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MLBTR Originals

Offseason In Review: Washington Nationals

By Jeff Todd | April 5, 2016 at 10:24am CDT

This is the latest entry in MLBTR’s Offseason In Review series. The full index of Offseason In Review posts can be found here.

The Nationals missed on several major free-agent targets, but added multiple veteran pieces to a still-talented core.

Major League Signings

  • 2B Daniel Murphy: Three years, $37.5MM
  • RP Shawn Kelley: Three years, $15MM
  • RP Oliver Perez: Two years, $7MM
  • INF Stephen Drew: One year, $3MM
  • RP Yusmeiro Petit: One year, $2MM
  • Total spend: $64.5MM

Notable Minor League Signings

  • Bronson Arroyo, Burke Badenhop, Matt Belisle, Sean Burnett, Chris Heisey, Reed Johnson, Aaron Laffey, Nick Masset, Brendan Ryan, Logan Schafer (since released), Scott Sizemore, Jhonatan Solano

Trades And Claims

  • Acquired OF Ben Revere from Blue Jays for RP Drew Storen and $2.125MM
  • Acquired RP Trevor Gott and SP/RP Michael Brady from Angels for INF Yunel Escobar and $1.5MM

Extensions

  • None

Notable Losses

  • Ian Desmond, Doug Fister, Casey Janssen, Nate McLouth, Denard Span, Craig Stammen, Matt Thornton, Dan Uggla, Jordan Zimmermann

Needs Addressed

The Nationals entered the winter with more roster questions than they’d faced in quite some time, and proceeded to answer them with a modest and methodical series of transactions. Along the way, though, Washington dabbled in some higher-priced assets.

The first order of business was to plug arms into a bullpen that was in need of multiple new options. With Casey Janssen (declined option), Craig Stammen (non-tender), and Matt Thornton (expired contract) moving off of the roster, and several injuries and performance issues limiting the in-house options, this represented the clearest roster hole for the club.

Thus, even while president and GM Mike Rizzo was trying to woo the heavily-pursued Ben Zobrist, he quietly added southpaw Oliver Perez and swingman Yusmeiro Petit to begin the process of rebuilding the pen. While the Nats missed on Zobrist, they still followed through on a deal to send out infielder Yunel Escobar to the Angels, thus adding an interesting young reliever in Trevor Gott. And when they lost out on ace setup man Darren O’Day — who returned to the Orioles when they promised a fourth season — Rizzo and co. went out and got the underrated Shawn Kelley, who received three years and $15MM in a deal that took some time to be finalized. Of course, the Nats were also collecting minor league free agents all along the way. The spring pen competition included not only incumbents such as Blake Treinen, but veteran bounceback candidates including sinkerballer Burke Badenhop, former Nats lefty Sean Burnett, and longtime big leaguers Nick Masset and Matt Belisle.

Those moves bolstered the relief corps, but failed to address the situations of the team’s two best relievers: Jonathan Papelbon, fresh off of a rather public altercation with star Bryce Harper just months after coming over from the rival Phillies, and Drew Storen, the twice-deposed closer who the Nats had drafted and developed. And the reliever additions left unaddressed — or exacerbated — other needs. Having parted with Escobar to get Gott, the Nats lacked a clear option at second. The two obvious options — Anthony Rendon and Danny Espinosa — were already set to move to the left side of the infield, which had already lost Ian Desmond to free agency. And Denard Span also hit the open market, leaving the relatively untested-but-toolsy Michael Taylor atop the depth chart in center.

Feb 20, 2016; Viera, FL, USA; Washington Nationals second baseman Daniel Murphy works out at Space Coast Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Logan Bowles-USA TODAY Sports

Rizzo first inked Daniel Murphy, who signed for less than expected — and far less than some were unrealistically calling for after his torrid post-season run. A qualifying offer certainly reduced the tab in terms of dollars, but meant that the Nats had to cough up a pick. The long-time Mets stalwart isn’t much of a fielder at second, but brings the lineup a much-needed left-handed contact bat with some pop. He’ll join Rendon, first baseman Ryan Zimmerman, and catcher Wilson Ramos as regulars in the infield. Espinosa appears to have the reins at short, but he’ll be accompanied by veteran Stephen Drew and could eventually be displaced by top prospect Trea Turner.

The Nats then solved two open issues in one move, sending Storen to the Blue Jays to acquire two seasons of Ben Revere — who is a somewhat lesser and more extreme version of Span himself. Revere hits for little power and draws few walks, and his glove hasn’t always rated well in center, but he hits for a high average and is one of the game’s most electric baserunners.

Revere, Taylor, and Jayson Werth look to be set up for some kind of outfield rotation, with Bryce Harper sure to see near-full duty as he tries to repeat his MVP campaign from a year ago. That’s a sensible mix, which provides its share of flexibility and upside, but the team tried to do even more. Washington was among the teams that tried to get Jason Heyward before he joined Zobrist with the Cubs, and later lost out to the Mets in pursuit of Yoenis Cespedes (after already adding Revere).

The outfield-related moves and non-moves just mentioned combine to set the stage for some of the many questions still confronting the Nats in 2016 …

Read more

Questions Remaining

When the offseason started, it seemed possible that Rizzo would look to deal away both Storen and Papelbon. The former had become something of a symbol of the team’s failure to live up to its promise in recent years, and his departure was one of several that closed a chapter on an interesting period in the organization’s history. As for the controversial Papelbon, he likely provided a difficult asset to get any kind of value on, and both he and the organization seem committed to giving things another try. While he isn’t his former self — and hasn’t been for some time — he’s still quite an effective late-inning arm, though he did struggle down the stretch as the team collapsed.

Clubhouse dynamics are a hard thing to evaluate, but the Nationals’ dugout has come under close scrutiny of late. The Papelbon-Harper incident, failed tenure of former manager Matt Williams, and unrequited interest in several prominent veteran free agents has led to many questions.

Of course, failing to land Zobrist, O’Day, Heyward, and Cespedes likely had as much or more to do with financial considerations as any wariness toward the organization. While the latter two reportedly would have received greater guarantees had they signed in D.C., the opt-out provisions and average annual values they achieved arguably made the offers they took preferable. And the Nationals’ own proposed pacts were said to include heavy deferrals, like those built into Max Scherzer’s contract from the prior winter, with the team claiming it has been harmed by the still-unresolved MASN television dispute with the neighboring Orioles.

In any event, solving any chemistry issues will fall to the charge of veteran skipper Dusty Baker, a personable and player-friendly manager more in the mold of Williams’ predecessor, Davey Johnson. Of course, he wasn’t necessarily the first choice of the organization, which seemed set to hire Bud Black before failing to agree on a deal — leading some to charge the Nats with stinginess by failing to offer a market-length contract. Baker was happy to take the opportunity to return to the helm of a high-talent team, and he’s shown every bit of his legendary effervescence this spring.

While he’s renowned for his player management, Baker has come under fire in the past for in-game strategy, particularly in handling arms. He’ll have a good bit of talent at his disposal in the staff, albeit less certainty than in prior years. Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg, and Gio Gonzalez are the undisputed top three. That trio has plenty of upside, but Strasburg and Gonzalez struggled with consistency (and, in the case of the former, health) in 2015.

The departures of Jordan Zimmermann and Doug Fister leave the final two rotation slots to Tanner Roark and youngster Joe Ross. Both have shown promise, but have yet to entrench themselves as reliable starters. The team was hoping that Bronson Arroyo would add depth, but he’s out at least til midseason with shoulder issues. Washington also pursued Mike Leake at one point over the winter, though perhaps that would’ve worked in concert with a trade of some kind. There are still options on hand, with A.J. Cole perhaps the nearest prospect arm, and the Nationals have the top pitching prospect in baseball — towering righty Lucas Giolito — charging swiftly up the ladder. Still, there’s an argument to be made that the Nats would’ve been well served by making at least a modest investment into another starter to ensure there’s adequate depth.

There were enough options in the bullpen for the organization to part with Burnett — who turned in an excellent spring — and open with Gott in the minors. That was certainly surprising, but he does need plenty of work on his secondary offerings to come anywhere near the ceiling his upper-90s heater provides. He’s likely the first man up, and could see a chance rather quickly if Treinen or Belisle falter. Badenhop, too, remains an option. Washington would surely love to see Treinen, Gott, and southpaw Felipe Rivero all end up with results matching their high-powered stuff, as the members of that group — along with the injured Aaron Barrett — have the talent to constitute the core of the relief corps for years to come.

As with the arms, the position player mix is largely set but comes with performance and health questions. Werth, Rendon, and Zimmerman have all shown quite a bit of variability in recent years. Each has spent long stretches playing at a high rate, scuffled at other times, and encountered lengthy DL stints. Taylor has tantalizing skills but needs to cut down on his strikeouts quite a bit to reach his ceiling. Espinosa had a decent 2015 after his productivity had plummeted, and the team will only be looking for steadiness. But he won’t have a long leash if Turner excels upon his return to Triple-A. Ramos was finally healthy last year, but just didn’t perform. (He’s hoping that mid-spring Lasik surgery will help, and certainly has every reason to be motivated with the market beckoning after the season.)

The bench mix is likely to change as the season goes along. Jose Lobaton could lose his job to Pedro Severino if he continues to struggle. Clint Robinson will provide a left-handed complement to Zimmerman at first while also performing late-inning pinch-hitting duties, but he’ll need to keep hitting after finally sticking in the majors last year. And Drew’s all-or-nothing bat could prove a weapon or a liability. Chris Heisey earned the final spot, but players like Matt den Dekker, Brendan Ryan, and Scott Sizemore may get chances down the line.

As the season goes along, there’ll be increasing attention paid to the status of Rizzo, whose two-year contract option is reportedly due to be decided on June 15. As Barry Svrluga of the Washington Post explained recently on the MLBTR podcast, it’s hard to imagine that the ownership group won’t retain the veteran executive. He’s had some moves backfire, but the majority have succeeded — particularly in the trade department. In the aggregate, he’s played a huge role in transforming the organization from a baseball backwater to an expected annual contender.

Regardless of what happens with Rizzo, the Nats will need to keep plugging away at finding a resolution to the MASN television dispute. If the impact on future payroll flexibility is anywhere near as severe as the organization has portrayed it, it’s essential that things get sorted sooner rather than later. Indeed, Rizzo has expressed some hope of bringing back Strasburg (who’ll be a free agent at season’s end) and even attempting to keep Harper in D.C. past 2018. Financial certainty will be critical to either effort, or finding new talent to fill in the gaps.

Deal of Note

Truth be told, none of this winter’s deals were as important as those that took place in years past — or the free agent pursuits that never came to fruition. But the final decision on Storen certainly rates as a notable one given his unique place in the organization’s story.

Originally drafted tenth overall in the 2010 draft, Storen was to the pen what Strasburg was to the rotation: a quick-to-the-majors centerpiece and fan favorite. Both have had their ups and downs, making good on their talent while somehow falling just short of expectations and landing at the center of controversies through no fault of their own.

In Storen’s case, his departure came along with those of fellow former franchise icons Desmond and Zimmermann, thus closing a chapter of the organization’s history. The 2012 through 2015 Nats never got it done when it mattered most, and only ended up making the postseason in two of four years, but nevertheless provided a sustained stretch of contention for the first time since the organization moved to D.C.

Feb 28, 2016; Viera, FL, USA; Washington Nationals outfielder Ben Revere (9) poses for a photo during media day at Space Coast Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Logan Bowles-USA TODAY Sports

As for the swap itself, the Nationals certainly could still have used Storen’s arm in the pen. But having bumped him from the closer’s role not once but twice — first with Rafael Soriano, who he ultimately overtook, and then with Papelbon, even after Storen’s outstanding first half of 2015 — the front office probably felt a change of scenery was best for all involved.

Washington did well in adding Revere. He’s more of a sturdy contributor than any kind of star, of course, but he brings just what the team needed (at least, if it wasn’t going to make a bigger move). The left-handed-hitting Revere is the perfect complement for a club that has an aging Werth and talented-but-untested Taylor — both of whom hit from the right side. Storen could be the more impactful player, though of course he’s limited to pen duty, but Revere comes with one more year of arb control. He could turn into a non-tender candidate, but that’s effectively a one-year option that will give the club some much-needed flexibility come next fall.

Overview

It wasn’t a terribly exciting winter for Nats fans — unless you count the anxious moments watching as several big-ticket free agents signed elsewhere — but that was largely expected. After all, Rizzo had already lined up the long-term replacements for Desmond (Turner), Zimmermann (Ross), Fister (Roark), and Span (Taylor), and had other young pitching nearing MLB readiness.

The overarching goal, then, was to plug in veterans at reasonable rates of pay both to bridge to the next group of youngsters and to supplement the existing group of regulars. Ultimately, the offseason was more of a bet on the team’s pre-existing talent than it was any effort to improve from the outside.

While the expectations aren’t quite as high this year as last, there’s still ample pressure on the organization to be a winner. Anything short of a postseason berth would be yet another considerable disappointment — and would raise questions about how the organization has gone about converting its significant talent base into on-field results.

What’s your take on the Nationals’ winter? (Link to poll for mobile app users …)

How would you grade the Nationals' offseason?
B 54.26% (560 votes)
C 28.88% (298 votes)
A 6.98% (72 votes)
D 6.30% (65 votes)
F 3.59% (37 votes)
Total Votes: 1,032

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

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2015-16 Offseason In Review MLBTR Originals Washington Nationals

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MLBTR Originals

By Zachary Links and Brad Johnson | April 3, 2016 at 9:45pm CDT

A look back at the original reporting and analysis found on MLBTR the last seven days:

  • In the early stages of the offseason, free agents David Price, Johnny Cueto, and Jason Heyward all inked lucrative deals which included opt-out clauses.  In January, Matt Swartz wrote an article for MLBTR to approximate the value of those clauses.  Days ago, he offered his analysis of the opt-outs given to Yoenis Cespedes, Justin Upton, Scott Kazmir, Ian Kennedy, and Wei-Yin Chen.  While many in baseball criticize teams for giving opt-out clauses, Swartz estimates that in these five deals, teams would have had to fork over about 10 to 15 percent more in a straight forward deal.
  • In part one of his interview with Dave Stewart, Brett Ballantini spoke with the D’Backs GM about his eventful offseason.  In Part II of the interview, Ballantini spoke with Stewart about his unusual path from player to powerful agent to general manager.
  • The MLBTR Podcast last Thursday included play-by-play man Len Kasper on the Cubs and Ben Nicholson-Smith of Sportsnet.ca on the Blue Jays and the extension market.
  • Speaking of Chen, the Marlins laid out big bucks to land the left-hander.  MLBTR’s Jeff Todd looked back on Miami’s offseason moves, including the Chen deal and Dee Gordon’s extension.
  • To kickstart MLBTR’s brand new College Series, Chuck Wasserstrom interviewed Reds Senior Vice President/General Manager Dick Williams about his days at the University of Virginia.
  • Charlie Wilmoth reflected on the Cardinals’ offseason including the loss of Heyward and John Lackey to a division rival. Will additions to rotation and bullpen be enough?
  • Mark Polishuk analyzed the Yankees’ unlikely offseason. The infamous big spenders committed $0 to major league free agents. They did make a number of notable trades, acquiring Aroldis Chapman, Aaron Hicks, and Starlin Castro in three separate moves.
  • Mark also offered his take on the Blue Jays offseason which began with an unexpected need to replace former GM Alex Anthopoulos after their most successful season in over two decades.
  • On Saturday, MLBTR was the first to report that Alex Presley would not make the Brewers and has a 48-hour window to be signed elsewhere.
  • On Sunday, MLBTR was the first to report on the deal sending Chris Leroux from the Phillies to the Blue Jays.
  • MLBTR was also the first to report the Dodgers signing of reliever Dale Thayer to a minor league contract. Earlier in the week Thayer had opted out of a minors deal with the Orioles.
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MLBTR Originals

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Blue Jays Acquire Chris Leroux From Phillies

By Zachary Links | April 3, 2016 at 4:20pm CDT

4:20pm: Toronto announced that Leroux has been acquired from the Phillies in exchange for cash considerations.  The 6’6″ hurler will pitch for Triple-A Buffalo.

3:34pm: The Blue Jays have acquired Chris Leroux from the Phillies, a source tells MLBTR (Twitter link).  It’s not yet clear who and/or what will be going from Toronto to Philly in the swap.

The deal marks a homecoming of sorts for Leroux, who is a Montreal native.    Leroux, who turns 32 later this month, last pitched in the big leagues in 2014 when he appeared in two games for the Yankees.  Over parts of six big league seasons with the Marlins, Pirates, and Yankees, the hurler has a 6.03 ERA with 8.3 K/9 and 4.4 BB/9.  In his 22-game stint with the Phillies’ Triple-A affiliate in 2015, Leroux posted a stronger stat line as he pitched to a 3.26 ERA with 5.9 K/9 and 2.8 BB/9.

In other Blue Jays news, the team signed Franklin Morales to a one-year, $2MM non-guaranteed deal over the weekend.  And, on Friday, Mark Polishuk delivered a must-read in-depth recap of the Blue Jays’ offseason.

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MLBTR Originals Philadelphia Phillies Toronto Blue Jays Transactions Chris Leroux

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Dodgers Sign Dale Thayer To Minors Contract

By Mark Polishuk | April 2, 2016 at 5:04pm CDT

The Dodgers have signed right-hander Dale Thayer to a minor league deal, MLBTR’s Tim Dierkes reports (via Twitter).  Thayer became a free agent earlier this week when he opted out of a previous minor league contract with the Orioles.  The righty is represented by O’Connell Sports Management.

2015 was a tough season for Thayer, as he posted a 4.06 ERA in 37 2/3 innings while posting the highest walk rate (3.6 BB/9) and lowest strikeout rate (6.0 K/9) of his career over a full season.  He was outrighted off the Padres’ 40-man roster in August and he elected free agency after the season.

Thayer posted some strong numbers out of San Diego’s bullpen from 2012-14, including a 3.02 ERA, 8.3 K/9 and 3.46 K/BB rate over 188 innings.  He spent his first two MLB seasons in Tampa Bay, so he’s a known quantity to Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman.  L.A. already has a pretty solid complement of right-handed relievers, though the club can probably use all the bullpen help it can get given the injuries in the rotation.

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Los Angeles Dodgers MLBTR Originals Transactions Dale Thayer

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Alex Presley Will Not Make Brewers, Has 48-Hour Window To Be Added Elsewhere

By charliewilmoth | April 2, 2016 at 10:26am CDT

Alex Presley has been told he will not make the Brewers’ Opening Day roster, MLBTR has learned. There will now be a 48-hour period in which other teams can decide whether they want to add Presley to their active rosters, and if someone does, the Brewers must allow him to depart or assign him to their own active roster.

Presley hit well in Spring Training while competing for a Brewers outfield job as a non-roster invitee, batting .289/.396/.556 in 53 plate appearances, but the Brewers’ decision indicates that they prefer Keon Broxton and Kirk Nieuwenhuis, with whom he was competing for two available outfield jobs. Presley is a career .259/.299/.393 hitter in parts of six seasons with the Pirates, Twins and Astros. He played briefly for Houston last season, spending most of the year with Triple-A Fresno.

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MLBTR Originals Milwaukee Brewers Transactions Alex Presley

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Offseason In Review: Toronto Blue Jays

By Mark Polishuk | April 1, 2016 at 9:20pm CDT

This post is part of a series reviewing the offseasons of every team in baseball. You can find all of the posts published to date at this link.

The Blue Jays are counting on some new-yet-familiar pitching depth to help them make a return trip to the postseason.

Major League Signings

  • J.A. Happ, SP: Three years, $36MM
  • Marco Estrada, SP: Two years, $26MM
  • Darwin Barney, 2B: One year, $1.05MM
  • Gavin Floyd, SP: One year, $1MM
  • Josh Thole, C: One year, $800K
  • Total spend: $64.85MM

Trades And Claims

  • Acquired RP Drew Storen and cash from Nationals for OF Ben Revere and a player to be named later
  • Acquired SP/RP Jesse Chavez from Athletics for RP Liam Hendriks
  • Acquired OF Darrell Ceciliani from Mets for cash or player to be named later
  • Acquired RP Arnold Leon from Athletics for cash or player to be named later
  • Claimed 1B Jesus Montero off waivers from Mariners
  • Claimed OF Junior Lake off waivers from Orioles
  • Claimed SP Joe Biagini from Giants in the Rule 5 Draft

Notable Minor League Signings

  • Domonic Brown, David Aardsma, Tony Sanchez, Alexi Casilla, Colt Hynes, Wade LeBlanc, Scott Copeland, Casey Kotchman, Scott Diamond, Pat McCoy, Humberto Quintero, David Adams (Toronto also signed Rafael Soriano and Brad Penny but both pitchers chose to retire)

Extensions

  • Josh Donaldson, 3B: Two years, $28.65MM

Notable Losses

  • David Price, Mark Buehrle, Dioner Navarro, Mark Lowe, LaTroy Hawkins (retired), Maicer Izturis (retired), Munenori Kawasaki, Cliff Pennington, Steve Delabar, Revere, Hendriks

Needs Addressed

Few expected the Blue Jays to have a general manager vacancy to fill this offseason, though Alex Anthopoulos’ surprising decision to turn down a new contract left team president/CEO Mark Shapiro looking for a new point man in the front office.  Ross Atkins ended up being the choice in early December, reuniting Atkins and Shapiro from their days together in Cleveland.  Whereas Anthopoulos had more or less free reign over player personnel moves when Paul Beeston was the Jays president, Shapiro’s baseball operations background puts him at the top of the personnel ladder with Atkins as the second-in-command.

With longtime assistant GM Tony LaCava serving as interim GM until Atkins was hired, the Jays accomplished some of their major winter goals fairly early, as Marco Estrada re-signed with the team just a week after free agency opened.  The two-year/$26MM contract is a reasonable spend for a 32-year-old pitcher who may not be a sure thing to repeat his 2015 career year, yet whose outstanding changeup and ability to induce weak contact tend to hint that Estrada’s arsenal can age well.  (We’ll cover the Estrada deal more extensively later in the “Deal Of Note” section.)

The Jays also made another significant pitching acquisition in November when they brought Jesse Chavez back to Toronto in a deal that sent Liam Hendriks to the A’s.  Toronto gave up four years of control over Hendriks and added payroll in Chavez (who will earn $4MM after winning an arbitration case) as well as a pitcher who is a better fit in a long relief or possible swingman role.

J.A. HappJ.A. Happ is another familiar face returning to Toronto, as the southpaw dealt to Seattle last season for Michael Saunders is now back in the rotation on a three-year/$36MM deal.  Such a contract would’ve been hard to imagine for Happ when he was struggling through his first 21 games of the season with the Mariners, yet a deadline trade to the Pirates and acclaimed pitching coach Ray Searage worked wonders.  Happ posted a 1.85 ERA, 9.8 K/9 and 5.31 K/BB rate over 63 1/3 innings with the Bucs, easily the best extended stretch of his nine-year career.

Happ’s 172 innings last season was a career high, though he’s topped the 144-inning plateau four other times in his career (and likely would’ve done so in 2013 had he not missed time after being hit in the head with a line drive).  Even if Happ reverts to his pre-Pirates career numbers, he’s a solid back-of-the-rotation arm who could have a higher upside if he really unlocked something in Pittsburgh.

The theme of adding veteran pitching continued with the signing of Gavin Floyd to a one-year deal that’s essentially a lottery ticket.  Floyd earns $1MM in base salary and up to $1MM more is available in roster incentives, so on the off-chance that Floyd stays healthy and returns to his 2008-12 White Sox form, the Jays get a huge bargain.  For that matter, Floyd is still a bargain if he pitches well out of the bullpen, as the Jays recently announced that he’ll start the season as a reliever.

Floyd pitched well in Spring Training during a well-publicized fifth starter’s battle with Aaron Sanchez (and to a lesser extent, Chavez and Drew Hutchison), and Toronto eventually decided to go with the promising youngster over the veteran.  Since Sanchez is under an innings cap, however, he will eventually be moved back into the bullpen likely around July or August, which opens the door for Floyd, Chavez, Hutchison or perhaps a trade deadline pickup to join the rotation.

Sanchez’s move to the rotation was aided by the Jays’ acquisition of Drew Storen to bolster the relief corps, as Storen and Brett Cecil will serve as the setup men to second-year closer Roberto Osuna in a strong late-game trio.  Storen was undoubtedly hoping he would earn the closer’s job as he heads into a contract year, though Osuna was so impressive last season and this spring that the Jays felt the sophomore righty didn’t deserve a demotion.

With five bullpen jobs set and Aaron Loup battling a forearm injury, switch-pitcher Pat Venditte or veteran specialist Randy Choate could join Cecil as the second southpaw in the relief corps.  (Choate has been released by the team but the Jays are hoping he re-signs on another minor league deal as Triple-A depth at the very least.)  Cecil will be the only lefty reliever on the roster to begin the season, as Ryan Tepera, new acquisition Arnold Leon and Rule 5 draft pick Joe Biagini comprise the rest of the bullpen.

In other lower-level signings, Toronto brought back Josh Thole and Darwin Barney as bench depth and acquired Junior Lake and Darrell Ceciliani as outfield depth in the wake of Ben Revere’s departure to Washington.  The Jays also picked up a few players (Jesus Montero, Domonic Brown, Tony Sanchez) formerly regarded as top prospects in the hopes of finding a post-hype sleeper in the bunch.

On the extension front, Josh Donaldson inked a two-year deal that allowed he and the Jays to avoid arbitration this year and achieve cost-certainty for the 2017 season.  Donaldson is still arb-eligible one more time due to his Super Two status.  If he continues his MVP-level play, the third baseman could possibly set a new arbitration record for his 2018 salary, unless the Jays were to sign him to a longer-term extension in the interim.

Keep reading after the break for more analysis …

Read more

Questions Remaining

Speaking of long-term extensions, the futures of Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion loom as a subplot of the 2016 Blue Jays season.  Both sluggers are eligible for free agency this winter, and though teams have become more hesitant about signing players to deals through their mid-to-late 30’s (and in Bautista’s case, perhaps, early 40’s), the elite-hitting duo will get lots of interest on the open market.

The odds of them both reaching that open market seem to be growing by the day, as each man has said they don’t want to contract talks to drag into the season.  Bautista is reportedly looking for an extension north of five years and $150MM, while Encarnacion’s talks with the Jays have seemingly stalled over contract length.  As per the latest reports, there don’t appear to be any more talks scheduled between Encarnacion and the Jays, while Bautista’s adamant stance against any negotiations whatsoever may be a bit flexible when it comes to deal length.

There will undoubtedly be a lot of speculation as the season progresses if neither player signs an extension, though for now, the Jays’ dealings with Bautista and Encarnacion might be a topic best saved for next winter.  The two sluggers obviously motivated to deliver big seasons for both themselves and to help the team reach the World Series, so for the short term, Bautista and Encarnacion aren’t issues.

It may be instructional, however, to look at David Price’s free agency as an example of how the Blue Jays may be willing to let a star player leave if the cost is just too high.  The Jays never made a serious attempt to retain the ace lefty, as Shapiro noted that re-signing Price would’ve taken all of the team’s offseason budget.  Price is also a 30-year-old with a long history of durability; as good as Bautista and Encarnacion are, their next contracts will begin in their respective age-36 and age-34 seasons, and both have significant injury histories.

While re-signing Price was unlikely to happen, it could be argued the Jays should’ve looked for a bigger pitching upgrade than Estrada or Happ.  The rotation consists of those two veterans, a steady-but-unspectacular innings-eater in R.A. Dickey, the inexperienced Sanchez and a burgeoning ace in Marcus Stroman who is nonetheless unproven over a full season.

Toronto needs Stroman to truly emerge as a front-of-the-rotation arm or Sanchez to break out for this rotation to be more than just solid.  It’s worth noting that this is a better collection of starters than the rotation the Jays had in the first half of 2015, though that club had the dual benefits of the Price trade and Stroman unexpectedly returning from a torn ACL to essentially replace a struggling Mark Buehrle in the rotation.

The Jays were checking in with Yovani Gallardo’s camp as late as mid-January, and even as Spring Training was wrapping up, they reportedly have interest in Miguel Gonzalez.  While these both could simply have been cases of due diligence on players Toronto didn’t expect to be on the market, they could also be hints that the team is still not quite satisfied with its pitching options.  As the first line of starter depth, Floyd is not exactly a stable choice given that he’s barely pitched over the last three seasons due to injuries.

Left field is perhaps also an area of dissatisfaction for Toronto given that the club attempted to acquire Jay Bruce and trade Michael Saunders as part of an ultimately fruitless three-team deal with the Reds and Angels.  Revere had an escalating arbitration price tag that was arguably too much for his production, yet the Jays also would’ve known what they were getting from Revere as the regular left fielder, whereas Saunders is something of a wild card after missing virtually all of 2015 recovering from knee surgery.  Saunders has hit very well in Spring Training action, though it remains to be seen how his knee will withstand a season on an artificial surface.  Ezequiel Carrera is the fourth outfielder with Lake, Ceciliani and Dalton Pompey available at Triple-A.  The Jays would probably prefer that Pompey gets more minor league seasoning with an eye towards using him regularly next year if Bautista and Saunders depart in free agency.

First base could also be an issue if Chris Colabello can’t sustain his (possibly BABIP-fueled) offensive production from 2015.  The Jays plan to use Colabello and Justin Smoak in a platoon at first with Encarnacion mostly relegated to DH duty.  If the Jays can sneak the out-of-options Montero through waivers, the former top prospect could provide some depth at first, though his dominance over minor league pitching has rarely shown itself in the bigs.

Speaking of prospect depth, former Pirates backstop Tony Sanchez was acquired to add depth behind Thole, who provides little value besides decent pitch-framing and the ability to catch Dickey’s knuckleball.  Dioner Navarro caught most of Estrada’s starts last season, so it will be interesting to see if Estrada could be affected by Navarro’s departure to the White Sox.

Devon Travis underwent surgery in November to try fix the shoulder problems that shortened his fine rookie season, and while there isn’t yet a firm timetable for his return, the Jays hope he’ll be back at second base in May or June.  Given Troy Tulowitzki’s checkered injury history, the Jays would’ve preferred Ryan Goins as a middle infield backup rather than a regular second baseman.  Beyond Barney and minor league signing Alexi Casilla, middle infield depth stands out as question mark for Toronto.  Just recently, the Blue Jays showed interest in Ruben Tejada before the shortstop signed with the Cardinals in Spring Training.

Deal Of Note

While Estrada didn’t exactly regret his decision to re-sign so early in the offseason, he told MLBTR’s Zach Links that he would’ve preferred more guaranteed years and perhaps a chance to more fully explore the free agent market.  It seems as if Estrada’s early acceptance of Toronto’s offer indicated both a desire to return to a contender and perhaps some uncertainty about how the draft pick compensation attached to him (via rejecting the qualifying offer) would’ve impacted his market.MLB: ALCS-Kansas City Royals at Toronto Blue Jays

Working mostly as a starter, Estrada has delivered good results in three of the last four seasons, with the one exception being his rough 2014 year with the Brewers that was hampered by an ungainly home run rate.  Still, with declining strikeout rates over the last four years and an arsenal that relies on soft contact, Estrada lacked the pure stuff, strong track record of success or even innings-eating durability owned by the other nine pitchers who received the QO this winter.

As we’ve seen in four offseasons of the qualifying offer, the market isn’t always kind to players in the second tier of free agency who have draft compensation hanging over their heads.  Gallardo, for instance, was on the market until late February before accepting a two-year, $22MM deal from the Orioles.  Despite being two and a half years older than his former Brewers teammate and owning a much shorter history as a reliable starter, Estrada got himself more guaranteed money than Gallardo and three months’ less uncertainty about his future.

Had Estrada languished in free agency, the Jays could’ve possibly saved some money by re-signing him for a lesser deal later in the winter.  That scenario, however, was a risky one for a Toronto club that had several holes to fill in the rotation — perhaps Estrada would’ve found another deal elsewhere, leaving the Blue Jays having to either spend more on another pitcher or settle for a less-familiar arm.  Signing Estrada so early allowed the Jays to immediately check one major need of their offseason shopping list and focus on other moves.

Overview

Between the Red Sox landing Price and Craig Kimbrel, the Yankees trading for Aroldis Chapman and Starlin Castro, the Orioles spending a fortune in free agency and even the Rays swinging multiple trades for young talent, Toronto’s offseason moves generated fewer headlines than their division rivals.  While the winter was short on Anthopoulos-esque surprise blockbusters, the fact is that outside of the rotation, the Jays had fewer glaring needs than the rest of the AL East.

Though the rotation still has its share of questions, it may not have to be any more than merely okay given the Jays’ position player strength.  Between Donaldson, Bautista, Encarnacion, Tulowitzki, Goins, Russell Martin, Kevin Pillar, the first base platoon and potentially Saunders, the offensive and defensive quality provided by these regulars is as good as any in baseball.  The bullpen goes at least three deep with quality late-game arms, and that could only be strengthened when Sanchez joins the mix later in the year.  A recipe of relentless offense and a strong bullpen was enough for the Royals to win a title last year, as the Jays saw first hand in their ALCS defeat to the eventual World Series champs.

As MLB.com’s Anthony Castrovince recently observed, the Blue Jays are an unusual example of a team that saw its window of contention fully open just as it was going through a front office change.  With so many major players (Bautista, Encarnacion, Dickey, Storen, Cecil, Chavez, Saunders) in their last year before free agency, the 2017 Blue Jays roster is likely to look quite different, so this season is the best chance to both cap off the Anthopoulos era and begin the Shapiro/Atkins era on the high note of another October run.

How do you feel the Blue Jays did this offseason? (Link to poll for mobile app users)

How Would You Grade The Blue Jays' Offseason?
B 54.30% (1,168 votes)
C 28.03% (603 votes)
A 9.81% (211 votes)
D 5.39% (116 votes)
F 2.46% (53 votes)
Total Votes: 2,151

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

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2015-16 Offseason In Review MLBTR Originals Toronto Blue Jays

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Offseason In Review: New York Yankees

By Mark Polishuk | April 1, 2016 at 4:44pm CDT

Do not adjust your screens — the Yankees did, in fact, actually go the entire offseason without signing a Major League free agent.  New York instead relied on the trade market for upgrades as the team looks for a much lengthier postseason visit even as it continues to keep a close eye on future payroll commitments.

Major League Signings

  • None
  • Total spend: $0

Trades And Claims

  • Acquired RP Aroldis Chapman from Reds for 3B Eric Jagielo, RP Caleb Cotham, SP Rookie Davis and 2B Tony Renda
  • Acquired 2B/SS Starlin Castro from Cubs for SP/RP Adam Warren and IF Brendan Ryan
  • Acquired OF Aaron Hicks from Twins for C John Ryan Murphy
  • Acquired SP Luis Cessa and SP Chad Green from Tigers for RP Justin Wilson
  • Acquired RP Tyler Olson and IF Ronald Torreyes from Dodgers for IF Rob Segedin and cash/player to be named later (Torreyes was later re-claimed off waivers after a brief stint with the Angels)
  • Acquired RP Kirby Yates from Indians for $78K
  • Acquired SP Ronald Herrera from Padres for IF Jose Pirela
  • Claimed OF Lane Adams off waivers from Royals

Notable Minor League Signings

  • Donovan Solano, Carlos Corporan, Anthony Swarzak, Chris Parmelee, Pete Kozma, Vinnie Pestano, Jonathan Diaz, Tyler Cloyd

Notable Losses

  • Chris Young, Stephen Drew, Chris Capuano, Chris Martin, Andrew Bailey, Warren, Ryan, Murphy

Needs Addressed

The Yankees have dealt from their catching depth by trading Francisco Cervelli and Chris Stewart over the last two offseasons, and New York moved yet another backstop by sending John Ryan Murphy to the Twins in exchange for Aaron Hicks.  It was an interesting one-for-one swap of young talent that filled a need for both clubs — Minnesota now has a long-term answer behind the plate, while Hicks can back up all three outfield positions and has good numbers against southpaws.  It was only a few years ago that Hicks was seen as one of baseball’s better minor leaguers, so it’s certainly not impossible that Hicks can still break out at age 26.

When Hicks was acquired in early November, the Yankees could’ve had an eye on him as not just a fourth outfielder, but perhaps a platooner or everyday starter in left as Brett Gardner’s replacement.  Gardner’s name reportedly surfaced in talks with several teams, including the Cubs as part of a potential swap for Starlin Castro.

As it turned out, the Yankees did indeed land Castro, though at the cost of swingman Adam Warren and veteran backup infielder Brendan Ryan.  Second base has been a problem area for New York since Robinson Cano’s departure, and adding Castro is a potential long-term answer.  The 26-year-old already has three All-Star appearances under his belt and is signed through the 2019 season (for $38MM), though as we’ll cover later, this is not quite a slam-dunk upgrade for New York.MLB: New York Yankees-Spring Training Media Day

Trading four prospects for one year of a relief pitcher usually isn’t considered a steal, and yet Aroldis Chapman has been so dominant over his career that four non-elite prospects was, in pure baseball terms, a very reasonable price to pay.  Of course, there was a huge reason the Reds’ price was so relatively low — the domestic violence allegations that scuttled one trade between the Reds and Dodgers for Chapman, and led to Chapman’s 30-game suspension under the league’s newly-established domestic violence policy.  The Yankees faced criticism from several quarters for acquiring Chapman while the allegations were still being investigated, and while no criminal charges were ultimately filed against the reliever, the trade still left a bad taste in the mouths of many fans and pundits.

Once Chapman returns from suspension, he’ll become the closer of what could be one of the best bullpen trios in baseball history.  The combination of Chapman, Andrew Miller and Dellin Betances goes a long way towards assuaging concerns about the Yankees rotation.  The Yankees clearly had the idea of an uber-bullpen in mind for months, dating back to the July trade deadline and their interest in both Chapman and Craig Kimbrel, though it’s interesting to note that they also explored trading Miller this winter for starting pitching.

Infield depth is still a concern for the Yankees, though they did make some moves to address the backup situation with a number of minor signings and acquisitions that led to Ronald Torreyes earning a bench spot.  Torreyes and Dustin Ackley will be tasked with stepping in should veterans be in need of rest days.

Keep reading for more analysis after the break …

Read more

Questions Remaining

Nobody really expected the Yankees to be big players in this winter’s free agent market, as the club is widely assumed to be waiting for several of their current big contracts to expire before eyeing another splurge (possibly in the vaunted 2018-19 free agent class).  Not signing any free agents at all, however, is a little surprising.

Signing a veteran or two on even a modest one-year contract might have been a better long-term strategy than filling roster holes by dealing away promising and controllable young talent.  Murphy and Warren may not seem like huge losses on such a star-studded roster, yet were both sneaky-valuable parts for the 2015 Yankees, able to step in when Brian McCann needed to play first or take an off-day, or make a spot start when a Yankee pitcher was unavailable.

The Yankees are hoping that Austin Romine can successfully step in as backup catcher, with top prospect Gary Sanchez waiting at Triple-A after a rough Spring Training.)  New York’s bench projects as Romine, Torreyes, Ackley and Hicks, which may not have the experience or ability to hold the fort if more than one of the Yankees’ several veterans hits the DL for any extended period of time.  Greg Bird’s absence due to season-ending shoulder surgery is a big loss to the Yankees depth chart, as the possible first baseman-of-the-future looked to build on an impressive rookie year.

Beyond Bird’s surgery, the Yankees were dealt two more injury blows in the same Spring Training game.  Bryan Mitchell, tabbed as Warren’s successor in the swingman role will now miss several months due to a fractured toe.  Miler received a chip fracture in his non-throwing wrist after being hit by a line drive, though he plans to pitch through the injury.  If Miller needs time off, however, the late-game relief juggernaut will suddenly be down to just Betances until Chapman’s suspension ends in May.

It’s easy to have 20-20 hindsight in the wake of injuries, yet even if everyone was available, the trades of Warren and Justin Wilson were still somewhat unusual given that the Yankees were clearly putting a premium on a strong bullpen.  New York did have another bullpen addition (and their only free agent signing) seemingly lined up in the former of righty reliever Tommy Hunter, though that reported two-year deal worth $11.5-$12MM fell through after the Yankees had concerns with the results of Hunter’s physical.

The Yankees’ need for a deep relief corps became even more pressing since they weren’t able to land any rotation help.  They were speculatively linked to free agent arms like Jeff Samardzija and Wei-Yin Chen, though there was never any sense that New York was hotly pursuing either those two or really any top free agent starters.  Rather than signings, the Bronx Bombers were known to be looking to trade for pitching, dangling Miller, Gardner and Ivan Nova as possible trade chips for rotation upgrades.

Gardner’s inclusion in that list is interesting, as the veteran had a bit of a down season both offensively and defensively in the first year of the four-year, $52MM extension he signed with New York in 2014.  Of all the high-priced veterans on the roster, the front office might’ve felt Gardner had the most trade value given how the others are even more expensive, older or have more injury baggage.  While Gardner’s subpar 2015 has been blamed on a wrist injury in the second half of the season, teams obviously weren’t willing to meet the Yankees’ asking price on a 32-year-old who’s owed $38MM through the 2018 season.

With no starting help to be found, Nova will be the first line of defense should injury or performance issues befall any of Masahiro Tanaka, Michael Pineda, Luis Severino, Nathan Eovaldi, or C.C. Sabathia (who was just named the fifth starter).  The rotation could be excellent if everyone is healthy and effective, though there are enough injury question marks that expecting 30+ starts from everyone is simply unrealistic.  If the Yankees are in the hunt at the trade deadline, the rotation stands out as the likeliest area of need.  Needless to say, it would help the Yankees greatly if Severino builds on his strong rookie season and emerges as a top-of-the-rotation arm.

Deal Of Note

The eight players who have seen time at second base for the Yankees over the last two seasons combined for a total of 0.6 fWAR as second basemen.  By that measure, Castro looks like a clear upgrade…until you consider that Castro posted just 0.8 fWAR in 2015 and 0.1 fWAR in 2013.  Those two rough seasons came the midst of two productive seasons (3.1 fWAR in 2012, 2.8 fWAR in 2014), which adds to Castro’s enigma.

CastroThis inconsistency  — and, obviously, the presence of Addison Russell and Ben Zobrist — is why the Cubs were willing to part ways with a player who seemed to be a cornerstone for the Theo Epstein era just a few years ago.  On the flip side, it’s also easy to see why the Yankees would be interested in Castro, especially since his bat woke up after being moved from shortstop to second last season (.941 OPS in 121 PA at second, .597 OPS in 443 PA at short).

Defensively, Castro was pretty average in his brief time at the keystone, with +2 Defensive Runs Saved but a -4.1 UZR/150.  That’s not bad considering that prior to last year, he’d played just 27 games at second in his pro career and none since 2009.  The Yankees would happily take average defense if Castro’s bat keeps producing, though Castro’s history of low on-base percentages is a bit of an awkward fit with the team’s usual focus on plate discipline.

GM Brian Cashman spoke openly about how he hated to give up Warren in the Castro deal, and the Cubs badgered him about the right-hander for a month before finally agreeing.  A Gardner-for-Castro swap would’ve been the club’s preferred choice of a Cubs trade, as the two are owed an equal amount in future salary and New York could’ve then used extra money to pursue other needs.  Still, if Castro bounces back again and finally solidifies second base, the Yankees will consider that extra $38MM well spent.

Overview

Every season is a “win-now” season in the Bronx, though the Yankees feel particular pressure to strike in 2016.  McCann, Alex Rodriguez, Carlos Beltran and Mark Teixeira all bounced back to deliver productive and generally healthy seasons last year, so the Yankees are trying to capitalize while these veterans still have something left in the tank.  This may explain the short-term addition of Chapman, though in Castro and Hicks, New York also added two pieces that can help both now and in future seasons.

Of course, with just so many aging players on the roster, it’s impossible for the Yankees to expect everyone to be in good form at the same time.  While the aforementioned four veterans are coming off good years, for instance, New York is now hoping for bounce-backs from Gardner, Jacoby Ellsbury and Chase Headley.  The Yankees had one of the better overall offenses in baseball last year, though keeping that consistency going over the entire year proved to be difficult to manage throughout the lineup.

Despite all the inevitable injury concerns and all of the injuries that have already occurred, if this club gets even slightly above-average health the rest of the way, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the Yankees make some noise in the postseason.  The Chapman/Miller/Betances trio is so dominant on paper that if all three are available and healthy, the Yankees will find themselves playing a lot of six-inning games.  Between that relief corps, an experienced lineup of star hitters and a potential breakout rotation, there are a lot of positives on the roster.  The Yankees have won pennants after free-agent spending sprees on several occasions; could they now win one with no FA spending?

How would you evaluate the Yankees’ winter? (Link to poll for mobile app users)

How Would You Grade The Yankees' Offseason?
B 53.44% (1,259 votes)
C 24.70% (582 votes)
A 12.39% (292 votes)
D 6.20% (146 votes)
F 3.27% (77 votes)
Total Votes: 2,356

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

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2015-16 Offseason In Review MLBTR Originals New York Yankees

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Offseason In Review: St. Louis Cardinals

By charliewilmoth | April 1, 2016 at 9:50am CDT

This is the latest entry in MLBTR’s Offseason In Review series. The full index of Offseason In Review posts can be found here.

After a winter in which they dealt with several significant losses, last year’s winningest team will try to regroup for 2016.

Major League Signings

  • P Mike Leake: five years, $80MM (plus 2021 mutual option)
  • P Jonathan Broxton: two years, $7.5MM
  • C Brayan Pena: two years, $5MM
  • P Seung-Hwan Oh: one year, ~$5MM (plus 2017 option)
  • SS Ruben Tejada: one year, $1.5MM

Notable Minor League Signings

  • Carlos Peguero, Jeremy Hefner, Eric Fryer, Deck McGuire

Trades And Claims

  • Acquired IF Jedd Gyorko and cash from Padres for OF Jon Jay
  • Acquired SS Jose Martinez from Royals for C Tony Cruz
  • Claimed P Jayson Aquino from Indians
  • Selected P Matthew Bowman from Mets in the Rule 5 Draft

Extensions

  • Kolten Wong, 2B: five years, $25.5MM (plus 2021 option)

Notable Losses

  • Jason Heyward, John Lackey, Jay, Steve Cishek, Peter Bourjos, Randy Choate, Mark Reynolds, Carlos Villanueva, Cruz

Needs Addressed

A variety of departures and injury issues had the Cardinals playing catch-up this offseason. They tried to retain star outfielder Jason Heyward with an offer for a greater total value than the deal Heyward eventually received, but were dealt a serious blow when Heyward instead picked the Cardinals’ division rivals in Chicago. The Cards were briefly connected to Alex Gordon, but instead chose to focus on other needs, going with Matt Holliday, Randal Grichuk and Stephen Piscotty in the outfield and Brandon Moss and Matt Adams at first.

USATSI_9201014_154513410_lowresIn the rotation, one top starter, John Lackey, left via free agency. Then, in early November, the team announced that another top starter, Lance Lynn, had undergone Tommy John surgery. Those losses left the Cards with significant holes at the top of their rotation. They aimed high, making a serious bid for David Price, but they lost out to the Red Sox and ended up signing Mike Leake (pictured) instead.

$80MM for a seemingly mid-grade starting pitcher like Leake seems like a lot, but perhaps it isn’t in an offseason in which Jeff Samardzija, Wei-Yin Chen and Ian Kennedy all received comparable amounts. (MLBTR’s Tim Dierkes predicted Leake’s $80MM contract exactly.) The 28-year-old Leake is easily the youngest of the four, and the Cardinals are effectively buying his late-prime years, at least in theory. Also, he has a strong health record, and his good control, ground-ball tendencies and strong hitting give him a high floor. Leake’s $80MM price tag reflects an escalation in starting pitcher salaries, but it’s also a reflection of Leake’s abilities, which are considerable, even if he isn’t as flashy as many of this winter’s other rotation options were.

The Cardinals’ other big-league signings were less significant, although they took steps to improve their bullpen. They re-signed Jonathan Broxton to a two-year deal after trading for him last July. The last several seasons of Broxton’s career have been spotty at times, and he struggled in 2015 with Milwaukee before being dealt to St. Louis, but he whiffed 9.4 batters per nine innings last year and still has mid-90s velocity. He should be in the Cardinals’ late-inning mix.

Joining him in that mix will be Seung-Hwan Oh, who’s making the leap to the US after nine seasons in his native Korea and two in Japan. Oh was a highly effective closer in both the KBO and the NPB, racking up a total of 357 saves between the two leagues and posting a career 1.81 ERA, 10.7 K/9 and 2.1 BB/9. The details of Oh’s contract still haven’t been released, but it reportedly guarantees about $5MM, with the chance to increase to $11MM over two years if Oh clears his incentives and the Cardinals pick up his 2017 option. That price would be a relative pittance for an everyday player, but it’s a significant commitment for a reliever, so the Cardinals seem to be banking on Oh being a key contributor to their bullpen.

Between Broxton, Oh and whatever they can get out of Jordan Walden (who’s currently struggling with what appears to be a continuation of the shoulder issues that cost him most of last season), the Cards’ bullpen could look quite different in 2016 than it did for most of last year, though it will also feature holdovers Trevor Rosenthal, Seth Maness and lefties Kevin Siegrist and Tyler Lyons (who’s out of options). Rule 5 pick Matt Bowman will reportedly get an opportunity in Walden’s absence.

Elsewhere, the Cardinals dropped light-hitting backup catcher Tony Cruz and replaced him with Brayan Pena, a competent but forgettable second catcher who signed a cheap two-year deal. In Spring Training, a late-breaking thumb injury to starting shortstop Jhonny Peralta forced the Cards to sign Ruben Tejada to a one-year, $1.5MM contract. Tejada is hardly a world-beater, but for the Cardinals to get a decent defensive shortstop with on-base ability after losing their shortstop in March rated as a minor coup at the time — Tejada is a credible big-league starter who only became available once the Mets released him, and in many seasons, it would have been hard for a suddenly-injury-ravaged team to find someone as good as Tejada without giving up any trade assets. Of course, Tejada went down with a quadriceps strain this week and will join Peralta on the DL to start the season.

The Cardinals also signed second baseman Kolten Wong to a five-year, $25.5MM deal that begins in 2016 and includes an option for 2021. The deal allows the Cards to control Wong for an extra two seasons through age 30 (since he would have been eligible for free agency after 2019), while providing Wong financial security. Wong doesn’t profile as a star, but he’s a solid defender and a good baserunner, and he provides enough offense that ensuring two extra years of his services on a relatively cheap extension seems like a reasonably low-downside gamble.

More analysis after the jump.

Read more

Questions Remaining

With Leake added to a group of starting pitchers that will also include a healthy Adam Wainwright (who made just four regular-season starts in 2015), the Cardinals should be able to weather the loss of Lackey and the temporary loss of Lynn. Michael Wacha, Jaime Garcia and Carlos Martinez will join Leake and Wainwright in a capable rotation.

The bigger question is in the outfield, where they’ll be without Heyward. Piscotty, who’s taking over in right field, is a fine young player who had an outstanding debut in 2015, but he doesn’t look likely to come anywhere near Heyward’s six-win 2015 performance. In center, the Cardinals could benefit from a full season of Grichuk, although it’s unclear whether Grichuk will be able to hit as he did in 2015, when he batted .276/.329/.548. Grichuk has excellent power, but little in his previous track record suggested he could hit for a .272 isolated power figure, as he did last year. And that he’s now struck out in over 30% of his career big-league plate appearances could prove to be a problem. Perhaps the Cards can make up some of what they’re likely to lose from Heyward and Grichuk by getting more from Holliday (who lost much of 2015 to a quad injury) and giving less playing time to non-contributors like Peter Bourjos and Jon Jay, both of whom are now gone. But by fWAR, the Cardinals had the third-most-productive outfield in baseball last season, behind only the Diamondbacks and Royals. That doesn’t seem likely to happen again.

It’s also unclear how much the Cardinals can get out of first base, although at least they have a variety of options there. Moss is coming off a weak .226/.304/.407 season and arguably isn’t a particularly good deal at his arbitration-year salary of $8.2MM — he’s now 32, and as his ability to make contact declines, it seems unlikely that he can repeat something resembling his 2012/2013 prime with the Athletics. Fellow left-handed hitter Adams provides the Cards with an alternative, although he, too, had a subpar season in 2015. Holliday or Piscotty, both righties, could give the team additional options at first, particularly if someone like Tommy Pham emerges as a serious contributor in the outfield.

As I noted in my Offseason Outlook post on the Cardinals back in November, the team also isn’t likely likely to replicate its amazing 2015 performance with runners in scoring position. With runners on, opposing batters hit just .216/.298/.332 against the Cardinals, whose pitchers’ 5.23 ERA in those situations last season was more than a run better than that of the next closest team. With runners in scoring position, the difference between the Cards and everyone else in baseball was even more stark, with a .202 average, .296 OBP and .322 slugging against that all ranked as easily the best in the game and an 8.14 ERA in those situations that was more than a run and a half better than anyone else.

Of course, the Cardinals won 100 games last season. That’s hard to do, and it’s hardly an insult to note that they’ll need some luck to do it again. They could easily fail to do so and still be terrific.

There is also the broader organizational question of how the Cardinals will pivot away from their aging core, which has recently shown hints of weakness, despite the team’s overall success. Wainwright (age 34) and Holliday (36) missed much of last season. Yadier Molina (33) had his worst year since at least 2007, batting .270/.310/.350, and had two offseason surgeries on his thumb, an ongoing source of concern (though he’ll apparently be ready for Opening Day). Given Molina’s injury issues and catcher aging patterns, it wouldn’t be surprising if he never again approached his 5.5 fWAR 2013 performance, although his work behind the plate remains highly valued. This spring brought the injury to Peralta (33). The team has done a nice job integrating younger players like Wacha, Martinez, Wong, Piscotty and Grichuk in recent seasons, and it will have to continue to lean on its young talent to keep up with the Cubs and Pirates.

Deal Of Note

In December, the Cardinals sent Jay to San Diego in return for infielder Jedd Gyorko and somewhere around $7MM. Gyorko’s contract calls for him to be paid $33MM over the next four seasons, including a $1M buyout on his option for 2020. Jay, meanwhile, was set to make a modest $6.225MM in 2016, after which he’ll be eligible for free agency.

USATSI_9138260_154513410_lowresJay struggled through a wrist injury in 2015 but was useful for three straight years before that and doesn’t require much of a continued commitment, so the Cardinals seem to be betting heavily on Gyorko — a seemingly odd gamble on a player who didn’t even have a starting job with the team, at least until Tejada’s injury. The Cards have Wong and Matt Carpenter fairly firmly established at second and third, respectively, and even after Peralta’s injury, the Cardinals didn’t immediately turn to Gyorko at shortstop, instead preferring Tejada (who they’d acquired for a fraction of what they now owe Gyorko).

In his 2013 rookie season, Gyorko looked like a player on the rise, which is why the Padres signed him to his $35.5MM extension in April 2014. He’d hit 23 home runs in a difficult offensive context, and while there were warning signs, like his rather low batting average and the fact that he’d struck out nearly four times as often as he’d walked, it was hard to fault the Padres for seeing him as a potential cornerstone piece. He took a big step backward in 2014, though, hitting .210/.280/.333, and while some of that decline was BABIP-driven, he suddenly looked like a different player, even after he rebounded to .247/.297/.397 last year.

Gyorko still has good power for an infielder, and he’s a career .260/.335/.441 hitter against lefties. And he did hit 13 home runs in 259 plate appearances in the second half last year. But since the Cardinals clearly don’t seem to think he’s much of a shortstop (and there’s little reason to think they’re wrong about that, as defensive metrics haven’t graded him particularly highly even at second base), it’s fair to wonder how much value they’re going to get out of this trade. Perhaps they see Gyorko as a younger player whose best years ahead of him, but at 27, he isn’t that young, and it’s curious that it took two injuries for them to find much of a role for him.

Overview

The Cardinals will miss Heyward, and they don’t appear likely to win 100 games again. Leake aside, their offseason lacked a banner move, the kind that would suggest they’re likely to stay ahead of the Cubs, who signed away two key Cardinals players in Heyward and Lackey. They remain formidable, however, and look poised to contend again in 2016.

How would you rate the Cardinals’ offseason?

Photos courtesy of USA Today Press Images.

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2015-16 Offseason In Review MLBTR Originals St. Louis Cardinals

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Dave Stewart Interview, Part II

By brettballantini | April 1, 2016 at 9:00am CDT

Over four decades in baseball, Diamondbacks GM Dave Stewart has done nearly everything in baseball. He was a solid pitcher for 16 years, with 168 wins and a 3.95 ERA. Over four superstar seasons with the Oakland A’s, he collected 17.8 bWAR and four straight top-four Cy Young Award finishes. Upon retirement, he was a pitching coach and an assistant GM for multiple teams, and was a finalist to manage the Milwaukee Brewers upon Davey Lopes’s firing in 2002.

After failing to ascend to general manager in Toronto (with the Blue Jays instead hiring J.P. Ricciardi), Stewart formed a player agency and represented several stars, including Eric Chavez, Matt Kemp, Chad Billingsley and Chris Carter.

Years after Stewart had admittedly given up hope of ever being a big-league GM, Tony La Russa was hired to run baseball operations in Arizona and selected his former ace as the Diamondbacks GM.

Last week, we spoke to Stewart about his Diamondbacks team. This week, Stewart reflects on his career and his path to the big chair in this exclusive conversation.

 —

You were drafted in the 16th round by the Dodgers in 1975, but you also had a ton of football scholarship offers, and played some pretty good basketball, too. Why did you choose baseball?

[Laughs] It was the sport that I was least likely to get hurt playing. There are obvious injuries that happen in baseball, but in football, even at 6’2”, 210 pounds, that’s not big enough to play the sport, for me. In basketball, there were some size restrictions as well. What’s great about baseball is that anybody can get on the diamond and show their skills. At the time, among the three sports, baseball was not my favorite, and probably not my best sport. But it’s just funny how things turn out.

Did you have any idea L.A. was going to convert you from catcher to pitcher?

No clue whatsoever [laughs]. Once I reported to [rookie ball in] Bellingham, Washington, the picture became clear what they were going to do with me.

You blossomed into stardom in front of your hometown Oakland fans, with four straight seasons for top-four Cy Young finishes. Meanwhile, your A’s teams made it to three straight World Series and not afraid to put somebody on their backsides to get there. But Oakland was under .500 in 1986, your first year in Oakland, and just .500 in Tony La Russa’s first full year as manager in 1987. When did the A’s develop their swagger?

We had a good group of players, [Mark] McGwire, [Jose] Canseco, Carney Lansford, Dave Henderson, Rickey Henderson. And you look at the pitching staff of myself, [Bob] Welch, Mike Moore, Curt Young; our rotation was good, we had Dennis Eckersley on the back end, and Rick Honeycutt and others in the pen.

But what really makes the team is the guy who leads the team, the manager. Tony was a great example of what we should be and how we should play the game. His message went through our clubhouse. We believed we could win, and when we stepped on the field, we were going to win. That all started with Tony and his coaching staff, and the things they brought to us day-to-day as players.

Since retiring, you’ve been a player agent, a pitching coach, in the front office, and even have gotten consideration as a manager. You seem to have your choice of baseball gigs. Why GM?

The general manager has the most impact on an organization and a franchise. I get the opportunity to pick the manager and put the players in place. It’s the biggest responsibility in an organization. I like that kind of pressure. I like being in that situation. I’ve won championships as a player, now I want to win a championship in the front office. In this capacity now, I want to be able to shape and form an organization, and build a tradition during my tenure.

You’ve been outspoken about the role of race in your goal to become a baseball GM. Was there ever a point when you thought it just wasn’t going to happen?

No, there wasn’t a single point, because by a certain time I definitely didn’t think it was going to happen. But the thing about baseball, especially at the upper levels of management, if you get the right person in the right position, it can affect your life immediately, as this did for me. Tony La Russa is a guy I’ve had a relationship with for over 30 years, and once he was put in a position where he could hire me, he did. If Tony would not have gotten his opportunity, I wouldn’t haven’t have gotten mine.

As you say, in many ways you learned how to play winning baseball under Tony, have been friends for decades, have discussed your futures in baseball together. Is it ideal to be working toward a championship in Arizona with him?

I know enough about Tony to say that our friendship had nothing to do with giving me the opportunity to do this job. But having a friendship makes it easier to do the job. Our communication is wide open. We feel free to talk with each other about anything. Most of the time our conversations are good conversations. Sometimes they’re not so good. We both have some fire. And that’s the great part about it, whether it’s a good conversation or a bad one, we walk out of the room united.

You were fresh-faced in 1981, winning your first title with Los Angeles. You were a pitching stud in 1989 when you won a second title, with Oakland. A few years later, you got a third in Toronto. Is there a favorite?

They were all good, because they were all at different points in my life. In 1981, I was just a rookie coming into the game, so I had an opportunity to win one right off the bat, which was great. I wasn’t of great impact to the Dodgers, but I was able to help them get there. In 1989, as you said, I was in the middle of it, and I made a difference in winning that World Series. In 1993 it was my last one, at the tail end of my career. I was on my way out of the game, contributing any way I could, but still having impact. I was ALCS MVP that year. But they were all significant and good because they were all different parts of my career and my life.

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Arizona Diamondbacks Interviews MLBTR Originals

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MLBTR College Series: Reds GM Dick Williams (University of Virginia)

By Chuck Wasserstrom | March 30, 2016 at 3:30pm CDT

MLBTR is beginning a series where we interview top baseball executives about their college years. We’ll ask about why those chose their school, memorable moments, their favorite professor, important connections made, college learnings they still use today, etc.

Leading off the question-and-answer series is Cincinnati Reds Senior Vice President/General Manager Dick Williams – a graduate of the University of Virginia.

* * * * *

First off, sorry about the basketball game Sunday. Why did you choose Virginia?

Jul 2, 2012; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Cincinnati Reds vice president of baseball operations Dick Williams before the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee/Image of Sport-USA TODAY Sports

“I’m still reeling from the loss. Feel free to put that in the article. It was tough. I was so bummed. It’s been a while since we’ve gone to the Final Four. Why Virginia? It’s tough to pinpoint exactly. I went to boarding school in the northeast and I loved it. After two years in the northeast, I thought I would try a different part of the country. I’ve always been a bit of a wandering soul, and I wanted to try something new. So I applied to some northeastern schools, but I also applied to schools in the southeast and on the West Coast. I kind of had it in my mind that I was going to try a new part of the country.

The real tipping point was that I was a finalist for an award called the Jefferson Scholar, and they award a handful of these each year to incoming freshman. It’s a prestigious academic leadership award. They invite the finalists down their senior year to participate in a multi-day forum. They interview you and they have you participate in activities … and take tests … and they observe you. Then they award the scholarships for the next year. I didn’t get picked as a Jefferson Scholar, but I got to go down there for three days in March of my senior year in high school. And I spent three days on the Charlottesville campus – which was more than I spent on any other college visit. I think I just got more familiar with it. It didn’t hurt that it was St. Patty’s Day while I was there, so they had all these fraternity parties and all of the social activity going on. This beautiful campus … it was spring … it was gorgeous … and we’re just running around having the time of our lives. I really got a good feel from being there. I think that just gave it a leg up over other great schools that I was looking at. I think going there for that long weekend made all the difference.”

Although you weren’t selected a Jefferson Scholar, you did decide to go to UVA. Did you end up going there on an academic scholarship?

“They have another program called the Echols Scholars, and that’s for the top incoming freshmen academically. It is not a monetary scholarship. What it allows you to do is it gives you academic freedom when you get there. And I was an Echols Scholar. It gives you priority to sign up for any classes. Instead of classes based on age or what your major was, if you were an Echols Scholar, you got a free pass into any class you wanted to take. That really shaped my experience there, because I made it a point of trying to take classes in every discipline. I took a class from the engineering school. I took classes from the nursing school. I took classes from the architecture school. I did a little bit of everything – just because I was given that freedom. You didn’t have to meet typical major requirements as an Echols Scholar. You could build your own field of study. So you could really spread it around, and I took full advantage of it. I just took a lot of things that interested me that I would never get a chance to study again. When I look back on my transcript, it wasn’t all finance or all politics. It really was a melting pot of things I was interested in.”

So, what was your major?

“Well, my diploma says Echols Scholar Interdisciplinary Studies. So I had to explain that in job interviews for years. Just telling people that I really didn’t have a major. But I majored in being a liberal arts student – taking a little bit of everything.”

Looking back, should you have focused on a specific major – or are you comfortable with the route you took?

“I’m really comfortable with the route I went. I loved doing it the way I did. And when I got out of college, I went right into investment banking on Wall Street – and they put us through a training program of accounting and finance. I had a very good base in that. I learned plenty there and on the job. I ended up getting my chartered financial analyst designation – my CFA – a few years later, and that was self-study. Once my career took me on a path, then I began to do a lot of that follow-up work on my own.”

 Did you have a favorite class or favorite professor?

“I would have to say my favorite class was what they called ‘Bice Psych.’ Professor Bice. Everybody took that. It was Intro to Psychology. Every class was like a Broadway show. He always brought something very interesting to class. A lot of practical examples. A lot of funny stories. A lot of interactive exhibits. It also didn’t hurt that it was a pretty easy ‘A’ … For me, you got out of high school and you get to college – and you don’t know what to expect. I received some good advice to sign up for this class. It reminded you that academics could be fun and interesting. Not every class was big textbooks that you can’t read and worrying about copying down notes. ‘Bice Psych’ was like going to recess.”

 Can you share any memorable moments from your college days?

“I went abroad for a semester. I went to Australia; that was one of my formative experiences. I had a great time going down there. It’s kind of different being on the other side of the world. It was more about the travel and being able to travel around Australia and New Zealand. I kind of cheated a little bit … I went abroad, but there was no language barrier. That made it easier to meet people.”

Any college learnings that you utilize today?

“Statistics and probability – I took them there and really got a good understanding of them. I was surprised at how much that played into my business career, both in baseball and investment banking. Just the foundation for statistics and probability. It really affects everything you do in your daily life.”

Keep reading after the break for more …

Read more

 Did you follow the college baseball team when you were there?

“Not a lot. When I was there, the college football team was ranked No. 1 in the country. People who follow UVA football know that doesn’t come along very often. My sophomore year (1990), we were the No. 1-ranked team in the country. I still remember the game vividly. We lost a shootout to Georgia Tech at home 41-38. Georgia Tech went on to become co-national champs that year. We lost that game, and what I also remember about it was that the Allman Brothers played UVA that night at University Hall. The campus was in mourning, so nobody went to the concert. I had these buddies come in from out of town. It was one of the great concert experiences of my life, because we were watching an Allman Brothers concert – and there were about 100 people there. We were able to walk right up to the edge of the stage. We could go anywhere we wanted. It was like having a private Allman Brothers show … I’m sure it was one of the hardest shows they ever had to play. There weren’t many people there to get them fired up. But my memory of it was that it was a pretty great show.

I don’t remember the college baseball team that well. I had a couple buddies who played. I don’t remember watching them very much. But the program has certainly ascended to a whole other level. They have an unbelievable new facility. I’ve been back there a couple times and I’ve been able to see the facility they have. And the team now is just a rocket ship. They’ve had several good years there. They’re a lot of fun to watch. We actually had a first rounder a couple years ago from UVA (RHP Nick Howard in 2014). I promise I didn’t have any undue influence on our scouting director. That was all him, but it was kind of neat to have a pick from my alma mater.”

Do you know Virginia coach Brian O’Connor a little bit?

“Not very well. I’ve met him once. I don’t get real involved in our amateur scouting, so I don’t get down to Charlottesville much. But I’d like to get to know him better.”

 Obviously, you do get back to Virginia from time to time. As an alum, what emotions were going through your head while watching the Cavaliers play against Syracuse on Sunday?

“I was so disappointed. I know how many people were planning to watch them play in the Final Four. They’re such an easy team to root for, and I’m not just saying that as a UVA grad. They’re likable guys with a likable coach. Hard-nosed defense. This year, their offense kind of exploded. For three quarters of (Sunday’s) game, it was all UVA. Then that (Syracuse) run the last 8-to-10 minutes took all the wind out of our sails. It was just a bummer. But they’ll be back.”

Were you wearing your Ralph Sampson jersey during the game?

“Well, my era was Bryant Stith. So I had my Bryant Stith jersey handy. Ralph was a little before my time.”

 What advice would you give to high school and college students looking to work in a major league front office down the road?

“If you’re serious about it, it’s never too early to start and there’s no job too small. Everybody now has pretty good academic credentials. It just gives you a leg up if you can show some practical experience around the sport. I’ve got one guy on my staff that started on the grounds crew. I’ve got one guy who started as a clubhouse attendant. I know guys who have worn a mascot costume. I know some guys who worked in media relations. At a young age, no job is too small to be around the game and get familiarity with it. But you have to have some patience. There aren’t that many job openings. You have to start early and have patience.”

 Any important connections that you made in college that still play a part in what you do today?

“That’s a tough one. One of the other GM’s went to the same grade school I did in Cincinnati –Mike Hill of the Marlins. So I have that connection from grade school. For college, not sure I have a good one for that question. All of my UVA buddies were too smart to get into baseball. They all went and got real jobs.”

Any memorable stories from your college days that you can share?

“A couple come to mind. I used to go to a bar called Trax every Tuesday night and pay a $5 cover to see Dave Matthews and Boyd Tinsley before they made it big. I also had the opportunity to eat dinner in the rotunda one year.  Any time you got to do something in one of the historical buildings on campus, it was pretty special.”

* * * * *

Chuck Wasserstrom spent 25 years in the Chicago Cubs’ front office – 16 in Media Relations and nine in Baseball Operations. Now a freelance writer, his behind-the-scenes stories of his time in a big league front office can be found on www.chuckblogerstrom.com.

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Cincinnati Reds Interviews MLBTR College Series MLBTR Originals Dick Williams

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