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Front Office Originals

Front Office Subscriber Chat With Anthony Franco: TODAY At 2:00pm Central

By Anthony Franco | February 6, 2026 at 12:13pm CDT

MLBTR’s Anthony Franco will be holding a live chat today at 2:00 pm Central, exclusively for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers!

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Front Office Originals MLBTR Chats

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What Would It Cost The A’s To Continue Their Run Of Extensions?

By Anthony Franco | February 5, 2026 at 4:41pm CDT

The A's have made a point of locking up their core players as they target 2028 for their move to Las Vegas. Over the past 14 months, they've signed extensions with Brent Rooker, Lawrence Butler, Tyler Soderstrom and Jacob Wilson. They're looking to continue that run, as both Martín Gallegos of MLB.com and Mark Anderson of The Associated Press wrote this week that the team could still try to get deals done with Nick Kurtz and Shea Langeliers.

The extensions serve a couple purposes for the A's. They lock in what could be an elite lineup with less concern among the fanbase about them tearing the roster down the way they did after the 2021 season. They're largely backloaded deals, which raises the team's competitive balance payroll (based on annual value) to avoid a revenue sharing grievance without costing as much in salary while they're playing in Sacramento.

The A's have increased their short-term spending with Luis Severino signing and trades for Jeffrey Springs and Jeff McNeil, but their projected $139MM luxury tax number is dramatically higher than their actual $88MM estimated 2026 payroll (via RosterResource). The bills will come due down the line, at which point the organization is projecting a revenue spike from their new stadium.

All four of the recent extensions look like nice bits of business for the team -- Wilson's in particular. They could have a tougher time finding agreeable price points with Kurtz and Langeliers. Both have strong leverage, and they're represented by a pair of agencies that rarely sign extensions. That said, let's take a look at what kind of prices it might take to get talks rolling.

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Athletics Front Office Originals Nick Kurtz Shea Langeliers

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MLB Mailbag: Dodgers, Phillies, Twins, Tigers, Astros, Cardinals

By Tim Dierkes | February 4, 2026 at 1:53pm CDT

This week's mailbag gets into the Dodgers' rotation, the Phillies' outfield, my favorite and least favorite moves of the offseason, the Twins' and Tigers' approaches, the Astros' infield logjam, and the Cardinals' return for Brendan Donovan.

Drew asks:

Is there a world where the Dodgers get involved on another SP? Dodgers are clearly planning to "load manage" the starters in addition to running the 6 man and Friedman has publicly stated that in a perfect world he is a seller at the deadline (à la Dustin may last year). Why not sign Giolito, Bassitt, or even Gallen to an above-market 1 year salary and try to flip them at the deadline (I'm assuming that the QO for Gallen is slightly mitigated because of the prior penalties for Diaz and Tucker).

I'm excited to see Stone and Ryan but it's still not clear what they will look like post injuries. This would theoretically be another way to leverage the cash on hand advantage and keep the farm restocked given the current draft pick penalties they have to deal with.

Greg asks:

How in the world will the Dodgers manage to limit the innings of their top starters this season? Will a 6-man rotation be enough?

Let's take a look at the Dodgers' rotation:

  • Yoshinobu Yamamoto: The 27-year-old made a total of 24 starts as a rookie in 2024, tallying 112 2/3 innings.  He missed nearly three months due to triceps and shoulder injuries.  Not only did Yamamoto avoid the IL in 2025, he pitched 173 2/3 regular season innings over 30 starts and finished third in the NL Cy Young voting.  Then he tacked on another 37 1/3 postseason innings over five starts, capped by a Game 7 no-rest 34-pitch relief outing.  That epic performance won him World Series MVP.  Yamamoto jumped 98 1/3 innings last year and is slated to pitch in the World Baseball Classic.  But it's worth noting that in the regular season, 18 of Yamamoto's starts were on five days rest and the other 12 were on six or more.  That final Game 7 relief performance was his only postseason outing with fewer than five days rest.
  • Blake Snell: Snell, 33, tossed just 61 1/3 regular season innings last year over 11 starts due to a four-month bout with left shoulder inflammation.  He was Dominant Snell upon his return and added 34 postseason innings to bring his total to 109 (including minor league rehab time).  Last week, Jack Harris of the California Post wrote, "Snell and the team decided to have the 33-year-old slow-play his winter throwing program this offseason. The plan, Snell said, is to still be ready for Opening Day in late March. But at this point, that is not seen as a certainty within the organization."  I get the "as long as he's ready for the postseason" outlook here, but Snell has a checkered injury and may start the season on the IL.
  • Tyler Glasnow: Glasnow, 32, is another "good when he's available" type.  He managed 90 1/3 regular season innings over 18 starts, pitched another 8 2/3 on minor league rehab, and then added 21 1/3 in the postseason to reach 120 1/3 last year.  When the Dodgers traded for Glasnow in December 2023, I explored his injury history in an email-only subscriber article.  The upshot was that Glasnow suffered a forearm strain in 2019, avoided surgery, and then "pitched 86 total innings in 2020, a third of them in the high-stress playoff environment. His innings total ranked fourth in baseball that year."  He unsurprisingly went down for Tommy John the following year, and also had to recover from a flexor strain and knee surgery - during the lockout when he couldn't communicate with the Rays medical staff.  He returned from that in 14 months nonetheless.  Glasnow was not treated conservatively by the Rays, in my opinion.  To be fair, I thought he'd hold up better with the Dodgers, but his 2024 season ended on August 11th due to elbow tendinitis and he lost 73 days in 2025 mostly due to shoulder inflammation.  It'd be tough to count on even 140 total innings for Glasnow.
  • I don't need to explain Shohei Ohtani to you.  He was initially handled carefully on the mound post-Tommy John in '25, tallying 47 regular season innings as a sort of MLB rehab and another 20 1/3 in the postseason.  Ohtani reached 140 innings in each of the 2014-16 seasons in Japan and topped out at 166 in MLB in 2022.  He won't be pitching in the WBC.  I'd be reluctant to pencil him in for more than 140 innings total this year, but it's never wise to bet against Ohtani.
  • I haven't surveyed every team, but Emmet Sheehan is probably the best "fifth starter" in baseball.  The 26-year-old had Tommy John surgery in May 2024 and returned in a speedy 13 months.  His August and September were especially dominant last year.  Sheehan was used in relief in the postseason and mostly struggled.  He reached 100 1/3 total innings last year, his second-highest total after 2023's 127 frames.  Sheehan is yet another Dodgers starter you wouldn't want to count on for more than 140 innings.
  • Roki Sasaki projects to have the sixth spot after a rocky MLB debut.  He went on the IL in mid-May with a shoulder impingement, missed more than four months, and returned as a reliever.  Even 100 innings from Sasaki would be a win, and he hasn't yet shown he can be an effective MLB starter.

Dodgers starters ranked third-lowest in MLB with 783 1/3 regular season innings last year.  Clearly that isn't a problem for them; set 800 as the goal and assume you'll need six different guys who can manage 50+ innings in relief.  Is the current group set up to reach 800 innings, and is another addition worth pursuing?

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Front Office Originals Tim Dierkes' MLB Mailbag

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Trade Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript

By Steve Adams | February 2, 2026 at 1:58pm CDT

Steve Adams

  • Good morning! We'll get going at 2pm CT today, but feel free to ask questions ahead of time, as always!

Philly A's

  • Leo de Vries is slipping in the baseball america rankings, where all other outlets still have him as a top 5.  Does BA have a different matrix that they rank than others?

Steve Adams

  • Hello! Let's get going
  • I wouldn't say "falling" to No. 12 is a slip. The gap between the No. 5 and No. 12 prospect is more or less negligible. Maybe a half scouting grade. In this instance, you can look at the FV grades and see that's not even really the case.

Arthur Dent

  • With Logan Evans out for the season, can the Mariners afford to move any established pitching, like Bryce Miller for example, to upgrade the offense?

Steve Adams

  • The Mariners weren't ever keen on dealing one of their big league starters, and I would imagine that losing Evans only furthers reduces those chances.

John B

  • What do you think of the Giant's moves and do they push the team into contender status?

Steve Adams

  • I find them underwhelming as a whole. If they were going to spend $60-70MM in free agency, I'd have preferred they pursue some impact rather than just make a volume play to address a bunch of holes.The rotation still feels quite wobbly behind Webb. Arraez is a good value at 1/12 in a vacuum, but he's a poor fit for this roster if they're really going to play him at 2B every day.

    I'd love the Bader deal if they'd acquired a more impactful bat somewhere else, but adding him and Arraez to a lineup that already looked a bit light isn't all that encouraging.

wiseoldfool

  • Outlook on Drake Baldwin. Will Braves trade S. Murphy?

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Is Anyone Even Trying To Win The AL Central?

By Steve Adams | January 30, 2026 at 11:56pm CDT

Yet another offseason of hyperaggressive spending and mind-boggling CBT payrolls from the Dodgers and Mets (and, this winter, the Blue Jays) has led to increased talk of competitive balance ahead of the impending conclusion of the 2022-26 collective bargaining agreement. Owners are again expected to push for a salary cap -- though that's a perpetual goal and would absolutely have been the case regardless of how the usual suspects spent in free agency this winter -- and they'll have plenty of fan support in that regard.

Fans, particularly those of small market teams, feel a clear sense of defeatism, knowing their clubs will rarely (or in some cases never) be players for the top names in free agency. The Dodgers were close enough to losing in the World Series that it's not fair to say they can freely buy themselves a championship -- the Mets spent more in 2025 and missed the postseason entirely -- but it's fair to say they're spending enough to give themselves something like a 95% chance of making the postseason and entering as the favorite.

The other side of the cap argument, of course, is that it would assuredly usher in the implementation of a salary floor -- a level at which teams must spend on payroll or else be subject to some degree of penalization. There's already a weak "floor" in place for revenue-sharing clubs, but it seems to lack any semblance of teeth. The A's felt compelled to spend enough to push their CBT payroll up to $105MM last year -- roughly 1.5 times the amount they receive annually from revenue-sharing -- but that was seemingly because they're the only club to have been actually stripped of revenue-sharing status in the past. The Marlins were supposedly in the same boat this winter, and they've thumbed their nose at the idea of spending, as evidenced by a CBT payroll in the $80MM range.

I can see the arguments for a cap/floor system. I'm skeptical that it would actually force the game's lowest-payroll clubs to spend in meaningful ways, but that's another topic -- and one that we'll surely debate ad nauseum in the year to come as CBA talks intensify.

But whether it's a salary floor, firm penalties for not spending revenue-sharing funds in tangible ways, or greater access to draft/international resources for non-playoff clubs who remain competitive, something has to give. Right now, there's at least one entire division content to sit on its hands as the five respective front offices seemingly embody that same level of defeatism felt by their small- and mid-market fan bases.

If the Dodgers are a budding dynasty, it's unequivocally fair to say that's in part because of their limitless spending capacity. But it's also because there are teams seemingly content to throw their hands up and ask, "why even bother?" At a certain point, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy -- and I'd argue that at least with regard to the AL Central, we've reached that point. Let's look at each AL Central club's offseason to date.

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Chicago White Sox Cleveland Guardians Detroit Tigers Front Office Originals Kansas City Royals Minnesota Twins

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Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript

By Anthony Franco | January 30, 2026 at 11:56am CDT

Anthony Franco

  • Good afternoon, hope you're all well!
  • Decent amount to work with today, let's get rolling

Drake

  • Initial thoughts on the breaking news of Wilson/A’s 7 yr/$70 mil extension?

Anthony Franco

  • Love it for the A's. Wilson should've been well clear of the Lawrence Butler/Ezequiel Tovar tier in my view, thought he should've been a nine-figure guy already
  • Easier for me to say he should've turned down $70 million than it is for him to do it, and I don't begrudge anyone for locking in life-changing money and staying with a young core that's really promising, but I think he's leaving a lot on the table here

Arise, Sir Loin of Beef

  • I'm not real impressed with the Mets position player group or their bullpen. What am I missing?

Anthony Franco

  • I share your skepticism on the bullpen even as a fan of the Williams deal. It's a weird position player group because so many guys are bouncing around but you've got the elite talent with Soto, Bichette and Lindor and another five players (Alvarez, Robert, Polanco, Semien, Baty) who could be above-average regulars
  • Obviously Polanco/Robert have durability questions and Semien's probably a max 3-WAR guy at this point, but they've also got Benge lurking and Vientos hanging around. It should be a top 5-10 offense in MLB

Joshua

  • I would love to see CJ Abrams with the Pirates. Do you think the Nats would do a Seth Hernandez, Hunter Barco, Termarr Johnson deal? Is that close?
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MLB Mailbag: Giants, Framber Valdez, Eugenio Suarez

By Tim Dierkes | January 28, 2026 at 11:59pm CDT

This week's mailbag gets into the Giants' rotation, why Framber Valdez remains unsigned, a thorough look at where Eugenio Suarez could land, the Tigers and Nationals, and more collective bargaining thoughts.

Paul asks:

Who makes sense for the Giants to add to their rotation?

Daryn asks:

Why is Framber Valdez not signed yet? He is the best starting pitcher in the market. Is it his age and asking for a lot of years, or it is the clubhouse thing we hear about?

At present, the Giants' rotation looks like this:

  • Logan Webb
  • Robbie Ray
  • Tyler Mahle
  • Adrian Houser
  • Landen Roupp

Like every team, they'll need reinforcements for injuries.  Ray is 34 and 2025 was his first full season in three years.  Houser is 33 and tossed a career-high 164 1/3 innings last year (Triple-A included).  Roupp missed 24 days with elbow inflammation and then saw his season end in August with a deep bone bruise to his knee.  Mahle missed over three months with shoulder soreness.

On the Mahle conference call, Giants GM Zack Minasian said, "I don’t know if we’re ever done. I think we’re very comfortable with the five that we have and then the bundle of arms behind them. Our depth is in a much better spot than it was at the beginning of the offseason, so we’re happy with where we’re at. We’ll keep working at it, but we do think this is a solid five-man rotation going into the spring."  That quote comes via Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle.

That bundle behind the starting five may include Hayden Birdsong, Kai-Wei Teng, Carson Seymour, Blade Tidwell, and Carson Whisenhunt, all of whom made big league starts last year.  Trevor McDonald and Keaton Winn are options as well.

The Giants are paying $21MM in AAV for Houser and Mahle this year, but neither can be counted on for a 2-WAR season.  I don't know that Zac Gallen would be enough of an improvement over the Giants' existing back-end options, but slotting Framber Valdez in behind Webb would be huge.  The Giants have a good team at present, but Valdez could add a crucial three wins over whoever he replaces.

Back in November, Giants owner Greg Johnson expressed reluctance to sign a pitcher to a long-term deal.  Just before that, MLBTR predicted a five-year deal for the 32-year-old Valdez.  Ranger Suarez signed a five-year deal two weeks ago, so it is possible to get that type of contract in January.  That said, we haven't seen a free agent starter get five years on January 28th or later since Yu Darvish in 2018.  As we get closer to pitchers and catchers reporting, the chance of Valdez getting a true five-year deal like Suarez decrease.

There are several factors that likely contribute to Valdez being unsigned on January 28th:

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Front Office Originals Tim Dierkes' MLB Mailbag

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Where Can The Guardians Spend The Money Saved On The Ramírez Deal?

By Anthony Franco | January 28, 2026 at 11:09pm CDT

The Guardians hammered out their third extension with José Ramírez over the weekend. While the team still hasn't announced the contract as of Wednesday evening, it reportedly runs through his age-39 season. It more or less confirms that Ramírez will be a one-team superstar, but the biggest impact in the short term is that it involved a restructure to give the team some spending room.

Ramírez will reportedly be paid $25MM annually over the next seven seasons. $10MM of each season's salary is deferred until 2036. He'd been slated for a non-deferred $21MM salary this season. They saved $6MM against the 2026 payroll and $8MM and $10MM, respectively, over the following two years.

Any mention of the Guardians spending money is going to be met with sarcasm and skepticism. That's warranted given their usual spending habits, but this year's payroll would be extreme even by their standards. There'll almost certainly be a notable acquisition or two before Opening Day.

Cleveland has 12 players, including their arbitration class, signed for the upcoming season. Their salaries break down as follows:

  • Ramírez: $25MM ($10MM deferred)
  • Steven Kwan: $7.725MM
  • Emmanuel Clase: $6MM
  • Shawn Armstrong: $5.5MM (including option buyout)
  • Trevor Stephan: $4.75MM (including option buyout)
  • Tanner Bibee: $4MM
  • Austin Hedges: $4MM
  • Nolan Jones: $2MM
  • Colin Holderman: $1.5MM
  • David Fry: $1.375MM
  • Matt Festa: $1MM
  • Connor Brogdon: $900K

They'll also pay the Blue Jays $2.75MM as a condition of the Myles Straw trade. It's a total of $66.5MM in commitments, and even that dramatically overstates how much they'll actually spend. Ramírez is being paid $15MM this year, dropping their short-term obligations to $56.5MM.

There's also a strong chance they don't wind up paying anything to Clase. His criminal trial for alleged game-fixing won't begin until May, but it's possible MLB imposes its own discipline before the start of the season. It'd be a shock if the star reliever played another MLB game and Cleveland brass will obviously hope for the league to level a suspension that gets them off the hook for next year's salary.

If that happens, they'll be down to $50.5MM in guaranteed commitments. Filling out the roster with players on near league minimum salaries would push them into the $63-65MM range. According to The Associated Press, the Marlins were the only team with a season-opening payroll below $74.9MM last year. Cleveland ranked 25th in MLB with a $102.5MM mark.

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Cleveland Guardians Front Office Originals

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Trade Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript

By Steve Adams | January 26, 2026 at 2:58pm CDT

Steve Adams

  • Good afternoon! Hope the weekend treated everyone well. I will get going in a couple hours, at 3pm CT, but feel free to send in some questions ahead of time if you are so inclined!
  • Let's get going!

Mr Redlegs

  • What's the restriction on when you can trade a newly signed player? e.g. if the White Sox wanted, could they assume Seranthony Dominguez salary and trade him for a prospect now verses waiting until the deadline?

Steve Adams

  • Any player signing as a free agent cannot be traded until the following June 15 unless he consents to it.

Amazins

  • Do you see Peralta sigining extension with Mets? How much would get it done?

Steve Adams

  • I assume they'll try to extend him, yes. David Stearns has shown pretty definitively that he prefers to eschew long-term commitments, particularly to pitchers. He knows Peralta well from Milwaukee and knows Peralta has signed one deal prioritizing comfort and security over maxing out on the open market.I imagine they'll aim for something like four years total (beginning in 2027, since he's already signed for 2026) and at a massive AAV. Something like $140-160MM total from 2027-30. He'd be 34 at the end of that contract.

Drake

  • So who plays RF for the Giants? Lee or Bader?

Steve Adams

  • Jung Hoo Lee was statistically one of the worst CFs in baseball last year, but his arm strength rated well. Bader is elite in CF. He'll play there. Lee will slide to the corner.

Al

  • What do you see is the most likely scenario for Matt Shaw.

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The Astros Have Work To Do In The Outfield

By Steve Adams | January 23, 2026 at 3:37pm CDT

For much of the offseason, the focus surrounding the Astros was how they'd improve their rotation and general starting pitching depth. It was an understandable qualm. Framber Valdez became a free agent, and while he's still lingering on the market, a reunion with Houston never felt all that likely, given the contract he'll likely command and the team's aversion to long-term deals of that magnitude. Hayden Wesneski had Tommy John surgery late last May. Ronel Blanco followed a couple weeks later. Lefty Brandon Walter was an out-of-the-blue success story ... at least until he also underwent Tommy John surgery -- his in mid-September.

The 'Stros have done well to bolster the starting staff. Their surprise deal with NPB star Tatsuya Imai gives them a potential high-end arm to replace Valdez. A trade acquisition of Pittsburgh righty Mike Burrows plugged a young, controllable arm into the fourth spot on the staff. Cheap rolls of the dice on former top prospect Nate Pearson and former D-backs/Royals farmhand Ryan Weiss, who's coming back over after a terrific two years in the Korea Baseball Organization, added some depth.

A six-man group consisting of Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier, Imai, Burrows, Weiss and Lance McCullers Jr. could be solid -- particularly if McCullers can be even serviceable. Depth arms abound. Spencer Arrighetti, J.P. France, AJ Blubaugh, Colton Gordon, Jason Alexander and Miguel Ullola are all on the 40-man roster and all have minor league options remaining. Twenty-three-year-old Ethan Pecko had a nice season between Double-A and Triple-A last season and could get a look in 2026.

There are still clearly some question marks, but the Astros added an intriguing young arm (Burrows), a high-upside international star (Imai) and an under-the-radar 29-year-old coming off a big KBO showing (Weiss). Things look much better than they did a few months back.

The same can't be said in the outfield. To this point in the offseason, the biggest move the Astros have made, outfield-wise, is non-tendering Chas McCormick. Unless the Astros plan to use Yordan Alvarez in left field on the regular -- which is very unlikely to be the case -- it's easy to argue that they don't have even one everyday outfielder who can be confidently projected as a league-average hitter.

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