MLB Trade Rumors is proud to present our 16th 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? Sign up for our brand-new newsletter! You can also follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook, and download our free app for iOS and Android.
MLBTR writers Steve Adams and Anthony Franco joined me in this collaboration, debating free agent contracts and destinations for many hours over the past month. One change for this year: we’ve included separate team picks for myself, Steve, and Anthony.
Last offseason was colored by the uncertainty of the pandemic. While teams are still feeling the effects of reduced attendance, the biggest unknown is the expiration of the collective bargaining agreement on December 1st. A lack of an agreement may prompt MLB to initiate a lockout, putting a freeze on free agency that could result in a compressed signing period once a new CBA is reached. Absent an official transaction freeze, teams may operate cautiously, lacking insight on potential important changes involving free agency, arbitration, luxury tax thresholds, the minimum salary, draft pick compensation, and the addition of the designated hitter to the National League.
Rather than make unfounded assumptions about these many unknowns, we’ve made normal contract projections. We don’t know when, but eventually a new collective bargaining agreement will be in place.
If you’d like to support the month-long effort that went into this list, please consider a subscription. Check out all the benefits here!
Our free agent prediction contest is also officially open! Make your picks here. The contest will close at 11pm central time on Monday, November 15th.
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. Have your say on all of this in the comment section! You can also check out the transcript of a live chat Steve and Tim held about this list on November 8th.
On to our top 50 free agents:
1. Carlos Correa. Ten years, $320MM.
Tim Dierkes: Tigers / Steve Adams: Phillies / Anthony Franco: Tigers
In this winter’s star-studded class of free agent shortstops, we consider Correa the best. The Astros drafted Correa first overall out of Puerto Rico Baseball Academy back in 2012, and he won the 2015 AL Rookie of the Year award despite debuting in June. The 2016 season was a continuation of that success, and Correa seemed unstoppable.
However, in the three seasons that followed, Correa averaged only 98 games played per year due to a torn ligament in his thumb, multiple back injuries, and a cracked rib. Correa was able to avoid the IL during the shortened 2020 season, yet posted just a 96 wRC+ at the plate. At that point, Correa had played more than 110 games in a season only once, in 2016.
With plenty to prove in 2021, Correa delivered. He played in 148 games, posting a 134 wRC+ at the plate. Remarkably, Correa and Corey Seager have each played exactly 281 games with 1,182 plate appearances since 2019. Correa’s 129 wRC+ ranks fifth among shortstops during that period, not far behind Seager, Trea Turner, and Xander Bogaerts (Fernando Tatis Jr. remains in a class by himself).
Correa’s shortstop defense sets him apart from his offensive peers. Since 2018, Correa’s outs above average mark is on par with Andrelton Simmons, tied for third in the game among shortstops. Francisco Lindor has better defensive numbers but has never hit the way Correa does. It stands to reason that Lindor’s ten-year, $341MM extension with the Mets signed in April 2021 will be a benchmark for Correa. And keep in mind that while Lindor and Correa’s contracts both begin with the 2022 season, Correa is more than ten months younger. Correa should be able to remain at shortstop for the majority of his contract, which is not necessarily true of others on the market.
Correa’s postseason performance further bolsters his resume. He’s had all kinds of walk-off moments in his 79 career postseason games, with a batting line of .272/.344/.505 and 18 home runs in 334 plate appearances.
Correa has mostly quieted questions about his ability to stay healthy, having played in more than 97% of regular season games since 2020. That leaves one primary concern about our top free agent: his involvement in the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal. Correa benefited from the team’s trash can scheme in at least 2017 and ’18, and possibly in 2019. While Correa has spoken about feeling remorse, there has also been defiance in his comments after the scandal broke. Perhaps that’s why the sign-stealing scandal might not roll off Correa’s back in quite the same way it seems to have with George Springer, who signed the largest contract of the previous offseason.
The boos may follow Correa on the road for his entire career, and he showed this year that doesn’t faze him. But with several good alternatives on the market, certain big market teams — namely the Dodgers and Yankees — might not be able to stomach a long-term marriage with Correa. The Dodgers have a potential in-house replacement for Seager anyway in Trea Turner. The Yankees figure to at least be involved in Correa’s market, given their stated desire to improve at shortstop. The Tigers, Phillies, Rangers, Angels, Mariners, and Cardinals are other potential suitors. A reunion with the Astros is still possible as well, though the club never got past $125MM in their spring training extension offers.
Signed with Twins for three years, $105.3MM, with opt-outs after each year.
2. Corey Seager. Ten years, $305MM.
TD: Yankees / SA: Yankees / AF: Yankees
Seager, 28 in April, is one of the best-hitting shortstops in baseball. Since 2020, only Fernando Tatis Jr. has outhit him. He’s difficult to strike out, posted a career-best walk rate this year and since 2020 ranks third among all shortstops (min. 200 PAs) with a .239 ISO (slugging minus batting average). Though the left-handed-hitting Seager has never topped 26 home runs in a season, he has 31 bombs in 147 games since ’20. His key Statcast markers were all in the 80th percentile or better.
Seager didn’t set the world on fire in his 53 postseason plate appearances this year for the Dodgers, but he boasts trophies for NLCS and World Series MVP in 2020 and has ample October experience. The former No. 18 overall draft pick (2012) won the NL Rookie of the Year and finished third in the MVP voting back in 2016. A two-time All-Star, Seager also received MVP votes in the 2017 and ’20 seasons. Seager’s defense generally falls into acceptable range, but there’s an expectation he’ll move off shortstop at some point in the middle of his contract. At 6’4″, Seager, Correa, and Cal Ripken Jr. are the tallest regular shortstops in Major League history.
Major injuries have befallen Seager three times in his MLB career. He played in only 26 regular season games in 2018 due to Tommy John and hip surgery. This year in May, Seager was struck by a Ross Detwiler pitch that fractured his right hand, limiting him to 95 regular season games. Seager raked upon his return, with a 169 wRC+ in 240 plate appearances. He did, however, find himself with a new double play partner in Trea Turner. Turner, under team control through 2022, was in his fifth year starring as the Nationals’ shortstop and moved to second base for the Dodgers only in deference to Seager.
After the easy call to make Seager a qualifying offer, it stands to reason that the Dodgers will make at least some attempt to retain their longtime shortstop. But with Turner in tow, they hardly need to act out of desperation, opening the door for teams like the Yankees, Tigers, Phillies, Astros, Angels, Rangers, and Cardinals to make a play.
Signed with Rangers for ten years, $325MM.
3. Freddie Freeman. Six years, $180MM.
TD: Braves / SA: Braves / AF: Red Sox
Freeman, 32, has been one of the best hitters in baseball dating all the way back to 2013. His lowest single-season wRC+ mark during those nine seasons is 132, and he surged up to 186 in the shortened 2020 season to win the NL MVP. Freeman has gotten MVP votes in five additional seasons and is a five-time All-Star. Having signed an extension back in 2014, Freeman has been a Braves fixture for more than 11 seasons.
With such a beloved and consistently excellent player, it’s difficult to picture Freeman in another uniform. However, despite the Braves’ attempts to lock him up, Freeman has reached the open market. The obvious comparable is Paul Goldschmidt’s five-year, $130MM extension from spring 2019, but it’s unknown where each side stands relative to that marker. It’s also worth noting that even with the Braves’ championship, signing Freeman at $30MM+ per year will leave Liberty Media with limited financial flexibility to improve the team unless they raise payroll to new heights or shed existing commitments. If the Braves somehow allow Freeman to leave, the Yankees, Red Sox, Padres, Giants, Mariners, Mets, and Dodgers could be in play, but it’s tough to let a legacy player like this walk away on the heels of a World Series win.
Signed with Dodgers for six years, $162MM.
4. Kris Bryant. Six years, $160MM.
TD: Mariners / SA: Mariners / AF: Mets
The Cubs selected Bryant second overall in the 2013 draft out of the University of San Diego. The club held off on starting the clock for his 2015 Rookie of the Year season just enough to secure control of his 2021 season, which led to a grievance that Bryant ultimately lost. Bryant seemingly peaked early, ranking third among all position players in wins above replacement from 2015-17, a period that included his 2016 MVP award and the Cubs’ World Series championship. Two of Bryant’s seasons have been marred by injury: a shoulder injury that limited him to 102 games in 2018, and an assortment of minor injuries that resulted in him playing 34 of 60 games in 2020.
That brief ’20 season was the only one in which Bryant posted a subpar batting line. While he bounced back this year with a 123 wRC+, that still fell short of anything he did from 2015-19. He was never a standout defensive third baseman, which prompted the rebranding of Bryant into a jack-of-all-trades defender. He logged 55 games at third base, 48 in left field, 39 in right field, 19 in center field, and 12 at first base this year for the Cubs and Giants. As Bryant approaches his 30th birthday, he seems to have settled in as a quality hitter with defensive versatility, rather than the Hall of Fame-track superstar he was when he burst onto the scene.
Bryant once seemed a lock for well over $200MM, but we don’t see that happening now that he’s actually reached free agency. He is aided by being ineligible for a qualifying offer. The Giants will surely keep an eye on his market, but president of baseball ops Farhan Zaidi has plainly stated that the rotation is his top priority. And, after the season, Zaidi also characterized the acquisition of Bryant like a move that was unique to the 2021 season:
“For us, the move at the deadline was really about pushing chips in with this team, which we thought was a really special team and had a chance to do some special things and did. But we recognize that he’s a superstar talent and it’s going to be a really competitive market for his services. I’m sure we’ll have conversations there, but he’s going to have a long line of suitors, so we’ll just have to see how that develops.”
The Giants can’t be firmly ruled out, but the Mariners, Rangers, Mets, Blue Jays, Phillies, and Padres could also be suitors.
Signed with Rockies for seven years, $182MM.
5. Kevin Gausman. Six years, $138MM.
TD: Giants / SA: Giants / AF: Giants
Gausman began his career with a solid run for the Orioles after being selected fourth overall in 2012 out of Louisiana State. He was dealt to Atlanta at the 2018 trade deadline as the O’s kicked off their still-ongoing rebuild. After struggling through 16 starts in 2019, the Braves let Gausman go to the Reds as a waiver claim. Cincinnati used him as a reliever to finish the season. It seems that neither the Braves nor the Reds felt that Gausman’s abilities justified an arbitration salary north of $10MM, and the Reds non-tendered him.
That’s where the Giants jumped in with a $9MM free agent contract. Under the Giants’ tutelage, Gausman was superb in the abbreviated 2020 season, enough so that the club felt justified in making an $18.9MM qualifying offer. Rather than hit the free agent market with that burden, Gausman accepted the offer. A two- or three-year deal might have been on the table had he rejected and hit the market, but the decision to bet on himself by accepting that QO now looks prescient.
Gausman went out in 2021 and proved his 2020 breakout was no fluke, making his first All-Star team. The righty ramped up the use of his splitter this year, to the point where he threw that or his fastball nearly 90% of the time. Overall for the Giants, Gausman has a 3.00 ERA, 30.0 K%, and 6.5 BB% in 251 2/3 innings. Gausman’s bet on himself paid off, and he hits the market ineligible for a qualifying offer. If Gausman’s price gets too high for the Giants’ liking, he could land with the Tigers, Mariners, Angels, Twins, Blue Jays, Yankees, Red Sox, Mets, or Cardinals.
Signed with Blue Jays for five years, $110MM.
6. Marcus Semien. Six years, $138MM.
TD: Red Sox / SA: Dodgers / AF: Angels
Semien settled in as Oakland’s dependable starting shortstop as of 2015, but his offense skyrocketed in 2019 en route to a third-place finish in AL MVP voting. An unimpressive regular season in 2020 led to Semien betting on himself in free agency, signing a one-year, $18MM deal with the Blue Jays and moving to second base. With the Jays, Semien established that 2020 was the fluke, as his monster 45 home run 2021 campaign will net him MVP votes once again. Semien’s Statcast batting metrics don’t stand out this year, but you can’t argue with the results.
Defensively, Semien may profile better at second base than shortstop, but he’s played significantly more short in his career and should at least be good for a few years there. Semien does carry the weight of a qualifying offer, but interest should be robust for clubs that missed out on Correa and Seager or prefer not to shop in the $300MM aisle. His market also may differ from Correa and Seager in that he’s more likely to be signed as a second baseman. As a 31-year-old, Semien may be limited to a six-year pact, itself hard to achieve at this age. The Blue Jays will surely attempt to re-sign Semien, but otherwise the Phillies, Red Sox, Yankees, White Sox, Tigers, Twins, Astros, Angels, Mariners, Rangers, Cardinals, and Dodgers are other potential matches.
Signed with Rangers for seven years, $175MM.
7. Robbie Ray. Five years, $130MM.
TD: Blue Jays / SA: Blue Jays / AF: Blue Jays
Drafted by the Nationals out of high school in the 12th round in 2010, Ray was traded to the Tigers in the December 2013 Doug Fister deal. A year later, Ray was dealt to the Diamondbacks in the three-way trade that sent Didi Gregorius to the Yankees. Ray found success in his first five seasons for the D’Backs as a high-strikeout, high-walk, homer-prone southpaw. In 2017, he made the All-Star team and finished seventh in the NL Cy Young voting. But in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, Ray’s already-high walk rate jumped to an untenable 20.1% through seven starts, and with free agency looming he was shipped to Toronto mostly as a salary dump.
Ray’s brief effort for the 2020 Jays didn’t stand out, and he still walked batters at a higher rate than he had from 2015-19 in Arizona. Toronto saw something they liked nonetheless, making an early free agent strike by re-upping him to a one-year, $8MM deal in November last year.
Ray began the 2021 season on the IL for a bruised elbow suffered falling down some stairs. After a six-walk outing on April 18th, the notion of Ray contending for the AL Cy Young award would have been laughable — but that’s exactly what he did. The 30-year-old lefty led all of baseball with 248 strikeouts, also solving his longstanding walk issue with a career-best 6.9 BB%. Ray’s 2.84 ERA was the best in the American League. As Kaitlyn McGrath of The Athletic put it, “How Ray went from good to elite took a change in his mechanics, a change in his approach and a change in his physique.” Still, it wasn’t a radical overhaul in terms of pitch selection for Ray, who has remained a fastball-slider pitcher.
Ray showed strong control over a five-month period this year. For a potential new team, how much does that erase his 13 BB% from the three prior years? It’s also worth considering that Ray allowed a home run to 4.3% of batters faced this year, 19th-worst in MLB among those with at least 100 innings pitched. While Ray is about nine months younger than fellow top free agent Gausman, the lefty bears the burden of a qualifying offer. Their markets figure to be similar.
Signed with Mariners for five years, $115MM, with an opt-out after the third year.
8. Trevor Story. Six years, $126MM.
TD: Phillies / SA: Rangers / AF: Astros
Story, 29 this month, ranked second among MLB shortstops with 13.6 WAR from 2018-20. At the plate, he posted a 124 wRC+ during that time and was a regular 30-homer threat. Story was one of the game’s best defensive shortstops by Outs Above Average in 2019, though his OAA marks have been pedestrian since. Amid trade rumors and right elbow inflammation, the longtime Rockie slipped to a 100 wRC+ at the plate. But after the trade deadline passed, Story rallied for a 127 wRC+ that was more in line with his career work.
The Rockies chose not to trade Story, instead tagging him with a qualifying offer. Like most Rockies regulars, Story has been a much better hitter at Coors Field. We’ve seen plenty of hitters leave that comfortable hitting environment and continue to succeed — Matt Holliday, DJ LeMahieu, Nolan Arenado, Corey Dickerson, Seth Smith, Dexter Fowler, and Chris Iannetta among them. Others, like Brad Hawpe and Troy Tulowitzki, could not sustain their success. And still others, like Garrett Atkins and Carlos Gonzalez, began their decline while still in a Rockies uniform.
It’d be overly simplistic to suggest Story’s offensive success is a product of Coors. And even with his worst season at the plate since 2017, Story still posted 3.5 WAR. By some metrics, he has remained an above-average defender. Though he may not have the youth or ceiling of Correa or Seager or the platform year of Semien, Story should be highly coveted in free agency. The Astros, Rangers, Yankees, Tigers, Twins, Angels, Phillies, and Cardinals may be involved.
Signed with Red Sox for six years, $140MM. Can opt out after four years, at which point the Red Sox can retain him by picking up a seventh-year option.
9. Max Scherzer. Three years, $120MM.
TD: Dodgers / SA: Dodgers / AF: Dodgers
Scherzer, 37, has already put together a Hall of Fame career in his 14 years in MLB, mainly with the Tigers and Nationals. He won a Cy Young in 2013, ’16, and ’17 and finished top-five in four other seasons. In 2021, Scherzer showed no signs of slowing down, and he’s in the running for the top pitching award once again. Not long after landing his fourth All-Star game start, Scherzer was traded by the Nationals to the Dodgers along with Trea Turner in a blockbuster deal.
Scherzer’s dominance only deepened with the Dodgers, and overall he finished with a 2.46 ERA, a 34.1 K% that ranked second in the NL, and a 5.2 BB% that ranked fifth. Scherzer’s postseason experience is extensive, but after getting his first career save against the Giants in NLDS Game 5, Scherzer started Game 2 of the NLCS and started feeling the effects. Arm fatigue kept him from Game 6, and that’s as far as the Dodgers went.
Even at 37, Scherzer remains a Game 1 ace, and bidding for his services among playoff hopefuls will be fierce. He’s free of a qualifying offer, too. Three-year deals are exceedingly rare at Scherzer’s age, yet we still think he can get there. We also believe that given the relatively short term, Scherzer can surpass MLB’s record average annual value of $36MM and possibly even become the game’s first $40MM AAV player. The Dodgers should have the inside track, but otherwise the Giants, Angels, Astros, Blue Jays, Mariners, Tigers, Red Sox, Yankees, Mets, Padres, and Cardinals could join the bidding.
Signed with Mets for three years, $130MM, with an opt-out after the second year.
10. Nick Castellanos. Five years, $115MM.
TD: Rangers / SA: Padres / AF: Padres
Castellanos, 30 in March, posted a 140 wRC+ on the season that ranked third among free agents, behind Kyle Schwarber and the now-retired Buster Posey. His 34 home runs ranked third behind Marcus Semien and Kyle Seager. Aside from the lost 2020 season, Castellanos has posted at least a 122 wRC+ in every year since 2018. He also shows well in Statcast metrics. Castellanos is one of the best hitters available in free agency this year.
Castellanos made the easy choice to opt out of the remaining two years and $34MM owed to him by the Reds, who have since tagged him with a qualifying offer. Aside from the QO, the knock on Castellanos is his defense, which has been consistently below-average. By Outs Above Average, he was the second-worst right fielder in the game this year. Defensive Runs Saved and Ultimare Zone Rating weren’t quite so bearish but still agreed he was a below-average outfielder once again. Still, there’s a good chance the DH comes to the NL in 2022, and Castellanos could draw interest from the Rangers, Rockies, Marlins, White Sox, Reds and Mets.
Signed with Phillies for five years, $100MM.
11. Marcus Stroman. Five years, $110MM.
TD: Angels / SA: Twins / AF: Dodgers
Stroman, 31 in May, opted out of the 2020 season due to the pandemic an, and then accepted a one-year, $18.9MM qualifying offer to remain with the Mets. Like Gausman, that decision worked out well. Stroman ranked eighth in the NL with a 3.02 ERA this year, and was one of only seven MLB starters to make 33 regular season starts. Of the last five seasons in which Stroman has played, he’s started at least 32 games in four of them.
Stroman’s game is about keeping the ball on the ground and limiting walks. His strikeout rate is generally below average, and even this past season’s career-best 21.6% mark was shy of the 22.6% league-average among starters. It’s worth noting that Stroman did set new career-highs in swinging-strike rate and opponents’ chase rate.
The grounder/command-oriented approach isn’t as typical as it once was, but Stroman has managed to defy ERA estimators like SIERA by a wide margin in three separate seasons: 2017, 2019, and 2021. Even if he settles in as a mid-rotation arm, Stroman is free of a qualifying offer and will be a popular free agent. He’ll draw interest from the same group of teams that are attracted to Gausman and Ray.
Signed with Cubs for three years, $71MM, with an opt-out after the second year.
12. Javier Baez. Five years, $100MM.
TD: Rangers / SA: Tigers / AF: Rangers
Baez, nicknamed El Mago, is one of baseball’s most exciting and popular players. He’s hit 94 home runs in the last three full MLB seasons. Baez’s flashy defense earned him a Gold Glove in 2020, and he led all shortstops in outs above average in ’19. His tags are a thing of beauty. He adds value as a baserunner, somehow inducing ridiculous plays like this one.
Baez is also a hacker at the plate, striking out in more than a third of his plate appearances this year. He’s not big on drawing walks, getting on base that way only about 5% of the time. The result is an on-base percentage that generally falls short of .320. Baez benefits immensely from writing off 2020, as he was among one of the worst hitters in the game and seemingly scared the Cubs off extension talks.
The Cubs shipped Baez to the Mets this year near the trade deadline, freeing him of a potential qualifying offer and pushing him to second base to play alongside his friend Francisco Lindor. At the end of August, Baez was sitting on a .290 OBP and a 102 wRC+, apologizing for a thumbs-down gesture he started as a way of booing Mets fans. Then Baez went off with a 169 wRC+ in the season’s final month, helping pull his overall wRC+ to 116.
Baez offers an exciting blend of power, versatile defense, baserunning, and marketability. If the Mets don’t retain him, his market should be similar to that of Story.
Signed with Tigers for six years, $140MM, with an opt-out after the second year.
13. Starling Marte. Four years, $80MM.
TD: Mets / SA: Giants / AF: Phillies
Marte, 33, is the only starting-caliber center fielder on the free agent market this winter. He played six full seasons for the Pirates, tallying at least 3 WAR in each of them. The Bucs signed Marte to an extension in 2014 that gave them club options on his first two years of free agency. Those options were exercised, and Marte played those two seasons for the Diamondbacks, Marlins, and A’s.
Though Marte is an older free agent, he benefits from a lack of center field alternatives, ineligibility for a qualifying offer, and the best season of his career. Marte’s well-rounded contributions this year included a career-best 133 wRC+ and the most baserunning value generated by any player. Speedy as Marte is, he wasn’t among the 40 fastest regulars in the game this year in terms of average sprint speed (as measured by Statcast). No matter: he led all of MLB with 47 stolen bases, getting caught only five times.
Marte wisely rejected a reported three-year, $30MM extension offer from the Marlins before his July trade. We think a four-year deal is justified. Players like George Springer, DJ LeMahieu, Josh Donaldson, and Lorenzo Cain have all signed major free-agent deals that pay through age 36 or 37, and Marte should add to that list. The Giants, Yankees, Phillies, Mets, Braves, Rockies, and Dodgers are among the potential suitors.
Signed with Mets for four years, $78MM.
14. Eduardo Rodriguez. Five years, $70MM.
TD: Twins / SA: Tigers / AF: Twins
Rodriguez, 29 in April, joined the Red Sox at the 2014 trade deadline in a trade with the Orioles for Andrew Miller. Since making his big league debut in 2015, Rodriguez had made at least 20 starts in every season until 2020. He battled some knee injuries earlier in his career, culminating in surgery after the 2017 season. The southpaw’s finest year came in 2019, when he finished sixth in AL Cy Young voting. Unfortunately, Rodriguez got COVID-19 in June of 2020 and developed a heart condition called myocarditis. He missed the 2020 season and was barred from physical activity for three months.
Thankfully, 2021 marked a successful comeback season for Rodriguez. The lefty posted career-bests in strikeout and walk rate, with a K-BB% that ranked 15th in the game among those with at least 150 innings. He also ranked among the game’s best in terms of average exit velocity (90th percentile) and opponents’ hard-hit rate (87th percentile) and pitched well in his final two postseason starts. Rodriguez did post a career-worst 4.74 ERA, driven in large part by a .363 batting average on balls in play. Virtually any fielding-independent metric is far more bullish on Rodriguez, who posted a 3.64 SIERA and 3.32 FIP.
We believe Rodriguez might surprise some people with a four or even-five year deal this winter, although Boston’s decision to issue a qualifying offer figures to put a dent in his market. We still believe teams not quite willing to pay $23-25MM AAVs for starting pitching might turn to Rodriguez, and he’s young enough to entice clubs that are trying to get better but don’t quite expect to win the World Series in 2022.
Signed with Tigers for five years, $77MM, with an opt-out after the second year.
15. Kyle Schwarber. Four years, $70MM.
TD: Rockies / SA: Blue Jays / AF: Nationals
Schwarber, 29 in March, posted a 145 wRC+ that ranked first among all free agents and 11th in baseball among players with at least 400 plate appearances. It was basically four months worth of elite hitting, as Schwarber struggled in April and missed over a month during the summer with a hamstring strain. As he recovered from the injury, the Red Sox acquired Schwarber in a trade with Nationals.
Drafted fourth overall by the Cubs in 2014, Schwarber put up a 115 wRC+ for the club over the course of 492 games before struggling in the shortened 2020 season. He had his share of big postseason hits for the Cubs, including a dramatic return to DH in the 2016 playoffs after missing nearly the entire season due to a torn ACL and LCL. The Cubs chose not to tender Schwarber a contract after 2020, and he signed for one year and $10MM with the Nationals. Prior to ’20, the Cubs generally shielded the left-handed-hitting Schwarber against southpaw pitchers, letting him face them in fewer than 20% of plate appearances. This year, there were no such concerns: Schwarber saw lefties 31.6% of the time and posted a 119 wRC+ against them.
Though he was drafted as a catcher, the Cubs gradually phased Schwarber out of that position and into left field. He’s graded out as below-average defensively. The Red Sox used Schwarber in 19 games at first base, a position he had not played for the Cubs, given the presence of Anthony Rizzo.
The potential addition of the DH to the NL would help Schwarber, who is ineligible for a qualifying offer. After out-producing Nick Castellanos on a rate basis, Schwarber should see a similar market as one of the best bat-first players available. Castellanos has the more consistent track record and doesn’t have the history of platoon issues, so he gets the nod over Schwarber in terms of earning power for our list purposes despite a similarly productive 2021 season.
Signed with Phillies for four years, $79MM.
16. Chris Taylor. Four years, $64MM.
TD: Marlins / SA: Red Sox / AF: Mariners
The Dodgers acquired Taylor from the Mariners in June 2016, as a means of improving infield depth. Taylor added the outfield to his repertoire in a breakout 2017 season, and won the NLCS MVP award that year. Taylor has remained an above-average hitter ever since, and has a 114 wRC+ over the last three seasons. Though he struggled to hit in September this year, “CT3” left a strong final impression with his huge playoff showing. It was Taylor’s walk-off homer that propelled the Dodgers past the Cardinals in the Wild Card round, and he slugged three home runs in Game 5 of the NLCS to help the Dodgers force a Game 6.
Taylor has been deployed at second base, shortstop, third base, center field, and left field in his career. Though he’s sometimes compared to Ben Zobrist, Taylor reaches free agency at an earlier age and with more defensive versatility. He may not have quite the offensive track record Zobrist carried into free agency, but he’s very arguably a more attractive target for teams.
As expected, the Dodgers issued a qualifying offer to Taylor. We expect him to take his shot at a multiyear deal, but certain clubs may shy away from surrendering a draft pick or two to sign him. Taylor’s ability to play all over the diamond still makes him a potential fit for many teams, including the Blue Jays, White Sox, Mariners, Braves, Marlins, Mets, Phillies, Rockies, Giants, and Cubs.
Signed with Dodgers for four years, $60MM.
17. Raisel Iglesias. Four years, $56MM.
TD: Dodgers / SA: Astros / AF: Blue Jays
Iglesias is easily the best reliever of this free agent class. He defected from Cuba in 2013, signing a seven-year deal with the Reds the following year. Iglesias worked as a starter in 2015 before finding his home in the bullpen. After his 2018 season, Iglesias inked a three-year, $24.125MM extension. Seeking payroll relief, the Reds shipped Iglesias to the Angels in December 2020 — a trade that amounted to a pure salary dump.
Iglesias, 32 in January, ranked third among all relievers and first among free-agent relievers with a 33.3 K-BB%. Among the 398 pitchers to throw at least 40 innings in 2021 (starters and relievers alike), Iglesias ranked 10th in strikeout rate (37.7%), 14th in walk rate (4.4%), ninth in chase rate on pitches out of the strike zone (39.5%) and third in swinging-strike rate (20.6%). None of those 398 pitchers posted a higher combined percentage of swinging strikes and called strikes (36.8%).
Iglesias’ primary flaw is that he’s allowed 1.4 homers per nine frames over the past four seasons. It’d be charitable to attribute that solely to his time in the homer-happy Great American Ball Park, as he also coughed up 11 homers while playing his home games at the much friendlier Angel Stadium in 2021.
The Angels issued Iglesias a qualifying offer, so signing him will require the forfeit of draft picks. Any deep-pocketed contender seeking a lockdown stopper at the back end of their bullpen figures to be in on Iglesias, who could take aim at Liam Hendriks’ $18MM AAV record for relievers. The Blue Jays, Astros, Red Sox, Dodgers, Phillies, and Padres are potential suitors.
Signed with Angels for four years, $58MM.
18. Carlos Rodon. One year, $25MM.
TD: Astros / SA: Red Sox / AF: Angels
Drafted third overall by the White Sox out of NC State in 2014, Rodon was part of the team’s rotation the following year. The hard-throwing lefty with the nasty slider was limited to 12 starts in 2017 due to a biceps injury, undergoing arthroscopic shoulder surgery in the offseason that held him to 20 starts the following year. Rodon still served as Chicago’s Opening Day starter in 2019, but by May he was under the knife for Tommy John surgery. Rodon returned for four appearances in 2020, and was non-tendered by the White Sox in December with little fanfare. In late January of this year, Rodon returned to the club on a one-year, $3MM deal that turned out to be one of the best bargains of the offseason.
Working with new White Sox pitching coach Ethan Katz, Rodon made changes to his delivery and came out of the gate with guns blazing. He threw a no-hitter in his second start of the season, made his first All-Star team, and had his ERA as low as 2.14 after a dominating start on July 18th in Houston.
Having thrown just 42 1/3 innings from all of 2019-20, Rodon seemed to wear down at this point. He averaged more than six innings per start and 96 miles per hour on his fastball through July 18th, but only 4.5 innings per start and 94.1 miles per hour thereafter. Rodon dipped all the way to 91 miles per hour against the Reds on September 29th, and then on 12 days rest in a 56-pitch ALDS start, he was able to crank it back up to 96. On the season, Rodon pitched on four days of rest only six times. It can be argued that he’s best-served as part of a six-man rotation. Despite the velocity dip, Rodon still rates as the hardest-throwing starting pitcher on the market this winter.
Even in those somewhat worrying final nine starts, Rodon was able to punch out 28.9% of batters with a 3.26 ERA. His overall season numbers — 2.37 ERA, 34.6 K%, and 6.7 BB% — are off the charts. So what will Rodon do, coming off a dominant season in the middle of which he seemed to run out of gas? According to Bob Nightengale of USA Today, the White Sox “decided at the end of the season that they were not going to bring Rodon back,” and the club was surprisingly unwilling to even issue the one-year qualifying offer. Is that just the White Sox being frugal, or is it a red flag regarding Rodon’s health? We expect Rodon to receive multiyear offers this winter, though he might be better-served to take a large one-year deal and establish his health.
Rodon’s free agency should be fascinating, especially without the burden of a qualifying offer. He’ll need a team with a high tolerance for injury risk and a preference for high-AAV short-term deals. The Dodgers, Giants, Braves, Red Sox, Yankees, Mariners, and Astros could be candidates.
Signed with Giants for two years, $44MM, with an opt-out if he pitches 110 innings.
19. Jon Gray. Four years, $56MM.
TD: Tigers / SA: Angels / AF: Giants
Drafted third overall by the Rockies in 2013 out of the University of Oklahoma, Gray never quite put together an All-Star caliber season in his six-plus years with the club. He’s still been one of the best pitchers ever drafted by Colorado. The righty was one of the five-hardest throwing starting pitchers from 2016-19. While he’s not at his 96 mile per hour heyday at age 30, he still ranked 13th in average fastball velocity this year among those with at least 140 innings, and third among free agents.
Gray has made at least 25 starts in each full season dating back to 2018. Outside of his eight-start 2020 season, which ended early with shoulder inflammation, Gray has always posted an above-average strikeout rate. This year, Gray hit the IL in June for a right flexor strain, missing three weeks. He exited a late August start with forearm tightness, but that turned out to be a minimum IL stay. The injuries did not affect his velocity, though he did surrender 11 earned runs in his final 8 2/3 innings, pushing his ERA from 4.17 to 4.59.
The Rockies declined to trade Gray at the July deadline, stating their intent to extend him. In late September the club offered “a three-year deal in the range of $35 million to $40 million,” according to Nick Groke and Eno Sarris of The Athletic. He rejected.
Front offices are likelier to be more attracted to what’s under the hood than his surface-level 4.59 ERA. The bet here is that teams will look past the up-and-down nature of Gray’s career and view him as an upside play who’ll thrive away from Coors Field and with more robust information and data at his disposal. Gray is a former No. 3 overall pick who averages 95 mph or better on his heater. He’s better than league-average in terms of strikeout rate, walk rate and ground-ball rate for his career, with promising swinging-strike rates on a near-yearly basis. Some teams will believe they can turn Gray into a slam-dunk playoff starter.
The Rockies’ interest in retaining Gray was not enough for them to issue a qualifying offer, so they must have found the potential one-year price too high. Now, Gray gets to enjoy his first time through free agency without the QO dragging him down. The Angels, Blue Jays, Tigers, Twins, Mariners, Yankees, Red Sox, Mets, Giants, Dodgers, Cardinals and just about any team looking at rotation help could consider him. Gray’s upside and price point (relative to the top of the market) could also pique the interest of teams that aren’t looking at 2022 as a must-win season, putting him in play for clubs like the Rangers, Cubs and Nationals.
Signed with Rangers for four years, $56MM.
20. Seiya Suzuki. Five years, $55MM.
TD: Phillies / SA: Rangers / AF: Rangers
Perhaps an unknown name to many who are viewing this list, Suzuki is a 27-year-old outfielder who is expected to be posted by the Hiroshima Carp this offseason. We’ve received a broad range of opinions on Suzuki when surveying teams and scouts who’ve seen him play in Japan. That’s likely indicative of the volatility and uncertainty that is inherent to signing star players from overseas, but the most bullish outlooks on Suzuki peg him as an everyday right fielder with more than enough power to hit in the middle of a big league lineup. Dylan Hernandez of the L.A. Times cited a scout who called Suzuki the “best player in Japan” in an August profile of the slugger, and at least one evaluator to whom we spoke echoed that sentiment.
Suzuki won’t turn 28 until next August and is putting the finishing touches on another dominant season in NPB. Through 530 plate appearances this season, he’s posted a .319/.436/.640 batting line with 38 home runs, 26 doubles and nine steals (in 13 tries). Dating back to 2018, the right-handed-hitting Suzuki has put together a combined .319/.435/.592 batting line with 121 home runs, 115 doubles, four triples and 44 stolen bases (albeit in 72 attempts) through 2167 plate appearances.
Unlike many sluggers, including countryman Yoshi Tsutsugo, Suzuki achieves this production without selling out for the power. Since 2018, he’s fanned in only 16.4 percent of his plate appearances — compared to a nearly identical 16 percent walk rate. Suzuki has played some center field in the past, though no one we spoke to believes he’ll be a regular there. He has four NPB Gold Gloves for his work in right field, however, and while big league evaluators don’t seem convinced he’ll be an elite defender in MLB, the consensus seems to be that he’ll be a strong-armed, above-average right fielder.
The risk is always considerable when signing top-tier talent from other professional leagues, be it NPB, the KBO or the Cuban National Series. Suzuki is a legitimate superstar in NPB, however, with tools that are loud enough to forecast him as a Major League regular. A 25-homer bat with solid right field defense sounds an awful lot like Avisail Garcia, who places lower on this list — but Suzuki’s youth, huge walk rates and the upside of the unknown give him an edge for us, even if it’s possible they profile as similar players.
The contract we’re predicting for Suzuki would come with a $10.125MM posting fee, bringing the total outlay to $65.125MM. As always, it’s possible (or even probable) that his representatives will ponder the possibility of working an opt-out clause into the deal, perhaps allowing him to re-enter the market if he proves himself through his first two to three seasons. It’d be tough for a contender to just plug Suzuki right into its lineup, though teams like the Giants, Braves and Brewers certainly represent on-paper fits. Suzuki seems like a better fit for a club looking to turn the corner and willing to take on some risk, however, which could open him up to the Marlins, Cubs, Rangers, Tigers and Nationals.
Signed with Cubs for five years, $85MM, plus $14.625MM posting fee.
21. Anthony Rizzo. Three years, $45MM.
TD: Marlins / SA: Red Sox / AF: Braves
As the longtime face of the Cubs, it seemed like the club would hammer out an extension with Rizzo even if they intended to take a step back in 2022. He’d already signed a seven-year extension in 2013, which turned into a nine-year contract once both club options were exercised. As of March 31st of this year, Cubs GM Jed Hoyer was “very confident” a deal would get done and Rizzo had used the word “optimistic.” The Cubs’ initial offer was reportedly for five years and $70MM, while Rizzo sought something closer to Paul Goldschmidt’s $130MM deal. An agreement was not reached, and once the Cubs fell out of contention, Rizzo was traded to the Yankees.
At age 32, Rizzo’s play seems more solid than spectacular. He’s posted a 109 wRC+ in 819 plate appearances since 2020, roughly on par with Josh Bell, Jonathan Schoop, Miguel Sano, and Eric Hosmer. To sign Rizzo to a deal well beyond our projection would require placing a large value on intangibles, or expecting him to defy the aging curve and return to his 2019 form. Still, Rizzo is free of a qualifying offer and faces limited competition at first base unless Freddie Freeman and/or Brandon Belt make it to the market. Many clubs could find a spot for him, especially if the NL DH adds flexibility.
Signed with Yankees for two years, $32MM, with an opt-out.
22. Anthony DeSclafani. Three years, $42MM.
TD: Mets / SA: Mariners / AF: Cardinals
DeSclafani had put together some solid 3-WAR type seasons for the Reds in 2015 and 2019, but he scuffled in 2020 with a right teres major strain that limited him to seven starts. The Giants jumped in with a one-year, $6MM contract and a rotation job. The result was a 3.17 ERA that ranked 11th in the NL among those with at least 150 innings.
In five of the past seven seasons, DeSclafani has started at least 20 games — the exceptions being the shortened 2020 season and 2017, when he missed the season due to a ligament issue in his right elbow (but notably avoided surgery). In four of his five mostly healthy seasons, “Disco” has pitched to a 4.05 ERA or better.
DeSclafani’s skills and history suggest he’s more of a 4.00 ERA type pitcher than the 3.17 level he showed in 2021, but that would still be plenty valuable for clubs seeking mid-rotation innings at a reasonable price. We discussed whether a four-year deal was possible and agreed it’s not out of the question, but we see a three-year deal as the likelier outcome.
Though Giants president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi issued a qualifying offer to Brandon Belt this offseason and Kevin Gausman last winter, he chose not to take the plunge on DeSclafani. We believe DeSclafani would have accepted, and perhaps the Giants didn’t want to tie up that hefty one-year salary so early in the offseason. DeSclafani may yet return to the Giants, but he’s now free to explore the market without being hampered by the QO. The Tigers, Royals, Twins, Red Sox, Blue Jays, Angels, Mariners, Rangers, Mets, Nationals, and Cubs are among the other teams that make sense.
Signed with Giants for three years, $36MM.
23. Justin Verlander. Two years, $40MM.
TD: Giants / SA: Giants / AF: Braves
Like Scherzer, Verlander is a future Hall of Famer likely to sign a high-AAV, short-term deal. The difference is that Verlander, 39 in February, underwent Tommy John surgery in October 2020. He missed almost the entirety of that season and all of 2021, but won the AL Cy Young award in 2019 and finished second in 2018.
Verlander will be 17 months from his surgery in March of next year, so he should be able to have a normal Spring Training (barring a lockout). Even if his 220 inning days are behind him, Verlander will appeal greatly to contenders. Though Verlander has pitched only six innings since 2020, the Astros issued him a qualifying offer. In October, Astros owner Jim Crane suggested Verlander will be “looking for a contract of some length,” implying perhaps a two-year pact. If things somehow don’t work out between Verlander and the Astros, the Red Sox, Yankees, Blue Jays, Tigers, Angels, Mariners, Braves, Mets, Cardinals, Dodgers, Padres, and Giants could be interested.
Signed with Astros for one year, $25MM. Gains $25MM player option for 2023 with 130 innings pitched.
24. Avisail Garcia. Three years, $36MM.
TD: Royals / SA: Marlins / AF: Rockies
Garcia, 30, put together a solid season in 2021. He posted a 115 wRC+ with a career-best 29 home runs in 135 games as the Brewers’ right fielder. Defensively, he seems to be at least average, depending on your metric of choice. Garcia has 88th percentile sprint speed and is very strong in most Statcast batting metrics. He’s a player who seems like he could have another level, but that was also true when he signed his two-year deal with the Brewers. Garcia could be a fit for the Marlins, Royals, Rangers, Mets, Cubs, Reds, and Rockies if the Brewers don’t bring him back.
Signed with Marlins for four years, $53MM.
25. Jorge Soler. Three years, $36MM.
TD: Brewers / SA: Rockies / AF: Marlins
Soler defected from Cuba in 2011 and signed a nine-year, $30MM deal with the Cubs. He was a part of the Cubs’ 2016 championship team, but was traded to the Royals for Wade Davis after that season. In 2019, Soler shook off a long injury history to set the Royals’ franchise record with 48 home runs – perhaps aided by playing 107 games at DH and only 56 in the field. Soler played 752 innings in right field this year, his most in the field since 2015 – in part because the Royals traded him to the Braves at the deadline. He’s never been a good fielder, and rated as one of the game’s worst defensive right fielders this year.
Soler struggled mightily in the first half of the season, but from July 20th forward, he posted a 144 wRC+ that ranked 21st in all of baseball. Soler capped his season by winning the World Series MVP, crushing three big home runs against the Astros. 30 in February, Soler lights up Statcast and demonstrated his ceiling back in 2019, even if he played at replacement level overall this year. If the NL gets the DH, Soler could snag a three-year deal.
Signed with Marlins for three years, $36MM with opt-outs after ’22 and ’23.
26. Alex Wood. Three years, $30MM.
TD: Mariners / SA: Nationals / AF: Twins
Wood, 31 in January, was a second round pick by the Braves out of the University of Georgia back in 2012. He was sent to the Dodgers in a three-team, 13-player swap at the 2015 trade deadline, and then moved to the Reds in another complicated trade in December 2018. However, Wood tallied only 48 1/3 frames from 2019-20, resulting in a pair of cheap one-year free agent deals with the Dodgers and Giants.
When healthy, Wood has always been effective. He made only seven starts for the 2019 Reds due to a back injury. He cracked the Dodgers’ rotation in the shortened 2020 season, but quickly went down for shoulder inflammation and pitched mostly in relief upon his return. For the Giants, though, Wood was healthy for the first time since 2018, making 27 starts despite starting on the IL due to a March back procedure and later missing time due to COVID-19. Wood’s 26 K% ranks sixth among free agent starters, and he’ll cost a lot less than those ranked ahead of him. He’s also free of a qualifying offer, but that’s true of the other mid-range starters as well.
Signed with Giants for two years, $25MM.
27. Steven Matz. Three years, $27MM.
TD: Red Sox / SA: Angels / AF: Nationals
Matz, a 30-year-old lefty, was drafted out of high school by the Mets in the second round in 2009. He underwent Tommy John surgery in May 2010. Matz finally debuted for the Mets in 2015, pitching well enough to get the ball in Game 4 of the World Series. He became a rotation mainstay in the four years that followed, pitching fairly well aside from a 2017 season mostly lost to elbow woes. Matz made 60 starts with a 4.09 ERA from 2018-19, but was yanked from the rotation in 2020 after five rough starts. Considered a possible non-tender candidate after that season, Matz was instead signed and shipped to the Blue Jays in a trade.
Matz pitched well for the Jays, with a 3.82 ERA in 29 starts. His strikeout and walk rates were roughly league average. Only six left-handed starters threw harder than Matz’s 94.5 miles per hour average this year, so it’s possible suitors will aim to unlock another level of strikeout ability in him. Matz declined a reported multiyear proposal from the Blue Jays, who declined to make him a qualifying offer. Other clubs seeking an middle of the rotation arm like Matz might include the Tigers, Royals, Twins, Angels, Mariners, Rangers, Nationals, Cubs, Cardinals, and Giants.
Signed with Cardinals for four years, $44MM.
28. Kendall Graveman. Three years, $27MM.
TD: Astros / SA: Royals / AF: Dodgers
Graveman, 31 in December, was drafted in the eighth round by the Blue Jays out of Mississippi State back in 2013. He joined the A’s in the Josh Donaldson trade the following year. Graveman served as a groundball-heavy, pitch-to-contact starter for the A’s from 2015-17, putting up a 4.11 ERA in 71 starts. Graveman lost his rotation job early in the 2018 season, and then went down for Tommy John surgery in July of that year. The A’s cut him loose, and the Cubs signed him with an eye on the 2020 season.
The Cubs chose to decline the option, leading to a $1.5MM deal with the Mariners for ’20. Graveman’s 11 appearances that year didn’t impress, but his fastball ticked up close to 95 out of the bullpen and he figured out a four-seam fastball during quarantine. A benign bone tumor was discovered in Graveman’s spine, but he was able to pitch with it. Graveman’s club option was declined again after the season, but this time he re-upped with the Mariners for $1.25MM for ’21.
Graveman put it all together for the Mariners this year, posting a 0.82 ERA and 28.1 K% before the club surprisingly traded him to the division-rival Astros for Abraham Toro and Joe Smith. Though Graveman’s control slipped with the Astros, he still performed capably and assumed a key role in their bullpen through the postseason. Graveman’s skills form a rare combination, as only three relievers this year can boast of a 96 mile per hour fastball, 27 K%, and 54% groundball rate. He may be the best setup option on the market, and should draw interest from just about every contender.
Signed with White Sox for three years, $24MM.
29. Kenley Jansen. Two years, $26MM.
TD: Blue Jays / SA: Blue Jays / AF: Royals
Barely a year after spending most of his season catching for the High-A Inland Empire 66ers, Kenley Jansen made his MLB debut as a hard-throwing reliever at Dodger Stadium against the Mets in 2010. Armed with little more than a devastating cutter, Jansen began a run of domination out of the Dodgers’ bullpen that resulted in a 2.08 ERA over his first eight seasons. In January 2017, after fielding even larger offers from other teams, Jansen-re-signed with the Dodgers on a five-year, $80MM deal that still stands as the second-largest ever given to a reliever.
Though still very good, Jansen started to waver a bit in 2018, posting career-worsts in ERA, strikeout rate, and home run rate. He blew saves in Games 3 and 4 of the 2018 World Series, undergoing heart surgery in the offseason. Jansen battled through eight blown saves in 2019, posting a career-worst 3.71 ERA. After Jansen blew the save in Game 4 of the 2020 Series, manager Dave Roberts called on Blake Treinen and Julio Urias to close out Games 5 and 6.
Jansen began reducing his cutter usage in 2019 after typically throwing the pitch 85-90% of the time. He was down to 58% in ’21, to solid results. While Jansen’s ERA fell back down to 2.22 and was unscored upon in seven postseason innings, Jansen’s 12.9 BB% was the worst he’s had in a full season. Now 34 years old, the second act of Jansen’s career figures to be respectable, if not dominant. Jansen is ineligible for a qualifying offer, having received one previously. If the Dodgers decide to finally move on, the Red Sox, Blue Jays, Astros, Angels, Braves, Marlins, Phillies, and Padres could be potential suitors.
Signed with Braves for one year, $16MM.
30. Mark Canha. Two years, $24MM.
TD: Guardians / SA: Guardians / AF: Guardians
Canha, 33 in February, was drafted in the seventh round out of UC Berkeley in 2010 by the Marlins. The Rockies took him in the 2014 Rule 5 draft, immediately trading him to the A’s. He was able to hit well enough as a rookie in 2015 to stick on the roster, but required season-ending hip surgery in May of the following season. Canha was up and down in the Majors in 2017 and underwent wrist surgery after the season.
In 2018, Canha was finally able to stick in the bigs for good, posting a 115 wRC+. His best season was 2019, when he hit 26 home runs for a 146 wRC+ and four wins above replacement in 126 games. Canha has a strong .366 on-base percentage since 2020, but has slugged only .393 – perhaps the result of playing his home games at RingCentral Coliseum. The lack of power and hard hits does show up in Canha’s Statcast metrics. Defensively, Canha is able to play all three outfield positions capably.
For a team seeking to bolster its OBP, Canha is a strong addition who may be limited to a two-year term given his age. The Guardians, Marlins, Mets, Phillies, Rockies, and Giants could be fits.
Signed with Mets for two years, $26.5MM.
31. Kyle Seager. Two years, $24MM.
TD: Blue Jays / SA: Blue Jays / AF: Mets
Among free agents, only Marcus Semien hit more home runs than Seager’s 35 this year. Seager may have sold out for power, however, as he posted a career-worst strikeout rate and batting average. Seager still probably profiles as a 110 wRC+ type bat, and the 34-year-old plays above-average defense. Drafted by the Mariners in the third round in 2009 out of UNC, Seager has played 11 seasons with the club due to a seven-year extension signed in December 2014. The free agent market is short on regular third basemen this year, and the Blue Jays, Phillies, and Mets could make sense.
Retired.
32. Michael Conforto. One year, $20MM.
TD: Braves / SA: White Sox / AF: Brewers
Conforto, 29 in March, seemed primed for a large contract heading into the 2021 season. Instead, he tumbled to a 106 wRC+, his worst mark since 2016. In the four years prior, Conforto stood at 133, 18th in baseball among those with at least 1,500 plate appearances during that time. The longtime Met can play either outfield corner, and can be used in center in a pinch. In general, his right field defense has been average.
There will be teams that happily make Conforto a multiyear offer, crediting his long track record as one of the game’s better left-handed hitters over his mediocre 2021. The guess here is that Conforto will turn down the qualifying offer, find the multiyear offers insufficient, and sign a comparable one-year deal with a new team to rebuild value and shake off the QO. Yasmani Grandal and Marcell Ozuna followed this model successfully. If the Mets don’t hammer something out with Conforto, he could fit with the Rangers, Braves, Phillies, Cubs, Brewers, Rockies, Padres, Guardians, and Royals.
Remains unsigned.
33. Clayton Kershaw. One year, $20MM.
TD: Rangers / SA: Rangers / AF: Phillies
Kershaw, 34 in March, will eventually enter the Hall of Fame as a Dodger. His resume includes three Cy Young awards and votes in six other seasons. The legendary lefty saw his average fastball velocity drop to 90.7 miles per hour this year, down from the prior shortened campaign but within range of his 2018-19 work. He was a big contributor to the Dodgers’ 2020 championship, with a 2.93 ERA over five starts. Though a bit homer-prone over the past five seasons, Kershaw 25.2 K-BB% in 2021 remains elite.
Kershaw made 22 starts this year. He returned to pitch in September after a two-month absence due to a forearm injury, but after four starts his season ended due to a recurrence. Kershaw received a platelet-rich plasma injection in October for what he termed a “flexor issue,” with no current plans for surgery. The options for Kershaw appear to be a return to the Dodgers, a move to his hometown Rangers, or retirement. The Dodgers surprisingly elected not to issue a qualifying offer to Kershaw, which could be perceived as a red flag on his health or just a friendly gesture meant to allow him to explore free agency uninhibited. A multiyear contract is still possible, but we decided to predict one year given the uncertainty of Kershaw’s injury.
Signed with Dodgers for one year, $17MM.
34. Yusei Kikuchi. Two years, $20MM.
TD: Cubs / SA: Cubs / AF: Cubs
Kikuchi, a 30-year-old southpaw, averaged 95.2 miles per hour on his fastball this year – second only to Carlos Rodon among free agents. After an excellent July 1st start at Toronto, things were looking up. Kikuchi owned a 3.18 ERA, 25.4 K%, and and 8.5 BB% in 15 starts, and he had been selected to his first All-Star Game.
Though it didn’t immediately manifest in his results, Kikuchi lost 197 RPM on his four-seam fastball after June 12th. He also lost about one mile per hour on his fastball after July 1st, possibly the result of wearing down. From July 7th forward, Kikuchi posted a 6.22 ERA, 23.3 K%, and 10.3 BB%, with 1.7 home runs allowed per nine innings. By the end of the season, he’d been booted from the Mariners’ rotation. The Mariners made the easy choice to decline his four-year, $66MM option, but Kikuchi surprised some by declining his one-year, $13MM option. But not guaranteed a rotation spot in Seattle and with at least some prospect of a multiyear deal, Kikuchi’s decision makes sense.
Despite his solid start to the season and top-notch velocity from the left side, Kikuchi isn’t quite the appealing upside play you might imagine. His Statcast numbers show that when batters hit the ball against Kikuchi this year, they absolutely hammered it. The 91.9 mile per hour average exit velocity against him was the worst in baseball, and 47% of the balls hit against him were 95 and up (second worst in the game). As such, the fact that Kikuchi allowed more than a fifth of his flyballs to leave the yard can’t be waved away as a fluke. Some starting pitchers, such as Robbie Ray this year, are able to succeed despite allowing hard contact. But it’s hardly a positive, and Kikuchi does allow his share of walks as well. He’s still an interesting project, but a total reboot will be required. The Blue Jays, Tigers, Twins, Angels, Rangers, Mets, Nationals, Cubs, and Giants could be candidates.
Signed with Blue Jays for three years, $36MM.
35. Eduardo Escobar. Two years, $20MM.
TD: Nationals / SA: White Sox / AF: Blue Jays
Escobar, 33 in January, joined the Twins in the July 2012 Francisco Liriano trade with the White Sox. He received his first taste of semi-regular duty in his years with the Twins before being traded to the Diamondbacks at the 2018 deadline. A solid ’18 campaign earned Escobar a three-year extension with Arizona, and he rewarded the club with a 35 home run, 3.6 WAR season in ’19. Escobar struggled mightily in the shortened ’20 campaign. He bounced back in ’21 and was involved in the third trade deadline deal of his career, heading to the Brewers.
Escobar is an above-average hitter who can handle third base, second base, and first base. The Blue Jays, Mariners, and Phillies could be among those looking to plug him in at the hot corner on a short-term deal.
Signed with Mets for two years, $20MM.
36. Brandon Belt. One year, $18.4MM (accepts qualifying offer).
TD: Giants / SA: Giants / AF: Giants
Since 2020, Belt’s 163 wRC+ ranks behind only Juan Soto and Bryce Harper among those with at least 500 plate appearances. The flip side is that Belt played in only 97 games this year due to a left oblique strain, a right knee injury, and a fractured left thumb. The first baseman, 34 in April, did manage to play in more than 93% of the Giants’ possible games from 2019-20.
It’s also worth noting that Belt faced left-handed pitching about a third of the time from 2016-18, but only about 19% of the time from 2020-21. That’s likely because the Giants found quality right-handed complements in Darin Ruf and Wilmer Flores. That said, Belt hasn’t always struggled against lefties. He posted a 127 wRC+ against them over the first six years of his career, and a 129 mark this year. But from 2018-20, Belt hit just .207/.319/.319 against southpaws over 348 plate appearances, and it’s difficult to say if this year’s 75 PA erases that.
Having signed a five-year extension in April of 2016, Belt has spent his entire 11-year career with the Giants. The Giants issued him a qualifying offer, and it may make sense for Belt to accept and aim for a healthy 2022 with the only team he’s ever known, especially with the expected addition of the NL DH. We do believe offers larger than $18.4MM would eventually surface for Belt, but we don’t know his willingness to wait out a potential lockout and/or leave the Giants.
Accepted one-year, $18.4MM qualifying offer from Giants.
37. Noah Syndergaard. One year, $18.4MM (accepts qualifying offer).
TD: Mets / SA: Mets / AF: Mets
Syndergaard, 29, burst on the scene with a fourth place Rookie of the Year finish in 2015 and Cy Young votes the following season. However, the hard-throwing Mets righty made only seven starts in 2017 due to a lat injury. He bounced back to make 57 starts from 2018-19, but went down for Tommy John surgery in March 2020. It took Syndergaard 18 months to return to an MLB mound, as he made two appearances as an opener as the Mets closed out their season. Syndergaard wasn’t at his pre-surgery 97-98, but 95 miles per hour isn’t a bad starting point.
Syndergaard seems to be in favor of the Mets’ issuing a qualifying offer. A simple path forward would be for him to accept the $18.4MM offer and re-establish his health in 2022 before hitting the free agent jackpot.
Signed with Angels for one year, $21MM.
38. Corey Knebel. Two years, $18MM.
TD: Red Sox / SA: Phillies / AF: Twins
Knebel, 30 this month, was drafted 39th overall by the Tigers in 2013 out of the University of Texas. He was traded to the Rangers in the July 2014 Joakim Soria trade, and then to the Brewers in the January 2015 Yovani Gallardo deal. Throwing 95-97 miles per hour, he peaked in 2017 with a 40.8 K%, 39 saves, and an All-Star nod. Knebel was briefly demoted to Triple-A late in a rocky 2018 season, and then went down for Tommy John surgery in March 2019.
Knebel returned from surgery for 15 shaky appearances in 2020, and the Brewers traded him to the Dodgers in lieu of a non-tender. He missed more than three and a half months this season due to a lat strain, returning in August. After his return, Knebel was excellent in 19 appearances, including four as an opener. He opened twice more for the Dodgers in the playoffs among seven appearances, adding another dominant 5 2/3 innings to his ledger.
It’s fair to wonder how many innings Knebel can provide next season, but his last impression was a strong one and he should be a popular late-inning relief target.
Signed with Phillies for one year, $10MM.
39. Alex Cobb. Two years, $16MM.
TD: Royals / SA: Red Sox / AF: Athletics
Cobb, 34, joined the Angels in a February trade and pitched better than he ever did in Baltimore. Cobb’s 24.9 K% marked a career-best, though his walk rate was his worst since his brief rookie season. In his time with the Rays and Orioles, Cobb hasn’t primarily been a strikeout pitcher, instead relying on strong groundball rates.
Cobb hit the IL in late July with wrist inflammation this year, knocking him out for more than two months. Cobb hasn’t made 20 starts in a season since 2018. Still, he shouldn’t require a long-term deal and can supplement just about any rotation.
Signed with Giants for two years, $20MM.
40. Zack Greinke. One year, $15MM.
TD: Nationals / SA: Cardinals / AF: Red Sox
Still putting the finishing touches on a Hall of Fame resume, Greinke’s season ERA stood at 3.41 as late as August 23rd. He’d make only four more regular season appearances for the Astros, allowing 20 earned runs in 15 1/3 innings. Greinke’s season and perhaps Astros career ended on a high note, with four scoreless innings to start off Game 4 of the World Series.
In his 18-year career with the Royals, Brewers, Angels, Dodgers, Diamondbacks, and Astros, Greinke has one Cy Young award and votes in four other seasons. He’s always had impeccable control, though his strikeout rate tumbled down to 17.2% this year. The 38-year-old righty is enigmatic, thoughtful, and hilarious, and would likely be signed for his clubhouse presence as much as for his work on the mound. First, we have to see whether Greinke even wants to continue pitching.
Signed with Royals for one year, $13MM.
41. Eddie Rosario. Two years, $15MM.
TD: Nationals / SA: Braves / AF: Braves
Rosario, 30, was an above average hitter for the Twins each year from 2017-20, with a 112 wRC+ overall. He’s not much of an asset on defense, with a 2018 season that was particularly rough. Facing an arbitration salary beyond what the free agent market would pay a player of this skill set, the Twins chose not to tender Rosario a contract after the 2020 season.
The Indians gave Rosario a one-year, $8MM free agent contract, and by the trade deadline they were simply hoping to unload some of the financial commitment. Rosario became one of the Braves’ four outfield acquisitions, shipped to Atlanta while on the IL for an abdominal strain. Once he returned Rosario hit well in 106 regular season plate appearances for the Braves, posting a 133 wRC+. He added the NLCS MVP award on top, smacking three home runs in six games against the Dodgers. His power and solid finish to the season on the big stage should help him land a starting outfield job.
Signed with Braves for two years, $18MM.
42. Hector Neris. Two years, $15MM.
TD: Phillies / SA: Angels / AF: Rays
Neris, 32, has pitched in parts of eight seasons for the Phillies. While he’s been prone to the longball throughout his career, Neris also has a long history of missing bats. He’s got a 31.1 K% since 2019, 11th in baseball among relievers with at least 140 innings during that time. His swinging strike rate during that period ranks fifth, and Statcast also paints a positive picture. Neris hasn’t always been able to hold onto the Phillies’ closer job, and he had seven blown saves this year, but he remains a capable late-inning reliever.
Signed with Astros for two years, $17MM.
43. Jonathan Villar. Two years, $14MM.
TD: Mets / SA: Rockies / AF: White Sox
Villar, 30, is a solid utility infielder capable of playing second base, third base, and shortstop. Though he struggled to hit in the shortened 2020 season, he posted a 105 wRC+ this year for the Mets and a 107 mark in 2019. He also adds positive value on the basepaths, with 2021’s low two-thirds success rate likely an aberration. Villar is not generally known for his defense; his versatility is his calling card. After this year’s one-year, $3.55MM deal with the Mets, Villar should do better this time around through free agency.
Signed with Cubs for one year, $6MM.
44. Mark Melancon. Two years, $14MM.
TD: Phillies / SA: Cardinals / AF: Cardinals
Melancon, 37 in March, led all of MLB with 39 saves for the Padres this year. And among relievers with at least 50 innings, his 2.23 ERA ranked 18th. Melancon deploys a groundball-heavy approach, helping compensate for a strikeout rate below 22% over the last three years. The veteran righty is pretty good at generating weak contact, with a barrel rate and average exit velocity both in the 76th percentile or better. While Melancon’s skillset isn’t the one modern GMs crave, he keeps getting results and should surpass last winter’s one-year, $3MM deal.
Signed with Diamondbacks for two years, $14MM.
45. Ryan Tepera. Two years, $12MM.
TD: Angels / SA: Royals / AF: Phillies
After a 2019 season abbreviated due to elbow surgery, Tepera’s Blue Jays career came to an end when he was designated for assignment. The Cubs picked him up as a free agent for just $900K. Despite a less-than-ideal 13.5 BB% in 2020, Tepera was a key part of the Cubs’ bullpen and had a decent year. The 2020 campaign earned Tepera an accidental MVP vote, but the Cubs still weren’t impressed enough to tender him a contract. After a few months on the market, Tepera landed back with the Cubs, this time with an $800K guarantee.
This year, Tepera got a handle on the free passes, but still punched out more than 30% of batters faced. That earned him a ticket across town in a midseason trade with the White Sox. Though Tepera pitched better than most of the relievers ahead of him in the bullpen pecking order, including fellow ex-Cub Craig Kimbrel, he wasn’t thrust into a high-leverage role. Still, it seems like Tepera will finally earn some respect this winter with a multiyear deal.
Signed with Angels for two years, $14MM.
46. Corey Kluber. One year, $12MM.
TD: Braves / SA: Twins / AF: Giants
Kluber blossomed into a late-career ace with the Indians, winning Cy Young awards in 2014 and ’17 and receiving votes in three other seasons. However, he missed almost the entire 2019 and ’20 seasons due to a forearm fracture followed by a Grade 2 tear of the teres major muscle in his right shoulder. After showcasing for teams in January this year, Kluber signed a one-year, $11MM deal with the Yankees.
Kluber’s 16-start season with the Yankees was a mixed bag. He peaked with a May 19th no-hitter at Texas, but then missed more than two months with a subscapularis strain in his shoulder. The righty was much better before the injury than after it, and his 14.4 K-BB% on the season was far from vintage Kluber. 36 in April, Kluber’s past glory plus a healthy, normal offseason should still make him an interesting one-year deal candidate.
Signed with Rays for one year, $8MM.
47. Nelson Cruz. One year, $12MM.
TD: Padres / SA: Padres / AF: Brewers
Cruz, 41, posted a 122 wRC+ with 32 home runs in 584 plate appearances for the Twins and Rays this year, almost entirely as a designated hitter. While Cruz was a solid producer, 2021 was still his worst season since 2013. He’d been at a 150 wRC+ in the three seasons prior. Cruz’s drop in offense coincided with his trade to the Rays, as his walks and power took a tumble and he managed league average production. Cruz’s Statcast metrics remain near the top of the chart, and the ageless slugger will only be helped if the National League adds the designated hitter.
Signed with Nationals for one year, $15MM.
48. Danny Duffy. One year, $10MM.
TD: Angels / SA: Dodgers / AF: Royals
Duffy, 33 in December, got off to a fine start this year with a 1.94 ERA through his first seven outings. At that point, he hit the IL for a flexor strain and missed more than a month. He was reinstated for a brief 42-pitch start on June 23rd, and then was oddly brought out in relief two days later. After that he made four additional starts, topping out at 77 pitches, before the flexor strain recurred and ultimately ended his season. That wasn’t known at the time, and while on the IL Duffy attracted interest from the Giants and Dodgers, landing with the latter via trade. Duffy suffered a setback in September and never pitched for the Dodgers.
Having signed a five-year extension in 2017, Duffy pitched with the Royals for 11 years. In his 61 innings this year, he posted a career-best 25.8 K%. He’s generally been good for about 150 innings of 4.00 ball, and could become an attractive target once teams gain clarity on his health situation.
Signed with Dodgers for one year, $3MM.
49. Yan Gomes. Two years, $10MM.
TD: Yankees / SA: Yankees / AF: Rockies
In an extremely thin market for catchers, the 34-year-old Gomes stands out as the lone starting-caliber option in free agency. Gomes admittedly hasn’t been a particularly consistent hitter on a year-to-year basis, but over the past four seasons he’s turned in a combined .252/.311/.426 slash — about seven percent worse than the league-average hitter (regardless of position) but about five percent better than the average catcher.
A solid hitter relative to his positional peers, Gomes also possesses quality defensive ratings. He’s roughly average in terms of pitch framing, but Baseball Prospectus rates his ability to block pitches in the dirt quite well. Gomes also boasts a 29% caught-stealing rate across the past four seasons and notched a 31% mark in that regard in 2021 — well above the league-average of 25%. Gomes will turn 35 next July, so his days as a clear-cut starting option behind the plate could potentially be dwindling, but the Rangers, Yankees, Marlins, Angels and Cubs (depending on a trade of Willson Contreras) could all potentially use a solid veteran of this style.
Signed with Cubs for two years, $13MM.
50. Andrew Heaney. One year, $6MM.
TD: Cardinals / SA: Nationals / AF: Pirates
Heaney, a 30-year-old southpaw, had a disastrous year with a 5.83 ERA in 129 2/3 innings. Things only got worse after the Angels sent him to the Yankees at the trade deadline. But look below the surface, and you’ll see an interesting reclamation project. Among those with at least 250 innings over the last three seasons, Heaney’s 27.1 K% ranks 24th in the Majors. His K-BB% ranks 21st. The skills are there for a 4.00 ERA starter. Always a flyball pitcher, Heaney was undone in 2021 by allowing 18% of his flyballs to leave the yard. A team with a big ballpark might wind up with a bargain.
Signed with Dodgers for one year, $8.5MM.
Honorable mentions:
- Tyler Anderson – signed with Dodgers for one year, $8MM
- Andrew Chafin – signed with Tigers for two years, $13MM
- Johnny Cueto
- Josh Harrison – signed with White Sox for one year, $5.5MM
- Rich Hill – signed with Red Sox for one year, $5MM
- Daniel Hudson – signed with Dodgers for one year, $7MM
- Joe Kelly – signed with White Sox for two years, $17MM
- Aaron Loup – signed with Angels for two years, $17MM
- Andrew McCutchen – signed with Brewers
- Collin McHugh – signed with Braves for two years, $10MM
- Brad Miller – signed with Rangers
- James Paxton – signed with Red Sox for one year, $10MM
- Joc Pederson – signed with Giants for one year, $6MM
- Tommy Pham – signed with Reds for one year, $7.5MM
- Michael Pineda – signed with Tigers for one year, $5.5MM
- Brooks Raley – signed with Rays for two years, $10MM
- Tomoyuki Sugano – remained in Japan
Notable deals for unlisted/non-tendered players:
- Nick Martinez – signed with Padres for four years, $20MM with opt outs after first two years
- Yimi Garcia – signed with Blue Jays for two years, $11MM
- Kirby Yates – signed with Braves for two years, $8.25MM
- Michael Wacha – signed with Red Sox for one year, $7MM
- Jordan Lyles – signed with Orioles for one year, $7MM
- Luis Garcia – signed with Padres for two years, $7MM
- Michael Lorenzen – signed with Angels for one year, $6.75MM
- Jeurys Familia – signed with Phillies for one year, $6MM
- Drew VerHagen – signed with Cardinals for two years, $5.5MM
- Drew Smyly – signed with Cubs for one year, $5.25MM
- Kole Calhoun – signed with Rangers for one year, $5.2MM
- Matthew Boyd – signed with Giants for one year, $5.2MM
- Dylan Bundy – signed with Twins for one year, $5MM
- Roberto Perez – signed with Pirates for one year, $5MM
- Jose Iglesias – signed with Rockies for one year, $5MM
- Mychal Givens – signed with Cubs for one year, $5MM
We realize that a Top 50 Free Agents list with team predictions will leave some fanbases dissatisfied. A few notes to keep in mind:
- With our team predictions, each of us tried to present one possible puzzle where everything could happen. Once we start to get picks wrong, it has a ripple effect.
- While some teams’ key needs have gone unaddressed, we wouldn’t recommend reading into it. There are plenty of potential big names on the trade market, as well as good free agents who didn’t make our top 50.
- This list was originally published on November 8th, 2021. The 2021-22 offseason included a 99-day lockout from December 2, 2021 until March 10, 2022, during which all transactions were frozen.
DarkSide830
I think the Phillies will go over the tax this year, but I doubt they go all in for Correa or Marte.
VonPurpleHayes
@DarkSide830 I don’t see them making either of those signings either.
The Mets "Missed WAR"
I’ve seen a lot of people with Seager ahead of Correa. I like this ranking better though. Seager’s injury issues seem a little worse than Carlos’s. I like how they put everyone’s choice for the new team this year as opposed to just 1 consensus team everyone might not have agreed with.
RobM
@”Missed War,” I’m not sure about that. Seager’s major injuries seem more fluky. Let’s look at his two big ones. TJS on a position player generally doesn’t get repeated and is not shown to indicate future injuries. His injury this year, a broken right hand after being hit by a pitch, is also not indicative of future injuries. Correa’s injuries, particularly his back, can be problematic. Back issues and consistent soft-tissue injuries are more of an alarm bell for me. Neither will threaten Cal Ripken, and Seager has had some other injuries in and around the two big ones, but I’d rank Correa ahead of Seager on the injury-concern scale.
Samuel
@ VonPurpleHayes;
I can’t figure the Phillies / DD / Middleton out.
A few things I believe:
o Didi will come back heathy and be a force at SS again.
o Marte is a poor defensive CF – he belongs in LF. They’re predicting a 3-4 year contract. I see his team getting stuck with at least 2 of them. A 33 year-old guy with a history of losing time to physical problems as well as inconsistency suddenly has a career year. Bless him for getting a big contract. But this just doesn’t feel right.
o Both DD and Harper said the Phillies need to get younger. So if they sign Correa I can see them trading Didi for a youngster – but his trade value at this point is in the dumper. Maybe they trade Segura for some youngsters and move Didi to 2B.
o The problem is obviously the bullpen. If they were simply average in 2021 the Phillies would have won the NLE.
o DD is gong to upgrade that team into a legit WS contender within the next 2 years.
VonPurpleHayes
@Samuel I don’t think Didi was ever a force at SS. Even his best years, he wasn’t amazing defensively, and he’s not young anymore. And last season was so awful with no signs of his bat returning to form. I think if the Phillies rely on Didi, they’re in big trouble.
In terms of Didi’s trade value, as you pointed out, it’s not much. Segura is very good, but with his current contract, his trade value is also not that significant. So I don’t see either as viable trade pieces.
I know it sounds crazy, but I think the Phillies bullpen problems are a bit overblown. Their poor defense and their lack of starting pitching depth has led to a series of problems for the pen. So in many ways the pen will be fixed with deeper starting pitching (if Eflin is back healthy, that’s a very solid 1-5) and an improved infield. This is why I think signing a SS is or other infielder and CF is the way to go. Didi isn’t going to improve this team.
Paul Griggs
The reason Gregorious struggled for the Phillies is that he didn’t get to play the Twins and bat .800 against them. Keep him in the National League!
truthlemonade
Harper and David Dombrowski said the Phillies need to get younger?
I just checked their roster, and nobody seems that old. Both middle infielders, Gregorius and Jean Segura will be 32 next year. McCutchen just turned 35 and I am sure he will be gone. Was that comment specifically for McCutchen?
Ducky Buckin Fent
@Hayes –
Didi was in kind of an ideal spot in the Yanks lineup for him. He was typically sandwiched between a couple excellent RH bats. He also turned the short porch wall-scraper into his entire offensive approach. He was an above average hitter for us, but I think he was more a victim of circumstance than a good batter.
He had a very strong arm. & he had a penchant for the occasional spectacular play. But – in general – he was just above average with the glove too. He did an admirable job replacing Jeter. But Jeter was also kind of bad defensively at the end. Which made Didi look a little better to us than he probably was.
Phils need a CF.
Yanks need a SS.
Perhaps a bad contract swap of Hicks for Gregorius? I’m not sure I actually like that myself as a Yankee fan. But the AAV’s match up pretty well. Which is the important number to big market GM’s. & it *might* address needs for both clubs.
tstats
I like your bullet points
paddyo furnichuh
Bubble bullets to show “beliefs.”
cheesesteak
I would rather the Phillies sign Bryant to play LF, and Galvis over those big contracts.
Pads Fans
32 means that those guys performance is already going down and has been for a year or two. Its old in MLB terms. At 35 Cutch is ancient and has no upside to his game anymore. Its all downhill from here for him.
Correa is 5 years younger than Gregorious. They Phillies need more guys like Correa who still have peak years left in the tank.
VonPurpleHayes
That improves their offense for sure, but not necessarily their defense which has been a big issue. Still, I’d take it.
The Mets "Missed WAR"
Wow. One prediction proved wrong already. Andrew Heaney didn’t sign for $6M. He signed for $8.5M. Also didn’t sign with the Pirates, Nationals or Cardinals. He signed with the Dodgers instead. One thing I don’t understand is Joc Pederson turning down his mutual option. Heaney was ranked ahead of Joc and projected to get $6M. Joc Pederson turned down a $10M mutual option in favor of a $2.5M buyout. That means Joc turned down a net $7.5M gain when he’s projected to make less than $6M. Joc also finished the season with 0.0 baseball reference WAR. Since when is 0 WAR worth more than $7.5M? It seems like he should have accepted his option and hoped the Braves did the same. Is it just me or does a 0.0 WAR player like Joc Pederson valuing himself at over $7.5M a mistake on his part?
panj341
Don’t know why anyone would think Pirates would sign any of these free agents.
mkeyankee
Pirates are being closely watched by mlbpa for fa minimum violations. They need to sign enough players to avoid heavy fines, draft pick forfeiture or worse.
panj341
Won’t happen. Nutting will push the envelope. Claim he has so much young talent with all the salary dumps that he doesn’t need any free agents.
NyyfaninLAA land
Lesson as always for players is sign early to do better. Surprised this happened so quick but good for Heaney.
Wonder if the other signing of TJ McFarland in STL means we may see early action on lefties.
haringbone
He’s probably looking for a multi year deal and cares about that more than a higher 1 year contract.
Steve Adams
I see the Phillies as a team with an aggressive owner and perhaps the most aggressive baseball ops leader in the sport now sitting at a decade without a playoff appearance. They’ve said they need to improve defensively and add a bat to pair with Harper in the middle of the order. Correa checks both boxes.
I also, somewhat symbolically, wanted some indication on MLBTR that we don’t — or at least, I personally don’t — see Correa/Tigers as the fait accompli many make it out to be.
Francys01
I don’t know if it’s only me, but I don’t think Correa is a 300 million player. I would be more comfortable giving a contract like that if I was a general manager to Corey Seager. I know Correa has proven he has more power than Seager, but overall I prefer Seager. Although, I don’t normally like those big contracts because most of the time it doesn’t work out for the team. When it comes to defense I also believe Correa is a better defender. However, Seager is better for me.
DarkSide830
yeah, i dont see him as a $300 million player with his injury issues
Francys01
DarkSide830- Yes. I think Seager is a better hitter than Correa overall with less power, but a better contact hitter. When it comes to the postseasons Seager has hit/ perfomed better than Correa and correct me if i’m wrong.
DanzigInTheDark
I will gladly take the chance to correct a wrong here.
Seager’s postseason career: 264 PAs, .236/.318/.459, 13 HRs, 67/26 K/BB. Had a huge 2020 NLCS/World Series(.347/.439/.816 with 7 HRs in 57 PAs) where he won MVP of both series, but only .207/.324/.364 with 6 HRs in his other 207 playoff PAs.
Correa’s playoff career reads .272/.344/.505 in 334 PAs. He’s never had a series like Seager did in the 2020 bubble playoffs, but he’s been a solid contributor to each of Houston’s runs since 2015.
Strosfn79
You are wrong.
Correa postseason 79g 18hr 59rbi, .272/.344/.505/849OPS
Seager 61g 13hr 36rbi .236/.318/.459/.777OPS
Francys01
dannibalcorpse- You guys are right. I thought Seager had superior numbers than Correa in the past postseasons. I must say that I’m surprised. I don’t follow the Dodgers nor the Astros during the regular season, but I normally watch them play in the postseasons. Thank you for correcting me. But, I still prefer Seager. He would be the perfect lefty batter that the Cardinals need. Although, the super team / Dodgers will offer him a mega contract if not it’s going to be another team.
RobM
Francys01, part of it might have to do with when in the postseason these two players are at their best. Correa’s numbers get worse every level he steps up in the postseason–WC, ALDS, ALCS, WS–while Seager’s numbers get better each step up through the postseason. Correa in the World Series–.253/.306/.418; Seager in the World Series, .298/.414/.511. Seager also has an NLCS MVP from 2020, followed by the World Series MVP in 2020. Those performances in back-to-back series led the Dodgers to a world championship.
I do believe too much is made of postseason performances. We’re talking small sample sizes in most cases, broken up over a period of years. As Eddie Rosario showed, some players get hot at the right time. That said, I do believe some hitters maintain their skill set against higher-level pitching compared to others. I’d be happy with either Correa or Seager on my team in the postseason.
paddyo furnichuh
Did you remove his 2017 home playoff stats? That would be the logical way to analyze the numbers. But I think Correa will still be have better triple slash as Seager did not hit well in the playoffs before 2020.
Pads Fans
Correa – 34.2 WAR/.127 OPS+ in 752 games in regular season – .272/.344/.505/.849 in the postseason
Seager – 21.3 WAR/131 OPS+ in 636 games in regular season – .236/.318/.459/.777 postseason
Seager has been a marginally better hitter in the regular while being hurt much, much more.
Correa has been much better overall (a 38% difference in WAR is HUGE) and better as a postseason hitter.
Ma4170
I think WAR is a flawed stat that overrates defense but if you cited it I’m sure you don’t feel that way so it’s not worth debating
Seager missed significant portions of 2018 and 2021 and some time in 2019… Correa missed significant portions of 2017-19… where the heck do you get that he’s been hurt much much more? Not a fact at all
Seager is the better hitter by a bit… OPS+ of 131-127… WRC+ of 132-128… and hasn’t had the down years that Correa has had when he was below league average (2018 and 2020).. Correa much better fielder… i think in five years we look back and see seager was a much better investment than Correa, but time will tell
mvlastowski
Seagar didn’t cheat so his stats are more credible.
Dan Hunter
I always thought Marte would be great for the Mets in Citifields outfield.
RobM
He would, but he’s 33-years-old and depends on his legs part of his value. He’s coming off a career year, and his hitting was fueled by a near .370 BABiP. He traditionally runs higher BABiP’s, but 2021’s was still up there. He’s heading for some regression. The question comes down to price, he likely will be pricey.
lucas0622
May the best guesser win
dobrien13
$100M to spend and you have the Cubs down for $10M. Ok…
brewsingblue82
A) There’s nothing that says the Cubs are likely to spend 100 million this offseason. B) They’ve already spent 10 million by picking up Miley, so it’s hard to say how much further they’re actually going to go. But doubtful for the 100 mil spending spree you’ve implied
The Natural
Actually Kikuchi makes perfect sense. I’d have guessed that at least one of the three would have had the Cubs as a top suitor for Gray or Matz though.
Steve Adams
I had Matz on the Cubs until shortly before we published the list. I switched him and Kikuchi out, not knowing that both Tim and Anthony had gone Cubs/Kikuchi as well. We all kind of laughed when we saw all three of us landed there on him.
Matz or Gray to the Cubs feels totally plausible, though.
Tim Dierkes
I had the Cubs with Gray for a while. That’s easy to see.
User 4245925809
No offense to the guys at MLBTR Steve, but of all the FA’s listed as possibilities to sign with Boston above, Matz is the only 1, other than possibly Schwarber for a lower figure myself.
On that DD post also? Yes, Philly has a great/spending owner and GM, who both like to make moves, but they are going to be hampered by being so close already to the (now) lux. tax and nearly non existent farm system prospect wise.
VonPurpleHayes
@johnsilver agree with your Philly points, but they aren’t as close to the lux tax after declining options on a number of players, they sit around $170. They were at $205 last year. So I expect them to at least go that high again.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
Hendricks, Miley, Gray, Kikuchi. And the first two gone by trade deadline.
dobrien13
With Miley I think their commitment is $75m or so. As a large market team, w/ an ownership group that has spent hundreds of millions developing real estate in/around Wrigley, as well as eschewing a contact with Comcast in favor of starting your own tv network, they need fans in the stands and the only way to do so is to commit resources and win.
Rebuilding for 3-5 years would crush the Ricketts after the fan base has tasted winning and knows the team went from being valued at $800m to $3B in the last decade. I for one won’t spend a $1 at Wrigley if they aren’t at least at $175m, which is basically just getting back to where they were this past season.
No reason they can’t responsibly spend (Jed’s asserted goal) $100m this off season and be in a position to compete next year.
Jaybird08
Except that both owner and Hoyer guaranteed they would be major players in free agency and this would be a quick turnaround
hyraxwithaflamethrower
They’re all picking their top teams to land a particular FA. It’s not like the Cubs were only mentioned as a possible landing spot for one player: they were mentioned nine times. And, be honest, if you were a ballplayer, would you rather go somewhere a rebuild is starting and be on a bad team for 3-4 years or go to a team likely to make the playoffs or, at least, who’s coming out of their rebuild like the Tigers?
cubbiesjz9
I don’t believe for a second the Cubs will sign one free agent. While I don’t expect them to spend 100 million, I do thing they’ll add at least two starting pitchers, most likely Gray, Matz, or Kikuchi. I also don’t buy the argument that free agents won’t want to sign with the Cubs. This will not be another total rebuild. I can see them seriously contending by 2023.
cubbiepatriot21
Why would they claim Miley as an established starter if they were simply rebuilding? They have the ability to sign a few players to long term deals or mid-term deals while waiting on the youth they’ve accumulated. They will not be able to get folks in the seat for the product /players they put on the field after July. They must try like the Yankees. And before you say they aren’t the Yankees–nobody is going to this Wrigleyville theme park they are creating only for hotels and bars. The Ricketts absolutely need fans to go to games. I’ve sat through losing seasons where the stands were empty and tickets were easy to get on the cheap. They did not renovate Wrigley and the surrounding neighborhood to do absolutely nothing.
Jake1972
The Cubs are in a rebuild and them claiming Miley off the wire was to add a pitcher they can flip at the trade deadline for prospects.
The Cubs would be wise to sign players they can easily flip and punt this upcoming season and 2023 and focus on contending in 2024 and do the rebuild correctly.
The team need a true first baseman, third baseman, outfielder and if they trade Wilson C. then a catcher.
Cubs should have moved Kyle and Wilson during the trade deadline last season and just made it clear the Cubs were rebuilding.
So expect a few lean years kids!
Shane Newbanks 2
Depending how quick some of their prospects develop, I could 100% see them competing for a Central title in 2023 and hopefully a pennant come 2024. That also depends on how Free Agency goes as well. Like others said, I think they sign low end guys this offseason in hopes to deal them at the deadline, then go all out next offseason.
NyyfaninLAA land
Hmmm, 5 of their top 15 prospects from the top ranking sites have significant time in AA by this season, 6 if you count B. Marquez’s 1 MLB appearance in ’20 (otherwise he’s only reach A+) before missing this year. And their 40 man isn’t loaded with keystones controlled through ’23.
That suggests they’d have to massively add to the mix prior to ’23 – or have a number of prospect guys make Great Leaps Forward. Too soon to my mind.
RoyalsFanAmongWolves
Don’t they have to rebuild their farm system? They pretty much emptied it out in pursuit of more championships after they won in ‘16.
Inside Out
Oh get over yourself. The Cubs are pinching pennies and will sign at best one lower ranked player from this list. Ricketts is a greedy miser and knows Cubs fans buy tickets no matter how poorly he treats them.
Joe says...
This list is better than a lot of others I have read.
Yankee Clipper
Yes, I love when MLBTR does these.
I am a bit dismayed by the fact that the Rangers, BJs, Phillies, etc, are seen as landing several, while the Yankees are only listed for Seager and Gomes, if it pans out that way.
Ducky Buckin Fent
Yanks are listed a handful of times in the attendant write up too, @Clipper.
Yankee Clipper
Ducky – Yes, and hopefully, the ancillary takes prove to be more fruitful…. Specifically CF. We shall see, time will tell.
At the lengthy proposed and associated numbers, if proven accurate, I do think I’m leaning toward Story over Seager, if it’s the difference in upgrading CF. Seager has an unquestionable bat, but I don’t think Story will be as…regressed (?) offensively as many believe on here.
Yankee Clipper
Hey Guys,
How about that Cole fella?! Cy Young finalist…. So much for all the criticism. I know he won’t win but I think the attacks on him were overblown. He’s a true ace and he will come back strong again next, for #28!
Dustyslambchops23
Great work MLBTR team, very great write up for each player.
I hope the ‘I can’t believe you think my team will or won’t sign x player!!’ Comments are minimal.
Ducky Buckin Fent
I can’t believe you think the Yanks won’t sign Scherzer!!!!!!!!!
Appalachian_Outlaw
I can’t believe you think the Pirates won’t sign Scherzer!
Milwaukee-2208
Very excited for this offseason! Best articles this site does is the predictions. Cant wait to go 4/50 again in my list
8ManLineupNoPitcherNoDH
Franco thinks Atl is letting Freeman get away. Guess he’s only here for comic relief.
Cardsfanatik redux
I’m pretty sure they stated it’d be hard to let him walk, but at 30 million per season, it doesn’t leave them much room for anything else. And why should Freeman take less? Not saying the Braves won’t resign him, but 30 million per year over 5 or 6 years isn’t usually their mo. It’d be weird to see him in another uniform, but wouldn’t be shocking.
8ManLineupNoPitcherNoDH
Face of the franchise who stuck it out with the organization through thick and thin. Beloved in Atlanta. AA already said payroll will go up. He’s not going anywhere.
seamaholic 2
He’s 32 and probably asking for 8yrs/$200m. Dunno who the Braves have behind him at 1B, but for a team with an actual budget, that’s a major call, and not an easy one.
mkeyankee
Reminds me of Pujols and stl right before he signed with the Angels.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
Let’s say Atlanta ball club offers Freeman 7 years at 26 million. I think another club would have to offer 8 years at 32 million to get him to leave. He stays with Atlanta ball club.
amk1920
Freeman has gotten all the way to free agency. It’s not a lock he comes back. Rumors were he just wanted the Goldy deal and it’s strange ATL didn’t want to give him that. I would predict he comes back but it wouldn’t be a shock if he gets more elsewhere.
Appalachian_Outlaw
I hope Freeman comes back to Atlanta. The Goldscmidt deal should be a no-brainer for Atlanta. Give it to him and run. My concern is they’re far apart on the years, as I really can’t see Atlanta and/or Freddie being that far apart on the AAV for him- and that may be the harder gap to bridge. I’d do five or six years in a minute, though.
padam
“Francisco Lindor has better defensive numbers but has never hit the way Correa does.”
What…? Take a look again.
Tim Dierkes
Lindor has topped a 118 wRC+ twice: in his rookie season in 2015, and in 2018 when he was at 132. Since then he’s at 110.
Correa has topped 132 four times, including this year. 129 since 2019.
8ManLineupNoPitcherNoDH
So he has hit like Correa previously. Seems like you’re proving padam right.
Tim Dierkes
I just showed that Correa hit at a level four different times that Lindor never reached.
Rangers29
Lol, this has “why are you booing me, I’m right” energy all over it.
Samuel
@ Tim Dierkes;
Welcome to your chatroom.
L O L
Samuel
@ Ken Jergins;
Your bringing up another variable as to why the same statistic for 2 players can be interpreted differently, is why as a fan I don’t get bogged down in statistics. All statistics are simply algorithms – i.e. snippets of computer code – that look at the variables being inputted and spew out a numerical result.
Most individual MLB FO’s have employees that go over those variables by writing even more computer code, as well as analysts that look for inconsistent variables – both of which help to interpret the results better.
Here’s another variable for you regarding this subject – last year Lindor missed a lot of time with injuries while Correa missed much less time pretty much being rested. How do we project what will happen over the period of their 2 contracts?
8ManLineupNoPitcherNoDH
“never” and “four differernt times” are not the same thing
Strosfn79
Anyone can cherry pick whatever stats they want to makeva point.
For example you mention he has played in over 110 g in only 2 of 7 seasons.
29%
However he was not brought up to the majors until June in 2015 and there were only 60 games played in another.
So he has played over 110 g in 2 of 5 possible seasons.
40%
I’m not saying that’s good.
I’m saying you included those 2 seasons trying to make your point look better while simultaneously commenting on someone else doing the same thing.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
If you have one foot in boiling water and the other foot in a bucket of ice, the statistician may tell you that, on the average, you are comfortable.
padam
As a data scientist, I question the complete effectiveness of the wRC+, since it doesn’t account for lineup, game situational batting, and pitch offerings (and pitcher quality). No different than accessing risk or scoring level of difficulty.
With that said, when comparing the two players and their statistics Lindor comes out on top. Old school statistics that account for the execution of of the outcome of the game, such as HRs, RBIs, SBs, Avg, etc shows Lindor comes out on top. There isn’t a category for ‘all-time’ wRC+ leader, especially when it doesn’t account for games played, whereas volume stats do. It’s a great stat to show how well a player is playing when active, but in the ‘lineup’ surrounding them (which Correa has had an abundance of) and getting good pitches because of said lineup offering its protections, etc.
Dustyslambchops23
If you’re a data scientist you should look at the data that shows lineup protection doesn’t exist.
Johnny T
There is just so much wrong about this comment. Unlike your counting stats, wRC+ does adjust for ballparks and league-wide pitcher quality. A hitter with the exact same counting stats (.235 BA, 35 HR’s, 108 RBI’s) would be an MVP in the deadball era of 1968 but would be a below average player in the middle of the steroid era (2000’s).
Not a single stat you mention adjusts for pitch offerings (pitcher quality).
There is an all time wRC+ leader and it’s Babe Ruth with 197 on top. Ted Williams is 77th all time in hits. Is he really the 77th best hitter in history? wRC+ says 2nd best all time. I tend to agree.
When evaluating free agents, throw out counting stats like RBI’s and runs scored because those were reliant on the Astros robust production around Correa. I don’t want to know what Correa looks like in the Astros lineup, I want to know what he would look like in my team’s lineup. Therefore, give me wRC+. How many runs is this guy worth in this era, against current pitchers, regardless of which team he is playing for.
wRC+ is derived from counting stats anyways since wOBA is the main component.
Dixon Mias
I think giants will be signing some top free agents. They’re loaded in payroll space.
seamaholic 2
They’d fill up that space in no time just signing their own guys. Which is what I think they’re gonna do, except Bryant.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
They’re also loaded with holes, like 4/5 of their rotation. With the years most of their guys had, they’ll be hard-pressed to bring back nearly all of them or fill all of those holes with comparable players.
jvent
I’m surprised they didn’t sign Cespedes this year for some power, they’ll probably go after Conforto and maybe Cespedes if he’s still playing , maybe they’ll sign Scherzer too
Metsin777
How is Andrew Heaney in the top 50? Most of the/ if not all the honorable mention candidates are more valuable than him
Joe says...
I would definitely take Cueto over Heaney. Hell, I’d take Sheldon Cooper over Heaney.
JeffreyChungus
Bazinga
Ducky Buckin Fent
I will take you over Heaney, @Joe.
Joe says...
I am a lefty and had a pretty fair curveball back in the day Ducky.
Ducky Buckin Fent
See?
Halo11Fan
Heaney’s peripherals are very good. Someone is going to turn him into a dependable starter.
NY_Yankee
Heaney was a disaster for the Yankees. He should be in a no pressure situation like Baltimore where they would be happy with 10-10 and an ERA of about 4.5
Halo11Fan
Yes, complete disaster. I’m just saying there is a reason he’s number 50.
DarkSide830
how many years in a row are we going to keep saying this?
5toolMVP
3 more??
Halo11Fan
Until he stops missing bats at pitchers thrown in and out of the strikezone.
Datashark
I cannot see how tigers would spend $320 million on Correa.. They need help in so many areas this would cripple them to get better overall. I can see them trying to spend $$ on pitching more than just lottery ticket one player.
Saint Chris
I disagree. The Tigers don’t really have a lot of holes to fill. Torkelson, Greene, & Kreidler will graduate to the majors next year. Candelario, Schoop, & Grossman are solid veterans. We just acquired a decent catcher in Barnhart, and have a trio of young arms in Manning, Skubal, & Mize.
The Tigers have $100m to spend before they’re close to previous spending numbers. They could sign Correa, one marquee starting pitcher, and a lower-cost starting pitcher, likely be a playoff team, and still be way under budget.
AAATIGERS2020
I hope that the Tigers pass on signing Correa. He is going to want a long term contract, and that would take him to his late 30’s. You would think that they learned their lesson by now.
A serviceable short stop, until Kreidler is ready, would make me happy. Spread the money saved on multiple major league ready players.
Houstoncolt45s
Kreidler’s an intriguing prospect, no doubt, but building a future around a guy who’s been good at exactly one level of the minors for less than half a season isn’t exactly shrewd. Tigers need more of a slam-dunk offense-oriented presence with strong defense up the middle, and Correa precisely fits that mold. That said, if Kreidler keeps maturing as a hitter, there’s no reason why he couldn’t become a CT3-type wandering bat with enough seasoning at different positions.
Strosfn79
36 is mid thirties, not late 30s
And multiple “major leagues ready” players do not add up to the value of one superstar.
TorkelsonStan
Miggy’s contract started at 33 and to 40. Way different from 27. Also, this is the type of elite player you take the chance on. Barring a major injury it would be worth it even if he he starts to decline at 33.
Also, why all this Kreidler love?
Anyways, you pass now and the current rebuild leads to a playoff, but not championship, contender that’s when you start overpaying for whatever is available and get Jordan Zimmerman.
Tigers MUST do this if they really can.
seamaholic 2
Eh. Be careful of counting too much on prospects coming in and playing at a level that makes a team playoff competitive. Plus you need depth, always.
The Saber-toothed Superfife
Just praying today,Sunday, the Chris ILLICH, does. NOT FEEL OBLIGED,to spend money…just because.
It does not impress all the fans. INTELLIGENCE DOES.
Mr. ILLICH, PLEASE be conservative. You don’t need to spend that money because some sportswriters put the pressure on.
I will even say, MR. AVILA, please don’t be so eager. Talk to Mr. ILLICH. A smart owner would take the pressure off of you be extending your contract. You had bad luck, somethings didn’t work as planned and the rebuild was stifled. Chris ILLICH should recognize this.
The Saber-toothed Superfife
Pretty please with sugar on it and a cherry on top.
Datashark
Prospects are not guarantees in MLB
otherwise Brandon Larson of Reds fame would be an all-star home run king.
Tigers would be better to sign a cheaper SS for shorter term and less $$
and spread money towards holes / gaps and pitching
JoeBrady
Datashark
Prospects are not guarantees in MLB
=====================================
Neither are veterans. So is there a point here?
1984wasntamanual
Counting on prospects to graduate and all produce will lead to disappointment more often than not.
The Saber-toothed Superfife
Don’t forget to factor in the Al Avila factor.
Al has proven he can be a pushover, enjoys being liked and wants to be liked. He talks like Elmer and this is no place for puddy cats….. TIGERS ONLY.
Al needs my help. Poor guy.
stymeedone
What the Tigers do will come down to what Chris Illitch wants to do. We simply don’t know what that is yet. Myself, I lean towards Story. Decent bat with power, and solid defender, still has some speed, and won’t take the years required to get one of the bigger names. I’d also be willing to bring Iglesias back as insurance for Kreidler, should they go that way. Pitching is likely to be their priority, though. One solid starter and one back end guy, plus 2 bullpen arms for depth.
Nes
Couple things IMO…Ray getting more APV than Gausman doesn’t make a lot of sense…and I do believe the Mets keep Conforto
RobM
@Nes, Ray’s contract is one less year, so teams will pay a slight premium to reduce their longer-term exposure. They’re fairly close. Someone could certainly argue Ray should get a bigger contract. He’s the likely AL Cy Young winner, he’s a lefty, pitched in the DH league, and pitched in the AL East, all with hitterish ballparks and teams. It’s a brutal division. His home ballpark (all three of them!) were also bad for pitchers.
In Gausman’s favor, he has put together back-to-back good seasons. Ray, meanwhile, might concern some teams. He was great this year, and had a similar season back in 2017. That normally would be a positive, except in between he was mediocre to horrible. What happens if this was just a slightly better version of 2017, and he’ll now revert to 2018-2020 Ray with a 96 ERA+?
They’ll both get paid. Trying to value one of the other isn’t easy.
cgallant
At 6/160m I’ll take Kris Bryant on the bosox. We don’t need Fredric Freeman.
NY_Yankee
I am no expert, but Correa to Seattle makes a whole lot of sense on both ends. Why? Mariners have a very good lineup and he would fit in perfectly, and from the Mariners perspective, take him away from Houston, you look like a playoff team ( maybe even Division favorites).
SodoMojo90
Please no Astros. Semien would look a lot nicer
jjd002
They are more than Correa away from being a division favorite. They were beyond lucky to finish as close as they did.
Poster formerly known as . . .
“In my experience there is no such thing as luck.” – Obi-Wan Kenobi
You want to argue with a Jedi?
ck420
Seattle already has a good shortstop we need a third or second baseman. Correa will cost way too much in my opinion, Kris Bryant is a better choice as long as he’s not too expensive as his offense has declined a little
JackStrawb
6/$160 for a 2-4 WAR corner guy like Bryant turning 30, who peaked five years ago and on average missed 35 games a year over the last four years?
That’s a great way to sink your team. How could any GM conceivably perpetrate this deal? Best case, you pay about $40m more than Bryant’s worth. Worst case? He starts missing enormous chunks of seasons, his offense collapses, and you get a couple of 2-3 win seasons from him before he’s out of the game or limping through a last, sad year as your fifth OFer and backup to your backup 1Bman.
mister guy
curiously, I would be interested to know if this gets changed around a lot if changes to the QO and/or the DH – I would imagine that the QO would highly change the market for guys like taylor that could go a lot of places and the DH would change castellanos’s market a lot as well since you can hide his defense
Steve Adams
Qualifying offer decisions are already in and did impact our placement and predictions. It’s part of why we wait until this morning to publish rather than going right after the World Series.
We operated under the assumption that the DH would be in the National League (hence my pick of Cruz to the Padres and Soler to the Rox).
Brew’88
Huh? Are the Red Sox moving the National League?
BRUH.SF.BRUH
@Brewer Rox= Rockies
junkmale
Alex Cobb in the top 40. Nice turnaround.
mrgreenjeans
Miss on Harrison not top 50… as always.. that kid will prove everyone wrong
brandonl
How is Loup with a sub 1 era not a top 50 free agent?
angelsfan4life
Marcus Stroman and John Gray make sense for the Angels. Marcus Semien, makes absolutely no sense for the Angels. I’d rather the Angels go with Captain Jack at SS. Than over pay for Semien.
jvent
The Angels do need pitching, why did they sign Rendon for all of that money when they really needed pitching., help Trout at least make the playoffs already, they can sign Stroman but I want Gray on the Mets we can trade you Carrasco for a RP I don’t care what they get for him.
5toolMVP
Did you forget how that off-season unfolded? The Angels went after pitching but missed on Cole and others, they either got outbid or the player outright preferred the east coast… THEN they pivoted to Rendon, which was a need anyway.
angelsfan4life
@jvent, the Angels had been towards the bottom of the majors, in regards of slugging and OPS since Troy Glause. The Angels had been needing an every day third baseman since Figins. Besides that as, 5toolMVP said, the Angels were in it for the 3 biggest FA starting pitchers. Wheeler wanted to stay on the East Coast. Strasbourg they tried, but he wanted to stay with the Nationals. Cole, people want to overlook the fact that the Angels offered him 8 years for 300 million.
RobM
They got outbid, but that was more a function of Cole wanting the Yankees, so they structured the deal to land him. Not much the Angels could do there.
JackStrawb
@5toolMVP Which was a blunder in any case, given that pitchers like Odorizzi and Taijuan Walker were available for 8m and 10m by AAV as late as February.
The Angels gave 70 starts to pitchers with ERAs over 5.25, with a cumulative ERA around 6.00. What a sorry front office.
Datashark
If am Jon Gray’s agent I would be pitching him towards SF, to get his numbers rejuvenated for bigger deal later.
BRUH.SF.BRUH
You can copy and paste the names of many pitchers on this list into that statement…
MLB Top 100 Commenter
I agree that Angels should sign three starting pitchers and maybe a bargain basement position player. I have low expectations this will happen.
degrominator34
Did Carlos Correa and seagers agent write this?
The Saber-toothed Superfife
Really! Salesmen for the players. Just once I would like to an article about ridiculous the cost of attending an MLB game has become.
America does not deserve to pay $7+ for a damn hotdog.
We saved the world, established democracy and freedom from those lousy Brits and this is how we get treated?
$7+ hotdogs?
JackStrawb
If you truly think—other than as a rhetorical device—that the U.S. “established democracy,” I had some very sad news for you.
1984wasntamanual
Things cost what they cost because people will pay it, not because of players’ salary. Also…The US is a Constitutional Republic, not a Democracy.
Yankee Clipper
1984: One would never know that based on the philosophical ponderings in this chat room. We would be tossed between socialism and communism.
mcdusty49
Surprised that none of you have Kershaw going back to the Dodgers
Pete'sView
Exactly. I think Kershaw is a lock to return to LA as a lifetime Dodger. Is he worth $18.4 anymore. No, of course not. But for PR purposes alone,. Kershaw is back with the Dodgers at $10M for 2022. Then retires.
JackStrawb
Of course Kershaw is worth $18.4m. Even in 2021, his worst season since 2008, he put up 2.1 rWAR. Pro rate 2020 and he hasn’t had a season worth less than $24 million by conventional FA $ per WAR standards since 2008.
If he only repeats his modest 2021 he’s worth the QO, and it doesn’t take much imagination to suggest he might double its value.
Ronk325
There’s going to be a lot of confused people on here when they see the Correa prediction. Half of the users on here foolishly seem to think he’s going to sign for $200M or less
5toolMVP
I think half of users here actually think he’s not worth the projected 10year $300m+ risk. A majority are probably fine with the AAV, just on shorter terms — again due to his past injury risk. Injury risk tends to increase as players age.
Ronk325
I’ve seen people on here legitimately say that 7 years and $210 is the best Correa will get. Others seem to think the Astros latest offer is reasonable. Whether people like it or not Correa will be getting a deal similar to what the guys here predict
RobM
I’ve been watching free agent signings going back decades. Let’s just say that the collective wisdom of fans is comically bad.
mkeyankee
Yep, Astro’s offer was token. Mostly, to tell the fans…”hey, we tried…market dynamics…end of the day etc.”
JackStrawb
Correa may well get 10/$320m, but it hardly means he should. 2021 was his first season worth as much as 4 rWAR since _2017._ A great player who simply cannot stay on the field. If you want to spend 1/3 of billion dollars on a player missing 45 games a year over the past 5 years, have at it—but expect to be badly disappointed.
2021 was the first season since _2016_ that Correa played more than 110 games. Imagine how much he’ll be playing at 32, 33, 34…. Why would you pay this player 85% of what Mookie Betts got?
Rangers29
I think Corey Kluber will prove to be the best budget signing this off-season. He hasn’t fallen off in terms of pitch movement and velocity too drastically, and what he does have will age really well. I’d give him a two year deal tbh. Think it’ll be well worth it.
JoeBrady
I think Kluber is a nice low-end candidate. He had a 3.46 ERA after 4/21. His problem (and Taillon) might just have been a rust issue. It’s a short sample, but nothing really looks out of whack. I’m not sure of the fit, but if the ERod bidding goes to extremes listed above, I’d like to see the RS sign him on a 1+1.
Yankee Clipper
I’d love him back with the Yankees if his injury risk wasn’t so high. He will undoubtedly hit the IL again.
Pete'sView
I’d like to see the Giants put in a bid for Kluber.
JerryBird
Hard to argue with the list. I can’t see gambling on Gausman. He is a one year fluke. If Scherzer’s arm is okay, he will get a couple of years. I see Kris Bryant staying on the west coast. Jon Gray is a risky signing at best. His Colorado numbers make him look below average.
And STL, please do not sign Heaney. He has failure written all over him.
BRUH.SF.BRUH
How is Gausman a one year fluke if he did it two years in a row?
etex211
There’s no way a low character guy like Correa should be at the top of this list.
JerryBird
etex211 – That’s ANALytics for ya!
Wilmer the Thrillmer
The only thing that sticks out to me is the Rodon prediction. Who is going to surrender a 2nd round draft pick plus pay 25mil for 1 year of a guy who finished the season injured and has a history of injury problems? Rodon knows he had a career year. He’s going to look at parlaying it into as long of a multi year contact as possible with as high of an AAV as he can get, even if it’s 12mil per year.
At first glance the rest of the list looks great! Thanks Tim, Steve and Anthony!
Steve Adams
Rodon did not receive a qualifying offer. No draft forfeiture needed!
Glad you enjoyed the list! It’s always a lot of work and also a lot of fun.
Wilmer the Thrillmer
Thanks Steve! I have to think that him not getting a QO will also serve as a red flag againt a one year high AAV contract if the White Sox didn’t think he was worth 18.4 mil because of his injury at the end of the season.
WrongM
If this list is ordered by total contract dollars, should Rodón either be farther down or have a different number in the contract prediction?
NyyfaninLAA land
Curious why Rodon is ranked where he is – not saying its wrong, just that the whole thing is stacked ranked by contract total except him.
kozy21
Bryant signing for $26MM+ AAV seems a bit egregious. His stats say he’s at best a $20MM AAV player.
kcusgnikcufsregdod
HIs agent is Scott Boras so you can bet Boras is going to have some creative sales pitch to get KB as much $$ as possible. At the end of the day I still think Giants resign KB, especially at that price. Anything over 170 and they’ll let him walk.
JackStrawb
The Giants are one of the smarter teams out there. There’s no way they’re going anywhere near $170m for Bryant, a 2-4 WAR player in steep decline compared with his peak, who started having trouble staying on the field at age 26. Now he’s 30.
Forget 2015-2017. That’s all gone and has no bearing on Bryant’s projections for 2022 and after. Bryant projects to 7-8 WAR over the next 3 seasons, before he falls to permanent backup status. That’s not even worth $70 million, never mind $170 million. $3/60m, perhaps with a vesting option—the smart teams aren’t going past that for Bryant.
jvent
I like the Mets with Marte and Syndergaard but I’d like for them to be in on Gray, Jensen and maybe K. Seager. I guess putting McNeil back at 2b will be ok or they can try Mauricio there.. I would try out Vientos in RF.
PutPeteRoseInTheHall
Marte would be a great fit in SF. I think if they miss out on KB, they get Marte
JoeBrady
I think Marte will be disappointing. He’s already 33 years old.
JackStrawb
@jvent The Mets need 4 starting pitchers. They can flirt with position players, but their rotation is in an absolute shambles, with no one a favorite to go 150 innings with an ERA under 4.25.
BUT, it’s the Alderson Mets. Expect the back half of the rotation to be catastrophically bad. He actually pretended David Peterson was their #4 SP last April, and that a bunch of pitchers with FIPs over 5.20 were “depth,” somehow. It’ll look something like deGrom-Syndergaard-Carrasco-Walker-Megill, and they’ll end up giving at least 50 starts to the likes of Jerad Eickhoff and Corey Oswalt.
kcusgnikcufsregdod
Sorry, you guys are normally pretty spot on. But missed greatly with this years list. The Giants, who have probably the most money to spend, just lost the face of their franchise, coming off a 107 win season after 5 years of mediocre years, are not going to sit idly,
They have a bunch of holes to fill. They will be much busier than you seem to indicate.
PutPeteRoseInTheHall
The Giants will definitely be spenders this off-season. They will spend a lot on a player or two at least
BRUH.SF.BRUH
@kcus In defense of the writers, they mentioned a number of different players potentially signing in SF. Not sure what you’re talking about…
CNichols
I wonder with Castellanos if the Padres can even afford $23M AAV right now with where their payroll is at. They do need a big bat like him, but they also need to bring in pitching depth as well and I don’t know how much salary they can really take on since once the arbitration salaries factored in, they’re already going to be around the luxury tax threshold for this year without even signing any FA. (Spotrac has them $3M over based on arbitration estimates).
I think they also face the heightened luxury tax penalty for signing anyone with a QO attached, so it makes it sting even more if they sign someone like Castellanos. Based on that, my though is that they’re going to have to be more active on the lower end of the FA spectrum instead of making a big splash this year.
kcusgnikcufsregdod
you’re right, the Padres are pretty maxed out. I don’t see them making any substantial signings. I do see them signing someone like Mark Canha.
Dustyslambchops23
We don’t know where the lux tax will be
CNichols
That’s a good point since the CBA is in flux and the number hasn’t been set. It is true that we don’t really know where this number will be for 2022, but we do know it was $206M in 2019, $208M in 2020 and then $210M in 2021, so it probably will have a modest increase from there.
The Padres are currently sitting at $213M without signing anyone. They might non-tender a couple players and reduce that amount a little. It’s also possible they could finally find a way to dump some salary. I’m just lowering my expectations for a big move since they already have so much money committed.
JoeBrady
Doesn’t everyone in here already know that there is no CBA yet?
JackStrawb
$23m AAV for Castellanos, a 2-3 WAR, one-dimensional slugger turning 30 who can’t get on base and has trouble staying on the field? It’s absurd.
stymeedone
Can’t even say “after the Myers contract” because they still have the Myers contract, I just don’t see the Padres adding another Bat first OF in Castellanos.
Champs64
Great job on the predictions. You can see that it has taken a lot of work to make the list plausible. It will be interesting to see which writer wins bragging rights.
Randy Marsh
There’s a report the Astros offered Correa 6 years 210 million. Crazy to think that’s a laughable offer now a days
hyraxwithaflamethrower
Well, I’ll take it if he doesn’t want it.
jaysfansince1977
Randy, the offer was 5 years for 160 Mil
Strosfn79
He is right.
There is a 6/210 report out there
Of course, who knows if it’s true, no official is willing to confirm nor deny.
But yes, it’s crazy to think it’s a laughable off.
The Astros front office have put a line in the sand, no contracts over 6 years, period.
Correa wants more years and the Astros just keep trying to up the AAV.
The good news is that lines in the sand are easily wiped away
The bad news is that Correa is as good as gone
hyraxwithaflamethrower
White Sox have a real penchant for trading away IF before they become either stars or at least, good quality major leaguers. Tatis, Jr., Semien (along with Bassitt), Escobar, and Madrigal. And for Shields, Samardzija, Liriano, and Kimbrel. Hahn and Co: please stop trading IF for pitchers; you’re just not good at it.
PutPeteRoseInTheHall
Some of these predictions seem a little ridiculous to me. Scherzer getting paid 120/3, when he’s, what, 37 right now? Gausman getting 6 years? No way.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
I think Marte’s deal is a bit generous. I can see four years, but only at a $15-16M AAV.
PutPeteRoseInTheHall
I agree. 15-16m per year on 3-4 years sounds reasonable, especially because he isn’t showing many signs of slowing down. He’s still running the bases very well and is still a very competitive hitter. I believe Zaidi makes a push for him
hyraxwithaflamethrower
I could see that, especially if KB departs.
Dan Hunter
Castelllenos
Bryant.
Marte
Gausman
to Queens.
VonPurpleHayes
That’s quite a giant haul. I don’t even think Cohen swings that.
Appalachian_Outlaw
They can’t even sign a POBO, man.
Plus those four signings would send them over the 300m dollar payroll level. I can’t see anyone going there for multiple years.
mkeyankee
Predicting big negative surprises for nym and A’s this hot stove. Do not be surprised if a major name in ny asks for a trade.
JackStrawb
@Dan Hunter It’s amusing, anyway, to think that the Mets might actually sign four elite FA, that they’d actually want to come to Queens! It’s also possible Alderson is foolish enough to add just one good SP to a rotation currently unlikely to give 375 innings with ERAs under 4.50. Imagine pretending deGrom-Gausman-Syndergaard-Walker-Megill is a contender’s rotation.
Flyby
Imagine a rotation of harvey, degrom, syndergaard matz/niese colon … that rotation will never amount to anything … oh wait that was the rotation that took them to the world series that year. I’m not saying this rotation will take them there but if i were to tell you that in 2015 that syndergaard in his rookie year, harvey coming off tjs, colon in his 40’s, niese who in his career had an era+ of 100 once, matz who was not even on the radar for the mets, and degrom coming off rookie of the year honors would be the rotation to get you to the world series would you believe it?
Anything can happen if things fall the right way.
Oh you also forgot Carrasco as well as he was coming off injury and hopefully should be in the running for the rotation.
T-Dawg
Steve Adams… add Corey Knebel to your list of FA’s the Red Sox would like to sign, and I think you’ve nailed it! Rizzo, Taylor, Cobb, Rodin are exactly the type of players Chaim Bloom would attempt to sign. It mirrors last years signings, Hernandez play multiple positions with Taylor. It mirrors Richards with Cobb. It fills needs a 1B, #2 starter and RP with Rizzo Rodon, and Knebel signings. If these aren’t spot on signings in the near future, they will be close to it. Based on his limited previous track record Chaim Bloom looks for value to fill team needs with upside while developing the minor leagues. Excellent article overall and I thoroughly enjoyed the read. Thank you.
twins33
I would really like if Eduardo Rodriguez to the Twins came true.
JoeBrady
My predictions for future disappointments (at the predicted prices):
Gausman-decent+ pitcher, but with only a 99 ERA+ in the three previous seasons. I don’t see him replicating 2021, and he remains a big injury risk.
Castellanos-Similar to Gausman. He’s okay, but he’s had two outliers. One being with the Cubs, before he walked, and one in 2021, before he walked.
Marte-4 years at age 33?
Schwarber-Much like Castellanos. 2021 was a career year. In the three previous years, he had an OPS+ of 115 and a semi-DH.
Neris-Seems pretty pedestrian to me. Not bad, but when team like Philly, with their BP, wants to replace you, who else should want you?
James A.
If the braves get verlander they are going to repeat Verlander, Morton, Sorka , Fried , Anderson that’s a great rotation and that bullpen with that offense with Acuna coming back. THATS DANGEROUS
jcamhou
I know this is real lazy – but could y’all add the AAV with contract predictions? Great work as always! Favorite article of the year every year!
JoeBrady
No. Virtually every contract listed is maybe 2-3 seconds of math. It might be a little bit of a challenge, but I think I could the math for all contracts in under a minute. Granted, I am an accountant, and this is what we do, but still………….
Josh5890
I know this has been beaten to death but looking at these contract projections for the former Cubs core:…
Bryant- 6 yr / 160m
Baez- 5 yr / 100m
Rizzo- 3 yr / $45m
Schwarber- 4 yr / 70m
I can’t help but wonder what extensions were offered and if any of these guys are kicking themselves for not signing earlier. No idea what went down with the supposed Bryant talks but I’m sure the Cubs offered more to Baez and Rizzo than what they will end up getting this time.
JackStrawb
The Cubs offering Baez almost 200m after his peak seasons is somehow hilarious.
Dunk Dunkington
Cubs will sign Corey Seager.
Yankees signing Seager would likely means they will let Aaron Judge walk in free agency in 2023. I don’t see it.
Edward Whorton
The Seager brothers will be Texas Rangers next year.
PadreFan19
I’d like to see Nick Castellanos repping the Brown and Gold
JoeBrady
My predictions for teams that will like their signings:
Story-For only $126M/6, he seems like a steal. In the three previous seasons, he had a consistent 123 OPS+, and a 6.5 bWAR/650. Had this survey been taken last year, I think he’d have been at the same level as Seager and Correa.
Baez-There is room for disappointment, but I think that is priced-in and then some. He’s had a pretty consistent 113+ OPS, even with the strikeouts. I see no downside to a 5-year contract.
Kershaw-He needs lots of MRIs, but even with his slight fall from grace, he still had a 6.86 K/W. One year for $20M seems pretty low risk.
Syndergaard-Has as much upside as anyone on the list. To me, he looks like Sale. TJS has turned in pretty good results. I’d give him 3-4 years, expect a slow April-May, and a reversion to classic Thor after that.
Kluber-As I mentioned elsewhere, he struggled out of the box, but was pitching like a #2 after that. An injury risk for sure, but at $11M, the returns could be big.
Samuel
@ JoeBrady;
1. There’s a slim chance that Story’s offensive stats will carry over since he won’t be playing half his games at Coors.
2. Seager was never a gold glove SS, and I believe he’s deteriorating. He’ll have to be moved to 3B or 2B during the length of his new contract, or he’ll hurt him team immeasurably. He’s a perfect fit for the Yankees – in a year or two his contract will look like Stanton’s has the past few years.
3. I’m not just in a minority here, I may be on an island…….
This hubbub about the FA SS’s in 2021-22 with prove to be much ado about nothing.
Correa is a true superstar if he remains relatively healthy. Franco (Rays) will very possibly become the premier SS in MLB by 2023. He’ll be a true superstar – Seager, Story, and Semien are not close to that. Additionally, there will be more SS’s that come up over the next 2 years that quickly pass them…..and fans will wonder why they’re being paid so much money.
Samuel
Over the next 4-5 years I’d much rather have Willy Adames as my SS than Seager, Story, or Seimen.
He’s far better all-around SS, more consistent, a clutch player and a team leader.
markakis
I’d be very nervous about signing Baez at least, perhaps Story as well. Baez has so little margin for error with how abysmal his plate discipline is. If his raw skills decline at all I don’t know if he’s going to be able to make it at the plate. Story has the Coors concerns obviously, but the bigger issue is this year’s downturn.
1984wasntamanual
Agreed. As someone who has watched Baez for years and enjoyed it, I still wouldn’t want my team to go more than 2, maybe 3 years on him. He’s not the type of player that is going to steadily decline, he’s going to fall off a cliff.
anthonyd4412
The Cubs are spending this off-season. They’ll do far better than Kiluchu
Shane Newbanks 2
I don’t see it. I think they sign guys they can flip at the deadline and then spend heavy in 2023 and 2024.
MikeSadek3333
As a Giants fan i noticed a few things–Belt is almost beloved in the Giants locker room–would not surprise me if he got a deal a la Crawford–2 years, 36 mil or so–Gausman is a big fan of FZ and even with the loss of Posey, i can see him resigning with SF–i dont think Bryant is resigned, as he might be too expensive and we all know he is looking for that big payoff, especially after gettin screwed by the Cubs with his 1 day delay to the majors to have him that one extra year—to all the commentators who say, hey, the Giants have tons to spend, why doesnt this list have more Giants listed as going to teams—the list mentions the Giants as possibles for many of the above players—we all know SF needs SP first and foremost–i believe that once FZ gets his SP in order we will see him go selectively after hitters–the 3 guys i can see SF going for are Marte, Scherzer, and Gray–for all those saying the first two are old, i point you to the ages of a lot of Giants still on the roster—FZ does not have an agenda against age, just wants production—
Franco27
Please stop with the Cubs screwed him. He is much better off being a FA this year than last. Think about it. Those were and are still the rules. It went to court, the Cubs won. Poor Bryant, only made 19m this year, and will probably get at least 150m contract. How did he get screwed?
Deleted_User
Yeah if the Cubs hadn’t gotten the extra year on Bryant he probably would have received and accepted a QO from the Cubs last offseason, which was close to how much money he made this year anyway. Then he likely would have been traded to the Giants at the 2021 deadline anyway. Literally the only difference is that if he is still playing well the next time he becomes a free agent and the QO system is still the same at that point his team can make the QO.
Pete'sView
MikeSadek – While that may be true, I don’t think FZ wants to ADD too much age to the Giants. Gray leaves me cold. Marte is terrific but not a necessity at that price. I’d go for Scherzer but not at the price mentioned. I DO think SF will surprise people and try to sign Semien.
oilers777
Andrew Heaney is not a top 50 free agent.
LordD99
Dodgers disagree.
Inside Out
Wrong as he was first to sign.
Franco27
Were all of you high when you put this together? If Baez or Story sign for that amount, I will guarantee you that the Cubs will be highly involved on one of them. Huge need and they have the money. I don’t understand why a building team would pay so much for a injury risk player like Correa. Makes no sense to me. 300m for him or Seager is whacked.
HubcapDiamondStarHalo
Starting your reply with a third grade level insult is a superb way to build your own credibility.
Franco27
Not really worried about it. Go back to your mom’s basement and mind your own business.
stymeedone
If you want people to mind their own business, don’t post on a public chat board.
Thurman8er
Given the Angels recent past, I can see why they are estimated to sign a bullpen arm and a couple of lower- to mid-level starters. But Arte’s pattern is to go big on FA’s when big contracts come off, and people seem to forget some high offers on pitchers who went elsewhere.
The Angels will be in on Scherzer and Stroman.
Mark Smith
These guys think Arte will let stupid teams steal Iglesias from him. So stupid. If the Angels had no intention of re-signing Iglesias they should have traded him at the trade deadline. Minasian found his closer. Now he needs to fix the rest of the bullpen, not start all over. These guys actually have the Angels signing a lesser closer. Why do that? No thanks on that dumb idea.
AlienBob
Seiya Suzuki, should be a guy the Mariners go all-in on. They lost Yusei Kukuchi and have maintained one Japanese player on their roster for years. They are the closest franchise to Japan and were once owned by Nintendo. The Japanese would be insulted if they did not make a strong bid. They need to maintain their pipeline to the NPB. Suzuki comes with no draft pick penalty, nor does he affect the teams international signing bonus allotment. The team has need for a centerfielder which he could play or move to one of the corner spots. His great arm, base stealing speed and bat are needed on the M’s and he is affordable.
Other than that, I see them making a move on those that have no QO such as: Kris Bryant and Carlos Rodon. Left handers, Tyler Anderson, James Paxton and Aaron Loup could be on their radar, too,
Mark Smith
The Japanese prefer California to horrible Seattle. We have Disneyland which they love and great weather. Seattle is no longer where Japanese players want to go.
48-team MLB
Two serious questions…
1. Are the Braves capable of winning another championship? Obviously the roster will have changes but their young core will stay in tact. Can they do what the ‘90s Braves couldn’t do and back up their championship with a second?
2. Are the Dodgers getting too old? Obviously they have a very deep roster and tons of money…but do they need to get younger to make another serious run?
TradeAcuna
May we please stop comparing Correa and Lindor? Lindor was never great. Yes, Correa has been hurt, but he is a very good hitter and a very good player in big spots. Lindor is just a smily ego guy who thinks he is better than everyone else.
mattymets
Mets front office is in flux and not everyone wants to play in NYC, however, with the richest owner in MLB there’s no way they wont be more active than this.
Samuel
Cohen will be used by the agents to run up the price of their players.
Once Mets offers go beyond reality the other teams will drop out, and the agents will be asking for opt-outs to be put in literally every year of a contract with the Mets. Don’t know what the outcome will be.
48-team MLB
The New York Mets will become the Rochester Rabbits one day. I don’t care what anyone says. It WILL get that bad and they will finally leave Queens.
kodiak920
Washington need not sign any players requiring draft forfeiture. The picks and international signing money are critical for this team at this stage.
ck420
Seattle already has a good shortstop we need a third or second baseman. Correa will cost way too much in my opinion, Kris Bryant is a better choice as long as he’s not too expensive as his offense has declined a little
Mark Smith
Third baseman? Didn’t Dipoto trade Graveman to the Cheaters for a third baseman? I guess that trade didn’t work out.
kobo77
I really do not feel that anyone is giving the Giants the acknowledgment of money they have to spend in this free agency to rally chase after more of these top targets. Time will tell…
Pete'sView
But Farhan will not spend just to spend, and he knows many of these high-end, long-term contracts will turn out to albatrosses. He’ll need to re-sign Gausman (which will be costly). He’ll need to sign DeSclafani and Verlander or arms like them to reasonable 3-year contracts ($40-42M).
But an everyday bat—like Marcus Semien—will cost . . . and I think that’s where you’ll see him splurge. He’ll fill in the rest of the rotation with upscale reclamation projects.
mrperkins
If Matz only gets 3/27mm as predicted he needs to fire his agent. I could see him almost double that annual salary.
Dtownwarrior78
PLEASE TIGERS DO NOT SIGN CORREA! He already has a ring, and as soon as he gets that huge contract I can see him putting up the same kind of numbers that Lindor put up in 2021! I would take Simean and a 5/$125 all day long! That way you can also grab a pitcher like Robbie Ray as well to put with Mize, Skubal, Manning and Boyd/Turnbull. That along with the coming of Tork and Greene, we will be well on our way to contention!
JGoeckner0105
As a Cardinals fan, with all the money finally coming off the books, this crop of FA’s, the way the roster’s holes have manifested to a team that doesn’t seem very far away and the emergence of the OFs, I’d be very disappointed if they only come out with Desclafani and Melancon.
The Cards reasonably should be in on the SS’s, at the very least Semien. He checks everything they need for offense. Offensive boon, switch hitter, gold glove defense, can play 2nd to move Edman around to get Sosa some playing time, high character clubhouse guy for a new young manager.
They have a rotation opening too and it seems like someone like Stroman with his ground ball tendency would be a perfect fit for an infield with 3 Gold Glovers and one 2nd place Gold Glover in Molina. I don’t know, maybe I still expect too much but with these contract projections, they could sign Semien and Stroman and still have some left over for the bullpen. Not to mention signing a starter makes some of those in-house options able to contribute from the pen. Just have to keep my fingers crossed.
NyyfaninLAA land
Cards have money coming off the books, but 1/2 of it is already spoken for in increases on current contracts and projected arb increases. Some of that is due to the variable payouts by Colorado to Arenado, but ’21 represents kind of the average here over the longer term.
Leaves about $30 mil to get back to ’21 payroll. That should allow them to make some significant adds, but if Semien and Stroman get the numbers here they’ll be about $15 million up from ’21.
They could do that, but not sure they would.
Deleted_User
I can’t believe the Rockies didn’t trade or QO Gray.
Michael Macaulay-Birks
As a Red Sox fan, I’m a little surprised that none of the three riders expected him to go back to Boston, I think he’s a solid option
Michael Macaulay-Birks
Writers***
jvent
1st wrong prediction (#50). Heaney signed with LAD
mitchladd
As a cards fan I have to say that the number of names we’re attached to here and really the idea that we’re going to walk to away from FA with one (or more) of these guys is almost laughable.
carlos15
Gausman won’t get $168m and Rodon getting $25m is silly too, even if it’s for one year.
carlos15
$138m*
BRUH.SF.BRUH
@carlos15 I bet Gausman gets something close to that number.
Altuves Buzzer
The pirates are overrated
RobM
I know. So are the Orioles.
Edward Whorton
The Seager brothers will be Texas Rangers next year.
. My big prediction.
PasstheTums
The Braves have to sign Freddie Freeman. A good starting point would be 6 years and $164 million, with salaries of $33 million in 2022 and 2023 (making him the highest paid first baseman for those years ahead of Miguel Cabrera’s $32 million per year), $27 million in 2024 and 2025, and $22 million in 2026 and 2027. I would also add club options of $19 million per year for 2028 and 2029, making the total potential of the deal 8 years and $202 million. This is a lot for a 32 year old first baseman, but Freeman IS the Atlanta Braves. Not sure how long Freddie wants to play, given that he has three young sons and his family is most important to him, but the Braves need to do everything they can to keep him around for as long as he is the face of the franchise and continues to be productive.
Brew’88
Good list. Of the guys outside the Top 50 who might belong in it, I’d consider Pham. He’s streaky, but clearly started 21 feeling the effects of recovery from stabbing. Healthy, I think he’ll put up decent numbers in 22 – 265/20 HR/15 SB? Might be a worthwhile risk for the right team.
TroyVan
Tigers are linked to roughly half of these 50 free agent. I’d just like to point point out that Avila said they probably won’t be making a big splash on free agency. Since it isn’t prudent to spend $300+ million for a player when you have a potentially similar player on the cusp of MLB-readiness, they won’t be signing a big name shortstop. If they do make a big splash, it’ll be for a SP, and it won’t be Verlander.
kingman1
Depending on what the new baseball agreement brings there is little doubt Cohen is going to John the Yankees, Dodgers, Red Sox and a few others in skyrocketing The players salaries. When you made 3 billion last year what does a 300 million dollar payroll matter?
socraticgadfly
I agree on Greinke to the Cards, if the price isn’t over $15 million. That said, the Cards really could use a lefty starter; would they make a run at Kershaw if Robbie Ray is too pricey?
Bright Side
10 years for Seager???
Pass.
If the Yankees overpay Seager and the Bosox snag Freeman, I will cancel my MLB subscription.
HubcapDiamondStarHalo
Well, now, THAT’S how you make a difference in this world!
LetThereBeLux
Kershaw for 20M. Yes please. I’ll take 3
tidybowlman
He couldn’t pitch in the playoffs and the Dodgers didn’t think he was worth 18 for next year. That’s not telling you something?
JackStrawb
Corey Seager hasn’t been worth as much as 4.0 rWAR in a season since _2017_. The idea that he’ll get $300m is absurd.
” It stands to reason that Lindor’s ten-year, $341MM extension with the Mets signed in April 2021 will be a benchmark for Correa.”
—It really doesn’t. The Mets foolish offer to Lindor, already in significant decline the two years prior to 2021, is no one’s benchmark.
1984wasntamanual
I agree on the Lindor thing. They mentioned in the chat too, that Lindor got that without the free agent market. I don’t think he’d have found offers close to that much from the 29 other teams. Maybe I’m wrong, but I think setting their sights on the Lindor contract will lead to disappointment for Correa and Seager.
tidybowlman
Anyone who feels Lindor is in significant decline doesn’t watch the Mets and only reads second hand information.
He’s still the best defensive shortstop in baseball and once he got used to NY, his numbers returned to where they always were.
That doesn’t necessarily justify the amount of the contract, but he’s the same guy he always was.
rocky7
Not a Mets fan, but agree with your comment directed towards “significant decline” of Lindor 2 years prior to his new deal…..what the hell does significant decline mean anyway…..
All Star 2016,17,18,19, with a somewhat off year in 20 which pretty much everyone in baseball had….and then you have 21…so if the comment is based on one “bad” year in which he had a 3+ WAR….whats the criteria for a good year? I believe most clubs would take that any time….the money these days is insane so that has to be discounted to a certain degree…none of these guys is worth what they make if they had to make it in the real world.
As usual, too many commenting “experts” who only read second hand accounts and have never seen the actual players they comment on.
1984wasntamanual
7.7 > 4.7 > ~3.6-4 ish (prorated) > 2.7.
I’d consider a slide from 7.7 to 4ish a pretty significant decline…
JoeBrady
tidybowlman
Anyone who feels Lindor is in significant decline doesn’t watch the Mets and only reads second hand information.
====================================
It wasn’t really a heck of a hiccup. After 5/27, he had an .835 OPS. He had 292 ABs after 5/27, so simply doubling his production would give you 108 runs, 34 HRs, and 108 RBIs. I’m not going to have any trouble drafting him if he falls to the 3rd round.
IRT the contract, the NYMs put themselves in terrible position by giving up so much for him. 3 years of Rosario, 5 years of Gimenez, and 2 young kids, for one year of Lindor, was a huge price. If they didn’t sign him, it would’ve been a catastrophe.
Mark Fichtel
Interesting that only one person had a prediction for the Tigers to sign a starting pitcher (Eduardo Rodriguez), when the GM literally said they want to sign “2 established starting pitchers”.
Poster formerly known as . . .
Verlander touched 97 MPH in his showcase. I don’t know if the Tigers scouted the workout, but reportedly there were scouts from 15-20 teams in attendance. Big gamble, obviously, and he only threw about 25 pitches. They said Kluber looked good in his January showcase, and we know how that turned out.
Mystery Team
Tatis Jr. a class all by himself huh?? Is that drama 101 by any chance? I’ll take Trea Turner at least we know he’ll play all season and do it without showboating and making an ass of himself. Tatis is a great player but you can keep all the BS bat flips and stutter steps rounding the bases that’s for morons who are easily distracted by shiny things. Not to mention who knows how many IL trips he’ll take in a season. You can have Lil’ Sweet I’ll take Turner the ball player.
Yankee Clipper
Plus, Turner is better defensively. Tatis is an offensive powerhouse, but his defense at SS is far from being the best, and depending on the metric, below average.
rocky7
Lets wait 3-4 years and see what all the fans of Tatis contract say then….most likely, that contract leg term will be an anchor that the Pads will rue.
Is showboating by Tatis and those like him these days code for SuperStar, or maybe the other way around….SuperStar states by fans allow for showboating…..can’t make up my mind!
1984wasntamanual
I don’t care what Tatis does if he plays well, that said, I still question that contract. He’s a very good player, but if he can’t play SS at a passable level, that contract is going to look very bad, especially when you consider how much control they still had over him at the time they agreed to it.
tidybowlman
Since the Mets are so close to the luxury-tax, I can see them blowing past it with signings that have extra intangible value. They also need some star power to change the BS narrative going around and kill time until Sterns is free from Milwaukee.
I can see them stealing Freeman from the Braves, bringing in Verlander to help deGrom out, retaining Baez to get the best from Lindor and keeping Stroman because the owner loves him.
Dan Hunter
Where would Freeman play?
Flyby
3rd base?
CalcetinesBlancos
If someone is actually dumb enough to give Correa 10/320 I’ll laugh so hard. Even a contract half that length would be a bad idea for him.
greatgame 2
No way is Cobb worth it
Ron Tingley
All of the top 10 are not worth it. Maybe Cory if he can stay away from being hit.
MarlinsFanBase
I can see the Marlins trying to land Jorge Soler…with the next plan being Avisail Garcia…with Eddie Rosario or Joc Pederson being the plan Cs.
I can see the Marlins landing Chris Taylor of the Dodgers don’t bring him back. Familiarity with Mattingly and the playing opportunities will be available in Miami.
With relievers, I would love the Marlins pursuing Iglesias or Jansen, but those are pipe dreams right now. Their best bet is to try to acquire Kimbrel.
Catching-wise, we’ve got to be looking at trades for Wilsson Contreras or Jacob Stallings.
yick04
Wait, is Sugano getting posted again this year?
Louholtz22
Great, the Brewers get Soler. Just what they need, a .220 hitter. They have enough of those
WideWorldofSports
If you think the yankees only walk away with one of these guys you haven’t been paying attention.
wileycoyote56
I think Verlander either signs with Detroit or goes to West Coast team. Tigers will sign Correa or Baez, and probably another starting pitcher. I look for them to spend 60-80 million per year this winter
Mark Smith
Raisel Iglesias is going to re-sign with the Angels so you can delete your silly predictions. The Angels have a good closer and didn’t trade him at the trade deadline so no way are they letting those stupid teams you listed steal him. They have their closer, now they need a couple more good relievers and an ace starter and middle of the rotation starter.
junkmale
“Lindor has never hit the way Correa does” lol Lindor had three straight years better than anything Correa has ever done. Amateur hour.
getright11
I understand you aren’t expecting a lot out of the cubs this this winter, which makes it even stranger to think they would spend—-I mean waste 20 million on Yusei Kikuchi. If that happens, after 40 years, I’ll start looking for a new team. I’m not expecting to go there.
_Mob_Ranfred
I don’t want Correa anywhere near Philly.
wei
I am Mrs. Martha from Botswana, I want to share a testimony of my life to every one. I was married to my husband Mark, I love him so much we have been married for 7 years now with two kids. when he went for a vacation to France he meant a lady called Ashley, he told me that he is no longer interested in our marriage anymore. I was so confuse and seeking for help, I don’t know what to do until I met my friend Africa and told her about my problem. she told me not to worry about it that she had a similar problem before and introduce me to a man called dr osoba who cast a spell on her ex boyfriend and bring him back to her after 3 days. Africa ask me to contact dr osoba. I contacted him to help me bring back my husband and he ask me not to worry about it that the gods of his four-fathers will fight for me. He told me by three days he will re-unite me and my husband together. After three day my husband called and told me he is coming back to sought out things with me, I was surprise when I saw him and he started crying for forgiveness. Right now I am the happiest woman on earth for what this great dr did for me and my husband, you can contact him email: drosobasolutioncenter@gmail.com,or WhatsApp him +2348107577983 Contact him on any problems such as:
(1) If you want your ex back
(2) if you always have bad dreams.
(3) You want to be promoted in your office.
(4) If you want a child.
(5) Herbal care
(6) You want to be rich.
(7) You want to tie your husband/wife to be yours forever.
(8) If you need financial assistance.
(9) Let people obey your words and do your wish
(10) Case solve E.T.C
(11)penis enlargement
Contact him again on drosobasolutioncenter@gmail.com and be blessed…
wei
I am Mrs Martha from Botswana, i want to share a testimony of my life to every one. i was married to my husband Mark, i love him so much we have been married for 7 years now with two kids. when he went for a vacation to France he meant a lady called Ashley, he told me that he is no longer interested in our marriage anymore. i was so confuse and seeking for help, i don’t know what to do until I met my friend Farica and told her about my problem. she told me not to worry about it that she had a similar problem before and introduce me to a man called dr osoba who cast a spell on her ex boyfriend and bring him back to her after 3 days. Farica ask me to contact dr osoba. I contacted him to help me bring back my husband and he ask me not to worry about it that the gods of his four-fathers will fight for me. He told me by three days he will re-unite me and my husband together. After three day my husband called and told me he is coming back to sought out things with me, I was surprise when I saw him and he started crying for forgiveness. Right now I am the happiest woman on earth for what this great dr did for me and my husband, you can contact him email: drosobasolutioncenter@gmail.com,or whatsapp him +2348107577983 Contact him on any problems such as:
(1) If you want your ex back
(2) if you always have bad dreams.
(3) You want to be promoted in your office.
(4) If you want a child.
(5) Herbal care
(6) You want to be rich.
(7) You want to tie your husband/wife to be yours forever.
(8) If you need financial assistance.
(9) Let people obey your words and do your wish
(10) Case solve E.T.C
(11) penis enlargement
Contact him again on drosobasolutioncenter@gmail.com and be blessed…