March 30: The Royals have now added all three of Bradley, Duffy and Reyes to their roster, per Anne Rogers of MLB.com (Twitter links). To make room for those three additions, they traded left-hander Richard Lovelady to Atlanta and placed left-hander Jake Brentz and outfielder Diego Hernandez on the 60-day injured list. Brentz is going to miss most of the season due to Tommy John surgery while Hernandez will be out for a few months with a dislocated shoulder.
March 27: Outfielder Jackie Bradley Jr. and infielder Matt Duffy have been informed that they’ll be on the Royals’ Opening Day roster, tweets Anne Rogers of MLB.com. Both were in camp as non-roster invitees, so they’ll need to be added to the 40-man roster. Designated hitter/outfielder Franmil Reyes, also in camp on an NRI, is “likely” to make the roster, Rogers continues, adding that outfielder Edward Olivares and utilityman Nate Eaton are both going to be on the Opening Day squad as well. Olivares and Eaton are already on the 40-man roster. The New York Post’s Jon Heyman first indicated over the weekend that Bradley was expected to make the roster.
Bradley, 33 in April, has long been considered among the best defensive outfielders in the sport, having collected a whopping 58 Outs Above Average since the start of the 2016 season, including a +3 mark in 2022. His history at the plate is far more complicated, however. From 2015-2020, Bradley oscillated between being a decently above average (118 wRC+ in 2016) and slightly below average (89 wRC+ in 2019) bat from year to year, ultimately posting a 102 wRC+ in 709 games over that six-year period.
Since then, however, Bradley has been nothing short of brutal at the plate: In 266 games in the past two seasons for the Brewers, Red Sox, and Blue Jays, Bradley has slashed just .182/.245/.285, good for a wRC+ of 46 that indicates Bradley was 54% worse than the average major-league hitter over that timeframe. Looking at the underlying metrics, it’s easy to see that Bradley’s struggles are borne of regression in virtually all aspects of his game since his days as an average bat with the Red Sox. Notably, his walk rate has dropped from 9.6% to 6.5% while his ISO has plummeted from a solid .191 down to just .103.
Even with his strikeout rate staying mostly stagnant (it ticked up slightly from 24.6% during the 2015-2020 season to 26.2% the past two years), that loss of power and declining ability to elicit free passes leaves Bradley highly unlikely to contribute meaningfully to the Royals with the bat in 2023. Still, with Drew Waters expected to open the season on the injured list and Michael A. Taylor getting shipped to the Twins in trade earlier this offseason, Bradley will provide the Royals with valuable depth in center field behind Kyle Isbel.
As for Duffy, he’ll give the Royals a veteran utility presence who can handle any of third base, shortstop and second base. The 32-year-old spent the 2022 season with the Angels, for whom he posted a .250/.308/.311 batting line in 247 plate appearances. Duffy’s right-handed bat could be a natural complement to left-handed-hitting second baseman Michael Massey, and his versatility provides some insurance in the event that Hunter Dozier’s struggles continue and/or Massey needs further seasoning in Triple-A Omaha.
Duffy once rated as a plus defender at the hot corner but has posted closer to average defensive grades around the infield in recent seasons. He’s never hit for much power, but the limited pop in his bat has dwindled as well. The diminished defensive ratings and power are perhaps partially due to foot and ankle injuries that have taken their toll on him over the years.
Reyes, 27, certainly isn’t lacking for power. He boasts a pair of 30-homer seasons and has clubbed 106 long balls in 2013 Major League plate appearances dating back to his 2018 debut with the Padres. However, strikeouts have become an increasingly problematic issue for the slugger, evidenced by last year’s career-worst 33.2% mark. If Reyes walked at the rate one might expect for someone with his prodigious power, the lack of contact might be more forgivable, but he drew a free pass in just 6.3% of his plate appearances between the Guardians and Cubs in 2022 — more than two percentage points worse than the league average. He also saw his power output curiously drop off, resulting in a career-worst .221/.273/.365 slash.
Assuming Reyes indeed makes the roster, he’ll likely be used as a designated hitter, a righty bat off the bench and perhaps an occasional option in the outfield corners, though he grades as a poor defender and the Royals have plenty of alternatives. Reyes, who hit .372/.438/.674 with three homers and four doubles in spring training, will need to keep up an above-average level of production as he hopes to fend off prospect Nick Pratto, who was optioned to Triple-A last week. Pratto and Vinnie Pasquantino give the Royals a pair of powerful first basemen, but to this point in their careers it’s Pasquantino who’s proven better equipped for big league pitching. Still, if Pratto’s raking in the minors and Reyes is again struggling, there’s room for both Pasquantino and Pratto to share time at first base and designated hitter over the long term.
tedtheodorelogan
Duffy hasn’t played for the Giants in 7 years and Baseball Reference still hasn’t updated his picture.
jdgoat
Probably because 90% of fans couldn’t be able to guess which other teams he’s played on over those previous 7 years lol
ac000000
Cubbies
agnes gooch
Because he will always be a Giant in our hearts. We all love the Duffman!
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
Let’s set the bar about 2 inches above the ground
I lived in KC for years, it still breaks my heart
The best you can do???
kripes-brewers
How can those dudes make a MLB roster?! What is going on down there? Is the farm that bad? I feel so bad for KC fans right now. Wow. And the first pick in the 2024 draft goes to the Royals.
GareBear
Except no team was less lucky than the Royals in the new draft roulette this year.
stymeedone
+3 outs above ave makes Bradley a slightly above average CF. Being slightly above average does not make up for that woeful bat. He is no longer one of the best defensive OF. I just don’t understand what he offers here.
kingkeg
Huh ? Are you not paying attention ? is the farm that bad ? Huh ??? Dude, read instead of type. We have 8 position players with 3 or fewer years that will be starting and 10 more that will be vying for pitching staff spots. Is the farm that bad ?? what are you talking about, two veteran backups ?
drewm
…how?
GASoxFan
It’s hard to believe that the 2022 season time in Boston represented a good 40 point upwards bounce in JBJ’s batting average compared to the 171 games bookending it in MIL and TOR.
I don’t think they get the same ROI as benintendi brought.
StudWinfield
JBJ has all of 1 full season with an ops+ above 92 and has made $55 mill. Now that’s a wow.
Rsox
I’m happy for JBJ. Good veteran depth on a reasonably young team
mikedickinson
And a great guy!
PiratesFan1981
Anyone wonder what they were trying to say here and got confused besides me? This part, “He boasts a pair of 30-homer seasons and has clubbed 106 long balls in 2013 Major League plate appearances dating back to his 2018 debut with the Padres.” Horrible run on sentences with 2 contradictory statements. He clubbed 106 long balls in 2013 Major League plate appearances? And made his debut in 2018?
I hate grammar police and rarely point something out. But I just had too
Hired Gun 23
It’ll get more gooder one of these days…
PiratesFan1981
Gooder hahaha! Thanks for the laugh
signenderinciarte
It means he has literally had 2013 plate appearances.
PiratesFan1981
Makes sense to use proper usage of a comma, like 2,013. Fundamental writing is a lost art
Grantastic
It’s simple, really. Grammatically correct as well, although horribly worded; the author was trying to be a wordsmith here.
Reyes has clubbed 106 homers in 2013 plate appearances in his career, which began in 2018.
PiratesFan1981
@grantastic even that is easily understandable and comforting to read. It was all run on sentences and all over the place. My English teacher in 6th grade is rolling over in her grave
SFBay314
Already standing for Duffy when he comes out on opening day. April 7th. Return of the Skeeter. #RIPskeeter
KamKid
Are you reading his number of plate appearances as a year? That would make the sentence confusing. If that’s what is hanging you up, try rereading it with the context that 2013 isn’t a year. It’s his number of plate appearances since his debut in the year 2018.
KamKid
Oops. Meant to be a reply to Piratesfan1981 above.
Old York
Must not be hard to make the team. I’ll tryout next year.
stymeedone
Why wait?
notagain27
Anyone see the dollar figures for these two extra men?
baseballteam
Two players who should be playing in some softball league.
Homerunbunt
They’re trying to get some value from these guys. If you can get some lottery tickets from trading these guys totally worth having the younger guys wait. Maybe Dozier has a badass start and you can trade him too. The lottery tickets you get will be needed in a few years for deep post season runs. Smart
Angry Disgruntled Sox Fan
Franimal only likely?
PaulyMidwest
Duffy is better than a lot of utility players. He had some clutch hits for the cubs a few years back. Franimal is gonna be fun in the clubhouse and smash some Homer’s at Kaufman if he makes the team but it is ugly when he plays the field.
Cardsfanatik redux
Meanwhile, Lovelady will go on to win the Cy Young. KC is such a crap team. I get so mad watching them. Jettison a 27 year old lefty reliever for a washed up never has been CF’er.
GoRoyals1969
JJ Picollo: Hey Al, tell ya what, I’ll give you Richard Lovelady.
Awkward pause.
Alex Anthopoulos: Okay.
Both: shake hands.
Jacobpaul81
My Royals look BAD. The young players they are betting on don’t look that good – and they are playing them next to a bunch of veterans – who have never been good.