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Archives for August 2021

Yankees Place Domingo German On 10-Day Injured List

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 12:47pm CDT

The Yankees placed right-hander Domingo German on the 10-day injured list prior to today’s game, as German is suffering from inflammation in his throwing shoulder.  Righty Albert Abreu was called up from Triple-A to fill the spot on the active roster.

German started New York’s 4-2 win over the Marlins last night, lasting four innings and 66 pitches before being removed for a pinch-hitter in the top of the fifth.  It was German’s 18th start in 21 appearances this season, with all three of those relief appearances coming since June 19.  Over German’s last nine outings, only one has lasted beyond five innings — his seven-inning, 93-pitch start against the Red Sox on July 25.

With Andrew Heaney just acquired from the Angels, the Yankees were hoping to have a full rotation in place but they’ve been again left shorthanded due to injury.  It isn’t yet known if German’s injury is fairly minor or if he’ll be out longer than the minimum 10 days, which could run him into the projected late August/early September timelines for Corey Kluber and Luis Severino.  While these recovery timelines could be altered or future injuries could further change plans, the Yankees are hoping to have a surplus of rotation options down the stretch, so German might ultimately end up in the bullpen.

German missed the entire 2020 season while serving an 81-game suspension under the MLB/MLBPA joint domestic violence policy.  The right-hander has a 4.45 ERA/4.01 SIERA over 97 innings this year, with slightly below-average strikeout and hard-hit ball rates.

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New York Yankees Transactions Albert Abreu Domingo German

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Brewers Select Blaine Hardy

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 12:25pm CDT

The Brewers have selected the contract of left-hander Blaine Hardy.  The veteran will take the spot of Hunter Strickland, whose placement on the COVID-related injury list wasn’t made official until today.

Hardy underwent Tommy John surgery in March 2020, preventing him from taking the field last season and keeping him from benefiting from a minor league deal with the Twins.  The southpaw inked a new minors deal with Milwaukee back in January, and he returned from TJ rehab to post a 3.50 ERA over 46 1/3 innings for the Brewers’ Triple-A affiliate in Nashville.

Through six MLB seasons and 289 2/3 innings with the Tigers from 2014-19, Hardy posted a 3.73 ERA/4.31 SIERA with 18.6% strikeout rate.  Hardy has worked mostly as a reliever but did make 13 starts in 2018, and he started seven of his 17 games with Nashville this year.  Milwaukee could use Hardy as rotation depth, as a long reliever, or potentially both in a swingman capacity.

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Milwaukee Brewers Transactions Blaine Hardy

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Marlins Sign First-Rounder Kahlil Watson

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 12:03pm CDT

The Marlins officially announced their deal with 16th overall pick Kahlil Watson.  MLB Pipeline’s Jim Callis (Twitter links) originally reported on Friday that the two sides were in agreement on a deal, and Watson passed his routine physical yesterday.

Watson is expected to receive a bonus of $4,540,790, which is well above the $3,745,500 slot price attached to the 16th selection.  Watson’s bonus would also put the Marlins in excess of their original $9,949,800 draft pool, but under the five percent threshold.  Miami will have to pay a 75% overage tax on any money spent beyond 10 percent of their overall bonus pool, but exceeding the five percent mark would also cost the team a future first-round pick, which is obviously a price the Marlins (and any team) aren’t willing to pay for any prospect, even one with Watson’s pedigree.

Given that he received some consideration from the Pirates as the first overall pick, Watson’s surprising slide down the board was one of the chief storylines of draft night.  Watson was seen as a consensus top-seven choice by draft evaluators, with Fangraphs and MLB Pipeline each ranking the high school shortstop as the fourth-best prospect in the entire draft class.  It isn’t exactly clear why Watson was still around by the time of the 16th selection — the first 15 teams might have simply been higher on other prospects, or some clubs (like the Pirates or Orioles) were focused on spreading around their pool money, or Watson may have been to some extent hampered by the presence of two other highly-touted high school shortstops in Marcelo Mayer and Jordan Lawlar.

Regardless, the Marlins must undoubtedly believe they landed a steal midway through the first round.  Watson may not remain a shortstop in the long term (another potential reason for his draft day fall), though Pipeline’s scouting report believes he has the athletic ability to handle multiple different positions.  Watson makes a lot of contact despite what Pipeline describes as an “aggressive power-over-hit approach,” and Fangraphs calls the 18-year-old “electricity personified” due to both his bat speed and foot speed.  Evaluators generally see Watson as a plus player across the board, though he is a little on the smaller side at 5’9″ and 178 pounds.

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2021 Amateur Draft 2021 Amateur Draft Signings Miami Marlins Transactions Kahlil Watson

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Marlins Select Sean Guenther, Option Lewin Diaz

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 11:46am CDT

The Marlins have selected the contract of left-hander Sean Guenther from Triple-A Jacksonville.  First baseman Lewin Diaz was optioned to Triple-A in the corresponding move.

The 25-year-old Guenther is now in position to make his Major League debut.  A seventh-round pick out of Notre Dame in the 2017 draft, Guenther isn’t ranked by either Baseball America or MLB Pipeline as one of Miami’s top 30 prospects, but the lefty has earned his promotion with some strong numbers.  Since becoming a full-time relief pitcher in 2019, Guenther has greatly increased his strikeout totals, with a 34% K rate over 40 1/3 combined innings at Double-A and Triple-A ball this season.

2021 marked the first time Guenther had pitched beyond the A-ball level, and while he performed well at Double-A, his 4.76 ERA over 22 2/3 Triple-A frames indicates some growing pains.  Still, much of that damage was done over two calamitous  outings on July 6 and 9, as Guenther allowed nine runs over 1 2/3 total innings.

While Guenther will get his first taste of the majors, Diaz heads back to Triple-A after another brief stint with the Marlins.  Diaz has only a .496 OPS over 73 career plate appearances with Miami, but the 24-year-old has already displayed a lot of power potential down on the farm, albeit without much plate discipline.

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Miami Marlins Transactions Lewin Diaz Sean Guenther

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Orioles Make Three Roster Moves

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 11:16am CDT

The Orioles placed left-hander Tanner Scott on the 10-day injured list due to a left knee sprain.  Fellow lefty Keegan Akin has been reinstated from the COVID-related injury list to take Scott’s place on the active roster, while right-hander Thomas Eshelman was designated for assignment to open up a 40-man roster spot.

Scott has a 3.95 ERA/4.12 SIERA over 41 innings out of Baltimore’s bullpen this season, with a very strong 31.4% strikeout rate.  However, Scott’s 16.5% walk rate is one of the worst in baseball, continuing the control problems that have plagued the southpaw over his 143 career innings in the Show.  Despite these free passes, Scott still drew a lot of attention prior to the trade deadline, as rival teams were intrigued by his high fastball velocity and the fact that Scott isn’t eligible for free agency until after the 2024 season.

This is the third time in as many seasons that the Orioles have DFA’s Eshelman, with the previous two designations resulting in the right-hander being outrighted to Triple-A.  All 92 of Eshelman’s career Major League innings have come with Baltimore in those three seasons, with the righty posting a 5.87 ERA and only an 11% strikeout rate.  The swingman has been mostly used in the rotation in 2021, as Eshelman has started five of his six games.

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Baltimore Orioles Transactions Keegan Akin Tanner Scott Tom Eshelman

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Marlins To Seek Catching Help In Offseason

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 10:58am CDT

Jorge Alfaro’s time with the Marlins looks to be about up, as Barry Jackson and Craig Mish of The Miami Herald report that the club is planning to part ways with the catcher this winter and look for a new starter behind the plate.  Alfaro earned $2.05MM this season in his first year of arbitration eligibility, and the Marlins could simply non-tender him prior to the arb deadline or seek out a trade.

It wouldn’t be a surprise if Miami was able to find a partner for an Alfaro trade, as it wasn’t long ago that he was one of the more highly-regarded prospects in all of baseball.  This potential has already led to Alfaro’s inclusion in two major trades.  Originally a member of the Rangers organization, Alfaro was part of the six-player package Texas sent to the Phillies for Cole Hamels and Jake Diekman at the 2015 trade deadline.  The Phils then sent Alfaro, Sixto Sanchez, and minor league lefty Will Stewart to Miami for J.T. Realmuto in February 2019, with the Marlins looking at Alfaro as a natural replacement for Realmuto behind the plate.

Alfaro also isn’t far removed from some decent production in the 2017-19 seasons, as a big performance in 2017 largely fueled his overall .269/.322/.429 slash line in 956 plate appearances for the Phillies and Marlins in those three years.  After slightly below-average production in 2018 and 2019, however, Alfaro’s bat has since cratered.

The catcher has hit only .224/.274/.329 in his last 296 plate appearances, striking out 101 times and posting the ninth-highest strikeout rate (34.1%) of any player with at least 250 PA since the start of the 2020 season.  Beyond the bat, Alfaro’s defense has been enough of a question mark that the Marlins turned to the light-hitting Chad Wallach down the stretch last year and into the playoffs.

Alfaro was one of the players sidelined during the Marlins’ COVID-19 outbreak last summer, and he also missed about a month earlier this year with a hamstring injury.  Still, Miami was already showing signs of looking beyond Alfaro last offseason when the team engaged in trade talks with the Cubs about Willson Contreras — Jackson and Mish recently reported that Alfaro would likely have been sent to Chicago as part of a Contreras deal.

Since the Cubs now appear to be in a rebuild mode, it stands to reason that Miami will probably check in on Contreras again this winter, if the Fish didn’t already do so prior to the trade deadline.  Jackson/Mish also believe that the Pirates’ Jacob Stallings is likely to be a trade target.  Contreras is under control through only the 2022 season, while Stallings is a Super Two player who isn’t eligible for free agency until the 2024-25 offseason.

Miami has enough pitching depth to explore trades for any number of other catchers on opposing rosters, and the club could also explore the free agent market if it decides on a shorter-term veteran addition.  The Marlins may already have their catcher of the future in 31st overall pick Joe Mack, and prospect Will Banfield is also on the radar as at least a defense-oriented backup type.  Looking at other internal options, Alex Jackson and Payton Henry were both acquired in deadline trades and Miami will consider both as candidates for a backup role in 2022.

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Miami Marlins Jorge Alfaro

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Draft Signings: 8/1/21

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 10:16am CDT

Teams have until 4pm CT today to reach agreements with their selections from this year’s amateur draft, and here are the latest notable signings coming in under the wire.  You can get more background on these players via the prospect rankings and scouting reports compiled by Baseball America, Fangraphs, MLB Pipeline, The Athletic’s Keith Law, and ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel.  As well, here is MLB Pipeline’s breakdown of the slot values assigned to each pick in the first 10 rounds, as well as the bonus pool money available to all 30 teams. 2021 amateur draft signings

  • The Giants went way overslot to sign fourth-round pick Eric Silva, as Baseball America’s Carlos Collazo reports that the high school right-hander received a bonus of $1,497,500 to begin his pro career rather than attend UCLA.  That works out to just under $1MM in money beyond the assigned $502.3K slot price for the 115th overall pick.
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2021 Amateur Draft 2021 Amateur Draft Signings San Francisco Giants Transactions

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July Headlines: American League

By Mark Polishuk | August 1, 2021 at 9:09am CDT

We covered the National League yesterday, so let’s look at the American League’s biggest transactional headlines from a wild month of July…

Windy City Trade Winds: “Help from within” had a few different meanings for the White Sox last month, as the return of Eloy Jimenez from the injured list and Luis Robert beginning his own rehab assignment could end up being the biggest factors for the Pale Hose down the stretch.  However, the Sox also found help from within the Chicago city limits, lining up with the Cubs (of all times) on a pair of trades that brought Craig Kimbrel and Ryan Tepera into an already-solid bullpen.  A prospect package of Nick Madrigal and Cody Heuer was required to land Kimbrel, but it was a steep price the White Sox were willing to pay.

Madrigal’s season-ending hamstring tear in June created a vacancy for the White Sox at second base, so once again, the Sox looked within the AL Central and picked up Cesar Hernandez from the Indians.  Hernandez could be a rental player, or he might be a factor for the 2022 team considering his affordable $6MM club option for next season.

Rays On Cruz Control: It was in many ways a typical deadline month for the Rays, who both added and subtracted some key personnel in order to constantly improve the roster (and payroll) situations.  Landing Nelson Cruz from the Twins was perhaps the atypical move, as the Rays took on Cruz’s $4.8MM in remaining salary, yet Cruz offers superstar-level power to the lineup.  Beyond Cruz, Tampa Bay also at least looked into the likes of Trevor Story, Craig Kimbrel, Kris Bryant, Jose Berrios, and Kyle Gibson.

Lower-level trades saw Tampa add Jordan Luplow and DJ Johnson (from the Indians), Shawn Armstrong (from the Orioles), and JT Chargois from the Mariners.  That same Seattle trade saw Diego Castillo head to the M’s, while the Rays also dealt left-hander Rich Hill to the Mets in yet another move.  You’d think a team moving its nominal closer and a veteran starter would fall into the “seller” category, but that isn’t how the AL East-leading Rays operate.

Athletics Stock Up: The A’s focused mostly on the position player side of their roster, highlighted by the trade that brought Starling Marte from the Marlins in exchange for prized (albeit oft-injured) pitching prospect Jesus Luzardo.  Miami will eat the rest of Marte’s approximate $4.57MM salary for the season, so the Athletics were willing to part with a quality young arm for essentially a free rental player who should provide an immediate jolt to the Oakland lineup.  A subsequent deal with the Nationals brought even more veteran depth in Josh Harrison and Yan Gomes.

On the pitching side, the Athletics landed Andrew Chafin in a deadline deal with the Cubs, while also adding Sam Moll as further depth in an early-July swap with the Diamondbacks.  While the A’s definitely fortified themselves for the wild card race and a challenge to the Astros’ AL West lead, Oakland didn’t make any rotation adds — a decision that loomed large when James Kaprielien landed on the injured list yesterday.

Rangers’ Rebuild Continues: As one of the AL’s clear sellers, the Rangers were a popular team for trade calls, and the end result was seven young players added — four from the Yankees in exchange for the power-hitting Joey Gallo and lefty reliever Joely Rodriguez, and then another trio from the Phillies for Kyle Gibson, closer Ian Kennedy, and a noteworthy prospect in righty Hans Crouse.  The deal with Philadelphia netted the most notable name of the seven in Spencer Howard, who has yet to emerge after 52 2/3 MLB innings but is still considered one of baseball’s better young arms.

Texas was able to score such a haul since Gibson’s career year drew him a lot of attention, and Kennedy (a minor league signing in the offseason) bounced back from a rough 2020 to continue his late-career reinvention as a quality bullpen arm.  The Rangers looked into a contract extension with Gallo, but when talks failed to extend the team’s control beyond the 2022 season, the decision was made to move the homegrown All-Star while he still held a lot of value.  Time will tell if the Rangers made the right calls, yet the hope is that at least some of these seven newcomers will become building blocks of the next winning Texas club.

Twins Fall Short Of A True Fire Sale: Minnesota thought their 2021 side would be “the next winning Twins club,” except a disastrous start to the season made it apparent early that the Twins would be sellers.  The team took calls on pretty much every notable veteran on the roster, but since Minnesota is looking to limit the disappointment to just one year, the Twins mostly focused on moving players only under control through 2021.  The ageless Nelson Cruz was the biggest name of this bunch, as Cruz was traded to the Rays while J.A. Happ (Cardinals) and Hansel Robles (Red Sox) were also sent elsewhere.

Jose Berrios was the exception, as the right-hander is controlled through 2022 but the Blue Jays made too good of an offer for the Twins to pass up.  In acquiring top prospects Austin Martin and Simeon Woods Richardson from Toronto, big league-ready young arms Joe Ryan and Drew Strotman for Cruz, change-of-scenery candidate John Gant from St. Louis, and even high-strikeout righty pitching prospect Alex Scherff from Boston, the Twins brought in a collection of players that could help them as early as 2022.

Yankees Load Up The Left Side: After a lackluster first half of the season and a lot of ground to make up on the Red Sox and Rays, there was some sense that the Yankees might be deadline sellers rather than buyers.  Uh, nope.  The Yankees added a pair of left-handed hitting sluggers (Joey Gallo, Anthony Rizzo) to their heavily right-handed lineup, picked up southpaw Andrew Heaney in a trade with the Angels, and also brought left-hander Joely Rodriguez from Texas as part of the Gallo trade.  Just to break up the left-handed theme, righty Clay Holmes was also acquired in a deal with the Pirates.

New York had to give up a lot of quality prospects to make these trades, and also had to carve out some luxury tax space by moving Luis Cessa and Justin Wilson to the Reds.  However, the Yankees were able to make these sorely-needed upgrades without moving any of their true blue-chip prospects, and they also continued their season-long quest to stay under the $210MM luxury tax threshold.

Blue Jays Win The Berrios Sweepstakes: Jose Berrios’ ability and his extra year of control made him a hot commodity on the trade market, and Toronto had to move two big prospects (Austin Martin, Simeon Woods Richardson) to get the Twins’ attention.  While Berrios will help the club beyond just 2021, the Jays are similar to the Yankees in not being discouraged by a big deficit in the AL East standings, as the Blue Jays feel their powerful lineup and the benefit of actually playing in Toronto again will fuel a surge.

Since late-game breakdowns have led to a number of tough losses, the Blue Jays have prioritized bullpen additions in July.  They picked up Trevor Richards from the Brewers early in the month, then added two veterans in Brad Hand and Joakim Soria to join with incumbent closer Jordan Romano in protecting late leads.  Between all the trades and the injuries that led to Toronto’s bullpen predicament in the first place, the Jays’ bullpen mix is almost entirely different from their collection of relievers on Opening Day.

Who’s On First At Fenway:  Kyle Schwarber’s unreal home run tear in June added to his reputation as one of the sport’s better power bats, and with the Nationals in pure selling mode, the Red Sox took advantage in landing Schwarber (probably a rental player, given his 2022 mutual option) for a solid but non-elite pitching prospect in Aldo Ramirez.  Boston’s lineup will become even more dangerous with Schwarber returns from the 10-day IL, though the team reportedly intends to use Schwarber to fill its first base vacancy, despite the fact that Schwarber has played exactly one game at first base in his 10 professional seasons.

The Red Sox otherwise added bullpen depth in acquiring Hansel Robles from the Twins and Austin Davis from the Pirates, with the latter deal sending former top-100 prospect Michael Chavis to Pittsburgh and former Red Sox GM-turned-Bucs GM Ben Cherington.  Like the A’s, the Sox didn’t bring in any rotation help, which stood out as perhaps Boston’s biggest need heading into the deadline.  The Red Sox will be counting on Chris Sale to essentially be that midseason rotation boost, as the ace continues to work his way back from Tommy John surgery rehab.

Houston, We Have A Bullpen: The Astros had a relatively quiet deadline in comparison to many of the top contenders, though with a heavy-hitting lineup and a good amount of rotation depth, Houston had arguably fewer holes to fill than most.  It’s also safe to say that avoiding the luxury tax was also a chief concern, given how the Astros’ moves played out.

That left the relief corps as the Astros’ primary target.  Houston brought in Yimi Garcia (from the Marlins), Phil Maton (from the Indians) and, in a surprising deal between two division rivals, Kendall Graveman and Rafael Montero from the Mariners.  The Astros gave up youngster Abraham Toro and veteran reliever Joe Smith to Seattle, while speedy center fielder Myles Straw went to Cleveland for Maton and catching prospect Yainer Diaz.  It made for a decent but not overly substantial price to pay for bullpen upgrades, and the cost will look pretty negligible if the Astros make another deep playoff run

Trader Jerry At It Again: That aforementioned Graveman/Montero trade left some hard feelings within the Mariners’ clubhouse, considering that the surprising M’s are in the thick of the wild card race.  However, GM Jerry Dipoto insisted that the move was part of a larger plan, and the Mariners indeed made some further pitching additions by acquiring Tyler Anderson for the rotation and Diego Castillo to replace Graveman in the bullpen.  All in all, the Mariners made what they feel is an overall improvement to the roster, while not going overboard in dealing young talent when the team might really be looking at 2022 as its true return to contention.

Guarding Their Assets: Getting a new team name counts as a pretty big acquisition, but while the Indians aren’t out of the playoff race, their July moves were mostly geared towards saving some payroll space and preparing for a better run in 2022.  Cesar Hernandez was traded to the White Sox and Eddie Rosario was dealt to the Braves, clearing some money off the 2021 books, and the Tribe also got an interesting pitching prospect in Peyton Battenfield in exchange for moving Jordan Luplow and DJ Johnson to the Rays.  Losing Phil Maton to the Astros is an acceptable price for a new everyday center fielder, and Cleveland hopes it landed such a player in Myles Straw.

Royals Say Goodbye To A Franchise Staple: The Royals were undoubtedly disappointed to be deadline sellers considering their aggressive winter and their red-hot star to the season, but K.C. stuck to moving veteran rentals rather than any longer-term players (such as Whit Merrifield, who was again the topic of much trade speculation).  The most notable name moved was longtime hurler Danny Duffy, who agreed to waive his no-trade protection to chase a ring with the Dodgers.  Former AL home run leader Jorge Soler was also dealt to the outfield-needy Braves, ending Soler’s Kansas City tenure on the disappointing note of a rough 2021 campaign.  The Royals also swung a few lower-level deals earlier in July, acquiring Joel Payamps from the Blue Jays and dealing Kelvin Gutierrez to the Orioles and Alcides Escobar to the Nationals.

Arms Leave Anaheim: The Angels had a pretty quiet deadline, perhaps befitting a team that doesn’t entirely want to sell (since stars like Mike Trout will return from the IL) but also faces a big hill to climb to truly get back into the playoff race.  The Halos ended up moving a pair of impending free agents in starter Andrew Heaney and reliever Tony Watson, netting some prospects for the long term, but in the short term hampering a pitching staff that is already a weak link.  In another minor deal earlier in July, the Angels dealt southpaw Dillon Peters to the Pirates.

Sellers Barely Sold: The Orioles and Tigers were seen the AL’s most clear-cut deadline sellers, yet in the end, neither team did much trading in July.  Detroit’s only deal of the month sent Daniel Norris to the Brewers, while the Orioles traded Freddy Galvis to the Phillies and Shawn Armstrong to the Rays.

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