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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)

Photos courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

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Reds Waive Jake Cave

By Connor Byrne | March 31, 2016 at 4:16pm CDT

The Reds have placed outfielder Jake Cave on waivers, C. Trent Rosecrans of the Cincinnati Enquirer reports (via Twitter). As a Rule 5 pick, Cave will be offered back to the Yankees for $25K if another team doesn’t claim him. Any club that does claim Cave would have to keep him on its 25-man roster for the entire season or lose him to the Yankees.

Cave, 23, failed to impress during 56 Spring Training plate appearances for the Reds, compiling a .224/.309/.306 line that was appreciably worse than his career minor league slash of .285/.346/.391. The 2011 sixth-round pick spent nearly all of last season with Double-A Trenton and hit .278/.339/.359 in 132 games (seven with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre) while swiping 17 bases on 20 attempts.

With Cave out of the picture in Cincinnati, the Reds’ bench come Opening Day is likely to consist of Jordan Pacheco, Scott Schebler and Jose Peraza, according to Rosecrans. Both Pacheco and Schebler have made strong cases for roster spots by thriving offensively this spring.

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Cincinnati Reds New York Yankees Transactions Jake Cave Jordan Pacheco Jose Peraza Scott Schebler

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Yankees’ Bryan Mitchell To Miss Three Months With Fractured Toe

By Mark Polishuk | March 31, 2016 at 10:14am CDT

Yankees right-hander Bryan Mitchell will miss three months due to a fractured toe, Jack Curry of the YES Network reports (Twitter link).  Surgery may be necessary, though that won’t be decided until Mitchell visits a specialist, according to Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News (via Twitter).  In addition, Mitchell also has Grade 3 turf toe.

Mitchell suffered the injury while covering first in yesterday’s Spring Training camp against the Braves.  In that very same game, incredibly, Andrew Miller also suffered a chip fracture in his right wrist, leaving the Yankees potentially down two key relievers in a matter of innings.

Miller has said he plans to pitch through the injury to his non-throwing hand, though Mitchell unfortunately had no recourse.  The Yankees were building around a potentially superb bullpen this season led by the Aroldis Chapman/Miller/Dellin Betances trio, though Chapman is suspended for the first 30 games, Miller is dealing with his wrist problem and now Mitchell is also hitting the DL.

The 24-year-old Mitchell was expected to take on a greater role with the Yankees this season, stepping into the swingman job left open after Adam Warren was dealt to the Cubs in the Starlin Castro trade.  With so many injury questions within the Yankees’ rotation, Mitchell was tabbed as a key depth piece who could step up as a starter if necessary.  With Mitchell out of action, it could open the door for Anthony Swarzak or rookies Luis Cessa or Johnny Barbato to join Ivan Nova as New York’s primary rotation depth option.

The righty looked impressive in 14 2/3 spring innings, allowing just one earned run and one walk while recording 11 strikeouts.  Mitchell posted a 5.31 ERA, 8.0 K/9 and 1.89 K/BB rate over 40 2/3 innings from 2014-15, with 20 of his 23 appearances in the bigs coming out of the New York bullpen.  He possesses a big fastball, averaging 96.1 mph on the pitch last season.

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Andrew Miller Suffers Chip Fracture In Right Wrist

By Jeff Todd | March 30, 2016 at 7:09pm CDT

7:08pm: Miller has a chip fracture in his right wrist, Curry tweets. He will see a hand specialist to determine the best course of action to treat it.

4:39pm: Miller has undergone X-rays and they came back negative, Jack Curry of YES tweets. Miller still has to have a CT-scan.

3:03pm: Yankees reliever Andrew Miller left today’s action after taking a comebacker to his right wrist. It has been diagnosed as a bruise for now, but Miller is headed for further testing, as George A. King III of the New York Post was among those to tweet.

With Aroldis Chapman out for the first thirty games of the season, Miller was expected to reprise his closing duties from a year ago. The high-powered lefty has firmly established himself as one of the game’s very best relievers, and any absence would certainly tell. Of course, the Yankees also have yet another top-quality pen arm in Dellin Betances.

It’s obviously far too soon to know the prognosis, and the injury is far less worrisome than had it been to his opposing hand. But with Opening Day less than a week off, even a brief absence could well require a trip to the DL.

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AL East Notes: Loney, Yankees, Levine, Smith

By Mark Polishuk | March 27, 2016 at 5:22pm CDT

Here’s the latest from around the AL East…

  • Hearing his name mentioned in trade speculation is nothing new for James Loney, as the veteran first baseman tells Roger Mooney of the Tampa Tribune.  “I think I’ve dealt with this pretty much every year in my career, at some point, trade rumors.  It gets kind of old.  I’m not putting too much stock in it, because nothing’s happened yet,” Loney said.  It’s no secret that the Rays have been shopping Loney and his $8MM salary for much of the offseason, though no takers have been found.
  • Loney’s presence is one of the many playing-time complications facing the Rays as they prepare to set their Opening Day roster, as Mooney and Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times explore in separate pieces.  Dealing Loney wouldn’t just save some payroll, but it would also free up a much-needed roster spot for either one of the Rays’ several available position players or perhaps another reliever.  If a trade can’t be found, Topkin speculates that Tampa could hang onto Loney for a few weeks into the season until a fifth starter is needed, or the team could just see Loney’s salary as a sunk cost and release him.
  • The Yankees optioned Rob Refsnyder to Triple-A camp, with manager Joe Girardi telling reporters (including MLB.com’s Bryan Hoch) that the club wants Refsnyder to get more experience playing third base before using him as a utility infielder at the big league level.  Ronald Torreyes and Pete Kozma are battling for the backup infield job now, though Giradi didn’t rule out the possibility that the Yankees would look at adding an infielder when other teams make their spring cuts.
  • While the Yankees will continue to support income redistribution in the next collective bargaining agreement, president Randy Levine tells FOX Sports’ Ken Rosenthal that the Yankees certainly want to see some changes made to the current system.  “What is very burdensome to us — and is unfair — is the amount of money we have to pay in revenue sharing compared, for example, to teams in our market that pay 10 times less than us,” Levine said, referring to the Mets.  The revenue-sharing contributions are determined by a formula based around net local revenue.  Levine said the Yankees made around $90MM in revenue-sharing payments in 2015.  According to Forbes magazine, the Yankees still led all MLB teams in revenue ($516MM) last year, even accounting those revenue-sharing payments.
  • There has been some speculation that Carson Smith’s potential as an injury risk could’ve been a reason the Mariners dealt the reliever to the Red Sox this winter, Fangraphs’ David Laurila writes.  Smith is on the DL with a strain of his flexor mass muscle and it isn’t known when he’ll return, though the injury isn’t thought to be too serious.  The red flags for Smith are his unusual delivery and his heavy use of the slider — only four pitchers (minimum 60 innings) threw a higher percentage of sliders than Smith did in 2015.  “I’ve heard that my whole life, but throwing from a lower arm slot is something that’s come natural for me,” Smith told Laurila.  “I’ve found ways to manage it, whether it’s the weight room, the trainer’s room, or on the field.”  MLBTR contributor Bradley Woodrum recently cited Smith as a slightly above-average risk for Tommy John surgery as a part of his larger study to predict which pitchers will require TJ procedure in the future.
  • In other AL East news from earlier today, David Murphy opted out of his minor league contract with the Red Sox and is already drawing interest from the Orioles and other clubs….the Orioles have discussed releasing Hyun Soo Kim from his two-year contract.
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Chris Denorfia Opts Out Of Yankees Deal

By Zachary Links | March 27, 2016 at 8:38am CDT

The Yankees announced that outfielder Chris Denorfia has exercised his opt-out clause.  Denorfia signed a minor league pact with the Yankees in early March that allowed him to exit the contract by the end of the month.

Denorfia, 36 in July, inked a one-year deal worth $2.6MM with the Cubs prior to the 2015 season.  The veteran turned in a .269/.319/.373 slash line with three homers across 231 plate appearances, numbers that weren’t in line with the best work of his career.  Still, he offers solid hitting against lefty pitching with a career .285/.353/.419 line in those situations.

Prior to his slide in 2014, Denorfia had a run of four solid seasons at the plate, and he was hoping to return to that form for the Bombers.  Instead, he’ll presumably seek employment elsewhere with an eye on turning things around.

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AL East Notes: Yankees, Shields, Holt, Fowler

By Jeff Todd | March 25, 2016 at 9:01pm CDT

While the total value of international signings grabs most of the headlines, it’s also interesting to look at the volume, and Ben Badler of Baseball America recently did just that. Over the calendar year of 2015, the Yankees signed more talent from outside the United States — 57 players in all — than any team in baseball. The AL East as a whole was active, per Badler, with the Red Sox and Rays also falling in the top five (but the Blue Jays and Orioles sitting in the bottom ten).

Let’s take a look at the latest out of the division:

  • Despite the Yankees’ stockpile of powerful late-inning arms, the club is on the lookout for middle relievers with camp winding down, Jon Heyman of MLB Network tweets. Current options include pitchers such as right-handers Bryan Mitchell, Johnny Barbato, and Branden Pinder and lefties Chasen Shreve, Tyler Olson, and James Pazos — most of whom have quite limited experience in the majors. While it’s easy to imagine these and other arms all spending time at the big league level, it also makes sense for the club to pursue a veteran addition or two.
  • Ivan Nova and CC Sabathia are fighting for the final Yankees rotation spot, with the loser likely to open in the pen. As ESPNNewYork.com’s Andrew Marchand reports, the club is giving real consideration to using Sabathia in relief despite his huge contract. But Nova didn’t perform well at all today in his penultimate start, as Chad Jennings of the LoHud Yankees Blog writes.
  • The Red Sox’ “stance doesn’t seem to have changed” on Padres righty James Shields, per ESPN.com’s Scott Lauber (via Twitter), with concerns persisting as to whether his flyball-heavy batted ball results would play well at Fenway. That factor played an important role in the club’s decision not to pursue him in free agency, and the Sox appear uninterested in chasing him now via trade. It was reported earlier today that Boston has been in touch with San Diego on pitchers, but there are certainly other names that may have been of greater interest.
  • Meanwhile, Red Sox skipper John Farrell says that utilityman Brock Holt could see significant action in the outfield, as Tim Britton of the Providence Journal reports. “There is a chance for him to get a good number of at-bats out in left field,” said Farrell. “How those at-bats in left field are divvied up, that remains to be seen. I’m not going to say it’s a strict platoon, but there are going to be multiple guys getting at-bats out of that position.” Needless to say, that statement represents a signal that Rusney Castillo will need to earn his playing time, as he’ll also face competition from Chris Young. Boston has endeavored to light a fire under several presumed regulars this spring, with other options helping to force the action with strong showings.
  • The Orioles not only offered Dexter Fowler $33MM over three years, but would’ve gone as high as $36MM, Heyman tweets. It seemed at one point, of course, that Baltimore was set to sign the outfielder before he would up back in Chicago for one year and $13MM.
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Alex Rodriguez May Retire After 2017

By Jeff Todd | March 24, 2016 at 7:17am CDT

THURSDAY: Rodriguez may not be entirely firm about his decision to retire, as he texted Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News that “I’m thinking in terms of my contract which ends in 2017.  After that, we’ll see what happens. I’ve got two years and more than 300 games to play.”  One of Rodriguez’s friends tells Feinsand that the slugger could decide to keep playing if he’s reasonably close to Barry Bonds’ all-time home run record.  A-Rod currently has 687 homers, so he’s still a significant distance behind Bonds’ mark of 762.

WEDNESDAY: Long-time MLB star Alex Rodriguez has decided to retire after the 2017 season, he tells Andrew Marchand of ESPNNewYork.com. The veteran will wrap up his career when his contract with the Yankees is up after next season.

Rodriguez, 40, will no doubt go down as one of the most talented and controversial players in baseball history. He went from hyped prospect to star in his first full season, a 1996 campaign with the Mariners in which he led the league in batting average while playing a stellar shortstop. That was his first of five outstanding seasons in Seattle and first of six in which he finished with an OPS of over 1.000.

Entering the open market in advance of his age-25 season, Rodriguez inked a ten-year, $252MM contract with the Rangers — an unheard-of sum at the time and still one of the three largest baseball player contracts ever. A-Rod continued to produce in Texas, finally winning an AL MVP award in 2003, though the club didn’t post a winning season over his three years.

Things took an interesting turn when Rodriguez was shipped to the Yankees for Alfonso Soriano before the following season. Though he was still a quality defender up the middle, he moved to third base to play alongside Derek Jeter. Rodriguez went on to take home two more most valuable player nods in 2005 and 2007, then opted out of his deal in the midst of the World Series — only to strike yet another ten-year pact to stay in New York, this one for $275MM. Rodriguez ultimately helped lead the way to a 2009 World Series win, though his offensive production began to wane as he entered his mid-thirties.

PED allegations and a 2014 suspension significantly marred his legacy, however, and at one point it seemed in question whether he’d ever suit up for the Yankees again. But Rodriguez has, rather miraculously, managed to rebuild some of his public image and turned in a strong .250/.356/.486 campaign last year as the club’s regular DH.

New York owes Rodriguez $20MM in each of his final two campaigns. He’ll likely surpass Babe Ruth on the career home run list at some point before hanging up his spikes. While his performance record will always come with at least an implicit asterisk, Rodriguez already rates among the top 15 position players in history in terms of total fWAR.

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AL Notes: Red Sox, Rangers, Eppler

By charliewilmoth | March 21, 2016 at 10:46am CDT

The Red Sox could trade from their considerable catching depth, Brian MacPherson of the Providence Journal writes. Blake Swihart projects as their starter, while Christian Vazquez has looked good defensively after having Tommy John surgery last year. There’s also veteran Ryan Hanigan, as well as Sandy Leon, who MacPherson notes isn’t on the 40-man roster but is “being paid commensurate with a front-line depth option.” At some point, MacPherson suggests, youngsters Swihart and Vazquez will likely be the Red Sox’ top two catchers. That would imply that Hanigan could be a candidate to be dealt, with the Astros and Rangers as potential trade partners. Hanigan hit a decent .247/.337/.328 last year, has a reputation as a good defender and framer, and is only owed $3.7MM in 2016, so he could be an attractive target for teams in need of catching help. Here’s more from the American League.

  • The Rangers have announced that they’ve optioned high-profile youngsters Joey Gallo, Jurickson Profar and Nomar Mazara to Triple-A Round Rock. Gallo has wowed minor-league fans with his power and hit 29 home runs between three levels in 2015, but he struck out in over 40% of his plate appearances in the big leagues and at nearly as high a rate at Triple-A. Profar was ranked the No. 1 prospect in the game by Baseball America and Baseball Prospectus prior to the 2013 season, but he missed all of 2014 and most of 2015 with shoulder issues and has only recently begun playing shortstop again. Mazara, an outfielder, batted .296/.366/.443 in a 2015 season split between Double-A Frisco and Round Rock. Via MLB.com, he ranks as the Rangers’ third-best prospect, with Gallo ranking first.
  • Tyler Kepner of the New York Times’ profile on new Angels GM Billy Eppler describes Eppler’s earlier days as assistant GM of the Yankees. In particular, Kepner gives Eppler credit for many of the Yankees’ smaller but effective moves, like their 2014 stretch-drive trade for Brandon McCarthy and their 2008 offseason deal for Nick Swisher, neither of which cost the Yankees much. “I think you demonstrate that to the people interviewing you, like, ’There’s other moves that the Yankees make,'” says Eppler, who had previously interviewed for the Padres’ and Mariners’ GM jobs, as well as interviewing for the Angels job when it previously went to Jerry Dipoto. “It’s not just the $150 million guys and nothing else. There are other moves; they just don’t grab the attention in New York.”
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New York Notes: Wright, A-Rod, Tejada, Ellsbury

By Mark Polishuk | March 20, 2016 at 12:20pm CDT

Here’s the latest from both Big Apple teams…

  • Alex Rodriguez’s health problems have made him the Yankees’ full-time DH while David Wright’s spinal stenosis makes him questionable for even the modest 120-game plan the Mets originally slated for the star third baseman.  As Joel Sherman of the New York Post writes, the health issues faced by these two stars have led to roster flexibility problems for both teams.  The Mets don’t have a left-handed hitting utility option available, and Sherman suggests that players like Yangervis Solarte, Derek Dietrich, Luis Valbuena could be good fits as potential trade targets if they’re made available.  The Yankees could use both an extra reliever and a versatile infielder as their 25th man, since depth is a need with so many aging stars in both the lineup and rotation.  This is a reason why the Yankees didn’t want to give a big league deal to a veteran infielder, as the club hopes Rob Refsnyder can also learn to play third.  On the external help front, Sherman suggests that Cody Asche makes sense as a trade target when healthy.
  • Signing Ruben Tejada to a minor league deal would’ve greatly helped the Yankees’ utility situation and also given a bit of a PR tweak to the Mets at the same time, Newsday’s David Lennon observes.  Tejada rejected the Yankees’ minor league offer for a one-year, $1.5MM Major League deal with the Cardinals.
  • X-rays and a CT scan were negative on Jacoby Ellsbury’s right wrist after the outfielder was hit by a pitch yesterday, though he tells reporters (including Lennon) and his wrist “is in a bad spot” and may need some time for the inflammation to die down.  With this and the Yankees’ spring schedule in mind, Ellsbury likely won’t play until Thursday at the earliest, as per Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News.
  • There’s an open spot in the Mets’ bullpen with Josh Edgin still recovering from Tommy John surgery, and ESPN New York’s Adam Rubin looks at some of the roster logistics that could factor into the competition between Erik Goeddel and Jim Henderson.  It could end up being a short-term gig for either pitcher as Edgin hopes to be back by the start of May.
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