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Offseason In Review: Oakland Athletics

By Mark Polishuk | March 12, 2024 at 3:40pm CDT

The rebuilding A’s made only a few moves to address their big league roster, as much of the offseason news continued to focus on the club’s impending departure from Oakland.

Major League Signings

  • Alex Wood, SP: One year, $8.5MM
  • Scott Alexander, RP: One year, $2.25MM
  • Trevor Gott, RP: One year, $1.5MM
  • Osvaldo Bido, SP/RP: One year, $750K split contract (Bido earns $200K if in minors)

2023 spending: $13MM
Total spending: $13MM

Option Decisions

  • Drew Rucinski, SP: Athletics declined $5MM club option for 2024

Trades & Claims

  • Acquired SP/RP Ross Stripling and $3.5MM from Giants for minor league OF Jonah Cox
  • Acquired IF Abraham Toro from Brewers for minor league SP Chad Patrick
  • Acquired cash considerations from Marlins for IF Jonah Bride
  • Claimed IF/OF Miguel Andujar off waivers from Pirates
  • Claimed RP Michael Kelly off waivers from Guardians
  • Selected SP Mitch Spence from Yankees in the Rule 5 Draft

Notable Minor League Signings

  • Stephen Piscotty, Carlos Perez, Daz Cameron, Gerardo Reyes, Aaron Brooks, Hoy Park, Vinny Nittoli, Yohel Pozo

Notable Losses

  • Tony Kemp, Kevin Smith, Austin Pruitt, Sam Long, Kirby Snead, Buddy Kennedy, Zach Neal, Devin Sweet, Yacksel Rios, Trevor May (retired)

A long and twisted series of events that leads to finding a green armadillo in Las Vegas might sound like the plot of another Hangover sequel, yet it could also describe the Athletics’ relocation efforts.  MLB owners gave unanimous approval in November to the franchise’s plan to relocate, and the team recently released some eye-popping renderings of their proposed “spherical armadillo” ballpark on the Strip, which is planned to open for the start of the 2028 season.

Much has yet to be settled until then, including the rather important detail of where exactly the A’s will be playing during the 2025-27 seasons.  Next year’s edition of the Offseason In Review could be devoted to the Salt Lake City Athletics or the Sacramento Athletics, as the Athletics have been exploring alternate cities as their short-term home.  Since NBC Sports California could opt out of its broadcast contract with the A’s if the club moves out of the Bay Area, the team’s first option is to extend its lease at the Coliseum beyond its current end date following the 2024 season, yet the city of Oakland is (unsurprisingly) not too enthused about continuing the relationship.  At least, not without possibly trying to negotiate a new expansion team out of the league in exchange for letting the Athletics temporarily stay put.

Even the Vegas end of the move isn’t exactly solidified.  The league is pushing so hard for the Athletics’ relocation that it doesn’t seem likely that the move would fall apart altogether, though questions remain — a Nevada teachers’ union has filed a lawsuit challenging the state’s funding law that earmarked $380MM in public money towards the ballpark, the overall uncertainty about the new stadium’s financing and construction plans, and the fact that Las Vegas citizens seem mixed at best about the A’s coming to town.

Between all these factors and the Oakland fans’ open disdain towards owner John Fisher, it seems like several more years of awkwardness are in store before things start to turn for the Athletics organization.  Finding a silver lining in the on-field product seems like a longshot, given how the A’s have gone 110-214 over the last two seasons and seem destined for another triple-digit showing in the loss column in 2024.

Given how the Athletics have already dealt most of their prominent (and most expensive) veterans, GM David Forst didn’t do much in the way of continuing the fire sale this winter.  Forst said during the Winter Meetings that Aledmys Diaz, Seth Brown, Paul Blackburn weren’t likely to be traded, and while it can be assumed that the A’s are always listening to trade offers, the team still needs players on the roster.  And, some stronger performances from any of these more experienced names in the first half of the 2024 campaign could well bolster their trade value heading into the deadline.  Blackburn might be a key name to watch in this regard, since he is a free agent after the 2025 season and teams are forever looking to add pitching.

The rotation was a need for the A’s themselves this winter, resulting in a couple of familiar Bay Area names joining the club.  Alex Wood signed in free agency after spending the last three years with the Giants, and the A’s also lined up with the Giants on a rare trade between the local rivals in order to bring Ross Stripling to Oakland.  These two moves represent the Athletics’ biggest expenditures of the offseason, as Wood will earn $8.5MM on a one-year deal, and the A’s are covering $9MM of the $12.5MM owed to Stripling on the final year of his contract.

Neither veteran was too pleased about their usage within the Giants’ patchwork pitching tactics, but Wood and Stripling will get plenty of opportunity to work as full-time starters in Oakland.  Wood started 12 of 29 games in 2023, working as a swingman, bulk pitcher behind an opener, or in a piggyback capacity while posting a 4.33 ERA over 97 2/3 innings.  Wood’s traditionally solid strikeout and walk rates both plummeted to well below the league average last year, though it could be argued that his ever-shifting roles (and five weeks missed due to a pair of stints on the injured list) might’ve contributed to these struggles.

Stripling had an even tougher time of things with a 5.36 ERA over 89 innings, and injuries and a hybrid rotation/bullpen deployment were also a story of his season.  The right-hander did pitch better as the season went on, however, which could hint that he might have a smoother time of things in a more stable capacity as a starting pitcher.

Returning to trade deadline possibilities, a return to form for either Wood or Stripling will surely make them prime candidates to change uniforms at midseason, which could open up rotation jobs for some of the Athletics’ younger arms.  Some of this group (Joe Boyle, Kyle Muller, and Rule 5 Draft pick Mitch Spence) are already competing for the fifth starter’s role, which is open since both Luis Medina and Ken Waldichuk will begin the season on the injured list.  It remains to be seen when exactly either hurler might be back on the mound, underscoring the Athletics’ reasoning for acquiring experienced arms like Wood and Stripling.

Experience was also the watchword for the Athletics’ bullpen additions.  Of the seven pitchers who made the most appearances for Oakland in 2023, only Lucas Erceg is still with the team, so some veteran help was needed for a relief corps that is thin on Major League innings.  Trevor Gott and Scott Alexander signed low-cost one-year deals and might have hidden-gem potential, since both righties outperformed their ERAs last season.  Gott had a 4.19 ERA over 58 innings with the Mariners and Mets while not receiving any BABIP (.343) luck, while Alexander’s 3.75 SIERA was well below his 4.66 ERA in 48 1/3 innings for San Francisco.  A .325 BABIP was particularly harmful to an extreme groundball pitcher like Alexander, whose numbers might normalize if he gets better fortune with balls in play.

Gott and Alexander figure to work in setup roles no matter who (if anyone) winds up as the Athletics’ full-time closer.  Top prospect Mason Miller is making a bid for the job with a very impressive Spring Training performance, as the A’s are keeping Miller in the bullpen this year as a way of easing him back to action after a long string of injuries.  Erceg or Dany Jimenez could also be in the ninth inning mix.

The A’s mostly stood pat on the position-player side, though Tony Kemp (who signed with the Reds) was a notable departure after four seasons in Oakland.  The newly-acquired Abraham Toro is something of a replacement for both Kemp and Kevin Smith, as Toro has experience at first base, second base, and third base, and can step into the corner outfield in a pinch.  Third base figures to be Toro’s most steady position, and Toro and Diaz figure to share the hot corner until prospect Darell Hernaiz makes his expected Major League debut this season.

Zack Gelof, Nick Allen, and Ryan Noda should form the rest of the starting infield, with Brent Rooker as the primary DH and one of Shea Langeliers or Tyler Soderstrom behind the plate.  Brown, JJ Bleday, and speedster Esteury Ruiz are the projected starting outfielders, with rookie Lawrence Butler looking for a larger role and former Athletic Stephen Piscotty back on a minor league deal and looking to get back to the majors after spending 2023 in the White Sox farm system.  Miguel Andujar is an interesting wild card on the roster, as the former Yankees star prospect is looking for a fresh start after being claimed off waivers from the Pirates, and he hit well after a September call-up with the Pirates last season.

It isn’t the most inspiring lineup on paper, which is why the A’s will be hard-pressed to avoid the AL West basement.  There is some talent here, however, as Noda, Rooker, and the rookie Gelof all delivered well above-average production in 2023.  Gelof’s 133 wRC+ (from a .267/.337/.504 slash line and 14 homers) came over just 300 plate appearances, though it was enough to make the second baseman look like a potential building block for an A’s team in desperate need of some true cornerstones.

A rebuilding team is only going to spend so much on veteran players anyway, yet the Athletics’ projected payroll is the lowest in baseball by a substantial margin.  As per RosterResource’s projections, the A’s currently have only $59.3MM on the books for 2024 — well behind the $82MM in slated spending for the Pirates, who rank 29th of the 30 teams.

Fisher has been adverse to spending even when the A’s were fielding contenders, yet even beyond the lack of available money, Forst’s attempts to add any reinforcements were naturally complicated by all of the negativity surrounding the Athletics’ forthcoming move.  For players who had leverage in determining their next team, there wasn’t much interest in joining a franchise entering a lame-duck season in front of a fanbase that is understandably hostile towards the organization.  It perhaps isn’t surprising that so many of the Athletics’ additions this winter have prior experience playing for the Giants if not the A’s themselves, so the new faces are at least familiar with the Bay Area and the unusual situation facing the Athletics this coming season.

If the Athletics’ 57th season in Oakland will indeed be their last, it is probably going to be an inauspicious ending to a history that includes the “Swingin’ A’s” powerhouse teams of the 1970s, Rickey Henderson and the Bash Brothers in the late ’80s, and the Moneyball underdogs of the last two decades.  The focus will be on letting the kids play and hopefully building some momentum in the rebuild towards 2025 and beyond, no matter where the team ends up playing.

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2023-24 Offseason In Review MLBTR Originals Oakland Athletics

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Post a Comment

55 Comments

  1. Big whiffa

    1 year ago

    Time for A’s to get their scouting in order. They’ll be competing with a new generation of talent and a ton of top picks by the time things open in Vegas.

    4
    Reply
    • Steinbrenner2728

      1 year ago

      This is a really big whiff of a comment.

      5
      Reply
      • mlb fan

        1 year ago

        “Really big whiff”…Your peanut gallery comment isn’t exactly stellar.

        3
        Reply
      • holecamels35

        1 year ago

        How? If they aren’t going to spend money, they need to actually acquire talent in trades, not replacement level AAA lifers who can’t cut it in the majors. They traded tons of all stars and literally got nothing in return. There’s something there, kind of, if you look hard enough, but they need to develop their talent better. I hope when they get their situation figured out they start treating their team like a major league ballclub instead of a place for just 3-5 years of prospects and washed vets.

        5
        Reply
        • daddyshark423

          1 year ago

          In future news…they did not.

          Reply
    • daddyshark423

      1 year ago

      They will be horrible until John Fisher is gone. Just a sad truth.

      4
      Reply
      • mlb fan

        1 year ago

        “Until John Fisher is gone” John Fisher will be gone in a couple of years(to Las Vegas), just like all the other Major professional sports teams in Oakland.

        3
        Reply
        • daddyshark423

          1 year ago

          Wow really original.

          Reply
        • daddyshark423

          1 year ago

          Btw John Fisher isn’t going anywhere. Dude has multiple mansions in the Bay Area. He’s not moving to some white trash desert town.

          Reply
    • statman

      1 year ago

      This was a tantalizing read for a’s fans to get excited for what most assuredly will be a truly exciting year – it’s sure to get their juices flowing, much like the sewage flows freely in their ballpark’s dugouts. Both of them must be really excited!

      2
      Reply
      • YourDreamGM

        1 year ago

        Better than playing opossum like the ones in their broadcast booths. They showed a lil life.

        Reply
    • case

      1 year ago

      Or they can hire an intern to simply google the consensus top picks, hope to get lucky with some of them, continue to eject as much salary as the league will let them get away with, and pay lip service to running a baseball organization while working on their real estate deal.

      Reply
  2. DanUgglasRing

    1 year ago

    F

    4
    Reply
    • NYCityRiddler

      1 year ago

      I’d love to know what they would have to do to get an F for these people who voted C. Ahahaha!

      4
      Reply
      • YourDreamGM

        1 year ago

        Pay a 2b as a premier SS because of his inflated prime of career Fenway stats.

        Give a guy who openly hates baseball 300m.

        Extend a pitcher to a large contract who has lost velocity all of the sudden.

        Trade your 3 best prospects for Archer.

        Give 2 40 year old pitchers 43m a year.

        Give a 30 something a mega contract when most of there production is from their speed.

        3
        Reply
      • YourDreamGM

        1 year ago

        They didn’t make a trade with Atlanta. That’s an improvement and earns a automatic passing grade.

        6
        Reply
        • DonOsbourne

          1 year ago

          True. Shows they’re learning.

          2
          Reply
      • Asmongold

        1 year ago

        I gave them an A. Anything they do is progress.

        2
        Reply
      • aquasox

        1 year ago

        I don’t think you can grade their off-season in the same way as most every other team. Highly regarded free agents won’t sign with the A’s give the ballpark situation. In fact no agent is going to suggest their player to a team that has no home from 2025 to 2027. Picking up Wood, Stripling, Gott, Alexander, Toro and Andujar are stellar moves for a team that has so much working against them (off the field).

        1
        Reply
        • CCCTL

          1 year ago

          “Highly regarded free agents” tend not to sign with a team that if they could, legally, would pay them in literal peanuts.

          Reply
        • daddyshark423

          1 year ago

          Stellar moves? Good grief.

          Reply
  3. Fraham_

    1 year ago

    No grade poll?

    Reply
  4. Super2

    1 year ago

    F John Fisher, F Dave Kaval, F Rob Manfred, F the other owners supporting them.

    F for the offseason too.

    16
    Reply
  5. Lloyd Emerson

    1 year ago

    forbes.com/sites/maurybrown/2024/03/11/as-presiden…

    Good article about the ineptitude of those in charge of the A’s franchise.

    11
    Reply
    • FergFax

      1 year ago

      Ha! That was a fun article.

      Reply
    • case

      1 year ago

      lol

      Reply
  6. Buzzz Killington

    1 year ago

    I voted C.

    3
    Reply
  7. bag o ballz

    1 year ago

    I really wanted to give them an F but they did actually get better even if they still aren’t good so they got a D

    5
    Reply
  8. Clofreesz

    1 year ago

    The only comparable teams to Oakland’s offseason are Cleveland and Southside.

    2
    Reply
    • DonOsbourne

      1 year ago

      Chicago had a much better offseason. Even the A’s might have done more than Cleveland. I have no idea what is going on over there.

      Going into and throughout 2021 Cleveland and Toronto looked like emerging dynasties. Now, not so much.

      Reply
  9. YankeesBleacherCreature

    1 year ago

    The chances of Wood and Alexander, if healthy, not being traded by the deadline are slim.

    1
    Reply
    • acoss13

      1 year ago

      At 8.5 million for Wood, The Athletics already knew they weren’t going to be paying such a high salary, high for them mind you, when they signed him.

      Reply
  10. dano62

    1 year ago

    Bravo for getting a 700+ word essay on the Athletics abysmal off-season. Although nothing short of a miracle will keep them out of the AL West basement, I wouldn’t be surprised if some guile & anxious youthful talent gets them to the 65-win threshold…

    1
    Reply
    • acoss13

      1 year ago

      65 wins is probably the ceiling for them. But don’t worry the White Sox will be right there with them at the bottom of AL teams.

      1
      Reply
  11. Billg7987

    1 year ago

    Hat tip to the writer. It was a rough job but someone had to do it. The A’s are completely uninteresting.

    5
    Reply
  12. YourDreamGM

    1 year ago

    C. They actually kinda somewhat tried. Brought in some major league players that cost more than league minimum. Few nearing the 10 million point. Hold off on the playoff tickets but they did a lil something. If they did less I don’t think many would have been surprised.

    3
    Reply
  13. bhambrave

    1 year ago

    I’d give them a G if I could.

    4
    Reply
  14. nailz#4life

    1 year ago

    there will be some great signings once they move to LV. Hang on a few more years

    Reply
    • YourDreamGM

      1 year ago

      Fans should increase as well. Right now they got 2 in California and 1 in the UK maybe.

      Reply
      • DonOsbourne

        1 year ago

        I believe 2 in the UK, but they only formally recognize one of them.

        1
        Reply
      • DonOsbourne

        1 year ago

        U are rongus

        Reply
      • daddyshark423

        1 year ago

        How does one become this clueless about the A’s? Have you read anything about what actual fans have been doing recently?

        Reply
    • Datashark

      1 year ago

      You would think before they move they would acquire and draft better talent, so by the time they are in LV – they could bring them up on time.

      Reply
    • Patrick Tracey

      1 year ago

      Not if Fisher is still the owner.

      2
      Reply
    • daddyshark423

      1 year ago

      It’s weird how many guys post on here and know nothing. In what world is John Fisher spending money after moving to the smallest market in baseball and going into debt to pay for a stadium?

      Reply
  15. Non Roster Invitee

    1 year ago

    Bob Geldof is a star at second base. Joaquin Andujar is a nice waiver claim. Smokey Joe Wood is good for few innings.
    They need to stay in Jokeland for as long as possible or they will have to pay a fortune to move. But they need to bring their own food as nothing is open over there anymore.
    It’s fun to see a day game there and a night game in SF for a cool doubleheader.

    Reply
    • dano62

      1 year ago

      Baseball’s Boomtown Rats!
      And unfortunately it looks like MLB has conspired to limit fans’ doublemint fun opportunities… Just like in Chi-town, the teams are rarely home on the same day.

      1
      Reply
  16. Datashark

    1 year ago

    Lousy in standings, keeping stars, acquiring talent, trading players for at least decent return, scouting minors, putting talent on the diamond.

    What has happened to Beane?!

    bright spot was drafting Gelof.

    Reply
  17. NoSubstitute

    1 year ago

    Stop using the word “rebuild” when talking about the A’s. There’s no rebuild. There’s only a teardown. On the extreme off chance that they ever move to Vegas, no one on the current team will still be around. As long as Fisher owns the team, any rebuild will only begin shortly before a new ballpark opens so that most of the team remains paid the minimum. And as long as Fisher owns the team the odds of a new ballpark opening are two: slim and none.

    5
    Reply
  18. deepseamonster32

    1 year ago

    I vote to expel that bum John Fisher

    3
    Reply
  19. The Big Yo

    1 year ago

    I think the A’s have had a nice little off season. I know it’s only spring training but all of their projected line up are hitting the baseball and the pitchers particularly the possible bullpen look very good. 72-90 season

    1
    Reply
  20. SweetBabyRayKingsThickThighs

    1 year ago

    Solid 55 win team

    Reply
  21. Doubledown2142

    1 year ago

    They were already a F in general, but I gave a C which is mediocre and that feels about right. Added some players that actually make them better. Not a whole bunch better……..but better. I say 70ish wins. Hopefully some trades at the deadline to get more young guys some run.

    Reply
  22. DarkSide830

    1 year ago

    Incomplete grade because it’s the A’s.

    Reply
  23. MLBTR needs to hire editors

    1 year ago

    When using “and” to start a sentence, there should be no comma after it.

    Reply

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