The A’s are receiving early trade calls on closer Mason Miller, writes Ken Rosenthal of the Athletic. While the team is at least broadly open to discussions, Rosenthal reports that no one has come close to what is understandably a huge ask.
Miller has been one of the league’s breakout players in 2024. It certainly didn’t come out of nowhere — he has been widely regarded as a Top 100 prospect in each of the last two years — but the second-year righty is already one of the best relievers in the game. Miller gave up two runs in his first appearance of the season against the Guardians. He hasn’t been scored on in 12 games since, and that understates his dominance.
The 25-year-old has recorded multiple strikeouts in all but two of his outings. He has fanned 33 of the 60 batters who have stepped in against him. That’s a laughable 55% rate. Among pitchers with at least 10 innings, Cincinnati’s Fernando Cruz ranks second with a 47.3% strikeout percentage. Only four qualified relievers — Devin Williams (during the abbreviated 2020 schedule), Aroldis Chapman (2014), Craig Kimbrel (2012) and Edwin Díaz (2022) — have ever maintained a strikeout rate north of 50% over a full season. Miller has induced swinging strikes on more than 21% of his pitches, a mark only narrowly topped by Cruz. He has paired that overwhelming stuff with strong control, issuing just four walks without hitting a batter.
[Related: The A’s Overpowering Closer]
It’s not difficult to understand why opponents haven’t had any success making contact. Miller’s stuff is off the charts. His fastball is averaging 100.8 MPH and can run into the 103-104 MPH range at its high end. He has paired it with an upper-80s slider that drew plus or better reviews from prospect evaluators and has been nearly unhittable. Opponents are coming up empty almost half the time they swing at both offerings.
Every bullpen would be massively upgraded with Miller at the back end. It’s entirely unsurprising that teams would look to pry him from Oakland and that the A’s would need a massive haul to consider it. On top of Miller’s dominance, he’s under affordable club control for years to come. He entered 2024 with less than one season of MLB service. He’s not on track to reach free agency until the end of the 2029 campaign. Miller is a lock to go through arbitration four times as a Super Two player, but that won’t begin until after next season.
The A’s are still deep into a rebuild despite a reasonable 18-21 start. They’re very unlikely to hang in the playoff mix this year, although they surely anticipate being a legitimate contender well within Miller’s window of team control. A player of this caliber who still has five-plus years of control being traded is essentially unheard of.
However, Miller’s status is at least somewhat clouded by an alarming injury history. He barely pitched in the minors in 2022 because of shoulder troubles. The A’s nevertheless called him up early last season to work from the rotation. Miller made four starts before being diagnosed with a UCL sprain in his elbow. He was shelved into September. The A’s used him out of the bullpen for 2-3 inning stints once he returned.
GM David Forst announced early last offseason the A’s would move Miller to late-inning relief this year in an effort to keep him healthy. They’ve maintained they’re not opposed to stretching him back out as a starter in ’25, although he may wind up being so impressive as a reliever the team chooses not to mess with success.
There’s no small amount of stress put on the arm of a pitcher who throws as hard as Miller does. The front office presumably has some concern about the possibility he suffers another significant injury. That would be the main argument for genuinely considering trade offers, though Miller also clearly has the talent to be a franchise building block. That’s particularly true if the A’s are serious about potentially moving him back to the rotation in 2025.
Significant trades this early in the season are rare, although the Padres and Marlins lined up on the Luis Arraez swap last week. Teams will certainly continue trying to tempt the A’s as the deadline gets closer. Miller would be their most valuable trade chip, while players like Paul Blackburn, Brent Rooker, Ross Stripling and Alex Wood could draw attention.
Speculatively speaking, Lucas Erceg could also emerge as one of the more intriguing relievers on the deadline market. A former third baseman, Erceg was a late convert to pitching whom the A’s acquired from the Brewers in a minor trade nearly a year ago. While he struggled to a 4.75 ERA over 55 innings as a rookie, he has been a key high-leverage arm for skipper Mark Kotsay in 2024. Erceg has managed 22 strikeouts over 15 frames of 3.60 ERA ball. His fastball is sitting in the 98-99 MPH range.
Erceg also has six years of team control, so there’s no urgency for the A’s to move him. He’s already 29 years old and not as overpowering as Miller, though, so he’s less likely to be a major long-term piece coming out of the rebuild.
zacharydmanprin
Well, better late than never for ‘Erect’ amirite?! I’ll see myself out.
julyn82001
A’s being A’s – anything can happen with current ownership – chances are they are not pulling the trigger on this one trade unless hugely motivated.
jbigz12
Reliever with an injury history is the only pause I have. If they get something massive in return—IDK. I’ve seen crazier happen.
Joemo
If they get a decent deal, they should pull the trigger. But I would be very weary as a team trading for him.
If they can get a return like the Chapman trade, so a teams top prospect and a few additional ones, probably in the teams top 10/15, they should pull the trigger.
As a Red Sox fan, I wouldn’t want to give up Mayer, Teel, or Anthony for a young closer with an injury history. So teams might not be chomping at the bit to meat the asking price.
Dogbone
All of you are wasting your energy. I hear the White Sox are putting a huge package together, of all their excess talent, for him.
Fever Pitch Guy
Joe – I agree 100%! My interpreter would bet good money this kid winds up on the IL for an extended period of time.
The infatuation with max effort these days is totally out of control.
DarkSide830
Controllable through 2029. Bro ain’t going anywhere.
jimmyz
Established MLB position player with years of control, one premium prospect, one pitcher to effectively but unremarkably cover 160 innings a year for 2-3 years and and a teenager with massive tools but limited understanding of how to use them gets a conversation started. Nobody is going into the stratosphere of his trade value for a couple years.
rmullig2
If the O’s offer up Holliday he’s gone in a heartbeat.
just_thinkin
lmao
bumpy93
the O’s aren’t giving up Jackson Holliday for anyone unless it’s someone like Skenes and a lot more. neither team does this so it’s pointless for me to write this or for you to even read this, so………
jimmyz
Mason was 6′ 2″ and only 150ish pounds his junior year of college throwing high 80- low 90’s with his fastball and found out he was diabetic. Finished senior season at the local school he’d been at since a freshman and got a 5th year waiver to transfer to the baseball juggernaut of Gardner Webb University. Adjusted his diet and workouts and 4 years later he pumping 102 on the regular as one of the best relievers in the majors. If you can’t root for this kid then you just don’t appreciate baseball.
Rsox
A’s would be foolish to trade any potential young stars ahead of relocating be it to Sacramento or Vegas
Ronk325
I’d argue exactly the opposite. The A’s are at least 3-4 years away from contention and RPs are extremely volatile, especially guys like Miller. If a team offers a haul for him the A’s would be fools not to take it
tjmacari
4 years away from contention? Holy crap dude. I’m willing to bet money they make wild card by 2026 (unless they follow your advice and just trade guys every year). Are you one of the people who thinks they will lose 110 games this year?
Why is there this stupid narrative that the A’s have been a 100-lose team for 20 straight years? They’ve made the playoffs under Fisher in 2006, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019, and 2020. This is their normal cycle. Last year was rock bottom.
Rsox
As much as we dog Fisher (and rightfully so) the A’s have been competitive more often than not since the turn of the century. A few bad years in between cycles of competitiveness has been the norm and there is zero reason to believe that the A’s don’t make the playoffs at least once while playing in Sacramento
deweybelongsinthehall
Depends on the offer. Stud closers can nail down a championship. but if you’re not ready overall and given his injury situation, you listen. Perhaps the return brings you closer to a full team and gats when you look for that closer. Just my two cents.
Blue Baron
“Gats when you look for that closer?”
Huh?
deweybelongsinthehall
Typo. You knew that though…lol
Blue Baron
Yes, but your meaning wasn’t clear.
JoeBrady
tjmacari
Why is there this stupid narrative that the A’s have been a 100-lose team for 20 straight years?
==========================
That’s my biggest is with the Oakland/A’s/Fisher issues.
I couldn’t care less about Fisher, but the haters, none of whom go to the As games, don’t realize that the As have been much more successful than a lot of teams.
Ronk325
Yes, very possible the A’s are 4 years, and possibly more away from contention. Both their big league roster and farm system are among the worst in the league and they notoriously don’t spend money in free agency. The A’s might not lose 110 this year after their surprising start but 100 is still very likely.
Cycles like you mention don’t exist in sports. In the past the A’s have made the right moves to avoid ever hitting rock bottom. After going all in for 2021 then getting bent over in the Matt Olson and Sean Murphy trades, they’ve absolutely hit that point. I’m not trying to dog the A’s but I honestly don’t see how they get back to contention anytime soon
ARC 2
Last 3 years they have been terrible because Fisher traded away all the players. Beane is no longer the GM as soon as he left the team went down hill. Now it has come out that Fisher was just using the fake A’s stadium to get $380 million from Vegas.
hiflew
You are only 3-4 years away from contention if you CHOOSE to be 3-4 years away from contention.
Although I would agree that they should take an overwhelming offer for Miller simply because relievers are notoriously volatile. Unless you are convinced this guy is the next Mariano Rivera, sell high and move on.
deweybelongsinthehall
Exactly but what is high when he has an injury history? Listen and see if you can generate an auction right now when most teams aren’t selling.
JoeBrady
but what is high when he has an injury history?
==========================
That’s usually a problem with fan opinions. Sometimes they think they know something that other GMs don’t.
If the idea is that they should trade him because of his injury history, the other 29 GMs will lowball them because of his injury history.
Tacoshells
His fip is -0.15 lol
R.D.
Yeah can someone explain that one to me?
jimmyz
He’s so good that he broke the FIP algorithm.
mlb1225
FIP mainly focuses on the three-true-outcomes plus HBPs. Since he rarely walks anyone, hasn’t given up a home run, and is on pace for the highest single-season K% of any reliever, he has a negative FIP. The lowest single-season FIP is Craig Kimbrel in 2012 at 0.78 and only 3 have ever had sub-1.00 in 60+ IP: Kimbrel, Eric Gange (2003) and Edwin Diaz (2022).
TrotNixonIsMyHero
If you have a negative FIP game it is called a Kimbrel from Kimbrel’s Atlanta years.
Basically lots of strike outs puts FIP into the negative..
Squeeze32
Since no one is actually answering this:
FIP = ((13*HR + 3*(HBP+BB) – 2*K)/IP) + FIP constant
FIP constant a variable that approximates league average results on balls in play
If you are allowing next to zero home runs, and striking out ~2+ batters per inning without walking anyone such that that side of the equation is more negative than the FIP constant, your FIP will be negative.
Waldo29
As an A’s fan in Oakland, this would sadly feel like an appropriate final gut punch from Fisher before leaving lol
jimmyz
Different sport but the Seattle Supersonics drafted Kevin Durant and got one year out of him before folding. It happens and it’s terrible
Blue Baron
The Sonics didn’t fold. They moved to Oklahoma City.
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
If the sonics don’t come back within the next 10 years they will never come back
I hate watching the nba when you don’t have your own team
Blue Baron
Why would they move back to a city from which they relocated? That doesn’t make much sense.
And people just voted to fund a new arena in Oklahoma City, so they’re not leaving anytime soon.
Rsox
They wouldn’t “move back”. The City retained the name and team colors when the Sonics moved to OKC and the NBA has been talking about expansion and Adam Silver has said that Seattle (along with Las Vegas) are at the top of the list of potential expansion sites.
If Seattle gets an expansion team you can pretty much guarantee they will be named the Super Sonics
Blue Baron
That would be nice for them.
The same thing should have been done for Baltimore and the Colts, Houston and the Oilers, etc.
knolln
because you see him as a starter? yes everyone needs a bullpen, and people have been raving about the A’s bullpen this year…but you can like buy a high leverage bullpen, 2 or 3 guys for what an average position player costs. there’s got to be a price the A’s have to say yes, i don’t know who gives it up, but there’s several questionably intelligent FO’s out there!
jbigz12
Miller’s been so electric as a closer that I doubt he goes into the rotation at this point. Kinda like Chapman when he broke in. He was so dominant with his paired down arsenal that you just leave him to dominate in that role.
knolln
yea i get it. relative closeness to the majors, immediate bullpen success. sure. there’s also crochet’s and hicks’s (just this year) and wainwrights and cj wilson’s and 50 others that turned their value from high leverage bullpen arm that I can get comparable to on the open market if you ask me….heck miller may sophomore slump and your 40 yo FA signee may out stat him over 40-60 innings. but the everyday player, which the A’s have almost none of outweighs that every time.. not saying a surefire everyday ML’er is on the table, but i’d definitely be interested.
Kenag
Hopeful that the games aren’t 4 hours…
Ryan Schimpf
He also used the “Anyone who uses Trashtros is a problem” and the “(team or stadium) is the most underrated in all of sports” gimmick
joparx
Someone is gonna trade a massive haul for him and his arm is gonna explode, his pitch mix is horrifying in more ways than one
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
Padres would be willing to trade their entire farm system and preller himself in order to acquire miller
HiredGun23
Nah…
AshamedMethGoat
Was thinking exactly the same thing. This would be a very Preller thing to do.
rd42
They aren’t trading him. Right now, he’s the favorite for ROY. That’d net them an extra draft pick.
They won’t trade him before collecting that pick.
jbigz12
You have to pay that extra draft picks bonus. Acquiring prospects doesn’t cost you millions!
User 4245925809
Tough for a reliever to get ROY and actually 3 can think of right away doing outstanding in the early going: Miller, Ryan Fernandez and Justin Slaten. Last 2 are both rule5 guys and they also sit upper 90’s.
shark stitches
Mason Miller doesn’t sit in the high 90’s. He sits in the low 100’s.
HEFFERNAN
Mason Miller pitched over 30 innings last year. He is not considered a rookie this year.
SteveC
HEFFERNAN: I’m led to understand the threshold for a rookie pitcher is 50 IP or 45 days service time. Seems he still qualifies as a rookie
Melchez17
According to Baseball, Reference he exceeded rookie limits in 2023.
Sid Bream Speed Demon
I haven’t seen him mentioned as a rookie at all this season.
rd42
They’re wrong. He had exactly 45 days. Still eligible. Bowden on the athletic said it was specifically brought up to the commissioners office and they said hes a rookie still.
SteveC
rd42: “Bowden on the athletic said it was specifically brought up to the commissioners office and they said hes a rookie still.”
That’s where I saw it, as well. Seems to have missed the cut off by a day
danumd87 2
Baseball reference is incorrect. Confirmed by the commissioners office.
JoeBrady
That’d net them an extra draft pick.
=====================
Q-If he wins ROY, and gets traded, who gets the pick?
rd42
Nobody. If they’re traded, nobody gets it.
Os1995
Neither team gets the pick if the player is traded mid season. I don’t believe Mason Miller is eligible to get the A’s a PPI pick anyway since he wasn’t on 2/3 of the top 100 prospect lists (MLB Pipeline, ESPN, Baseball America)
shosho
How much would the o’s need to give up for Miller? He and/or Kopech should be targets imo
jimmyz
2 of Hjerstad, Mayo and Cowser plus two lower minors pitchers with tools that need to be ironed out but have sky high potential. Mason Miller is arguably the best pitcher in the world right now but most people don’t know cuz he plays for Oakland.
Blue Baron
@jimmyz: People do know. Hence an article like this.
danumd87 2
You’re on something. If the orioles called with a Kjerstad, Seth Johnson and a couple 20-30 guys the As would jump on it. Kjerstad and Norby and the As would be over the moon. What you mentioned is Julio Rodriguez or Bobby Witt type once a decade type trade value. Miller is electric and his assent has been a blast to watch but he’s still a reliever with a recent injury history.
Nosferatu Zodd
Norby, a can of Spam, Povich, and maybe one of the glut of OF prospects or Stowers. It’s a need for this year. I don’t see this guy pitching like this for 5 years. If As are smart they will sell high.
King Floch
Way too much for me to be willing to gamble on his arm holding up for the next 5.5 years. I suspect that Mike Elias would agree.
We definitely need another high leverage RP, but I would look elsewhere, i.e. Ryan Helsley.
Barry Bonds' DooDoo
No wayyy
Liberalsteve
Torkelson for Miller
Melchez17
I don’t think you could get Ryan Noda for Tork.
LordD99
Cash in. He’s an injury waiting to happen.
A's Fan
any team not calling the A’s on Miller would be foolish, but the A’s should certainly let him ride out the year. as if he wins ROY would they not get an extra first round pick?
Dogbone
A’s fan: if he is eligible, that is how I would play it. Assuming his arm stays healthy, you can always seek the king’s ransom, in the offseason.
Niekro floater
He’ll never be more valuable and there’s cpl good teams who could really use em this yr. If he continues close to his early performance plus being controllable for so long, he should require kings ransom to obtain em. Billy Beane is famous for “pump up the closer” n deal em when they’re hot. Injury history is scary, but it only takes 1 team to bite.
shark stitches
Billy Beane doesn’t run the front office, so I’m not sure how this is relevant.
Niekro floater
No, he’s senior executive advisor to owner so I’d imagine he’s still got a lil pull in building n considering that was 1 of his goto moves, “build up the closer” n let his value appreciate then deal em, I’m sure he’s let it be known w/the sudden rising commodity of Mason Miller that trading em could be lucrative especially when his stock is so high. Deal em b4 he breaks down again.
julyn82001
A’s Billy Beane is definitely involved – he has a feel for running operations with the team. David Forst is his top lieutenant.
zacharydmanprin
Billy Beane hasn’t been involved in day-to-day baseball operations since 2017 and hasn’t been involved with operations at all since 2020. This has been David Forst’s team for some time, now.
Fred McGriff HR
“Erect” was a late convert”…
RunDMC
lol…you saw that too
Prunella Vulgaris
I’d love to see the Cubs acquire him.
Mercenary.Freddie.Freeman
If the Oakland Athletics are really a MLB team they would keep their young controllable star players. This is sad. Time to subtract a couple teams and start with this one.
its_happening
Bidding war. A’s should be looking at dealing him. A great arm, no doubt.
Slider_withcheese
Odds are, he’ll be a Cub. Other teams will pivot to Ryan Helsley who, let’s be honest, should be made available starting today.
Blue Baron
The Cubs are one of 29 other teams, at least 9 or 10 who are contenders, so the odds actually are that he won’t be a Cub.
Bruin1012
If Baltimore wants this guy truly wants him and Oakland is really willing to trade him then he will be an Oriole. No other team has the excess talent that Baltimore has. The Cubs don’t stand a chance if Baltimore wants him. I just don’t think Oakland is trading him this year.
King Floch
I think O’s GM Mike Elias is too cautious and conservative to meet Oakland’s understandably stratospheric asking price, and I am okay with that.
danumd87 2
While the Os still have best farm in baseball, the gap is not as large since they traded Ortiz in the Burnes deal. The Cubs have seven top 100 guys. While only two of those 7 rank as high as the orioles top 5 the cubs depth is gross. They can hang with the orioles in a bidding war if desired.
danumd87 2
It does appear that the cubs and orioles are the only realistic options. Both teams have the prospect capital and expectation of competing this season and the need. Either could center a package around a top 50 prospect plus without their farms being decimated as a result. It would be interesting to see if the cubs were willing to give up something like Shaw & alcantara or the Orioles kjerstad & Norby. I’m assuming PCA and Horton are off the table for the cubs while Holliday, Basallo and Mayo are for the orioles, respectively.
Blue Baron
You actually are in no position to determine that.
Don’t underestimate the Guardians, Twins, Yankees, Dodgers, Phillies, and Rangers, to name a few.
Simm
If I’m the A’s I would definitely listen to offers for him. His value will never be as high as it is right now because he is healthy and has so many years of control.
Plus with his arm injuries last year he likely isn’t going to be a starter. Perhaps he can stay healthy for awhile at least in the pen. His arm is going to explode one of these days.
The bottom line is closers only trump other relievers and bench pieces as far as value goes.
If they can get some quality starting pitching prospects or position player prospects back then they should pull the trigger.
The A’s have played better this year but are likely still years away from contending. While miller may still be there when they contend trading him now could speed up and give them a higher quality of return to contention.
With that said it’s pretty hard to judge the value he has in a trade. Obviously high but how much are teams really willing to trade for a reliever. Most likely a top prospect plus some guys, maybe something similar to the cease deal.
Bruin1012
I think Oakland will of course listen but unless they are blown away then they aren’t trading this guy. I do agree it’s going to be really hard to determine value for him for this reason I don’t think he gets traded.
slider32
Miller is a game changer for any of the top contenders, he is a lights out closer. Since pitching is outlier and he look like the Mariano Rivera of this generation I think he is worth the risk for a contender. Teams like the Yanks, O’s, Dodgers, Braves, Brewers, Cubs, Phillies, Padres, and Mariners. The question is do the A’s get one player in return or 2 or 3 lesser players.
YankeesBleacherCreature
He’s had 16.1 IP of success this season and 50 IP career. Let’s taper down the Mo comparisons and see how he rebounds when he inevitably hits a rough patch. Mo’s cutter averaged in the low 90s. Miller, undoubtedly talented, is throwing pure gas like peak Aroldis Chapman.
Bobby Mongan
I could see the Orioles making a trade. On the Major League side they have talent such as Kjerstad, McKenna and Urias. I would add Mateo and Santander but I think at this point they are in the Orioles plans. In the Minors they have Norby, Stowers, Fabian and many others who could fit nicely in the A’s plans.
Now I don’t believe the Orioles will give up a ton but they definitely have the Chips to make a deal.
2020vision
Agree. The logjam of talent in the Orioles system is almost problematic.
slider32
Agreed. they aren’t getting better with prospects now, They need to add players like Burns to put them over the top. The time is now!
slider32
Miller is a perfect fit for the O’s, the relief pitching was great last year with Cano and Bautista. Kimbrel isn’t the answer! What about Holliday, his father played for the A’s!
King Floch
Holliday isn’t getting traded. Period.
slider32
Holliday is a SS, and the O’s have one on their roster who is one of the best in baseball
King Floch
Holliday WAS a SS, now he is our 2B of the future. He isn’t going anywhere.
King Floch
I just cannot see Mike Elias paying the A’s justifiably monumental asking price for Miller. Like, Mayo or Basallo and Povich is probably the starting point, and several more very good pieces would still be needed to get it across the finish line (i.e. Beavers, De Leon, Fabian, etc.).
I have seen absolutely nothing in Elias’ tenure to make me think he would give up that much for anyone, much less a RP. Even one as good as Miller.
hockeyjohn
Bobby Morgan, Oakland is going to have no interest in players like McKenna, Urias, Mateo, and Santander. Spare parts or short-term assets are not going to interest Oakland.
C4Luke
I genuinely wonder what the reaction be if a team offered like 100m+ in cash for Miller, just with how John Fisher has been
slider32
Crockett’s!
shark stitches
That trade isn’t allowed since you can only trade cash up to the salary of the players in the trade, but I think the A’s would take that if it were allowed.
Chuck from Uniontown
The pride of Waynesburg University. Go Jackets.
Tito Leibowitz
You know he’s a hard worker with a double-occupational name.
Armaments216
A’s have a real grinder who’s ready to rebuild.
Lofton4daHOF
I see what you did there
Os1995
I don’t see Miller going anywhere. I think the A’s still think he has starting upside (and have him values as such) whereas the teams acquiring him likely use him as a closer and value him accordingly. I think this difference in how they view Miller puts the A’s and other teams too far away on value for a deal to get done.
Seaver rules
It bothers me to say it but he will be a Yankee and it may put them on top of the AL.
King Floch
Do the Yankees even have the bullets in their organization to pull it off? I genuinely do not know enough about their system to say, although I thought their system was supposed to be kind of mid even before they used a lot of their ammo to land Soto from the Padres.
YankeesBleacherCreature
How? They’re not parting ways with their top prospects for an inherently volatile reliever. They also have three relievers coming back in a few weeks. Clay Holmes has yet to give up a run in 16 IP with one walk.
davemlaw
Which teams inquired?
It’s easy to say Miller is drawing attention and not say whom.
Without naming inquiring teams this is a nothing burger article.
Mrski
Yankees should part with Tonkin if needed to get Mason.
Doral Silverthorn
Padres compiling a list of ten players to trade for him as we speak.
They will still finish third in the division.
Baseball77
If the A’s trade either Miller or Erceg then it really justifies, in my mind, that the A’s are just a AAA team seeking to move guys to legitimate big league teams.
These pitchers are young, cheap and have multiple years of control. A real big league club on the down swing would use them as the starting blocks to rebuild a contender. The A’s, however, would just shuffle them along for more minor leaguers that they could play.
I guess the move to Sacramento really does make sense.