s time to stop making a list.
jlad00
Uhh… they’ve been pretty close to the mark with the dollar amounts so far.
Willy
And that’s great but when you get pretty much every single location wrong it becomes worthless.
burly
With 30 major league teams, the odds are indeed slim of accurately predicting which teams will sign which free agents. Even assuming that a majority of teams will be out of the competition for any individual free agent, the odds are still probably only at best 1-in-3 to 1-in-10 of a correct prediction.
It seems a lot more meaningful to me that the predicted contract amounts have been surprisingly accurate, subject to slightly shorter contract lengths on average, continuing the trend we saw last off-season.
bjhaas1977
Nobody’s updates this page whatsoever! Some of these guys signed weeks ago!
stansfield123
The list is updated when the signing becomes official, not when the deal is reached (or rumored to have been reached).
bjhaas1977
Scroll through the entire list. Nobody’s updating this.
petfoodfella
It’s been almost a month since Pollock was introduced as a Dodger….
gbuff
Your success rate in predictions is pitiiful. You would do better to just
throw darts at a dart board with the teams on it.