MLBTR Chat Transcript
Anthony Franco
- Hey all, Steve’s on vacation this week so I’m stepping in for the Tuesday chat. Apologies for the time change from the usual afternoon schedule. We’ll get going at the top of the hour
- Good morning, hope you’re all doing well!
- Let’s get rolling
AL Central Casting
- With all the extensions getting done around the league lately, I’d love to see the Twins lock up Luke Keaschall long-term. What do you think it would take? What about for Walker Jenkins?
Anthony Franco
- Both sensible targets. I’d have Jenkins below Colt Emerson based on the higher defensive floor for Emerson as a shortstop but they’re not too dissimilar as prospects. Jenkins should be closer to Emerson’s $95M guarantee than Cooper Pratt’s $50M range
- Some questions about the long-term defensive home for Keaschall but more proof of concept that he can hit MLB pitching than we had with Campbell or Samuel Basallo, even if they were better prospects pre-debut. Would guess somewhere between $60-70M on him?
Jason
- I thought Boston was going to be middle of the pack this year, so I’m not completely surprised by the horrible no good very bad start, but did you think they’d be this bad so early? I know a lot can change but wowzers.
Anthony Franco
- Still think they’ll be fine — no way the starting pitching remains this bad — but obviously the worst first couple weeks for any team and it’s not an easy division to climb back from if they keep spiraling through most of April
AA
- Why do I get the feeling this year’s Braves team isn’t gonna be much different than the last two?
Anthony Franco
- Obviously remain concerned about the rotation depth there but credit to Bryce Elder, whose first two starts have been really good. If he’s able to stick around as a league average starter and they get contributions from Ritchie and Fuentes, they’ll be better than last year
Ham
- Despite a couple big adds, the Orioles offense still looks like last year’s lackluster offense. What’s going on? And when will they learn to hit an offspeed pitch?
Anthony Franco
- Alonso’s better than this obviously but I think they’ve skewed too heavily toward RHH power at the expense of their OBP overall
- Would still take them as a slightly better than average offense moving forward but I worry that some of the redundancy in the offensive profiles will make them pretty streaky
Redsy
- If Sandy Alcantara has another excellent outing would you go all in on trying to trade for him this early if you are one of the big contenders? No way the guy stays in Miami past the deadline this year right?
Anthony Franco
- Darragh wrote a Front Office post on this so he and I were discussing this yesterday. I lean towards them holding and trading him this offseason
- Would be really surprised if he signs an extension — only way I could see it being plausible is if the league gets the MLBPA to break on a cap/floor system that forces Miami to almost double their payroll
- But I don’t think it’s out of the question this Miami team can hang around the Wild Card picture where the final spot might be 83-85 wins and Sandy would still have immense trade value next winter
Reds fan
- What are the reds doing with Marte? He is a building block guy and he hasn’t played against a right hander yet-is he just a platoon bat moving forward? I don’t understand it
Anthony Franco
- Yeah I don’t get that one either. They’re not really platooning him, just kind of alternating between him and Will Benson and I’d much rather have Marte out in right field
Cardsfansince1973
- There have been reports about the Cardinals trying to extend JJ Wetherholt. Any updates? Do you think they will try to extend Masyn Winn as well?
Anthony Franco
- Don’t doubt that they’d love to get both of them done. Wetherholt seems likelier to me just based on the number of early-career extensions we’ve seen the past couple years
decinces
- is the angels decent start (third best record in the al) just small sample size or a hope that the pitching is a little better than advertised and better depth is making the lineup deeper and able to string together some momentum, even with adell and lowe not doing anything offensively so far (though both have been phenomenal in the outfield corners so far)
Anthony Franco
- I just can’t muster any kind of optimism with this roster. Much the same pattern as previous Angels teams where there are handful of impact pieces (Neto, Soriano, Trout if healthy, maybe Detmers) but the depth is going to get exposed over 162
Chris
- Even off to a good start, preseason concerns about Yanks bottom of order and back end of bullpen look legit, dont they?
Anthony Franco
- Lineup will be fine. Caballero’s in over his head as a starting shortstop but you can live with him or Volpe at the bottom of the order. McMahon and Wells should be close to league average bats who provide strong defensive value
- Bullpen bridge to Bednar and Cruz concerns me a little more, but that’s a spot where they can again take a volume approach at the deadline (hopefully with better results than they’ve gotten from Doval and Bird so far)
Connor⚾️
- Expectations for the Rangers this year?⚾️
Anthony Franco
- Right around .500, clearly behind Seattle for me but there with Houston as the second and third best teams in the division in some order
The Ghost of Mickey Lolich
- To the surprise of no one, except Scott Harris, the Tigers offense ‘stinks’. When will we see Max Clark called up
Anthony Franco
- Ha, I still mostly like this offense on paper. Do think we could see Clark by the middle of May, though, especially if Parker Meadows isn’t hitting
SCR
- Wacha , Soriano or Messick rest of 2026 ? ( K’s dont matter ) .
Anthony Franco
- Soriano
Too Early
- Related questions: How does a lockout impact service time, and does the potential for a lockout get factored into some of the extensions we are seeing?
Anthony Franco
- An offseason lockout obviously doesn’t impact service time. If it costs an entire season, that’s something they’d need to sort out within the CBA
- I don’t think it’s having much of an impact on extensions. It probably plays into contract structure a little bit — players would prefer the money as signing bonuses rather than 2027 salary as a hedge — but if the ’27 season gets canceled, they’re not getting paid salaries either way
Slick Ric
- If CJ Abrams keeps hitting like he is, does that make it more likely or less likely that he is in Washington after the trade deadline?
Buster Posey
- Fine: I should have traded for CJ Abrams. Does Eldridge straight-up get it done or would the Nats want more?
Anthony Franco
- Better performance has to drive up the likelihood of a trade. Nats still aren’t close and 2.5 years of Abrams might be the most valuable deadline trade chip
- I don’t think Eldridge is getting it done as a standalone. Sensible headliner but this kind of deal is basically never one-for-one for a top prospect. Teams like to hedge their bets with multi-player packages
Circle Me Bert
- Where is Byron Buxton playing after the trade deadline?
Anthony Franco
- Still think he’s a Twin
Fantasy Advice
- Are we concerned about Nick Kurtz’s start?
Anthony Franco
- Not really. His rookie season was probably a little over his head — don’t think we’re talking about him as the third-best hitter in MLB behind Judge and Ohtani — and there will always be a lot of strikeouts but the power barrage is coming
Greg
- Any tips for securing a job with MLB Trade Rumors?
Anthony Franco
- When opportunities come out, we just put out a job posting on the site, nothing available right now. Best advice I could give is to read closely on a lot of the transactional minutia to have an idea of why teams make moves when they do, 40-man implications, etc.
Phils
- What do you do with T walker when Zach Wheeler comes back? He won’t be in the rotation and they have absolutely no space for him in the bullpen. Is it time to just say goodbye or ask him to go to AAA?
Anthony Franco
- He has no incentive to go to Triple-A. My guess is they’ll try to get Pop through waivers and keep Walker around in long relief as a hedge in case Wheeler doesn’t look right
Ryan
- Why did the Brewers preemptively give Cooper Pratt a 40-man roster spot when he’s not getting called up and wasn’t Rule 5 eligible until after the 2027 season?
Anthony Franco
- It’s required for any player signing a major league contract. Mariners had to do the same with Colt Emerson
Jordan Walker
- Are you buying my breakout?
Anthony Franco
- Cautiously optimistic. Still a lot of swing-and-miss but he’s destroying the ball and getting it in the air more than he usually does. Seems like the bat path is a little more uphill this year, which is encouraging if you can pull that off without a massive drop in contact
- It’s two weeks so I’m not fully on board yet because we’ve seen stretches where Walker gets hot and then falls back, but I’m more intrigued than I was on March 27
Big Fan
- Can you explain the “player to be named later” process? Is there a time limit for the player to be named? Is there a bank of players that the teams agree could be available at a later time?
Anthony Franco
- Pretty much. Teams will agree to a prearranged list of players who the acquiring club can choose from a timeline for them to make that decision
To ATL
- I’ve seen Tim and now you revently respond to questions about the lockout with a bit more pessimism. Is that me, or are you concerned we may actually lose part or all of next season?
Anthony Franco
- Nah I think the offseason will suck but they’ll figure it out late, pretty similar to what happened the last time around
- More pessimistic about 2031 but MLB has so many reasons right now (TV bundle after ’28, expansion, Manfred’s personal desire not to have his legacy be an inability to get a CBA done at the end of his tenure) not to bring it all to a halt this time
I Overslept
- Calm me down about Carter Jensen. There are a lot of young guys on the Royals and it kinda bugs me that they let it slide.
Anthony Franco
- They kind of put him on blast publicly, obviously scratched him from that game. I think it’s fine. Sending him down or something is an overreaction that deals more of a hit to the team than it’s worth
- If it happens again, alright, maybe they do some kind of disciplinary thing like the Nationals did with CJ Abrams a couple years ago. For the first time, I think they handled it fine
The Big Q
- Why is “swing and miss” simply a part of Kurtz’s game, but a detriment to Walker’s breakout?
Anthony Franco
- We’ve seen Kurtz have a monster power season despite a 30% strikeout rate already
- If Kurtz had hit six homers last season, I’d be a lot more worried about the whiffs
zivkov34
- What’s the hold up on the Konnor Griffin extension? Or were we sold yet anotherPR lie y Bob
Anthony Franco
- Probably waiting a few days to make it look better for that silly PPI rule that says he can’t earn them a pick if there’s an extension done before his MLB debut
Marlins
- Do you think Liam hicks will keep hitting like this or do you think he’ll go back to being around a below average to average bat
Anthony Franco
- He’s never had anything close to this kind of power but the plate discipline is good enough that I buy him as a slightly above-average hitter
- I like him more than Agustín Ramírez but don’t think either has the glove to be a long-term starting catcher. Not like they’ve got anything locked down at first base, though
Blue
- How do you like ABS challenges so far?
Anthony Franco
- It’s been fun. Still think it’ll end up being full ABS once the novelty wears off and we get a blown call that costs a playoff game when a team is out of challenges. But I underrated how much fans would love the idea of the ABS overturning calls on the scoreboard
Guest
- If Bohm scuffles will the Phillies call up Aiden Miller to replace Bohm?
Anthony Franco
- He’d need to be really bad into July before I could see that as a possibility, easier to break him in as a bench bat without turning over 3B halfway through a pennant race. Miller’s also on the minor league IL right now and his return timeline isn’t clear
Buster Posey
- Why not blow this whole thing up and finally play the kids? This organization never wants to rebuild so we can be mediocre and win our standard 81 games.
Giants fan
- Would this Giants team be a powerhouse in the SEC?
Rich
- Is there a legitimate chance the Giants are really bad? Like, worse than Colorado bad.
Anthony Franco
- Three of the many Giants questions in here. Not yet moving off my prior that they’ll be in the Wild Card picture all season
Hoyer
- Giolito kinda makes sense if Hortons out awhile right?
Anthony Franco
- Probably but I have no idea what Giolito’s status is at this point. One of the weirder free agent trajectories I can remember
charlie tuna
- A question/comment about the MLB draft and taxes. As we all know, teams that spend big also pay big taxes and teams that don’t spend, don’t pay the lux tax. There are teams that are legitimately trying to win and others that aren’t. Then there are (not many) teams that spend and try to win with limited resources. Teams like this (best example being the Padres) are penalized by having to pay the lux tax anyway. They are also dinged by having their Q.O. players, that sign elsewhere, bring back a lower draft pick than they would normally receive. To me that seems like penalizing teams that use all their resources in an attempt to win. Bass akwards if you ask me and detrimental to the game. Any chance this gets address in the next CBA?
Anthony Franco
- MLBPA would love to flip this around. The league puts this in the CBA because they don’t want teams to spend, it’s a deliberate choice
- I don’t think moving a team’s top pick back 10 spots for passing the third tier is a huge disincentive. The QO stuff is, at least for mid-market players, but it’s designed to be to drive down free agent spending. Union has to give up something else to get MLB to give on this
Taylor
- With Yordan Alvarez finally healthy and the offense leading the AL in batting average through the first week, is this front office in a better position to be buyers at the deadline — or does the bullpen situation (Hader on IL, thin backend depth) make them more likely to address pitching first, even if it costs them a legitimate hitting upgrade?
Anthony Franco
- I’m sure they’d love to buy. Older roster, aggressive ownership (at least for certain players), a GM on the last year of his contract whose team missed the playoffs for the first time in eight seasons
- Still need to find a LH bat, ideally in the outfield. They’re still there with the Angels as the most RHH lineups in MLB
- Rotation depth isn’t great but is in better shape than it probably should be given where they were at the start of the offseason. Back-end bullpen could be the priority but we’ll see how Hader and Sousa recover in the interim few months
Nationals guy
- Are you buying the new analytics the Nationals are giving their hitters? Looks like we could have some guys breaking out (House, Nunez, Lyle) and that’s without Crews who should be coming up fairly soon. This team looks like they can at least hit.
Anthony Franco
- Nuñez is what he is, serviceable utility guy. Still don’t think House is going to make enough contact
- Agree that Lile can rake and should be athletic enough to play the outfield but man, his tentativeness last year was rough
Benge
- I have not been hitting at all lately. Probably time to go down to AAA to reset, or is it too early?
Anthony Franco
- Give him at least until Soto comes back. If he’s still struggling at that point, I’d option him
- Alright that’s all I have time for today. Working on a little tighter schedule this week unfortunately
- I’m on X @affranco10 if you want to throw any other questions at me there. I do a Friday afternoon chat for Front Office subscribers where I can get to a much higher percentage of questions with more time to go in depth on the answers
- Steve will be back next week, so it should be the usual Tuesday afternoon schedule on that one
- Have a good afternoon everyone!
Cardinals Trade Nick Raquet To Orioles
Today: The Orioles have announced the trade and activated Raquet. Brandon Young has been optioned to Triple-A. To make space for Raquet on their 40-man roster, Baltimore transferred Eflin to the 60-day IL. Elbow discomfort forced Eflin to make an early exit during his season debut on March 31, and he is going for a second opinion from Dr. Keith Meister later today. At the very least, he will now miss April and May.
April 6, 9:27 pm: Baltimore is sending minor league outfielder Brayden Smith to St. Louis in return, reports Derrick Goold of The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The lefty-hitting Smith was the O’s 13th-round pick last year after spending one season at Oklahoma State. He hit .200 with one home run while drawing 12 walks in 16 games at Low-A Delmarva to begin his pro career.
April 6, 9:08 pm: The Orioles are acquiring reliever Nick Raquet from the Cardinals, reports Ari Alexander of Boston 7 News. St. Louis designated the lefty for assignment yesterday. Baltimore will need to create a 40-man roster spot once the trade is final; Heston Kjerstad and Zach Eflin are potential 60-day injured list candidates.
Raquet debuted last September and tossed two scoreless appearances of one inning apiece. That’s the entirety of the 30-year-old lefty’s big league experience to date. Raquet held his spot on the 40-man roster over the offseason but was optioned early in Spring Training. He has worked three innings of one-run ball with a trio of strikeouts for Triple-A Memphis to begin the season.
It has been a long climb to the big leagues for Raquet. The 6’0″ hurler was a third-round pick by the Nationals out of William & Mary in 2017. He never made it beyond A-ball in the Washington system and was released in 2020. Raquet was out of baseball for a few seasons before turning independent and Dominican Winter League work into a new minor league opportunity with St. Louis in 2024.
Raquet spent most of last season in the upper levels of the minor leagues. He combined for a 2.24 ERA with a 28% strikeout rate over 52 1/3 frames, excelling in Double-A before struggling at the top minor league level. He’s a slider specialist whose breaking ball sits in the 82-84 mph range. Raquet’s fastball only lands around 90-91, but he has a full slate of minor league options and can head to Triple-A Norfolk.
Joe Ross Elects Free Agency
Veteran righty Joe Ross elected free agency over the weekend, according to the MLB.com transaction tracker. He cleared waivers after being designated for assignment on Friday.
Ross had a short-lived tenure in the desert. The 32-year-old broke camp in a long relief role after signing a minor league contract in February. He worked a perfect inning in his season debut but was knocked around over the next two appearances. Ross gave up six runs without getting through an inning against the Tigers on March 30. He surrendered three walks and a Mauricio Dubón homer in a blowout loss to Atlanta two days later. The D-Backs swapped him out of their bullpen for Taylor Rashi after the Braves game.
A veteran of parts of nine big league seasons, Ross has had a tough past year-plus. He gave up a 5.12 ERA over 51 innings for the Phillies last year. Philadelphia released him in August, and he closed the season in Triple-A with the Cubs. He’ll be looking at minor league offers now that he’s back on the open market.
Angels Notes: Johnson, Klassen, Trout
The Angels placed rookie starter Ryan Johnson on the 15-day injured list before tonight’s game. Lefty Mitch Farris is up from Triple-A Salt Lake to take his spot on the active roster. Johnson’s placement, which is retroactive to April 3, is due to a virus.
Johnson surprisingly broke camp as the Halos’ fifth starter. That was due both to his strong Spring Training and the injuries to Grayson Rodriguez and Alek Manoah ahead of him on the depth chart. It continued a bizarre career arc for the 2024 supplemental second-round draft choice. Johnson skipped the minors entirely to break camp last year as a reliever. He looked overmatched, was optioned all the way back to High-A in May, then dominated over 12 starts to finish the season.
The Angels jumped the 23-year-old back up as a starter without any upper minors experience. He had a shaky first MLB start, allowing six runs without getting through the fourth inning against the Cubs. Johnson was scheduled for his second appearance yesterday against the Mariners before the illness intervened.
That led to the first MLB opportunity for well-regarded prospect George Klassen. The Angels selected him as a spot starter in Johnson’s place. Klassen walked five batters and only recorded eight outs in his big league debut. The Halos used four relievers (Ryan Zeferjahn, Brent Suter, Sam Bachman and Shaun Anderson) for multiple frames in an eventual 11th-inning win.
Farris gives them a multi-inning relief option for the next couple days. José Soriano has done his part to give the bullpen a much needed breather, firing eight innings of one-run ball tonight against the Braves. Their pitching plans for the next few days are to be determined beyond knowing that it’ll be Yusei Kikuchi and Reid Detmers to start the final two games of their series with Atlanta. They’re off on Thursday before playing on 14 consecutive days. Manager Kurt Suzuki told reporters (including Jeff Fletcher of The Orange County Register) that they haven’t decided whether Klassen will make another start.
Meanwhile, Mike Trout was out of the lineup tonight after being hit on the left hand during yesterday’s ballgame. He’s listed as day to day, per the MLB.com injury tracker. Bryce Teodosio got the nod in center field tonight against Chris Sale. If Trout needs more time, the Angels could turn to lefty-hitting Josh Lowe there with Atlanta starting righties for the next two games. Teodosio would be the other possibility if they’re focused solely on defense.
José Buttó Undergoes Procedure For Blood Clot
APRIL 4: The Giants announced today that Butto’s recovery timeline is 2-4 months.
APRIL 3: Giants reliever José Buttó has a blood clot in his throwing arm, the team told reporters (via Alex Pavlovic of NBC Sports Bay Area). He’s undergoing a procedure this evening to remove it.
Buttó landed on the 15-day injured list yesterday. The team initially announced that only as arm fatigue. The clot provides a little more clarity, but there’s no return timeline. Susan Slusser of The San Francisco Chronicle relays that it appears Buttó had pitched through the issue for a while before the clot was diagnosed earlier today.
Blood clotting can be associated with thoracic outlet syndrome. That was the case for Phillies ace Zack Wheeler, for example. The Giants have not said anything about whether that’s a fear for Buttó. However, skipper Tony Vitello told Slusser there are a few possible procedures that the right-hander might undergo.
San Francisco acquired Buttó from the Mets as one of three players in the Tyler Rogers deal last summer. Blade Tidwell, another part of the Rogers return, was coincidentally recalled to take his place in the bullpen yesterday. Buttó turned in a 4.50 ERA across 20 innings down the stretch. He surrendered five runs on six hits and four walks over two innings to begin the 2026 season.
Braves Pitching Notes: Strider, Pérez, Fuentes
Spencer Strider threw a 20-pitch bullpen session on Friday as he works back from the oblique strain that shelved him to begin the season. Braves manager Walt Weiss tells reporters (including Chad Bishop of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution) that the righty will probably need a rehab start before he’s ready to return to the big league club.
There’s a decent chance Strider will need to throw a live batting practice session before he heads out on a minor league assignment. That’s usually the intervening step between a bullpen session and rehab stint. Strider seems to be progressing nicely, though, and he looks to be on track to make his season debut within the next couple weeks.
Strider worked 8 1/3 innings over three appearances during Spring Training. The final of those came on March 11 before he tweaked his left oblique. A healthy Strider would have followed Chris Sale in the season-opening rotation. Grant Holmes and Reynaldo López have stepped into the second and third spots, respectively. They’ve pitched well through the first two turns. López’s fastball velocity has ticked back up into the 94 mph range after sitting at worrisome levels in Spring Training.
The final two spots are still questionable. Bryce Elder had a nice season debut against the A’s earlier this week, working six scoreless innings with five punchouts. He’ll go against Michael Soroka tomorrow in the third game of their four-game set in Arizona. The Braves have yet to announce who’ll oppose Brandon Pfaadt in the series finale.
José Suarez took that spot the first time through the rotation. He didn’t escape the fourth inning, allowing four runs on five hits and four walks in a 5-2 loss to the A’s on Tuesday. Martín Pérez followed with 4 1/3 scoreless frames and three strikeouts in a mop-up role.
Neither pitcher has taken the ball since that appearance, and Mark Bowman of MLB.com writes that it likely sets up for the Braves to flip their roles in this turn. They could temporarily tab Pérez as the fifth starter while using Suarez in a low-leverage relief role. Dylan Lee is the only of their current 13 MLB pitchers who has minor league options. Barring intervening injuries, at least one of Pérez, Suarez or Osvaldo Bido will probably be pushed off the roster once Strider returns.
Didier Fuentes is something of a wild card in those pitching plans. The 20-year-old broke camp in long relief and reeled off four innings of one-run ball with four strikeouts in his only appearance. The Braves optioned him after that outing, a prearranged plan to allow him to build as a more traditional starter in the minors.
Fuentes made his first start of the season with Triple-A Gwinnett this evening. He struck out seven while allowing just two baserunners (one hit and walk apiece) across 3 1/3 innings. Fuentes got up to 72 pitches after a 56-pitch outing in his MLB appearance. He’s probably only one or two starts from being built up as a rotation candidate.
The Braves will need to decide how best to use Fuentes without overworking him. The Colombian-born righty tossed 70 innings last year between the minors and a four-start look in the big leagues. He has yet to reach 80 innings in a professional season.
Atlanta isn’t going to fully unleash him for 150+ innings and surely wants to see continued development in his command and secondary pitches. That said, Fuentes has an excellent fastball and has had a dominant few weeks going back to Spring Training, where he struck out 18 of the 43 batters he faced. After looking overmatched when the Braves hurried him to the majors last summer, he seems much better positioned to carve out an MLB role this year.
Ketel Marte Reaches 10 Years Of Service, Earns Full No-Trade Right
D-Backs second baseman Ketel Marte officially reached 10 years of major league service today. The three-time All-Star entered the season 10 days shy of that milestone.
It’s a significant achievement for any player. Marte’s impending 10-year milestone was more discussed than most because he found himself in trade rumors over the offseason. Players who have 10 years of service and have spent the past five seasons with one team automatically receive full no-trade protection under the collective bargaining agreement. Marte can no longer be traded by Arizona without his consent.
That doesn’t matter much in the short term. The D-Backs obviously weren’t trading Marte within the first couple months of the season either way. The front office ceased trade conversations about halfway through last offseason. General manager Mike Hazen has said a few times that talks never got especially close to a deal. He maintained throughout the winter that the front office didn’t want to move Marte but needed to consider all ways to improve their starting pitching.
If the Diamondbacks struggle this year, they could revisit the possibility at the deadline or next offseason. Marte turns 33 in October and is signed through 2031, albeit with an opt-out after the ’30 season. He’s still arguably the best second baseman in the league and is due below-market salaries for the next five years: $12MM in ’27, $20MM in ’28, $22MMM per season between 2029-30, and $11.5MM in ’31. He’d be a valuable trade chip if the D-Backs opt for any kind of retooling effort down the line.
Marte himself now has full control over his future. His contract had previously allowed him to block trades to five teams of his choice, which he could change each offseason. Marte said this evening that he thought he would be traded last offseason given all the rumors (video via Sports Illustrated), so he’s surely more comfortable now that the 10-and-5 rights are locked in.
Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript
Anthony Franco
- Good afternoon, hope you're all well!
- Looking forward to another of these, let's get it going
Brewer Fan
- Is it weird that the Brewers haven't actually announced the Pratt extension? And on that topic, if it does get done, it wouldn't rule out a Made or Pena extension right?
Anthony Franco
- It's a little atypical but I don't think any cause for concern. Adam McCalvy hypothesized yesterday that it's just a logistical holdup on completing the physical
- Which would make sense. He played for Nashville through March 29, the extension report came out on the 30th, and he hasn't played any of their past three games despite being on the active roster. Could just be a travel thing to get him to Milwaukee and get final sign-off on the medical
thebeatlesshow
- Anthony, Thanks again. Is the complete game no hitter on the way to being extinct (if it isn't already)?
Anthony Franco
- I don't think so. Less common, yes, largely because teams are more concerned about pitch counts and there's a decent chance you're running a pretty high number in a no-hitter because it's probably coming with some strikeouts
- But it's still a hell of an accomplishment for a pitcher and managers care about that
- Whoops, just realized I didn't answer the second part of that first Brewers question:
Don't see why Pratt would take a Made or Pena extension off the table, no
Cubbies
- What are the Cubs gonna do with their OF after this season? Happ and Seiya both FAs and Cassie was traded for Cabrera.
Anthony Franco
- QO to both, ideal if one of them accepts and takes that decision off the table. Feels like Happ is the likelier of the two to return if they're signing one to a three-year deal
- If they believe in Kevin Alcántara at all, have to give him a real opportunity next year. He'll be out of options and the strikeout questions aren't getting answered if he's only playing twice a week
Little Texas
- I’m my way to the Rangers home opener to see Gore pitch, Here’s to his CY Young season.
Anthony Franco
- Enjoy!
3D-space ABS
- Why would the Mariners forgo managing a signing like Emerson's so that PPI was still in play?
M
- now that he's signed an extension and thus no longer eligible for the PPI, how long before Emerson is up with the Ms?
-
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Will Any Pre-Arbitration Pitchers Sign Extensions?
From a transaction perspective, this time of the baseball calendar is defined by extensions. Within the past month, we've seen two impending free agents (Nico Hoerner and Jesús Luzardo) come off the board. The Cubs got a deal done with pre-arbitration center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong. Philadelphia extended Cristopher Sánchez even though he was already potentially signed through 2030.
The Orioles extended arbitration-eligible starter Shane Baz. The Mariners reached the largest pre-debut extension with shortstop prospect Colt Emerson. That's likely to be a brief record with the Pirates reportedly working on a deal with #1 overall prospect Konnor Griffin. Milwaukee infield prospect Cooper Pratt is nearing an eight-year contract of his own despite being a couple tiers below Griffin and Emerson according to scouts.
Despite all that activity, there's one demographic that has stayed out of the early-season extension run. There have not been any long-term deals for pre-arbitration pitchers this spring. Teams aren't quite as aggressive in extending pitchers early in their careers as they are with elite position player talents. There's more injury uncertainty with young arms.
However, there are generally a few extensions for pre-arbitration hurlers each season. Tanner Bibee, Brandon Pfaadt and Arizona closer Justin Martinez signed extensions last spring. Brayan Bello agreed to a six-year deal the year before that. Hunter Greene, Spencer Strider, Aaron Ashby, Garrett Whitlock and Emmanuel Clase were among those to sign between 2022-23.
Will any young pitchers sign extensions within the next few weeks? Let's run through a few speculative possibilities in each service class and the kind of money which those pitchers could command.
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Reds Notes: Lodolo, Outfield, Friedl
Reds lefty Nick Lodolo left tonight’s rehab start with Low-A Daytona in the third inning due to more blister issues on his left index finger, relays Manny Randhawa of MLB.com. Lodolo cruised through the first eight hitters with four strikeouts before coming out of the game.
It’s an all too familiar problem for the former seventh overall pick. Lodolo developed his most recent blister in his final start of Spring Training, leading to a season-opening injured list stint. It’s the third straight season in which blisters have shelved him. He missed most of August last year and a couple weeks between June and July in 2024.
The index finger has bothered him off and on dating back to his time in the minor leagues. He has also had major league injured list stints with back, calf and groin injuries — plus a sprain of his middle finger that ended his ’24 season. He’s a mid-rotation starter when healthy and coming off a career season. Lodolo tossed 156 2/3 innings of 3.33 ERA ball while striking out 24% of opponents a year ago.
This flareup should be a minor problem, but it’s no doubt frustrating for player and team alike. The hope had been for Lodolo to get through 60-65 pitches tonight and only need one rehab start before rejoining the MLB rotation next week. That’s probably not happening now. He left after 40 pitches and it’s unclear whether he’ll need a brief rest period before giving it another go in a game.
Brandon Williamson has stepped into the rotation behind Andrew Abbott, Brady Singer, Rhett Lowder and Chase Burns. Lodolo’s injury led the Reds to promote rookie righty Jose Franco as a long reliever. After tonight’s off day, Cincinnati has 10 consecutive game days.
The Reds haven’t made any changes to their 13-man position player group since Opening Day. Their infield of Sal Stewart, Matt McLain, Elly De La Cruz and Ke’Bryan Hayes has been set in stone, as has Eugenio Suárez as the primary designated hitter. Manager Terry Francona has played more matchups around the outfield, where no one has been locked into an everyday position.
TJ Friedl has been in the lineup regularly, but he’s not quite as settled as a full-time center fielder as he was last season. The Reds have kicked Friedl over to left field on five occasions, including his first start in left since 2023. Francona said this week he has liked what he’s seen from Friedl as a left fielder (via Charlie Goldsmith of Fox 19 Now). The 30-year-old’s fringy speed and arm strength probably fit better in left than in center all things considered.
Dane Myers is a better runner with a stronger arm. He’s probably the best defensive center fielder on the roster. Playing Friedl more often in left would open opportunities to draw Myers into the lineup, though that’d be a leap of faith in his bat. Myers is already a lock to play against left-handed pitching, against whom he’s a .294/.356/.449 hitter in his career.
Myers has just a .220/.266/.296 line against right-handers. His only start of the season came against Boston lefty Connelly Early over the weekend. The rest of his appearances have come as a late-game substitute with Friedl sliding to left field.
They’ve had a three-man rotation through the corner spots between Spencer Steer, Will Benson and Noelvi Marte. Steer has been the primary starter in left. He’s out to a slow start this season after hitting at a league average level in each of the past two years. Benson and Marte are splitting time in right field, though the Reds probably won’t use a strict platoon that limits the 24-year-old Marte to work against left-handed pitching.
