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Orioles Interview Luis Rojas In Managerial Search

By Mark Polishuk and Anthony Franco | October 15, 2025 at 10:54am CDT

The Orioles have interviewed Yankees third base coach and former Mets manager Luis Rojas amidst their ongoing managerial search, according to SNY’s Andy Martino.  Rojas is the first candidate known to have formally interviewed for the position.  Baltimore interim skipper Tony Mansolino also remains in the running, while Jon Heyman of The New York Post suggested that former O’s infielder and current Cubs bench coach Ryan Flaherty could be in the mix.

Rojas, 44, has served as the Yankees’ third base coach for the last four seasons.  Beginning his coaching career with the Nationals’ Dominican League team in 2006, he joined the Mets organization the following year and began a long stint as a coach and manager at various levels of the organization.  A promotion to the big league staff as the Mets’ quality control coach came in 2019, and Rojas was then unexpectedly elevated to the top job in January 2020.  Carlos Beltran had been hired as the Amazins’ manager just over two months earlier, yet after the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal broke, Beltran stepped down from the post before he’d ever managed a single regular-season game.

This sudden promotion for Rojas came right before the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, making for quite a trial by fire for the first-time skipper.  The Mets finished with just a 26-34 record in Rojas’ first year, yet he was retained for a second year in 2021.  New York was in first place for a big chunk of that season but collapsed down the stretch, going just 29-45 after the All-Star break to finish with a 77-85 record.

Rojas’ club option for 2022 wasn’t picked up by the Mets, and he then stayed in the Big Apple by joining the Yankees’ coaching staff in November 2021.  Before heading to the Yankees, Rojas interviewed with the Padres about their managerial vacancy that autumn, and he also interviewed with the Marlins in 2022 before Skip Schumaker was hired.

With so few public candidates identified in Baltimore’s search, it isn’t yet clear if the team is primarily focused on people with big league managerial experience (like Rojas or Mansolino) or if the O’s are more partial to Flaherty or another first-timer being elevated to the job.  Whomever the choice may be, they’ll face a challenge in trying to get the Orioles and their young core back on track after a very disappointing 2025 campaign.  The Orioles followed up consecutive playoff appearances with a 75-87 setback this year, though Mansolino did post a 60-59 record after he took over from Brandon Hyde in May.

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Baltimore Orioles New York Yankees Luis Rojas

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Anthony Volpe Undergoes Shoulder Surgery

By Mark Polishuk | October 15, 2025 at 9:38am CDT

Anthony Volpe spent much of the 2025 season playing through a partially torn left labrum, and the Yankees shortstop addressed the problem in the form of a surgical procedure yesterday, according to Joel Sherman and Greg Joyce of the New York Post.  The exact timeline for Volpe’s recovery isn’t yet clear, but if everything goes normally, a source tells Sherman/Joyce that Volpe would be ready for the start of the 2026 season.

The injury to Volpe’s non-throwing shoulder occurred in early May, when Volpe said he heard “a pop” in his shoulder after diving to try and snag a grounder.  What seemed like a minor issue at the time ended up being a lingering source of discomfort throughout the season, and Volpe received two cortisone shots (one at the All-Star break, one in September) to try and manage the pain.  The Yankees never placed Volpe on the injured list, but he didn’t play for the week following his second shot in September.

It is impossible to think that the injury didn’t contribute to Volpe’s tough season.  He hit .212/.272/.391 with 19 home runs over 596 plate appearances, resulting in just an 83 wRC+.  While these numbers weren’t far off what Volpe produced when healthy in 2023-24, it is worth noting that April (prior to the shoulder issue) was far and away Volpe’s best offensive month of 2025.  The bigger impact may have come defensively, as Volpe dropped to -7 Outs Above Average and +2 Defensive Runs Saved — middling metrics for a shortstop who was a Gold Glove winner in 2023 and a finalist for the award again in 2024.

Volpe’s struggles made him a particular target for fan criticism in the Bronx, and something of an avatar for the fanbase’s frustrations towards GM Brian Cashman and manager Aaron Boone.  There has yet to be any sign that Volpe’s starting job might be in danger, though Jose Caballero provided a big spark to the lineup after being acquired at the trade deadline, and getting a good dose of time at shortstop while Volpe was sidelined in September.

More will be known about Volpe’s recovery process in the coming weeks, but if he has any kind of setback, the Yankees could be encouraged to pursue at least a depth option at shortstop this winter if Caballero isn’t entrusted with the starting job.  There will certainly be more speculation about whether or not the Yankees could land a bigger-name shortstop in a larger shake-up for the position, but it doesn’t feel like the Yankees would be inclined to move on entirely from Volpe, due to his former top-prospect status and the team’s three remaining years of control over his services.  Volpe is arbitration-eligible for the first time this winter, and projected to earn $3.9MM in 2026.

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New York Yankees Newsstand Anthony Volpe

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Mets Sign Joe Jacques To Minors Contract

By Mark Polishuk | October 15, 2025 at 9:33am CDT

The Mets have signed left-hander Joe Jacques to a minor league contract, MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo reports.  Jacques will receive $800K in prorated salary if he makes New York’s active roster, and he will receive an invitation to the Mets’ Spring Training camp.

The move is a bit of a homecoming for Jacques, who was born in Shrewsbury, New Jersey and played his college ball at Manhattan University.  The Mets are the sixth different organization Jacques has played for since he was a 33rd-round pick for the Pirates in the 2018 draft, and the sidearmer’s on-field resume in the majors consists of 29 2/3 innings with the Red Sox and Diamondbacks over the 2023-24 seasons.

All but three of those innings came during Jacques’ 2023 rookie season in Boston.  The D’Backs claimed him off waivers in April 2024, giving him exactly one MLB appearance each with Boston and Arizona during the 2024 season.  He has since bounced to the Dodgers and Mariners without getting any more time in the Show, as Jacques struggled to a 6.02 ERA over 52 1/3 combined Triple-A innings with both teams’ top affiliates in 2025.

Jacques (who turns 31 in March) is a groundball specialist who has a 61.7% groundball rate in his brief time in the majors.  He has steadily increased his strikeout totals during his minor league career, with a respectable 22.3% strikeout rate to show for his 218 1/3 innings at Triple-A.  Jacques has had very large platoon splits for much of his minor league career and there was still a sizeable gap within his splits in 2025, though left-handed hitters still did pretty well (.768 OPS) against Jacques while righty swingers crushed him (.885 OPS).

Forty-six different players pitched for New York this season, due to both injuries and Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns’ penchant for acquiring and cycling through a ton of arms.  It isn’t surprising to see the Mets get a quick jump on their non-roster invites already, and Jacques figures to be one of many minor league pitching signings for the Amazins as the team tries to figure out its bullpen mix.

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New York Mets Transactions Joe Jacques

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Offseason Outlook: Tampa Bay Rays

By Mark Polishuk | October 14, 2025 at 7:01pm CDT

The Rays have a new owner and (hopefully) their old ballpark, as the plan is for a renovated and restored Tropicana Field to be ready for the start of the 2026 season.  Beyond those significant details, it may be an otherwise relatively normal Rays offseason, as the team looks to juggle payroll and churn the roster in the hopes of returning to contention.

Guaranteed Contracts

  • Yandy Diaz, 1B: $12MM through 2026 (Rays hold $10MM club option for 2027; becomes guaranteed for $13MM if Diaz has 500 plate appearances in 2026)
  • Drew Rasmussen, SP: $6MM through 2026 (includes $500K buyout of $8MM club option for 2027)

Option Decisions

  • Pete Fairbanks, RP: $11MM club option ($1MM buyout)
  • Brandon Lowe, 2B: $11.5MM club option ($500K buyout)
  • Taylor Walls, SS: $2.45MM club option ($50K buyout; Rays have arbitration control over Walls through 2027 whether they exercise the option or not)

2026 financial commitments (if Fairbanks/Lowe options are exercised): $40MM
Total future commitments (if Fairbanks/Lowe options are exercised): $40.5MM

Other Financial Obligations

  • Wander Franco, SS: Owed $164MM through 2032, but isn't being paid while on MLB's restricted list.

Arbitration-Eligible Players (service time in parentheses; projected salaries courtesy of MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz)

  • Shane McClanahan (4.158): $3.6MM
  • Cole Sulser (4.096): $1.2MM
  • Taylor Walls (4.092): $2MM
  • Griffin Jax (4.091): $3.6MM
  • Garrett Cleavinger (4.060): $2.1MM
  • Shane Baz (3.158): $3.1MM
  • Nick Fortes (3.149): $2.4MM
  • Christopher Morel (3.117): $2.6MM
  • Stuart Fairchild (3.114): $900K
  • Josh Lowe (3.093): $2.9MM
  • Bryan Baker (3.049): $1.5MM
  • Ryan Pepiot (3.005): $3.7MM
  • Alex Faedo (2.169): $800K
  • Richie Palacios (2.156): $1MM
  • Kevin Kelly (2.156): $1MM
  • Edwin Uceta (2.150): $1.4MM
  • Non-tender candidates: Walls, Fortes, Morel, Fairchild, Faedo, Kelly

Free Agents

  • Adrian Houser

Matt Silverman and Brian Auld have stepped down from their longtime roles as Rays co-presidents, and some other internal changes are inevitable now that Patrick Zalupski's ownership group has taken the reins.  However, the changes won't extend to president of baseball ops Erik Neander, with Zalupski making a point of stating during his introductory press conference that his group has a "self-imposed rule" that "none of us, and none of the partners, are allowed to talk to or have any influence on baseball operations."

The chief short-term goal for Zalupski's group is to finally secure a new ballpark in the Tampa/St. Petersburg area, with the lofty aim of having this new stadium in place for the start of the 2029 season.  It seems like a lot to achieve in less than three and a half years' time, but the bottom line is familiar for Rays fans --- the player payroll doesn't seem likely to change until that new stadium is in place, and new revenues start flowing.

Assuming that the Trop's renovations are completed on schedule, returning to their former ballpark at least represents some relief for the Rays after a season spent at Steinbrenner Field.  The adjustment to suddenly playing home games in a minor league park, and playing outdoors in the tough Florida weather, seemed to take its toll on the Rays as the 2025 campaign rolled along.  Tampa Bay was 47-36 on June 28 and in the thick of the AL East race, but stumbled to a 30-49 record the rest of the way.

Since the Rays were also 80-82 in 2024, this season's subpar record can't be entirely written off as a creation of Steinbrenner Field.  The magic formula hasn't entirely worked for Neander and company in the last two years, even if the Rays have remained quasi-competitive.  This could mean that Tampa Bay might not be far away from a full-fledged return to contention, since a lot still went right for the team in 2025.

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2025-26 Offseason Outlook Front Office Originals Tampa Bay Rays

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MLBTR Live Chat

By Mark Polishuk | October 12, 2025 at 12:10pm CDT

Mark P

  • The Weekend Chat is upon us!  We’ll get things started in a minute or two after the questions start to pile up….

Dave

  • Update on G Stone and R Ryan for Dodgers for beginning of 26

Mark P

  • Definitely the top question on Dodgers fans’ mind as the NLCS begins.  🙂

    Both should be on track to be ready for the start of Spring Training.  It doesn’t appear either pitcher has had any setbacks.

Julio

  • Can my team beat the mighty canadiens

Mark P

  • The Mariners would definitely beat the Montreal Canadiens in a baseball game.

Mike Cutter

  • Will the royals Sign Yaz back .

Mark P

  • A reunion would make a lot of sense.  KC desperately needs outfield help, and Yaz played really well for them in a brief spell.  While it’s safe to assume Yaz wouldn’t keep up those numbers over a full season, it wouldn’t hurt the Royals to sign him to a relatively inexpensive one-year deal as just a part-timer, if necessary

NY Mess

  • Pete wants 7 years. Five seems too long. What is realistic?

Mark P

  • I think he’ll get five years.  It’s hard to imagine any team giving Alonso seven years, and that might’ve just been an aim-high negotiating tactic that will eventually get reduced to a more manageable number.

Angela

  • Want do you see the phillies  doing this off-season

Mark P

  • I’m slated to write the Phillies offseason outlook piece, so stay tuned on that front.  But broadly speaking, I think they need to shake things up as much as they can with the roster.  That means doing all they can to retain Schwarber, but parting ways with Bohm, Stott, Castellanos, and maybe Realmuto.  (The latter one I’m more lukewarm about, since JTR walks, the Phils then have to find another catcher somewhere.)

Michael King

  • Should I opt in with the Padres after the season I just had?

Mark P

  • I assume by “opt in” you mean accept a qualifying offer, since there’s no scenario where King and the Padres both trigger the mutual option.
  • Assuming the mutual option is declined and the Padres issue the QO, I think there’s a more than decent chance King accepts.  He’ll still draw plenty of interest on the open market, but with his injury-riddled 2025 hanging over his head, he might prefer a QO in a familiar locale than rolling the dice on a short-term opt-out laden deal (or a one-year pillow deal) on a new team entirely

Read more

Brady

  • Who will be the Phillies opening day third baseman?

Mark P

  • As noted earlier, I think they’ll non-tender Bohm.  Maybe they find a trade partner before the non-tender deadline, but after last winter, I think teams realize the Phillies are ready to move on from Bohm and will just wait until he’s cut.

    As for who might take over, 3B is a less difficult position to fill than catcher, but obviously losing Bohm opens up another hole in the lineup.  Bregman would be a mighty interesting possibility if he doesn’t work out an extension with Boston.  Arenado is probably a no-go due to his decline over the last couple of years.

  • On the trade front, I feel I’ll be saying this about a lot of teams, but Brendan Donovan would be a very good fit in Philly

White Sox Fan

  • Is there any value in picking up Luis Robert’s option and trying to trade him?

Mark P

  • The White Sox are kind of damned if they do, damned if they don’t.  Exercise the option, and they’ll still have difficulty finding a trade.  Decline the option and Robert just walks for nothing, apart from some meaningless payroll savings

World Series Bound

  • Chances of a MIL/SEA world series coming soon?

World Series

  • Dream matchup of remaining teams? M’s Brewers would be wild given M’s have never been and Brewers have never won.

Mark P

  • As a Blue Jays fan, I’m not exactly keen on the Mariners winning the pennant, haha

    But if the Jays had to lose, a Mariners/Brewers WS would indeed be a lot of fun. Off the top of my head, I think 1980 (Phillies/Royals) was the last time there was a World Series between two teams seeking their first ring?

Nancy’s Friend Sluggo

  • I keep hearing people suggest the Tigers should trade Skubal this off-season so they don’t lose him for just a QO, but I think they absolutely should keep him and go for the World Series again in 2026. What do you think about the issue?

Mark P

  • Skubal (who is a Scott Boras client) would require a gigantic extension offer to keep him off the free agent market.  The Tigers have plenty of open future payroll space, and if you’re going to go overboard to sign anyone, it might as well be for the best pitcher in the game.

    That being said, I doubt Skubal is still a Tiger in 2027.  There’s even a decent chance he isn’t a Tiger in 2026, if another team presents the front office with a knockout offer.  Despite their success over the last two years, it feels like the Tigers are kind of in a weird spot with their fanbase, and dealing Skubal away would undo a lot of the goodwill generated from back to back playoff appearances

Go Pads

  • If the padres packaged Cronenworth and Estrada, what kind of return could they expect?

Mark P

  • Even with Estrada added, I don’t think you’ll find many (or any) teams willing to take on Cronenworth’s contract.  Cronenworth isn’t even a bad player, but his deal is just that big an overpday.
  • In this scenario, San Diego still has to eat money, or take on an unwelcome contract in return

Steve M

  • begging Dolan to spend some money. Do you see any realistic players that can help our beleagured offense via free agency?

Mark P

  • Acquiring a bat via trade seems more realistic for the Guardians than signing someone notable to a decent-sized FA contract

TC Bear

  • How likely is Torii Hunter managing the Twins in 2026? Any other managerial candidates you like for MN?

Mark P

  • There haven’t been any public rumblings about the Twins’ managerial search, so the team is keeping things pretty close to the vest.  Hunter may be on the radar, or the club may prefer someone more low-profile as the Twins go through what is likely a rebuild in all but name only

    It is possible one of the younger Pohlads may become manager in a Little Big League type of scenario, but probbbbbably unlikely

GoBias Industries

  • Bees?

Mark P

  • Beads?!

Yadi Molina

  • Am I getting any consideration for one of the manager openings?  Should I get some consideration?

Mark P

  • My assumption was that Molina was a bit of a manager-in-waiting in St. Louis, sort of the way that Pujols might’ve been in this same capacity in LA once he was ready and willing to take the job.

    But, the Cards seem content to stick with Marmol in the dugout.  There’s also the question of Bloom perhaps eventually wanting to hire his own manager once the rebuild is through, rather than feel obligated to pick a St. Louis legend

John

  • When we look back on Paul Skenes’s career 15 years from now, will he have played in the postseason in a Pirates uniform?

Mark P

  • In 15 years, we’ll be like “oh yeah, huh Skenes started with the Pirates, I remember that.”

    For comparison’s sake, it’s been only seven years since Gerrit Cole pitched for Pittsburgh but that feels like either a lifetime ago, or a “wait, Cole was a Pirate?” reaction

Trade

  • Taylor Ward for Brady Singer who says no?

Mark P

  • This seems like a very good need-for-need type of swap. Ward will be a bit more pricey (as per our arb projections), but that shouldn’t be an obstacle for a Reds team that badly needs offense

Dan S.

  • Can the Orioles put together a package for a playoff-caliber starter centered around Coby Mayo, or did Mayo’s 2025 struggles tank his value to the point where they’re better off giving him a shot at the everyday 1B job next year?

Mark P

  • Mountcastle is pretty likely to be non-tendered, so if Mayo is also dealt, that leaves 1B for either a new player or maybe Basallo.

    Mayo didn’t do great in his first extended taste of MLB action, but also didn’t do anything that raises serious questions about his overall value.  He’d still get a lot of attention if the O’s shopped him, even if they’re looking for at least a mid-rotation arm

King Tuck

  • Do you think there’s any chance Tucker agrees to a short term deal? Like a “prove it deal”. Maybe similar to Bregman or Bellinger?

Mark P

  • I have some doubts over Tucker getting $400MM, but also think he can do better than a shorter-term opt-out contract.

John

  • do you think the Jays tender Eric Lauer for 2026?

Mark P

  • Definitely. He’s a no-brainer to be retained.  With Bassitt and Scherzer both possibly leaving in free agency, Lauer might be penciled in for another starting role

Lou Brown

  • Jays went worst to first this year, what team has the best chance to accomplish this in 2026?

Mark P

  • Thought about making a poll out of this question, except Baltimore would likely win in a landslide.  Even if you have doubts about the O’s overall, their chances of a turn-around in 2026 seem a lot better than those of the White Sox, Angels, Nationals, Rockies, or Pirates.

Chris

  • Who is starting alongside Judge in the Yanks OF on opening day?

Mark P

  • Bellinger and Dominguez.  New York isn’t giving up on Dominguez this soon, and my guess is that the Yankees pony up to re-sign Bellinger to a big contract.

Richard

  • Mariners need to bring Naylor back! Show him the money!!!! With almost 25 mil coming off the books with both Mitches (Haniger and Garver) leaving what are the odds they resign him?

Mark P

  • Naylor has already become such a legend in Seattle that I can see the M’s go above and beyond their usual financial comfort zone to re-sign him.  Dipoto has already been vocal on the subject, and one would imagine ownership could be swayed as they see more and more extra dollars flow in from playoff revenue.

    Plenty of teams will be looking into Naylor’s market, and I can see him waiting for Alonso to leave the market in order to capitalize on some desperate teams.  This might leave the M’s in a waiting game since I don’t see them as bidders for Alonso.

Mark

  • J. Duran for Caglione. Who says no?

Mark P

  • The Red Sox are likelier to say no, in part because I think the Royals would say yes.  Remember, the Royals are sorely in need for OF help, and Jac might already be without a position on a team with Pasquantino/Perez eating up a lot of the 1B/DH time

Mike Tex

  • Was it wise for the Cubs to announce Jed’s extension at the trade deadline?

Mark P

  • It’s fair for Chicago fans to point out flaws in the team’s approach, but in the macro sense….the Cubs won 92 games, made the playoffs, won a WC series, and almost squeaked into the NLCS.
  • Working out an extension and then just sitting on it for a few months doesn’t really change anything, unless you’re suggesting that the Cubs should’ve moved on from Hoyer entirely

Walter

  • What right handed bats could Cleveland pursue in FA or trade? Thinking Hoskins or Willson Contreras.

Mark P

  • Hoskins is likelier due to a lesser salary, since I have a hard time seeing the Guards absorbing most or all of Contreras’ deal.

hope in the desert

  • what are the chances the diamondbacks get Masanori Murakami, do you think it would be a good fit

Mark P

  • Murakami and Pavin Smith are both LHH, but that’s not necessarily a huge obstacle since Murakami could be a DH, or get some 3B/OF time if the Diamondbacks are okay with his glovework.  Arizona isn’t at the top of my list as natural Murakami candidates, but I can sorta see it

Tim

  • You see the Angels going after Framber or Suarez?

Mark P

  • I’ll repeat my usual line about the Angels and top free agents….barring a huge overpay, why would a star player with choices opt to join a team that hasn’t won anything in a full decade?

    Now, the Pujols aspect adds a wrinkle to this situation.  Maybe it’s slightly easier for the Halos to lure players if they’re excited by the idea of playing with a legend as manager.  But, I wouldn’t suddenly expect free agents to start bumping the Angels up their wishlist just if Pujols is in the dugout.

Carl

  • Does the Paul Toboni era begin with a bang or a whimper this offseason? Presumably he didn’t leave a great job in Boston just to re-sign Josh Bell.

Mark P

  • So far he’s focused on overhauling a lot of the team’s development staff, which isn’t unexpected given how the Nats have struggled to build their own pipeline
  • Overall, the rebuild is still on in DC, so don’t expect any splashy moves

Micky Batt

  • Randy Arozarena has one year left of club control for the M’s.   Do they just ride out next year with him and not sign him to a multi-year extension?

Mark P

  • Leaning towards riding it out.  With their pitchers getting more expensive and the possibility of more money spent on Naylor or Polanco, Arozarena seems expendable
  • Maybe kind of a sneaky trade candidate this winter, but it’s more likely he’s still in Seattle on Opening Day

Royce Lewis

  • Do I end up somewhere else this off-season?

Mark P

  • He’s still inexpensive, so the Twins are under no financial pressure to move him.  The Twins also surely don’t want to sell low, in case Lewis stays healthy and figures it out elsewhere

Everybody’s doin’ the fish?

  • Are Marlins fans the happiest of the NLeast teams going into the offseason? What SHOULD do they do in the offseason to keep the riding the wave?…or maybe I should ask…what are they probably going to do?

Mark P

  • Are Marlins fans the happiest of the NL east teams going into the offseason?

    This gets my vote as “whoa….wait…” eye-opening comment of today’s chat session, lol.  I think this is actually correct, even with the caveat that Miami fans may have never been truly pleased with their team.

    As noted in past chats, I don’t think this year’s relative success will suddenly turn the Marlins into free-spenders or spin them directly towards wanting to contend.  They can get a bit more aggressive with the types of talents they seek out, but maybe moreso in trades than in free agency.

Kyle

  • Is the fact that the DH is mostly used for either a proven masher or as a carousel for off days for position players that versatile bench options can fill in for preventing the rise of another Ohtani? At least in US baseball development? It feels a bit weird that another team hasn’t tried something with someone, bc even half of Ohtani as a hitter and pitcher is an all star

Mark P

  • Ohtani’s emergence probably means that you’ll see a few more guys give it a real go as a two-way player.  But beyond the reasons you mentioned, the biggest obstacle against “another Ohtani” emerging is that is exceptionally hard to be both a big league-caliber hitter AND big league-caliber pitcher, let alone a star in both fields.  Ohtani is an utterly unique talent.

Joe E

  • who should the Astros try and acquire?

Mark P

  • The best team trainers and medical staff that money can buy

Sam Francisco

  • Giants big spenders and traders?

Mark P

  • I see the Giants being aggressive this winter.  They have holes to fill, and with a new manager coming in, Posey will want to further put the stamp on the roster being ’his’ team.

    Luring free agents to SF will continue to be a little tricky, and it’ll be interesting if Posey is more active on the trade front.  Maybe not quite to the huge extent of a Devers-type blockbuster, but if FAs aren’t biting for whatever reasons, the Giants could pursue the trade route again

Houston

  • Do I win the AL West?

Mark P

  • The Rangers may be cutting payroll, the Athletics’ pitching (and ballpark) is still a big issue, and the Angels are the Angels.  So overcoming the Mariners won’t be easy, but it wouldn’t be a shock to see the Astros rebound to another division title just because the rest of the West is pretty thin.

Slappy Slapster

  • As commented earlier, Singer for Ward makes sense. Thoughts on Bubic for Ward?

Mark P

  • Also a sensible move, though Bubic at a projected $6M makes him a valuable trade chip for players with a higher ceiling than Ward.

SKUBAL AND CROCHET

  • Odds Boston tries to pry Skubal and uses Duran/Abreu + some prospects?

Mark P

  • The Sox will absolutely at least check in on Skubal, and can offer enough in return to make Detroit think about it.  Skubal probably isn’t any likelier to sign an extension in Boston than he is in Motown, however, so the Sox will have to gauge how much they want to give up for what’ll very likely be a one-year rental

Skip

  • Can Joe Ryan return a top 10 global prospect? What teams are most interested in him?

Mark P

  • If the Red Sox did go big on a pitcher trade, Ryan is the likelier candidate than Skubal.  Actually, Pablo Lopez is the likeliest of all since the Twins would welcome saving some money, but sticking with Ryan, the two sides already had some talks at the deadline.

    Ryan is projected to make $5.8MM in 2026 and is arb-controlled through 2027.  That’s an inexpensive price for a frontline pitcher, so he’d fit into any team’s budget.

  • With just two years of team control, however, that’s probably not enough to pry a top-10 prospect

Bernie Brewer

  • Does Woodruff come back to the Brewers? Won’t his injury situation limit his opportunities elsewhere?

Mark P

  • Woodruff looked so good in his limited outings this season that I think he’ll get plenty of attention in free agency.  Not necessarily on a long-term contract, however, which might keep the Brewers in play to some limited extent.  Woodruff is an interesting qualifying offer candidate, in fact, if the Brew Crew wanted to go that route

Ricky

  • Would bichette accept playing 2B for the Jays

Mark P

  • Bichette’s reps surely have a strategy in mind for explaining their client’s inconsistent-at-best defense, but the easier route would indeed be a willingness to change positions.  An elite shortstop makes more than an elite second baseman, but Bichette’s bat will get him paid anyway, and a position change might even help him if he becomes a plus at 2B.

    As I and many others have pointed out, the Andres Gimenez trade seemed like Toronto’s hedge against a Bichette departure.  So if Bichette was willing to go with 2B, a path can now emerge towards a reunion with the Jays.  I still feel that overall, Bichette will sign elsewhere.

Pumpsie

  • Would Rice and Caballero be better next year than McMahon and Goldschmidt was last year? If so, where does McMahon go? Angels?

Mark P

  • McMahon’s contract won’t be the easiest to trade.  The question the Yankees should be asking if Caballero over Volpe, not McMahon.

    Rice is pretty much looking like a lock to be the starting 1B (and occasional catcher) next year.  Goldschmidt will likely head elsewhere.

Guest

  • Does Colt Emerson start next season with the M’s

Mark P

  • If he has a big spring, I can see the Mariners putting him on the Opening Day roster and aiming for the PPI bonus.  Crawford is still the shortstop, but Emerson could be tabbed for a hole at 2B or 3B

Cubs

  • Cubs have to re sign Tucker after what they gave up for him right ?

Mark P

  • You’d think so, but all signs point to Tucker leaving

Oriole Orange turned Blue

  • I don’t understand why teams let their players play through injuries rather than just letting them heal up?  It seems risky to let an already injured player possibly further aggravate the problem further.  Why not just put the injured player on the IL and let the back up play?   Austin Hays used to play injured for the Orioles and it drove me crazy! He’d have an All Star half season bookended by an injured other half.  The same with Colton Cowser now.  Broken finger and then broken ribs, but he plays through it with dismal results.  Kyle Tucker and Gleyber Torres the same thing.

Mark P

  • It depends on the player and the injury in some cases.  Like the cliche goes, there’s a difference between playing “hurt” and “being injured,” since over the course of a six-month baseball season, pretty much everyone is varying degrees of banged up.

    You’re not wrong that in many cases, having an obviously struggling player on the field is doing more harm than good, even if a team has no ready-made backup option to use.

    But sometimes, a player is able to play through injury just fine, like Tucker over his first month after the hairline fracture.  Or in Torres’ case, if he gets sports hernia surgery in mid-July when it first arose, then he’s likely gone for the rest of the season.  That’s not a welcome outcome for a player like Torres who is chasing a free agent contract, plus the simple fact that he wanted to keep contributing to a Tigers team that was (at the time) flying high

Twins fan

  • Does a trade based around Joe Ryan and Coby Mayo make sense for either team involved?

Mark P

  • The Orioles should be burning up the Twins’ phone lines for Ryan or Lopez.

JeffyM

  • Do Yesavage and Lauer just slide into the rotation for Scherzer and Bassitt next year, or do you think the Jays are active on a starting pitcher in FA or trade?

Mark P

  • Next year’s rotation lines up as Gausman, Yesavage, Berrios, and Lauer, so there’s definitely a need for at least one and probably two more starting pitching additions.

Ebenezer_Batflip

  • Any chances for the Reds to trade Hunter Greene for Jarren Duran + other players or prospects? Feels like those two teams are good potential trade partners with each having a surplus of what the other needs.

Mark P

  • Greene has a higher ceiling for me than Duran, so if I’m the Reds, I see if I can talk Boston into another starter.

Hits Like Rays

  • Your thoughts on the new Rays’ owners being able to really raise the player payroll if Tampa will not spend “one dollar” to help build a stadium?  Or are the Rays now more likely to just blackmail some other city and re-locate?

Mark P

  • The new group’s desire to have a new ballpark ready for Opening Day 2029 seems wildly optimistic, so I don’t think Tampa fans should feel entirely safe yet about the Rays staying in the Tampa/St. Pete area

Mac

  • You’re NHL Stanley cup finalists for 2025 -26

Mark P

  • Continuing the long history of players finding immediate championship success as soon as they leave the Leafs, I’ll pick Mitch Marner’s Golden Knights to hoist the Cup by beating the Panthers in the finals

Jason C

  • What do you see the Atl doing this offseason?

Mark P

  • Lots of bullpen moves, a new shortstop, maybe a new second baseman as well, plus at least one starting pitcher.  Technically Atlanta could have a rotation surplus between a new arm and their current staff if everyone is healthy, but everyone won’t be healthy.
  • That’s it for today’s chat.  Thanks for everyone’s questions, and I hope everyone enjoys Game 1 of the ALCS!  We’ll be back with more chatty goodness next weekend.
  • If you’re interested in more baseball Q&A, one of the many benefits of our Trade Rumors Front Office subscription is the exclusive weekly live chats. The more limited field means you’re about 10 times more likely to get a question answered, as opposed to battling for space with hundreds of other questions in today’s chat. For more on our memberships, check out this link:

    https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/membership?ref=chat-10-12-25

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Brandon Woodruff Won’t Be On Brewers’ NLCS Roster

By Mark Polishuk | October 12, 2025 at 11:58am CDT

Brandon Woodruff has yet to take part in the Brewers’ postseason run, as the lat strain the veteran righty suffered in September kept him off Milwaukee’s NLDS roster.  That absence will now stretch into the NL Championship Series, as MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy writes that Woodruff has yet to start even playing catch, so he naturally won’t be ready in time for the start of the NLDS on Monday.

With his throwing work still not underway, Woodruff would have to make a lot of progress in a pretty short window of time to receive consideration for a possible World Series roster slot.  If the Brewers defeat the Dodgers in the NLCS, Game 1 of the World Series falls on October 24, giving Woodruff just 12 days to get ramped up enough to pitch even in a relief capacity.

Asked if a return was possible, Woodruff said “I’m not ready to answer that question yet.  I’ve been trying to get ready.  Each day is better and better for me.  I don’t know what tomorrow looks like, but these past 2-3 weeks have been good for me and we’ll see what happens.  It’s too early to make a call on anything.”

Woodruff last pitched on September 17, when he threw a strong start (five IP, one earned run on two hits and no walks with nine strikeouts) in the Brewers’ 9-2 win over the Angels.  The performance continued Woodruff’s quality results in his comeback season, as the right-hander recorded a 3.20 ERA, 32.3% strikeout rate, and 5.4% walk rate across 12 starts and 64 2/3 innings.

These would be outstanding numbers for any pitcher, but it was a particular triumph for Woodruff considering his many injury battles.  Shoulder surgery cost him the entirety of the 2024 season and an ankle issue delayed the start of his 2025 campaign, but Woodruff returned not just healthy, but displaying the kind of form that made him a two-time All-Star.  Unfortunately, Woodruff’s dream return and a surefire role in Milwaukee’ s postseason rotation was spoiled by his lat strain.

With Woodruff still out, Freddy Peralta may be the only Brewers pitcher guaranteed to work as a traditional starter in the NLCS.  Quinn Priester, Jose Quintana, and Chad Patrick could all get starts, or potentially be pseudo-starters in a bulk pitcher capacity, if the Brew Crew again deploy a high-leverage reliever as an opener against Los Angeles.

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Mariners Add Bryan Woo, Miles Mastrobuoni To ALCS Roster

By Mark Polishuk | October 12, 2025 at 10:12am CDT

The Mariners announced the 26 players who will be part of their American League Championship Series roster against the Blue Jays.  After using a complement of 14 pitchers and 12 position players against the Tigers in the ALDS, the M’s will use an even 13 pitchers and 13 position players to navigate their series with Toronto.  The full list…

Catchers: Harry Ford, Mitch Garver, Cal Raleigh
Infielders: J.P. Crawford, Josh Naylor, Jorge Polanco, Leo Rivas, Eugenio Suarez
Outfielders: Randy Arozarena, Dominic Canzone, Victor Robles, Julio Rodriguez
Utility player: Miles Mastrobuoni
Left-handed pitchers: Caleb Ferguson, Gabe Speier
Right-handed pitchers: Eduard Bazardo, Matt Brash, Luis Castillo, Logan Gilbert, Emerson Hancock, Luke Jackson, George Kirby, Bryce Miller, Andres Munoz, Carlos Vargas, Bryan Woo

The biggest story is Woo’s return, as the right-hander hasn’t pitched since suffering pectoral tightness in a start against the Astros on September 19.  Woo’s ramp-up work didn’t quite allow him to be ready for Seattle’s ALDS roster, but president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto said on Friday after the Mariners’ Game 5 clinch that Woo would likely be part of the roster against Toronto.

Dipoto specified that Woo wouldn’t be available until closer to midway through the series, which would seemingly line him up for a start in Game 4.  Because Gilbert and Castillo were both needed in the 15-inning finale against Detroit, the Mariners’ rotation plans over the first two ALCS games in Toronto are very much up in the air.  Miller will start Game 1 on short rest and it can be assumed that Kirby will start Game 3 on regular rest, but it remains to be seen if Castillo and/or Gilbert will be involved in Game 2, and in what capacity.

Woo takes the roster spot of rookie infielder Ben Williamson, who didn’t see any action in the ALDS (and hasn’t played in a big league game since July 30).  Williamson’s inclusion on the ALDS roster was largely as a hedge against Josh Naylor potentially missing time on paternity leave, so the Mariners wouldn’t be left short-handed in terms of infield depth.  As it happened, Naylor played in all five games against Detroit and was still able to welcome his first child into the world.

Seattle’s other change comes on the bench, with one left-handed utilityman in Mastrobuoni replacing another in Luke Raley.  Mastrobuoni doesn’t have Raley’s offensive upside, but brings more to the table in pure versatility.  Raley can play first base and all three outfield positions, but Mastrobuoni saw work at both corner outfield slots and at first base in 2025, as well as time as a second and third baseman.  Essentially, Mastrobuoni’s inclusion allows the Mariners to replace Raley and Williamson in one fell swoop.  Raley came off the bench in four games of the ALDS, with one hit-by-pitch over six plate appearances.

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Blue Jays Add Chris Bassitt, Max Scherzer To ALCS Roster; Bo Bichette Not Included

By Mark Polishuk | October 12, 2025 at 9:39am CDT

The Blue Jays have announced the 26 players who will be part of their American League Championship Series roster against the Mariners.  As in the ALDS, the Jays will be using 13 pitchers and 13 position players, though a couple of new arms will be joining the pitching staff.  The full list…

Catchers: Alejandro Kirk, Tyler Heineman
Infielders: Addison Barger, Ernie Clement, Andres Gimenez, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Isiah Kiner-Falefa
Outfielders: Nathan Lukes, Anthony Santander, Davis Schneider, George Springer, Myles Straw, Daulton Varsho
Left-handed pitchers: Mason Fluharty, Eric Lauer, Brendon Little
Right-handed pitchers: Chris Bassitt, Shane Bieber, Seranthony Dominguez, Braydon Fisher, Kevin Gausman, Jeff Hoffman, Yariel Rodriguez, Max Scherzer, Louis Varland, Trey Yesavage

Beginning with the most notable omission from the roster, Bo Bichette remains unavailable, as the shortstop has yet to fully recover from a left knee sprain that has kept him out of action since September 6.  Bichette didn’t start any running work until this past Wednesday, but a move to a bit more high-intensity running on the bases yesterday didn’t yield much progress.  Bichette clearly looked to be in discomfort following even this brief session, which created doubt that he would indeed be healthy enough to be activated.

Since Bichette has been able to take batting practice and face live hitting, there had been some speculation that the Jays might use Bichette just in a DH role or even as a pinch-hitting specialist.  Even that limited capacity would involve Bichette having to run in some form if he ended up getting hits, of course, and yesterday’s footage implies that Bichette’s knee is still far from 100 percent.

Technically, the Jays could still activate Bichette at some point during the ALCS if another injury arose.  But the far likelier scenario is that Bichette won’t see any action until the World Series should Toronto advance, and it remains unclear if even 12 more days of rest and rehab will be enough for Bichette to return at all during the Jays’ postseason run.

By this point the Blue Jays have gotten used to playing without Bichette to some extent.  Gimenez has settled in as the glove-first option at shortstop, and the Jays were will able to both win the AL East and defeat the Yankees in the ALDS without Bichette available.  That said, obviously Toronto’s roster is better with Bichette than without, and the Jays figure to miss his bat against the Mariners’ deep pitching staff.

Speaking of rotations, Bassitt and Scherzer return after being left out of the ALCS picture.  Scherzer was omitted since manager John Schneider felt the veteran didn’t match up well against the Yankees in particular, while Bassitt wasn’t fully recovered from a bout of back tightness that sent him to the 15-day injured list on September 19.  The Jays felt they could navigate the five-game ALDS with only three starters (Gausman, Yesavage, Bieber) on the roster, and that proved to be the case, as the relief corps stepped up with a big bullpen-game performance in the clinching Game 4.

Gausman is set to start Game 1, and in all likelihood rookie sensation Yesavage will start Game 2 and Bieber will go in Game 3.  Still, Gausman is the only announced starter to date, so the Blue Jays might still yet creative with their exact deployment of their starters.  Not all five starters will actually start, of course, leaving some question with how Bassitt or Scherzer will be used.  Bassitt has a little more career experience as a reliever, yet Scherzer struggled so much down the stretch that that recent form is a bigger factor for the Jays than Scherzer’s distinguished postseason track record.

Bassitt and Scherzer will be taking the places of relievers Tommy Nance and Justin Bruihl.  Nance was inching his way into higher-leverage work after delivering a 1.99 ERA over 30 1/3 innings in the regular season, but he didn’t look sharp in posting a 13.50 ERA over 1 1/3 innings in the ALDS.  Bruihl was charged for two earned runs in his lone one-third of an inning of ALDS work, and the southpaw was something of a 26th man for much of Toronto’s season, as he logged 13 2/3 innings with a 5.27 ERA.

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Poll: Who Will Win The League Championship Series?

By Mark Polishuk | October 12, 2025 at 8:49am CDT

The postseason field has been narrowed down to four teams, in mostly chalk fashion.  Each member of the final four is a division winner, and three of the clubs received first-round byes.  The Dodgers were the only club who had to advance through the wild card round, and the reigning World Series champs aren’t exactly underdogs.  In fact, all of the Brewers, Mariners, and Blue Jays had a lot more questions to answer about their playoff readiness given a recent lack of postseason success, yet all three teams were up to the task in winning their League Championship Series matchups.

Only the Yankees have reached the World Series more times than the Dodgers, who are vying for the franchise’s 23rd trip to the Fall Classic.  Los Angeles is the defending champion aiming for its third ring in six seasons, against three teams with much less of a postseason resume.  The Blue Jays are a perfect 2-0 in the club’s only two World Series appearances, but they last reached the Series in 1993.  The Brewers’ lone Series appearance was so long ago (in 1982) that the club was still in the American League, and Milwaukee fell to the Cardinals in a seven-game nail-biter.  The Mariners can get a big albatross off their backs just by winning the AL pennant, as Seattle is the only team in Major League Baseball to have never reached a World Series.

The ALCS between the Mariners and Blue Jays carries some added historical import since the two teams both joined MLB in 1977.  The only previous playoff series between the two expansion cousins took place in 2022, when Seattle swept Toronto in two games in the best-of-three wild card series, and made an epic comeback from an 8-1 run deficit to capture a 10-9 win in Game 2.  That crushing loss was part of the 0-6 playoff record the Jays carried during the Vladimir Guerrero Jr. era, before Toronto broke out with a dominant win over the Yankees in this year’s ALDS.

Blue Jays hitters erupted for 34 runs and a collective .338/.373/.601 slash line over the four games against New York.  While that level of an explosion came as a surprise, Toronto led the league in both batting average and OBP this season, while also finishing near the top of the table in runs and OPS.  Seattle’s season-long numbers weren’t quite as impressive, yet the club has been one of baseball’s best offensive teams since Josh Naylor and Eugenio Suarez were acquired at the trade deadline.  Led by these two big bats, Julio Rodriguez, Jorge Polanco, and the all-around brilliance of MVP candidate Cal Raleigh, the Mariners’ powerful lineup will provide the Jays’ pitching staff with a huge challenge.

In terms of run prevention, the Blue Jays have a significant edge on defense.  Toronto had a collective +51 Defensive Runs Saves and +14 Outs Above Average in the regular season, in comparison to Seattle’s +9 DRS and -30 OAA.  This could potentially help the Jays counter the Mariners’ deeper rotation, as with Bryan Woo expected to return from injury in the ALCS, all five of the M’s regular starters will be available in some capacity.  How exactly those starters will be deployed is still a matter of debate, as George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, and Luis Castillo all had to pitch during Seattle’s 15-inning marathon with the Tigers in Game 5 of the ALDS.

The Blue Jays held a 4-2 edge in the season series with the Mariners this year, and have the homefield advantage as the AL’s top seed.  That is a significant point for a Jays team that is 56-27 at Rogers Centre during the regular season and playoffs, plus the Mariners’ road record is only 40-43.  Turning to the National League, the Brewers and Dodgers each had identical 52-29 home records in the regular season, and Milwaukee was an impressive 45-36 away from home, while the Dodgers were only 41-40 on the road.

The other eye-opening statistic is Milwaukee’s perfect 6-0 record in head-to-head play against Los Angeles this season.  As daunting as the Dodgers’ star-studded roster may be, the Brewers have had their number in 2025, and will now have to try and do it again in the postseason.  L.A. has won the only two prior postseason series between the two franchises, including a seven-game win in the 2018 NLCS.

That 2018 season marked the last time the Brew Crew won a playoff series until their five-game win over the Cubs in this year’s NLDS.  The series as a whole was a demonstration of the kind of quality pitching and timely hitting that the Brewers have enjoyed all season.  A relative lack of power is basically the only flaw for a lineup that posted tremendous numbers, but Andrew Vaughn’s career turn-around since being acquired by the Brewers in June has added a new dimension to the offense.

A pair of shaky starts from Freddy Peralta and Quinn Priester at Wrigley Field could be red flags for the Brewers against L.A.  Peralta pitched well enough in Game 1 that his Game 4 performance might just be a hiccup, yet if Priester can’t get on track, the Brewers will have to lean even harder on a bullpen that has already logged a lot of innings in the NLDS.  Milwaukee is as creative as any team in getting the most out of its pitching staff, so expect plenty of unconventional pitcher usage as the Brewers will try to keep the Dodgers at bay.

After a somewhat underwhelming regular season by their high standards, the Dodgers may have flipped the switch for October, sweeping the Reds in the wild card series and then dispatching the Phillies in a four-game NLDS.  Even with several stars (Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman, and an injury-diminished Will Smith) yet to get rolling at the plate, the Dodgers have been aided by a red-hot Mookie Betts and contributions from up and down their seasoned lineup.

Roki Sasaki’s emergence as the club’s seeming first choice at closer has been huge for Los Angeles, and perhaps addresses the team’s biggest weakness.  If Sasaki is now a high-leverage option late in games and the excellent L.A. starting rotation remains in form, the Brewers have a pretty narrow window to strike against the rest of the struggling Dodger bullpen.

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Seven Players Elect Free Agency

By Mark Polishuk | October 11, 2025 at 10:57am CDT

Now that the season is over, we’ll start seeing several players choose to become minor league free agents. Major League free agents (i.e. players with six-plus years of big league service time) will hit the open market five days after the end of the World Series, but eligible minor leaguers can already start electing free agency.

To qualify, these players must have been all outrighted off their team’s 40-man rosters during the 2025 season without being added back. These players also must have multiple career outrights on their resume, and/or at least three years of Major League service time.

We’ll offer periodic updates over the coming weeks about many other players hitting the market in this fashion. These free agent decisions are all listed on the official MLB.com or MILB.com transactions pages, for further reference.

Infielders

  • Abraham Toro (Red Sox)
  • Donovan Walton (Phillies)

Outfielders

  • Bryan De La Cruz (Yankees)
  • Leody Taveras (Mariners)

Pitchers

  • Carlos Hernandez (Guardians)
  • Erasmo Ramirez (Twins)
  • Devin Sweet (Phillies)
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