Rangers Acquire Jeff Francoeur For Joaquin Arias
The Rangers and Mets swapped players they no longer needed tonight, exchanging Jeff Francoeur and Joaquin Arias. Francoeur was no longer a fit in New York, and suggested this summer that he would welcome a trade. Last week, the Rangers designated Arias for assignment (to make room for former Met Alex Cora, of all people), so they weren't relying on him any more than the Mets relied on Francoeur.
About $897K remains on Francoeur's contract, but the Mets will pay most of that. The 26-year-old is hitting just .236/.293/.369 in 443 plate appearances, so he was a non-tender candidate on the Mets and remains one on the Rangers.
Like most right-handed hitters, Francoeur has markedly better numbers against left-handed pitching, both for his career (.820 OPS) and in 2010 (.767 OPS). David Murphy struggles against left-handers, so the Rangers needed a right-handed complement to Murphy, especially given Nelson Cruz's hamstring and Josh Hamilton's knee.
The Rangers acquired Arias as part of the 2004 Alfonso Soriano–Alex Rodriguez trade. Arias did have a solid 2008 campaign as a reserve for the Rangers, but this year he hit just .276/.290/.347 in 101 plate appearances so they no longer needed the 25-year-old.
ESPN's Adam Rubin first reported that the Rangers were considering Francoeur and Jon Heyman of SI.com reported (via Twitter) that the sides were actively discussing a deal involving Francoeur and Arias. Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and others also reported on the deal via Twitter.
Rockies Acquire Manny Delcarmen
The Rockies acquired reliever Manny Delcarmen from the Red Sox for minor league righty Chris Balcom-Miller, tweets WEEI's Alex Speier. According to a press release, the Red Sox also sent cash considerations. The Rockies were known to be seeking relief help given Matt Belisle's heavy workload and Rafael Betancourt's abdominal strain. At 3.5 games back in the wild card, Colorado has a 15.9% shot at the playoffs according to Baseball Prospectus. Unless Delcarmen cleared waivers, the trade implies Delcarmen went unclaimed by American League teams as well as National League non-contenders.
Delcarmen, 28, has a 4.70 ERA, 6.5 K/9, and 5.7 BB/9 with seven home runs allowed in 44 innings this year. His control took a turn for the worse after the '07 season, and his fastball velocity has been down a tick the last few years. The Red Sox were willing to trade Delcarmen in July, but didn't find a match. The Rockies have had their eye on him for years. If September goes well in the new league, perhaps they'll tender him a contract for 2011 at a small raise on this year's $905K salary.
Balcom-Miller, 21, has a 3.31 ERA, 9.7 K/9, and 1.6 BB/9 with three home runs allowed in 108.6 innings for the Rockies' Low A affiliate. Heading into the season Baseball America ranked him 16th among Rockies prospects, saying he "has the ceiling of a solid middle-of-the-rotation starter."
Arbitration Eligibles: Kansas City Royals
A look at the Royals players who will be eligible for arbitration after the season…
- First time: Luke Hochevar, Billy Butler, Brayan Pena, Josh Fields, Brian Anderson
- Second time: Alex Gordon, Robinson Tejeda
- Third time: Brian Bannister, Kyle Davies
- Fourth time: Wilson Betemit
Pena, Fields, Bannister, and Davies are non-tender candidates by virtue of poor performance, injury, or both. Before the non-tender deadline in December, the Royals could shop them around. Still, the Royals could just retain any or all of them at fairly reasonable prices if they think 2011 will bring improvement.
Hochevar and Gordon have yet to live up to their draft pedigrees, but neither is worth cutting loose. Butler, Tejeda, and Betemit will also be tendered contracts. Butler hasn't racked up counting stats in his career, but he's still done enough to earn the $3.1MM James Loney did. Betemit's huge half-year presents something of a conundrum in the opinon of FanGraphs' Dave Cameron, but I think he'll be retained. Anderson signed a $700K minor league deal as an outfielder in December but later converted to pitching. He may have impressed enough in 17.3 innings to be tendered a contract.
Odds & Ends: Webb, White Sox, Accardo
Links for waiver trade deadline day, as the Reds prepare for Chapmania…
- Yesterday Brandon Webb's agent Jonathan Maurer told MLBTR contracts starting at a $7.5MM base salary were conversation starters for his client. Jack Magruder of FOXSportsArizona.com has a response from D'Backs president and CEO Derrick Hall: "It is a very strong stand."
- The White Sox appear unlikely to add a reliever today, based on an email GM Kenny Williams sent to Jon Paul Morosi of FOX Sports.
- Interested in hearing a couple of pitchers gripe? Jeremy Accardo spoke to Todd Dewey of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, while Oliver Perez made a brief comment to SNY's Kevin Burkhardt.
Marlins Seeking Catching Help This Offseason
The Marlins are "strongly considering moving in another direction at catcher" this offseason, reports MLB.com's Joe Frisaro. John Baker may be headed for elbow surgery, while Ronny Paulino is a non-tender candidate given his PED suspension. Who might the Marlins consider importing this winter?
Viable free agents for the Marlins include Rod Barajas, John Buck, Ramon Hernandez, Gerald Laird, Bengie Molina, A.J. Pierzynski, Yorvit Torrealba, Jason Varitek, and Gregg Zaun. If the Fish don't find their man within that group, Ryan Doumit, Mike Napoli, Russell Martin, and Chris Iannetta could be available via trade.
Available Starting Pitchers
Let's put on our speculating hats and conjure up a list of starting pitchers who might be currently available. Warning: most of these guys have ERAs around 5.00.
- Kenshin Kawakami, Braves. The Braves don't have much use for Kawakami, unless Derek Lowe is ailing.
- Rodrigo Lopez, Diamondbacks. He leads MLB with 32 home runs allowed, but at least he takes the ball every fifth day.
- Paul Maholm and Zach Duke, Pirates. These lefties are probably not a part of the Pirates' long-term future, but they might find an improved market in the offseason.
- Kevin Millwood, Orioles. He's had some good starts this month, but he's owed over $2.1MM this year.
- Dave Bush, Brewers. Only makes sense if you're looking for someone to chew up innings.
- Kyle Davies and Bruce Chen, Royals. If the Royals intend to non-tender Davies after the season, they could trade him today.
- Jeremy Bonderman, Tigers. He's currently dealing with rib cage inflammation, but could be an OK option for someone in September. The Tigers would have to assume some of his remaining $2.2MM.
- Scott Kazmir, Angels. With almost $16MM left on his contract through next year, Kazmir probably already cleared waivers.
- Aaron Harang, Reds. He'll be activated today to start against the Brewers. The Reds probably need him.
- Rich Harden, Rangers. He's been booted to the bullpen and would have $2.4MM coming to him if traded.
- Carlos Zambrano, Cubs. He's got over $39MM left on his contract through 2012 and surely cleared waivers, but an offseason deal is more likely.
- Scott Olsen and Jason Marquis, Nationals. Olsen gets $75K in incentives for each of his next three starts, after which he will get $105K per. Marquis has over $8.8MM left on his contract, which runs through next year.
- Randy Wolf, Brewers. If traded, Wolf will have at least $22.6MM coming to him through 2012. He's another guy who presumably cleared waivers.
Quiet Deadline Day Expected?
Eleven hours remain until tonight's waiver trade deadline. A year ago today, Jim Thome, Jose Contreras, Ronnie Belliard, and Jon Garland were dealt. But two years ago it was pretty much just David Eckstein, and three years ago we only had deals for Steve Trachsel and Russell Branyan. So SI's Jon Heyman may be right in passing along the prediction from baseball executives that only "a couple of bullpen and bench pieces" will be moved today. More from Heyman:
- Almost all productive players have been blocked by claims already, even well-paid ones. Kevin Gregg, Scott Downs, and Fausto Carmona are among those claimed and pulled back.
- The Padres and Yankees would be in the market for a starter if someone decent comes available. The Padres made a claim on Hiroki Kuroda, but the Dodgers pulled him back.
- The Dodgers are not looking to trade Ted Lilly or gut the team, so consider my post on the potential to save $5.775MM just for fun.
- One active club is the Rays, tweets Jon Paul Morosi of FOX Sports.
- Click here for our list of those who have cleared waivers.
Hiroki Kuroda Will Not Be Traded
The Padres were negotiating a waiver trade with the Dodgers for pitcher Hiroki Kuroda, reported Bill Center of the San Diego Union-Tribune, but the Dodgers pulled him back over the weekend. That the Padres made the claim on Kuroda shows they were willing to take on his $2.33MM remaining salary.
Kuroda, 35, sports a 3.39 ERA, 7.3 K/9, and 2.2 BB/9 in 162 innings after last night's one-hit effort. He'll be eligible for free agency after the season. He projects as a Type B, though it's not clear whether his contract allows for an arbitration offer or if the Dodgers would consider it.
Dodgers Could Trim An Additional $5.775MM
The Dodgers already saved about $3.8MM by unloading Manny Ramirez yesterday. With a 4.1% playoff shot according to Baseball Prospectus (5.5 games out in the wild card), they're still not committed to packing it in for 2010. But let's do some simple math to determine how much additional cash the Dodgers would save if they cleaned house. Here's who could go and how much is left on their contracts:
- Hiroki Kuroda, $2.33MM. Kuroda was placed on waivers on August 24th, tweeted Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports. If he was claimed, the window to make a deal or dump his contract closed yesterday. Perhaps Kuroda was claimed and the Dodgers pulled him back, killing the chances of a deal. Or maybe his $13MM salary allowed him to clear waivers, and a trade is still possible. UPDATE: Scratch the Kuroda idea, he was pulled back over the weekend after the Padres claimed him.
- Ted Lilly, $2.15MM. Lilly was placed on waivers on August 27th, tweeted Rosenthal. The Dodgers could come out ahead financially on the Lilly portion of their deal with the Cubs. The Dodgers could keep the $2.5MM the Cubs sent but trade the lefty again today, allowing another team to pay the $2.15MM left on his contract. SI's Jon Heyman tweeted today that Lilly will not be moved, however.
- Octavio Dotel, $583K. It's a similar story with Dotel, as the Dodgers could keep the $500K the Pirates sent but trade the reliever again.
- Scott Podsednik, $296K. This assumes Pods voids his 2011 option.
- Brad Ausmus, $179K.
- Reed Johnson, $143K.
- Rod Barajas, $90K. The Dodgers may also save money on Barajas' performance bonuses.
- We'll leave Jeff Weaver, Ronnie Belliard, Vicente Padilla, and George Sherrill out of this discussion, as Padilla can't be dealt and the others are not appealing.
- To sum it up, if the Dodgers moved or dumped Kuroda, Lilly, Dotel, Podsednik, Ausmus, Johnson, and Barajas today, they'd save $5.775MM and add a few prospects. Add in $3.8MM for Manny and the $3MM received in July, and that's a cool $12.575MM. I don't expect the Dodgers to gut their team in this fashion, but it's fun to think about.
5 Surprises: Colorado Rockies
Five Rockies surprises I would not have predicted in the offseason…
- Brad Hawpe released. During the offseason Rockies GM Dan O'Dowd said he was willing to listen to trade offers for Hawpe, but he wasn't shopping the player. Hawpe's playing time dwindled until he was released in mid-August.
- Chris Iannetta's demotion. The Rockies agreed to a three-year deal with Iannetta in December, but signed Miguel Olivo to split time with him the following month. Before the end of April, Iannetta was demoted to Triple A for about a month. Iannetta could be attractive on the trade market this winter, but the Rockies may need him if Olivo's club option turns mutual and he becomes tough to re-sign.
- Huston Street making his season debut on June 23rd. In January, the Rockies were so enamored of Street they extended him through 2012 at a minimal discount even though they already controlled him for '10. Street had a decent-sized injury history, though, so this year's shoulder issue didn't come out of nowhere.
- Jhoulys Chacin's season. Chacin wasn't a household name, though he was ranked fourth among Rockies prospects by Baseball America before the season. He's been a crucial member of the team in 2010, with a 3.79 ERA in 102 innings. Aaron Cook hasn't performed as expected and Jeff Francis and Jorge de la Rosa have dealt with injuries, so Chacin has been a godsend.
- Carlos Gonzalez's season. Given Gonzalez's strong 2009 trial, his performance this year isn't a shock. Still, I didn't expect an MVP-caliber year from the center fielder.
