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Rangers To Reduce Payroll In 2021

By Mark Polishuk | October 3, 2020 at 9:12am CDT

Like many or most other teams, the Rangers are planning to trim their payroll in response to the revenues lost during the shortened 2020 season.  In a session with media earlier this week, managing partner Ray Davis told Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News and other reporters that “two major factors” will contribute to less spending next year.

“The first is how much baseball is going to lose [financially] in 2020.  And also, the life cycle of our club,” Davis said.  “We have some high-paid contracts rolling off our payroll.  We will have some minimum salary players coming on.  So, it gives a justification, if you will, to not to spend as much.  The economics of baseball has been so sad this year and there is uncertainty about what 2021 will bring.”

The Rangers were projected to have a payroll in the $153MM range heading into the season, before the COVID-19 pandemic struck and the season was reduced to 60 games (thus reducing Texas’ outlay to roughly $65MM).  Grant figures the club won’t go much, if at all, beyond the $100MM figure in 2021, though as Davis noted, some of that reduction was already baked into the future plans.  Approximately $47.1MM will come off the books in the form of departing free agents, most notably Shin-Soo Choo and Corey Kluber — Texas holds a $14MM club option on Kluber for next season but that will surely be declined in the wake of Kluber’s injury-plagued year.  It’s also worth mentioning that 2020 was the final year of the Rangers’ outstanding obligation to retired slugger Prince Fielder.

Assuming Grant’s $100MM projection is correct, that leaves Texas GM Jon Daniels with some room to maneuver, as Roster Resource has just under $62MM in payroll commitments on the Rangers’ books for the coming season.  However, as Daniels has already publicly committed to a “youth movement” year in 2021, major expenditures don’t seem likely.  The Rangers had already taken a generally more conservative approach to free agent spending in recent years, most notably their strategy of signing veteran pitchers (such as Lance Lynn, Mike Minor, Jordan Lyles, and Kyle Gibson) to multi-year deals that didn’t break the bank.

It remains to be seen if the Rangers will consider even those modest types of contracts this winter, though Davis did make it clear that Daniels will be the one continuing to weigh those decisions.  Daniels has been running the team’s baseball operations department for 15 seasons, and though the Rangers have suffered through four straight losing seasons, Davis still believes in Daniels’ track record.

“Jon has demonstrated that he and his team can put together winning ballclubs,” Davis said.  “If you thought about going out and replacing him, all you have is a question mark.  We have a known entity.  We have a group of guys that know how to get it done and I think they are going to get it done again.”

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Texas Rangers Jon Daniels

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Yankees Set Wild Card Series Roster

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 2:47pm CDT

The Yankees have set their 28-man roster for their wild card series against the Indians, beginning tonight in Cleveland.  Gerrit Cole will start against the Tribe’s Shane Bieber in a great battle of aces in Game 1, and Masahiro Tanaka is lined up to start Game 2 for New York.  The Yankees known to be debating whether to carry 12 or 13 pitchers onto the playoff roster, and they opted for 13 arms to provide as much depth as possible.

On the position player front, Miguel Andujar is the most notable omission, as the Yankees decided on Mike Ford as the primary first base/DH counterpoint to Luke Voit.  Ford is a left-handed bat while Andujar and Voit both swing from the right side, which could have been the deciding factor given that New York’s lineup is already loaded with right-handed batters.  Erik Kratz was also included on the roster as a third catcher.

Left-Handed Pitchers

  • Zack Britton
  • Aroldis Chapman
  • J.A. Happ
  • Jordan Montgomery

Right-Handed Pitchers

  • Gerrit Cole
  • Masahiro Tanaka
  • Luis Cessa
  • Deivi Garcia
  • Chad Green
  • Jonathan Holder
  • Jonathan Loaisiga
  • Nick Nelson
  • Adam Ottavino

Infielders

  • Mike Ford
  • DJ LeMahieu
  • Gleyber Torres
  • Gio Urshela
  • Luke Voit
  • Tyler Wade

Outfielders

  • Clint Frazier
  • Brett Gardner
  • Aaron Hicks
  • Aaron Judge
  • Giancarlo Stanton
  • Mike Tauchman

Catchers

  • Kyle Higashioka
  • Erik Kratz
  • Gary Sanchez
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New York Yankees

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Rays Set Wild Card Series Roster

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 2:09pm CDT

The Rays have announced their 28-man roster for their wild card series with the Blue Jays, beginning today at Tropicana Field.  Blake Snell will start Game 1, while Tyler Glasnow and Charlie Morton are scheduled to start the next two games (in Morton’s case, if a Game 3 if necessary).

The surprise move was the selection of prospect Shane McClanahan, whose first Major League game could come under the bright lights of the postseason.  The Rays and Blue Jays are frequent opponents in the AL East, and the hard-throwing McClanahan represents a totally fresh weapon for the Rays to wield against Toronto hitters.

Yandy Diaz and Ji-Man Choi are both back from hamstring strains, as Diaz will see his first action since August 31 and Choi back for the first time since September 12.  These returns add a potent lefty-righty combination to the Rays’ corner infield mix, though neither Diaz or Choi are starting in Game 1.

Left-Handed Pitchers

  • Blake Snell
  • Aaron Loup
  • Shane McClanahan
  • Ryan Yarbrough

Right-Handed Pitchers

  • Tyler Glasnow
  • Charlie Morton
  • Nick Anderson
  • Diego Castillo
  • John Curtiss
  • Oliver Drake
  • Pete Fairbanks
  • Aaron Slegers
  • Ryan Thompson

Infielders

  • Willy Adames
  • Mike Brosseau
  • Ji-Man Choi
  • Yandy Diaz
  • Brandon Lowe
  • Nate Lowe
  • Joey Wendle

Outfielders

  • Randy Arozarena
  • Kevin Kiermaier
  • Manuel Margot
  • Brett Phillips
  • Hunter Renfroe
  • Yoshi Tsutsugo

Catchers

  • Michael Perez
  • Mike Zunino
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Tampa Bay Rays

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White Sox Release Steve Cishek; Ross Detwiler Elects Free Agency

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 1:42pm CDT

The White Sox have released right-hander Steve Cishek, according to the MLB.com transactions page.  Both Cishek and left-hander Ross Detwiler were designated for assignment earlier this week, and Detwiler is also on the move, as the southpaw has elected to become a free agent.

After pitching for the Cubs in 2018-19, Cishek moved to the south side of Chicago after signing a one-year free agent deal with the White Sox last winter.  Cishek earned $5.25MM in guaranteed salary, and he will get $750K as a buyout of the $6.75MM club option on his services for the 2021 season.

For that $6MM investment, the White Sox received a 5.40 ERA, 2.33 K/BB rate, and 9.5 K/9 over 20 innings from Cishek.  As noted by MLBTR’s Steve Adams last Thursday, much of the damage done to Cishek’s ERA came early in the season — Cishek allowed seven runs over his first 5 2/3 innings of work (in seven games) before settling down to allow five runs over his next 14 1/3 innings (15 appearances).  That said, Cishek also had the highest HR/9 and the lowest ground-ball rate of his 11 MLB seasons, albeit in the small sample size of the abbreviated 2020 campaign.

While Cishek had a tough start and a solid finish to his season, Detwiler was the opposite story.  The lefty didn’t allow a run until his 10th appearance of the season, and had a sterling 1.47 ERA over his first 18 1/3 innings pitched.  Unfortunately for Detwiler, a disastrous final outing more than doubled his runs allowed total for the entire season, though his final numbers (3.20 ERA, 3.00 K/BB rate, 6.9 K/9 in 19 2/3 IP) are more than respectable.

With 23 combined Major League seasons on their resumes, Cishek and Detwiler offer a lot of experience for teams looking for veteran bullpen depth this offseason.  The two veterans, however, will face a lot of competition for jobs amidst a deep field of free agent relievers that will only grow longer once more teams begin their offseason roster maintenance.

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Chicago White Sox Transactions Ross Detwiler Steve Cishek

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Blue Jays Announce Wild Card Series Roster

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 1:13pm CDT

The Blue Jays announced their 28-man roster for their wild card series with the Rays, beginning today in Tampa Bay.  Matt Shoemaker gets the Game 1 start for Toronto while Hyun Jin Ryu is scheduled for Game 2, as the Jays opted to give Ryu an extra day of rest heading into an all-important postseason start.

Taijuan Walker is expected to start Game 3 if necessary, and the Jays are expected to make liberal use of their bullpen throughout the series.  The relief corps won’t include Jordan Romano, who is still out of action with a finger injury.  Left-hander Anthony Kay was called up from the alternate training site on the weekend and will stay as added left-handed depth in the bullpen.

After hitting the injured list with a right knee strain back on September 9, Rowdy Tellez has been activated for the playoff roster, though he isn’t in Game 1’s starting lineup.  Alejandro Kirk will get the start at DH, as the Jays hope the rookie’s hot right-handed bat can counter Rays southpaw Blake Snell.  Kirk is one of three catchers on the roster, though Kirk may end up seeing more time at DH, leaving Danny Jansen and Reese McGuire with the bulk of duties behind the plate.

Left-Handed Pitchers

  • Hyun Jin Ryu
  • Ryan Borucki
  • Anthony Kay
  • Robbie Ray

Right-Handed Pitchers

  • Matt Shoemaker
  • Taijuan Walker
  • Chase Anderson
  • Anthony Bass
  • A.J. Cole
  • Rafael Dolis
  • Thomas Hatch
  • Nate Pearson
  • Ross Stripling

Infielders

  • Bo Bichette
  • Cavan Biggio
  • Santiago Espinal
  • Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
  • Joe Panik
  • Travis Shaw
  • Rowdy Tellez
  • Jonathan Villar

Outfielders

  • Jonathan Davis
  • Randal Grichuk
  • Lourdes Gurriel Jr.
  • Teoscar Hernandez

Catchers

  • Danny Jansen
  • Alejandro Kirk
  • Reese McGuire
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Toronto Blue Jays

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White Sox Announce Wild Card Series Roster

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 12:34pm CDT

The White Sox have officially set their 28-man roster for their wild card series against the A’s, beginning today in Oakland.  Lucas Giolito will be on the mound this afternoon, while Dallas Keuchel is slated to start Game 2.

The biggest headline (and sign of relief for Chicago fans) of the roster announcement is the presence of Eloy Jimenez, who has been out of action since September 24 due to a mid-foot sprain.  Utilityman Leury Garcia is also back from injury, being activated off the 45-day injured list after missing close to seven weeks due to a torn thumb ligament.

Jimenez isn’t in the lineup for Game 1, however, as Garcia is starting in left field and Yasmani Grandal is the DH.  The White Sox will start James McCann at catcher, and the roster inclusion of Zack Collins could hint at additional DH duty for Grandal depending on both Jimenez’s status and Chicago’s interest in finding as much playing time as possible for their deep catching corps.

Left-Handed Pitchers

  • Dallas Keuchel
  • Aaron Bummer
  • Garrett Crochet
  • Jace Fry
  • Carlos Rodon

Right-Handed Pitchers

  • Lucas Giolito
  • Dylan Cease
  • Alex Colome
  • Jimmy Cordero
  • Dane Dunning
  • Matt Foster
  • Codi Heuer
  • Evan Marshall

Infielders

  • Jose Abreu
  • Tim Anderson
  • Edwin Encarnacion
  • Nick Madrigal
  • Yoan Moncada
  • Yolmer Sanchez

Outfielders

  • Jarrod Dyson
  • Adam Engel
  • Leury Garcia
  • Eloy Jimenez
  • Nomar Mazara
  • Luis Robert

Catchers

  • Zack Collins
  • Yasmani Grandal
  • James McCann
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Chicago White Sox

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Athletics Set Wild Card Series Roster

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 12:13pm CDT

The Athletics announced the 28-man roster for their Wild Card Series with the White Sox, beginning today in Oakland.  Jesus Luzardo will start Game 1 and Chris Bassitt is slated for Game 2.  No starter has been named for a potential Game 3, though it’s safe to assume that it will be an all-hands-on-deck situation if the A’s make it to the deciding games.

With that in mind, Sean Manaea is probably the likeliest candidate to start a Game 3, making is less likely that the southpaw would appear out of the bullpen in either of the first two games.  Of the other starters on the Athletics’ roster, Frankie Montas, Mike Minor, or Mike Fiers could all see bullpen duty, adding to Oakland’s already-deep relief mix.  As reported yesterday, righty J.B. Wendelken is also back from a brief trip to the injured list, representing yet another relief option for manager Bob Melvin.

Chad Pinder was activated from the injured list on Sunday, and the utilityman is in the Game 1 lineup as the designated hitter.

Left-Handed Pitchers

  • Jesus Luzardo
  • Sean Manaea
  • Mike Minor
  • Jake Diekman
  • T.J. McFarland

Right-Handed Pitchers

  • Chris Bassitt
  • Mike Fiers
  • Frankie Montas
  • Liam Hendriks
  • Yusmeiro Petit
  • Joakim Soria
  • Lou Trivino
  • J.B. Wendelken

Infielders

  • Tony Kemp
  • Jake Lamb
  • Tommy La Stella
  • Vimael Machin
  • Matt Olson
  • Nate Orf
  • Chad Pinder
  • Marcus Semien

Outfielders

  • Mark Canha
  • Khris Davis
  • Robbie Grossman
  • Ramon Laureano
  • Stephen Piscotty

Catchers

  • Jonah Heim
  • Sean Murphy
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Athletics

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White Sox Reinstate Leury Garcia From 45-Day IL, Designate Alex McRae

By Mark Polishuk | September 29, 2020 at 11:42am CDT

The White Sox have reinstated utilityman Leury Garcia from the 45-day injured list and included him on their postseason roster, the team announced.  Righty Alex McRae was designated for assignment to create roster space.

Garcia hasn’t played since August 10, as a severed thumb ligament required surgery.  The 29-year-old was off to a pretty nice start, hitting .271/.317/.441 over his 63 regular season plate appearances, getting a lot of action at shortstop (due to Tim Anderson’s own IL stint) and second base (before Nick Madrigal was called up to the big leagues).  Garcia has been known more for his versatility than his switch-hitting bat over his eight MLB seasons, and his ability to play all over the diamond will make him a nice bench piece for the Sox during their postseason run.  As a member of the White Sox organization since 2013, this playoff appearance surely feels extra sweet for Garcia after seven losing seasons.

McRae only appeared in two games for Chicago this season, tossing three scoreless innings.  The right-hander signed a minor league deal with the White Sox last winter after spending his first six pro seasons in the Pirates organization.  McRae saw Major League action in both 2018 and 2019, posting a combined 8.18 ERA, 6.5 K/9, and 1.14 K/BB rate over 33 innings for Pittsburgh.

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Chicago White Sox Transactions Alex McRae Leury Garcia

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Red Sox Won’t Retain Ron Roenicke For 2021 Season

By Mark Polishuk | September 27, 2020 at 12:23pm CDT

Ron Roenicke won’t be managing the Red Sox in 2021, the team announced.  In an official press release from the Sox, chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom said the following:

“Throughout this difficult season, Ron’s consistency and professionalism kept the environment in our clubhouse productive and gave all of our players room to grow and develop.  While we believe that, moving forward, we will benefit from new leadership and new energy, that does not diminish how strongly we feel about Ron.  He is a man of the highest character who cares about our players and the Red Sox organization.  As bench coach, he helped this team win a world championship.  As manager, he showed poise and leadership in navigating an extremely challenging year.  We are grateful for all of his contributions in our uniform.”

The release also stated that “a search for a new manager will begin immediately,” though speculation has already focused on whether or not this search will somewhat quickly center around Boston’s old manager — Alex Cora.  The Red Sox fired Cora last January, a day after he was implicated as a major instigator of the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal in his previous role as Houston’s bench coach.  The Sox interviewed several names as Cora’s replacement before deciding to promote Roenicke from bench coach to interim manager (and then eventually, full-time manager once the interim tag was removed in April).

Major League Baseball ended up suspending Cora for the 2020 season for his role in the Astros’ scandal, and it’s worth noting that back in April, Bloom and Red Sox president Sam Kennedy both indicated that there were no plans to eventually bring Cora back into the fold.  Barring any updated statements from Red Sox brass or from Cora himself, the speculation about a potential reunion is likely to continue until a new manager has been hired.

If Cora isn’t the choice, it will be fascinating to see who Bloom chooses in his first proper managerial hire since taking over Boston’s front office last year.  Former coaches and players with ties to the Rays (Bloom’s old organization) will surely be mentioned as candidates, and one would imagine a new skipper might be a first-time hire who is both relatively young and not far removed from a playing career.  This fits the description of both Rays manager Kevin Cash and Cora at the time of his initial hire with the Sox, so both Bloom and Red Sox upper management might feel comfortable with this type of modern managerial profile.

Roenicke will manage today’s game, looking to end a tough season on a high note.  The Red Sox are 23-36 and currently in last place in the AL East, thanks in large part to a lack of pitching.  Injuries (Chris Sale and Eduardo Rodriguez chief among them) were a big culprit, though the Sox seemingly lacked rotation depth even when those two arms were expected to be part of the 2020 staff.  Between the on-field struggles, the twin aftermaths of Cora’s firing and the Mookie Betts trade lingering over Fenway Park, and the unforeseen circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bloom’s description of 2020 as “an extremely challenging year” is an understatement.

The 64-year-old Roenicke took on a big league managerial post for the second time in his career, following a five-year stint with the Brewers from 2011-15.  Beyond his managerial jobs in Boston and Milwaukee, Roenicke has over 20 years as a Major League coach and as a minor league coach and manager.  Roenicke’s coaching resume includes a pair of World Series rings, one in 2002 as the Angels’ third base coach and another in 2018 as Boston’s bench coach.

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Boston Red Sox Newsstand Ron Roenicke

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Cubs Promote Brailyn Marquez, Designate Patrick Wisdom

By Mark Polishuk | September 27, 2020 at 11:58am CDT

The Cubs have selected the contract of left-handed pitching prospect Brailyn Marquez, the team announced.  Infielder/outfielder Patrick Wisdom has been designated for assignment to create roster room.

Marquez is expected to make his Major League debut in today’s game, Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein told reporters (including MLB.com’s Jordan Bastian).  The plan is for Marquez to toss an inning of work that could serve as an audition for the postseason roster.

With a fastball that hits the 100mph threshold, Marquez represents a very intriguing x-factor for the Cubs’ playoff run if he can adjust quickly to big league hitters.  The 21-year-old has never even pitched in Double-A ball, posting a 3.19 ERA, 2.84 K/BB rate, and 10.1 K/9 over 257 innings in Chicago’s farm system.

An international signing out of the Dominican Republic in 2015, Marquez emerged on top-100 prospect lists prior to the 2020 season.  Baseball America ranked him 37th on their list, with MLB.com (68th), Keith Law (80th), and Baseball Prospectus (84th) all being a bit more reserved in their praise.  BA’s scouting report cited Marquez’s potential front-of-the-rotation arsenal, including his big fastball, a “spike slider,” and also a changeup that was lacking in polish as a legitimate third pitch.

If everything is working, Marquez could be an ace of the future, though the issue is that his delivery doesn’t lend itself to repetition.  Law thinks Marquez will eventually end up as “a very high-end closer” who can pitch multiple innings, and the Cubs certainly wouldn’t mind a preview of that potential future in this year’s playoffs, though obviously the long-term goal is that Marquez will develop into a quality starter.

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Chicago Cubs Top Prospect Promotions Transactions Brailyn Marquez Patrick Wisdom

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