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Rangers Sign Tyler Alexander

By Anthony Franco | December 15, 2025 at 2:00pm CDT

December 15th: The Rangers officially announced the signing. Alexander’s deal will pay him a $1.125MM base salary and he can unlock another $1.125MM via performance bonuses, rep Jon Morosi of MLB Network.

December 12th: The Rangers are signing left-hander Tyler Alexander to a one-year contract, reports Jeff Passan of ESPN. Salary figures for the SSG Baseball client haven’t been reported. Texas entered the night with 35 players on their roster. That’ll jump to 38 once they finalize their contracts with Alexander, Danny Jansen (covered here) and Alexis Díaz (covered here).

Alexander will provide a multi-inning arm out of Skip Schumaker’s bullpen. The 31-year-old logged 97 2/3 innings across 52 appearances between the Brewers and White Sox this year. He started five games, all but one coming with Milwaukee in the beginning of the season, but spent the bulk of the year pitching 3-4 inning stints in relief. While the Rangers could theoretically give him a look in the rotation, it’s more likely they’d view Jacob Latz as a true swing option while pitching Alexander in low-leverage relief.

The southpaw was hit hard over his few months in Milwaukee. He carried a 6.19 ERA in 36 1/3 frames when they designated him for assignment in June. Alexander cleared waivers but found an immediate MLB opportunity in Chicago once he hit free agency. He pitched well enough as a veteran bullpen piece to stick on the roster for the reminder of the season. Alexander worked to a 4.26 earned run average over 61 1/3 innings in a White Sox uniform. He had a modest 20.1% strikeout rate but limited the walks and hard contact reasonably well.

That was enough to earn another big league contract. It comes with the added bonus of being with his hometown club. Alexander is a Southlake, Texas native who played collegiately at TCU. He was a second-round pick by the Tigers in 2015 and has spent the majority of his career in Detroit. Alexander owns a 4.63 ERA over parts of seven seasons. He sits in the 90-91 MPH range but mixes five pitches and did a decent job staying off barrels this year.

The Rangers constructed their 2025 bullpen mostly with a series of cheap one-year free agent pickups. It worked as well as they could’ve hoped, as the relief corps turned in a 3.62 ERA despite ranking 20th in strikeout rate and finishing third from the bottom in average fastball velocity. It’s not going to be easy to replicate. They’re likely in for a similar effort this offseason.

RosterResource estimated the Rangers’ payroll around $167MM heading into the evening. Evenly distributing Jansen’s salaries would push that close to $174MM. Contract terms for the two pitchers are unreported, though it’s unlikely they cost more than a couple million dollars between the two of them. Texas opened the 2025 season with a player payroll around $218MM. They’ve been clear that number is coming down.

Image courtesy of Patrick Gorski, Imagn Images.

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Royals Continuing To Explore Outfield Market

By Anthony Franco | December 15, 2025 at 1:49pm CDT

The Royals entered the offseason in pursuit of two outfielders — ideally adding one apiece via free agency and trade. They accomplished that last week, signing Lane Thomas to a $5.25MM deal and bringing in Isaac Collins in a trade with Milwaukee.

Collins played mostly left field for the Brewers. He’s loosely penciled in there for now, while Thomas provides a right-handed hitting complement to Kyle Isbel and Jac Caglianone in center and right field, respectively. It’s better than it was at season’s end but still not a great group on paper. Thomas is coming off an injury-riddled season. Caglianone struggled mightily in his first 62 MLB games and could benefit from more time at Triple-A. Isbel is a glove-only center fielder, while Collins’ breakout season came as a 27-year-old rookie.

Unsurprisingly, the Royals haven’t closed the door on the possibility of adding another outfielder. Collins has plenty of minor league infield experience — mostly at second with a handful of starts at third base as well. President of baseball operations J.J. Picollo indicated that while the Royals expect him to play mostly outfield, he has enough defensive versatility for the front office to keep their options open (link via Anne Rogers of MLB.com).

The switch-hitting Collins has a very patient approach. Kansas City ranked 22nd in on-base percentage (.309), and only the Rockies had a lower walk rate than their 7.2% clip. Collins provides a different skillet and generally raises the lineup’s floor, but his limited power means he doesn’t have a huge ceiling as an everyday left fielder. The Royals aren’t going to be in the market for a star outfielder in free agency, yet they’re kicking the tires on a more impactful trade possibility.

Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic writes that the Royals could still be a factor for Jarren Duran. Rosenthal suggests that Kansas City has balked at putting star southpaw Cole Ragans in a Duran trade. Whether the Red Sox would insist on Ragans’ inclusion isn’t known, as The Athletic report indicates that Boston executives view the teams’ talks to date as preliminary.

That said, it’s clear the Red Sox are putting a lofty price on their top outfielders. Tim Healey of The Boston Globe writes that chief baseball officer Craig Breslow is telling interested teams that the Sox don’t feel any pressure to trade an outfielder. They’ve taken calls on Duran and Wilyer Abreu at least dating back to the summer. Between Abreu, Duran and Roman Anthony, they have three above-average to star caliber left-handed hitting outfielders. (Anthony signed an eight-year extension in August and certainly isn’t getting traded.) Ceddanne Rafaela hits from the right side and has the ability to play the infield, but much of his value comes from his elite center field defense.

Keeping all four players limits the Sox’s flexibility a bit. They can find at-bats for them all by rotating them through the designated hitter role and getting Rafaela occasional infield work. Boston has considered swapping one of Duran or Abreu for controllable starting pitching, though they’re less motivated to do so after acquiring Sonny Gray.

The Royals have been on the opposite end. Picollo said a few weeks ago that they were open to trading a starter for outfield help. He essentially took Ragans out of that mix, though. The 28-year-old lefty finished fourth in AL Cy Young voting two seasons ago. He missed a good chunk of ’25 battling a rotator cuff strain. He’s signed for a combined $12MM over the next two years and will be eligible for arbitration in 2028. He’s a potential ace whom the Royals control for three seasons at what’d likely be no more than $25MM in total.

“We’re in a really good spot (with rotation depth), so if the right trade comes along, and it costs us a starting pitcher, we have to look at it,” Picollo told Rogers at the Winter Meetings. “It’s just not going to be Cole. … We have to ask ourselves: Is this his max value right now? Probably not. If Cole pitches like he did in ‘24, who knows what his value is going to be? We just think right now, three years of control on a really good starting pitcher, it would have to be something crazy, something that’s like, ‘How can we pass this up?'”

Kansas City has gotten hits on controllable arms like Noah Cameron, Ryan Bergert and Stephen Kolek. Lefty Kris Bubic might be their likeliest rotation trade candidate, but he suffered a season-ending rotator cuff injury in July and is headed into his final arbitration year. No one from that group is valuable enough to headline a trade for Duran, who is coming off his third straight well above-average season. Duran is set for a $7.7MM salary and is under arbitration control through 2028.

Even if the sides can’t line up value on Duran, the Royals will evaluate other outfield possibilities. They’re also known to be searching for left-handed relief. That was more of a luxury buy around the Winter Meetings but takes on added importance after they traded Angel Zerpa to the Brewers for Collins and righty reliever Nick Mears.

Kansas City is down to Daniel Lynch IV and swingman Bailey Falter as lefty relievers on the 40-man roster. Lynch managed a 3.06 earned run average over 67 2/3 innings but did so with a well below-average 15.6% strikeout rate. There are a few one-year deal candidates available in free agency (e.g. Drew Pomeranz, Caleb Thielbar, Caleb Ferguson, Danny Coulombe). They could also explore the trade market, with St. Louis’ JoJo Romero known to be available as he enters his final year of arbitration.

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Trade Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat, Today 3pm CT

By Steve Adams | December 15, 2025 at 1:28pm CDT

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Dodgers Sign Edwin Diaz

By Steve Adams | December 15, 2025 at 1:20pm CDT

December 15th: The deal also contains a condition club option for 2029, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post. That option has a $6.5MM base, with Diaz able to earn an extra $750K for 45 games finished and 50 games finished, plus another $1MM for 55 games finished. The specific conditions for the option aren’t known but Alden González of ESPN reports that it would be available to the Dodgers if Diaz spends a certain amount of time on the injured list.

December 12th: The Dodgers officially announced the signing today.

December 9th: For the second straight offseason, the Dodgers are signing the top relief arm on the market. They’ve reportedly agreed to a three-year, $69MM contract with now-former Mets closer Edwin Diaz. It’s a record-setting annual value for a reliever, breaking the $20.4MM record that Diaz himself already held. Diaz’s contract with the Dodgers contains $4.5MM in deferred salary annually. The net-present value, for luxury tax purposes, is roughly $21.1MM.

Diaz, a Wasserman client, returned to the open market this winter when he opted out of the final two seasons of the precedent-setting five-year, $102MM contract he signed with the Mets the last time he was a free agent. The right-hander had been guaranteed $38MM over the final two seasons of that contract, so by opting out and testing the market, he secured himself an additional one year and $31MM in guarantees. The Mets, according to Joel Sherman of the New York Post, offered Diaz a three-year, $66MM deal with “slight” deferrals.

The 31-year-old Diaz (32 in March) has spent the past seven years in Queens and, after a rocky first campaign, has turned in a collective 2.36 ERA (2.12 SIERA, 2.15 FIP) with a mammoth 40.8% strikeout rate and 8.9% walk rate. He’s piled up 144 saves in 332 appearances as a Met.

For the Dodgers, Diaz represents the most on-the-nose means of addressing a problem that nearly doomed them in the postseason: a lack of reliable bullpen help. Injuries to Evan Phillips, Tanner Scott, Brusdar Graterol and others left the Dodgers with a thin enough stock of trustworthy relievers that L.A. turned to Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow and Yoshinobu Yamamoto (one day after he threw nearly 100 pitches) in pivotal high-leverage settings during their World Series run. That they even progressed to the World Series was largely attributable to historic performances from starters Yamamoto, Snell, Glasnow and Shohei Ohtani in the postseason’s earlier rounds.

The Dodgers have now signed the top reliever on the market in consecutive offseasons. They inked Tanner Scott to a four-year, $72MM pact last winter, though that deal contained $21MM worth of deferred money, thus knocking down the present value. Scott’s first year in L.A. didn’t go at all as hoped; he limped to a 4.74 ERA with improved command but lesser velocity and strikeout rates. After yielding 11 home runs in the 2022-24 seasons combined, Scott served up 11 round-trippers in his first season as a Dodger.

Certainly, they’ll hope for better results with Diaz, whose track record is lengthier and steadier than that of Scott. While he’s naturally had some year-to-year variance in his earned run averages — as is the case for any reliever — Diaz has been at 3.52 or better in each of the past five seasons, including three sub-2.00 campaigns. He’s punched out at least 34.6% of his opponents each season along the way, and since a shaky walk rate in 2021, he’s sat between 7.7% and 9.3% in that regard for four straight seasons.

That’s not to say there aren’t any red flags at all with regard to Diaz. His average fastball velocity has dipped in two consecutive seasons. While this past season’s average of 97.2 mph was still well above average, it’s also two miles per hour shy of Diaz’s 2022 peak. He also gave up considerably more hard contact. Diaz’s 88.5 mph average exit velocity and 39.7% hard-hit rate were both the second-highest marks of his career, trailing only his disastrous 2019 season (his first as a Met). Neither is a glaring issue, particularly considering Diaz maintained elite strikeout and swinging-strike rates (38% and 18%, respectively), but he’ll want to avoid allowing those negative trends to continue, however slight they may currently be.

Diaz will slot into the ninth inning, pushing Scott to a setup role alongside Alex Vesia, Blake Treinen, Anthony Banda, Brock Stewart and Graterol. Will Klein, Ben Casparius and Jack Dreyer all had solid or better seasons in 2025, but if everyone is healthy — far from a given — there’s only room for one of that trio in the final bullpen spot. Of course, injuries will inevitably create opportunities for many of the Dodgers’ overqualified depth arms, and each of Klein, Casparius, Dreyer and Edgardo Henriquez have minor league options remaining.

The Dodgers have paid the luxury tax in (more than) three consecutive seasons and are more than $60MM over the $244MM first-tier luxury threshold, meaning they’ll pay a 110% tax on the AAV on Diaz’s contract. However the annual salaries break down, he’ll cost them an additional $25.3MM in taxes alone. Assuming an evenly distributed $23MM per season, RosterResource, now projects next year’s Dodgers payroll at just over $359MM (although that does not account for substantial deferrals to Ohtani, Scott, Freddie Freeman, etc.).

The Mets would have been subject to those same penalties had they matched or topped this offer. Diaz reportedly entered the market seeking a five-year contract. When that didn’t materialize, he clearly pivoted to a record-setting, shorter-term arrangement. The extent of the deferrals in New York’s offer aren’t yet clear, but there’s no indication (yet, anyway) that the Dodgers’ offer includes any deferred money.

While New York couldn’t have known when signing Devin Williams to a three-year, $51MM pact that Diaz would also sign for three years and a total of $18MM more, the results from those two high-end relievers will now be carefully watched by Mets fans for the next three seasons. If Williams returns to form, it’ll look like a savvy pivot to get a comparable reliever at a lesser rate. If not, there will be plenty of second-guessing and criticism from the fan base.

Of course, owner Steve Cohen also clearly has the resources to have simply won the bidding on both relievers, but that’s ultimately not the route the front office chose. They’ll now look to other avenues as they seek to continue adding to the bullpen. The Mets were open to re-signing Diaz even after adding Williams, and while this deal clearly went past their comfort zone, there are other high-end arms still available — Robert Suarez, most notably. Choosing to let Diaz walk also frees up further resources for a potential re-signing of Pete Alonso or perhaps a run at another target of note.

The Mets bid farewell to Diaz, who rejected a $22.025MM qualifying offer, with only minimal compensation for his departure. Due to their status as luxury tax payors, they’ll receive a compensatory draft pick after the fourth round of next summer’s draft. The Dodgers, meanwhile, will surrender their second- and fifth-highest selections in next year’s draft. The league-allotted cap on their personal spending pool for international amateur free agents will also be reduced by $1MM.

Such considerations tend to be ancillary for the market’s top-spending clubs. Perennial luxury payors consider them the cost of doing business in the deepest waters of the free agent pool. The Dodgers have punted draft picks to sign Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman (among others) in recent seasons. For them, the allure of adding a closer with nearly unrivaled dominance takes precedence as they try to assemble a roster capable of winning three consecutive World Series for the first time since the 1998-2000 Yankees.

The Athletic’s Will Sammon first reported the agreement. Sammon and colleague Ken Rosenthal were also the first to report the three-year term. ESPN’s Jeff Passan broke the total guarantee. Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman of the New York Post reported the Dodgers’ emerging interest in Diaz shortly before the agreement became public. Sherman reported on the deferrals.

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Mets, Cristian Pache Agree To Minor League Deal

By Steve Adams | December 15, 2025 at 1:12pm CDT

The Mets have agreed to a minor league contract with outfielder Cristian Pache, reports Pat Ragazzo of Mets On SI. He’ll be in major league camp as a non-roster invitee next spring. Pache is represented by the MVP Sports Group.

Pache, 27, was once considered one of the sport’s top outfield prospects during his earlier days in the division-rival Braves organization. He’s long been touted as a plus-plus defender in center field — a rangy outfielder with good speed and solid raw power but a shaky hit tool that didn’t allow him to get to that pop often enough.

That lack of hit tool has indeed held Pache back. Atlanta traded him to the Athletics as one of four players in return for first baseman Matt Olson, and he’s since bounced to the Phillies, Orioles and Marlins organizations. Pache hasn’t hit in the majors during any of his stops. He’s taken 610 plate appearances at the MLB level and carries just a .181/.243/.275 batting line with a troublesome 30.8% strikeout rate. He has indeed strong defensive grades, but Pache hasn’t hit enough to even profile as a viable fourth outfielder in the majors.

Pache’s numbers in the upper minors have been better but are still lackluster, particularly considering how hitter-friendly most of the environments in which he’s played have been. In parts of five Triple-A seasons, Pache carries a .257/.332/.397 batting line. He spent the 2025 season with the D-backs’ top affiliate in Reno, hitting .251/.351/.389 in 288 plate appearances. That looks decent on the surface, but in that exorbitantly hitter-friendly setting, it’s actually about 20% worse than league-average production, by measure of wRC+.

In many ways, Pache is an even more extreme version of Tyrone Taylor, who’s already on the Mets’ big league roster. Both are right-handed hitting center fielders with questionable bats and strong gloves, but while Pache is the better defender of the two, his bat is even lighter than that of Taylor (who hit .223/.279/.319 with the Mets in 2025).

Pache is out of minor league options, so if he’s added to the big league roster at any point, he’d need to stick or else be designated for assignment and passed through waivers. He gives the Mets some versatile outfield depth, but there are enough offensive question marks surrounding him that he profiles mainly as glove-first insurance in the event of multiple injuries at the big league level.

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Rangers Sign Anthony Veneziano To Minor League Deal

By Darragh McDonald | December 15, 2025 at 1:05pm CDT

The Rangers have signed left-hander Anthony Veneziano to a minor league deal, MLBTR has learned. The KHG Sports Management client also receives an invite to big league camp in spring training.

Veneziano, 28, has pitched for the Royals, Marlins and Cardinals over the past three big league seasons. He briefly crossed paths with Rangers manager Skip Schumaker, as Veneziano came to the Marlins via a waiver claim in September of 2024, when Schumaker was still the skipper in Miami. Veneziano has thrown 40 2/3 innings in the majors, allowing 3.98 earned runs per nine. He has averaged 93 to 95 miles per hour with his four-seamer but has thrown his slider more often while also mixing in a changeup. In 2025, he added a sinker to his arsenal in the big leagues.

That sinker seems to have helped him keep the ball on the ground. He tossed 25 innings this year, split between the Fish and the Cards, with a 4.68 ERA. He had just a 30.6% ground ball rate coming into 2025 but got grounders on 49.4% of balls in play this year, notably above the 41.8% league average. His 21.4% strikeout rate and 9.4% wak rate were both worse than league average but by less than 1% in both cases.

The Cardinals claimed Veneziano off waivers from the Marlins in August but then outrighted him off the 40-man in November. He was able to elect free agency, which allowed the Rangers to add him on this pact.

The southpaw came up as a starter but has primarily been working out of the bullpen in recent years. The 2025 Rangers built out their bullpen by signing a number of veterans to one-year deals. That worked fairly well but it meant that almost the entire relief group hit free agency last month. Phil Maton, Shawn Armstrong, Hoby Milner, Danny Coulombe and Chris Martin all hit the open market at season’s end. Texas also non-tendered Jacob Webb and Josh Sborz shortly thereafter.

Jacob Latz might get a chance at a rotation job next year, which means Robert Garcia is the top lefty in the bullpen. The Rangers added Tyler Alexander last week. If Veneziano can earn a 40-man spot, he still has an option, meaning he could be sent to Triple-A and back throughout the year. He also has less than a year of service time, meaning he could be cheaply retained for the foreseeable future if he can hold a roster spot through the upcoming season.

Photo courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel, Imagn Images

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Diamondbacks Sign Isaiah Campbell To Minor League Deal

By Darragh McDonald | December 15, 2025 at 12:03pm CDT

The Diamondbacks have signed right-hander Isaiah Campbell to a minor league deal, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. The ACES client has been assigned to the Triple-A Reno Aces but will presumably receive an invite to big league camp in spring training.

Campbell, 28, has appeared in each of the past three big league seasons. Suiting up for the Mariners and Red Sox, the righty has thrown 43 innings in the majors, allowing 5.65 earned runs per nine. His 21.9% strikeout rate and 8.3% walk rate are close to average while his 47.7% grounder rate is a few ticks better than par. His .341 batting average on balls in play and 66.6% strand rate are both to the unfortunate side, so metrics like his 4.34 FIP and 3.89 SIERA are a bit more optimistic than his ERA.

Only 7 2/3 of those innings came in 2025, as he spent most of the season with Triple-A Worcester. He logged 57 2/3 at that level this year with a 3.90 ERA. His 18.1% strikeout was a bit on the low side but he got grounders on 50.5% of balls in play. He averages in the mid-90s with his four-seamer and sinker but throws his slider more than half the time. He added a curveball in 2025 and mixed that in sporadically.

Campbell exhausted his final option season this year and will be out of options going forward, which will make it harder for him to hold a roster spot. The Sox outrighted him off their 40-man in October and he was able to elect free agency.

The bullpen was a big problem for the Snakes in 2025. They had planned for A.J. Puk and Justin Martínez but both were felled by UCL surgeries and other guys dealt with injury problems as well. Their relief corps had a collective 4.82 ERA this past season, which was better than just the Angels, Rockies and Nationals.

They will surely make some more moves to upgrade their bullpen before Opening Day but Campbell gives them some extra non-roster depth for now. He has just over a year of MLB service time. If he can earn a roster spot and hold it, he can be cheaply retained beyond the 2026 season.

Photo courtesy of Bob DeChiara, Imagn Images

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The Opener: Rotation Market, Relief Market, Mets

By Nick Deeds | December 15, 2025 at 9:04am CDT

With one free agent move already in the books this morning, here are three more things we’ll be keeping an eye on around the baseball world:

1. Will the rotation market heat up?

After weeks of a relatively frozen rotation market, things finally started to pick up this weekend when the Cardinals signed Dustin May to a one-year deal while the Diamondbacks reunited with Kelly on a pact worth $40MM over two years. The top of the market is still largely untouched (aside from Dylan Cease), leaving plenty of viable options for interested teams like Framber Valdez, Tatsuya Imai, and Ranger Suarez. The middle tier of this year’s market could be moving more quickly, by contrast, with Kelly having now signed and plenty of buzz surrounding other mid-market players like Zac Gallen and Michael King. Who could be the next domino to fall?

2. Relief market dwindling fast:

The market for relief pitching has been by far the fastest moving of the winter so far, and that didn’t change this weekend. Kenley Jansen and Tyler Rogers both came off the board as the former inked a one-year pact with the Tigers while the latter landed with Toronto on a three-year deal. Precious few high-end relief arms remain available at this point, with Brad Keller and Pete Fairbanks standing out as the best of the rest. There are still some very interesting candidates who could be had on one-year deals due to age. That’s a group that includes right-hander Chris Martin, who reportedly plans to pitch in 2026 in his age-40 season.

3. Mets fill first base in unorthodox fashion; what’s next?

Mets fans are still reeling from the loss of Pete Alonso to the Orioles at this year’s Winter Meetings, but president of baseball operations David Stearns wasted no time in getting a deal done with another veteran bat who’ll effectively take his spot in the lineup. Switch-hitter Jorge Polanco inked a two-year deal to come to Queens over the weekend, and despite spending most of his big league career as a second baseman, he’ll reportedly be used primarily at first base and DH with the Mets. Polanco’s a quality addition to the lineup, to be sure, but he lacks the power potential that Alonso brought to the table on such a consistent basis. Will the Mets look to supplement that lost power with a big bat in the outfield or at third base? Is there a big move in store on the pitching side of things?

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Brewers “Open To” Using Angel Zerpa As A Starter

By Mark Polishuk | December 14, 2025 at 11:04pm CDT

The Brewers and Royals officially announced the three-player trade (reported yesterday) that sent Isaac Collins and Nick Mears to Kansas City in exchange for Angel Zerpa.  Brewers president of baseball operations Matt Arnold spoke to Curt Hogg of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel about the trade today, and revealed the interesting detail that the club was “open to” the idea of Zerpa moving from the bullpen back to rotation work.

“We have some scouts that think he can do it.  He has done it in the past,” Arnold said.  “This guy also has postseason experience, too, which we obviously value a lot.  Having a guy with that kind of versatility and experience in big games is something we think will really help us.”

As we’ve seen teams move away from traditional pitching roles in recent years, there has been an increased willingness to explore turning relievers (sometimes even career relievers) into starting pitchers.  If clubs no longer expressly need their starters to throw more than five innings or take more than two turns through an opposing lineup, stretching a reliever out to handle this increased workload is more of a realistic goal than stretching a reliever to handle seven-plus innings.

Zerpa began his pro career as a starting pitcher, and worked as a starter in three of his first four career games in the majors (in 2021-22).  He started only three of his 15 appearances for the Royals in 2023, however, and hasn’t since started a game in anything outside of an opener capacity.  Instead, K.C. used Zerpa as a southpaw bullpen weapon, and the hurler posted a 4.03 ERA, 20.8% strikeout rate, 8.0% walk rate, and a whopping 60.6% groundball rate over 118 1/3 innings in 2024-25.

Right-handed hitters were quite productive against Zerpa even as he mostly dominated lefty swingers, and he allowed a lot of hard contact along with his uninspiring strikeout and walk numbers.  Zerpa is a hard thrower whose fastball averaged 96.2mph in 2025, but his standard four-seamer hasn’t been very effective over the last two years, while his 96.6mph sinker is his top pitch.  The slider was thrown 44.6% of the time in 2025, with a slider used 31.9% of the time and the four-seamer 19.8% of the time.  As Hogg noted, increased usage of a changeup might be necessary to help the 26-year-old Zerpa adjust back to starting pitching.

It isn’t the kind of arsenal that immediately stands out as a rotation candidate, and it might be that Zerpa just winds up as a reliever if the Brewers decide against the role change in Spring Training.  That said, the fact that the Brewers in particular see starting potential in Zerpa is probably a plus in favor of the experiment working.  Milwaukee’s ability to turn unheralded pitchers into capable or even elite starters or relievers has been perhaps the key element of the team’s success over the last decade, so nobody should rule out the possibility that the Brew Crew could help Zerpa unlock another level of performance no matter his role.

Arnold said the Brewers had “been trying to access [in a trade] for a long time,” as “I think that our group felt like this was a really strong arm to access with really, really good ingredients.  We’re very excited to get him with our coaches who have done a great job tapping into arms like this for a number of years.”

Zerpa is arbitration-eligible for the first time this offseason, and is arb-controlled through the 2028 season.  Because he has primarily operated as a non-closer, Zerpa’s first-year arbitration projection is only $1.2MM.  This is a solid price tag even if the left-hander stays in the pen, but he can successfully move into the rotation, he’ll be even more of a bargain over Milwaukee’s period of team control.

One reason why Zerpa may remain in the Brewers’ pen is the club’s current rotation surplus.  Freddy Peralta, Brandon Woodruff, Quinn Priester, Chad Patrick, and Jacob Misiorowski line up as the projected starting five, and plenty of other starting candidates (i.e. Logan Henderson, Robert Gasser, Carlos Rodriguez, Tobias Myers) are depth options.  The “you can never have too much pitching” mantra applies here since this group is likely to be naturally thinned out by injuries, plus Woodruff and Peralta are both set to become free agents next winter.  As trade rumors persist about Peralta, it is even possible the Brewers could suddenly have a big hole atop their rotation this offseason.

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Milwaukee Brewers Angel Zerpa

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MLBTR Chat Transcript

By Mark Polishuk | December 14, 2025 at 9:41pm CDT

Mark P

  • The Weekend Chat is here! We’ll get things rolling after a few questions get into the queue….

Giants fan

  • Any truth to the rumors of the Giants being close on a Ketel Marte trade? Chances of that happening and what would the Giants have to give up to get him?

Mark P

  • I’d find it surprising if the D’Backs moved Marte to a division rival, of all teams.  One would imagine SF would have to significantly outbid other teams to make that happen, which might mean Eldridge would have to be involved.

Bloom

  • Is there a way you’d see the cardinals both buying and selling?

Mark P

  • As in, trying to make an effort to contend in 2026?  Probably not, though the Cardinals aren’t turning up their noses at players who can be MLB contributors immediately.  Fitts, for instance, can help next year.

CBA

  • What’s one thing you want to see in the next CBA?  Any chance the league would go after establishing max contracts?

Mark P

  • The union would push back hard on max contracts, as they would anything directed at limiting salaries.

    One thing I’d like to see in the next CBA is a longer-term agreement, so we only have to suffer through all of this depressing lockout talk every 6-7 years instead of every four years

Dave

  • Hi mark, do you think the royals make  another trade for a bat?

Mark P

  • I’d think so.  Collins and Thomas are upgrades over what they had, but I’d suggest more is needed to really get things cooking.

Motor City Beach Bum

  • Who is the best non-Bregman bat the Tigers will realistically pursue?

Mark P

  • A quick glance at the Tigers’ entries on MLBTR this winter reveals a real push towards pitching.  Bregman, Ketel Marte, and HS Kim are the only position players really linked to Detroit so far, which makes sense since Jeff Greenberg literally said pitching was the Tigers’ priority this winter.

    The link to Marte was a little odd since Gleyber will be back at 2B.  I’d think Detroit fans wouldn’t be too enamored by Kim as the fallback plan to Bregman, but that might be as realistically big as it gets for Detroit on the position-player side

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nym fan

  • what in gods name are the mets thinking letting alonso and diaz walk?

Mark P

  • Seems like Stearns has been pretty ready to let Alonso walk for over a year now, and signing him to any sort of truly long-term contract never seemed to be the Mets’ plan.  Same with Diaz, as I suspect the Mets didn’t want to take the risk of paying big money deeper into his 30’s

    Obviously letting both go is a risk unto itself, since that’s a lot of high-caliber talent that now has to be replaced.  Polanco can only replace a portion of Alonso’s offense, and that’s assuming Polanco can replicate what he did in 2025.  Trying to build a pen out of strategic spare parts carries a lot of question marks, and that tactic tends to work better if you have a stabilizing closer like Diaz (or, like Hader or Williams for Stearns in Milwaukee)

Front Office

  • What is your initial reaction to Colorado’s new Front Office and Coaching staff?

Mark P

  • A step in the right direction.  It’s funny, some people speculated on Byrnes as the Rockies’ next front office boss since he worked for them back in the day, but he’ll instead return as the number two behind DePodesta.

    Sure, there’s the oddity of DePodesta being out of baseball for the last decade, but the bottom line is that these are some new voices who can bring some fresh ideas into an organization that badly needs a shake-up.

draft

  • The draft is supposed to help competitive balance. How does ending up with a team like the SF Giants picking 4th help ?

Mark P

  • That’s the magic of the draft lottery.  And, given how the Giants have had just one winning season in the last nine years, maybe they need the extra help!

Park M

  • idc if CY said he isn’t shopping Seager, he didn’t say he’s untouchable. Could Seager bring back Anthony +?

Mark P

  • There is no world where the Red Sox trade Roman Anthony.  Zero.
  • If the Red Sox actually did offer Anthony for Seager, then Young would quickly change his mind about Seager’s availability.

Dan S.

  • Any word on how teams are feeling about Michael King’s durability? Does 3/75 still feel like the right gamble? Would there be an opt-out?

Mark P

  • I think a lot of teams would happily take a three-year deal on King, with the added AAV perhaps a necessary cost.

Ghost of Mike Rizzo

  • What would it take for the Nats to move Gore? With Toboni’s focus so far on coaching and analytics, wouldn’t it make more sense to develop Gore into a better pitcher, and try to move him at deadline or next year?

Mark P

  • I think the Nationals have that same idea, as it would take a huge offer to get them to swap Gore right now.  There’s no real immediate incentive for the Nats to move Gore unless another team really levels up with something Toboni can’t refuse

Blue Jays fan

  • If the jays don’t sign Bo or Tucker is there a plan B or do they just go with a lineup of 1. Springer 2. Lukes 3. Vladdy 4. Santander 5. Barger 6. Kirk 7. Varsho 8. Clement 9. Gimenez

Oil Can Boyd

  • You want to get back to the world series. Does Tucker fill the void of Bo’s 200 hits ability?

Mark P

  • Toronto absolutely needs to add another bat to that lineup.  Going with that lineup means that you’re putting a lot of faith in everyone to match or top their 2025 numbers, and counting on Santander to have enough of a bounce-back year that he can replicate Bichette’s contributions.
  • If forced to pick one, I’d take Tucker over Bichette.  He’s just a better overall offensive force, and his LH bat works better in the Blue Jays’ lineup

Kyle

  • How serious do you think the Red Sox are in their interest in Michael King? Curious how they’d make that work and still be able to get two bats

Mark P

  • No reason to think they don’t have legitimate interest.  If King did get signed, then the Red Sox get more serious about shopping their young pitching depth for offense.

Guest

  • Long term preference – Nick Kurtz or Roman Anthony.

Mark P

  • Who would you rather have over the long term?

    Roman Anthony (49.0% | 941 votes)
    Nick Kurtz (50.9% | 978 votes)

    Total Votes: 1919

Guest

  • Kind of a role player, but has anyone shown interest in Dominic Smith?  He had a resurgence with SF last year. Great dude, easy to root for.

Mark P

  • Smith probably isn’t going to get much attention until a lot of the bigger, everyday player types land contracts.  Smith is indeed coming off a nice year, but most every team probably views him as a part-timer at best

Shaker Moseby

  • How much of a fantasy is it to hope the Jays sign both Tucker and Bo?  And if that fantasy comes true, what would you do with Clement and Barger?

Mark P

  • This wild scenario isn’t happening, as much as the Jays are in all-in mode.

    If it somehow did happen, the lineup is Bichette at 2B (presuably?), Barger 3B, Gimenez SS, Clement getting at-bats against lefties spelling either Barger/Gimenez, Tucker in one corner OF spot, and Santander/Springer in the other OF corner and the DH spot.

    Realistically, the Jays would probably then try to unload Santander for as much of a salary dump as possible, to save some money and to open up at-bats

Guest

  • What do you think of the Tyler Rogers deal?  I thought we were looking for a closer, but…

Mark P

  • I loved that signing for the Jays.  Rogers just gets results, and he brings a lot of durability to the bullpen.
  • I also wonder if the Jays made that signing in part as free advertising for Rogers Communications, haha

Joe

  • why do guys use baseball reference instead of FanGraphs for player pages?

Mark P

  • We’ve been using the B-Ref player tracker for years and years, and since it has worked just fine for us, I don’t think there’s any impetus to change?  But, we reference both B-Ref and Fangraphs all the time….heck, I’ve got a Fangraphs page open right now

Major League Bros

  • HEY MARK BRO… how many pull-ups can you do?

Mark P

  • I can pull up stats on that Fangraphs tab but that’s about it

Steven Kwan

  • Are fans overvaluing Steven Kwan? He has had health issues in each of the last two seasons and his sprint speed is plummeting. I’m sure front offices are taking that into consideration, but are teams willing to “overpay” for a good leadoff bat? Guardians have been noted as having a high asking price for him last trade deadline. Was that at any way in compensation for losing Clase’s trade value?

Mark P

  • It may surprise some fans to learn that Kwan had only a 99 wRC+ last year, and he had a similar number in 2023 while posting much more impressive offensive seasons in 2022 and 2024.

    So in that even-odd sense, he’s due for another big season next year!  But, you’re also leaving out the fact that Kwan is an elite defender, and his injury history is pretty light in comparison to most players.

    The Guardians’ financial situation means they’re always open to moving any player nearing free agency, but don’t forget….the Guards are also always trying to win, and Kwan has filled as outsized void as basically the only reliable player in Cleveland’s outfield for a few years now.

    My stance has always been that Kwan will be dealt next winter when he’s a year away from free agency, but that could potentially change if the younger OFs have started to emerge enough that the Guards felt comfortable moving Kwan at the deadline

  • That….was a lot more words than I realized I was writing, haha

Angel Fan

  • Who closing out games for us next season, Thought it would have been a no brainer to bring back Jansen. He said he liked playing here and only got a 1M dollar raise from the tigers

Mark P

  • Jansen may have preferred the idea of playing for a winning team that will help him get to 500 saves in much quicker fashion.  Due to their lack of success, the Angels aren’t going to win a ton of bidding wars unless they’ve got the clear top offer.

    As to who could step in, it’s asking a lot for Joyce or Stephenson to become the new closer, yet teams have often turned to any number of random relievers to close games.  Chances are the Angels bring in someone with a decent ninth-inning track record, but a committee might not be out of the question.

JaysVladdy

  • I think the Rays had a mutual option with Fairbanks. Considering the level of interest other teams have in him, why didn’t the Rays accept the $11 million option and then trade him afterward?

Mark P

  • Good question.  This was what I think most pundits figured the Rays would do, yet it seems like the Rays’ early forays into the trade market didn’t yield all that much interest.  Or, teams that were keen on Fairbanks might be open to paying him $11MM but not giving up prospects to Tampa to obtain him.
  • That $11MM weighs more heavily on the Rays’ budget than for most teams, yet it would seem like Fairbanks would still have been reasonably easy to move at full salary.  Or, Tampa Bay might have linked him to another trade chip in a multi-player deal?

Josh

  • I’m not a Mclain believer, does he have any trade value for the Reds?

Mark P

  • It would be a major sell-low situation for the Reds, so I doubt they’d have much interest in a trade.

Marky Mark

  • Mark Happy Weekend Chat!! So what is on ye ol’ Playlist this week?

Mark P

  • “Keep It Between The Lines” by Sturgill Simpson

Murakami

  • There’s only about a week left for me to sign and there’s been barely any rumors about interest in signing me? Does my market end up shifting to a shorter term deal?

Mark P

  • It’s been pretty quiet on the Murakami front, but Alonso leaving the market shakes up the 1B market.  It could be that Murakami’s camp is keeping a tight lid on rumors, moreso than interest is mild.

Rick Rude

  • Bold prediction for the rest of the Rays offseason?

Mark P

  • Lowe and Baz are both traded

Not Breslow

  • Asking for a friend. After the postseason push are the Red Sox fumbling the offseason so far? Any trade recommendations to right the ship? Im seeing a lot of negativity from the fanbase.

Mark P

  • Gray and Oviedo are very noteworthy pickups.  Keep in mind that Sox fans were having the same criticisms until Crochet was acquired at the winter meetings last year, and even then the criticism continued until Bregman signed in February.

    Boston’s roster is in good shape at the moment, they’ve already made the rotation better, and there’s still plenty of time for more significant moves.

Bobby Cox

  • You like the Yaz signing? I dont love it, good vs rh but a 4th outfielder and Eli white was good for us

Mark P

  • Really good move by the Braves. Yaz provides a lot of OF and bench depth, raises the team’s talent floor.

rando

  • Is it me or does it feel like the international/NPB signings have been oddly quiet? Aside from the usual west coast + some east teams. being interested, haven’t really heard any momentum

Mark P

  • Imai/Okamoto/Murakami don’t have the same big-name buzz of some of the other recent NPB additions.  Plus, I do wonder if some of the rumor mill is muted due to fan perception that the Dodgers will somehow sign all of these guys.

Snakes

  • Why would any GM trade away Marte. He is on a team friendly contract

Mark P

  • It could be that there’s some heat to the rumors of clubhouse discord over Marte.  Or, the D’Backs are simply open to offers, just in case some team makes a crazy bid that can’t be refused.

    Chris Young made comments to this effect today, talking about Corey Seager….all front offices “check in” on star players, just out of due diligence and just in case.  Like, take this scenario…

    GM #1: Hi, what would it take for me get your best player?
    GM #2: Haha, you and every other team, buddy! Ok, I’ll play along, what would you be willing to offer?
    GM1: I’ll offer prospect X and prospect Y, and eat the entire contract.
    GM2: …haha, I like your thinking, but I’ll still pass. Take care!

    /hangs up phone

    GM2 to his staff: Holy crow, they were willing to give X and Y?!  How long should I wait before calling back?!

Guest

  • Yanks had a quiet winter meetings. Something in the works or are they going to run it back again next year?

Mark P

  • The Yankees feel (with cause) that they’re in good shape already for 2026, and can afford to be relatively patient in seeing how the market develops on a number of fronts.  Who knows, maybe they’ll sign Bellinger or King tomorrow, or they’ll swing some trade that wasn’t even known to be on their radar.

Bucco B

  • What’s it going to take for a FA to sign in the ‘Burgh? No one wants to play in that beautiful ballpark? For a losing organization?!

His excellence, Mark Polishuk

  • Are the Pirates for real with their interest in high end free agents? Or this a mirage to say they tried for the fanbase?

Guest

  • What do you think is the biggest realistic target left for the Bucs? And do you think they’ll actually make any kind of splash?

Mark P

  • It only takes one Jayson Werth-esque signing to change a perception of a team for other free agents.  The real question now is that if the Pirates were willing to pay Schwarber $120MM, that theoretically means they have $120MM in spending capacity over the next four years.  So why not use most or all of that money on two or even one big bat, and really try to go for it while Skenes is still on the roster?

Cards in NY

  • What kind of return can we expect to see for Romero based on what seattle gave up for Ferrer

Mark P

  • Ferrer is a high-velo strikeout pitcher who comes with multiple years of team control.  Romero is a grounder specialist with so-so strikeout numbers, a lot of walks, and only one year remaining of team control.

    In short, the Cardinals will be getting a heck of a lot less than Harry Ford in a trade return.

Jerry R.

  • Was it probably a mistake for the White Sox to pick up Luis Robert’s club option for the year? 20m is quite a lot for him on a low-spending team, and it even looks like an obstacle to a trade that nets decent prospects. What’s the deal, you think?

Mark P

  • There seems to still be enough interest that Robert will probably get dealt.  I can understand Chicago’s logic in not wanting to just cut him for nothing, and if Robert does end up staying put this winter but then has a strong first half, he’ll get a good return at the deadline.

Ray Oyler

  • You got anything to say about the athletics tonight or are you gonna talk about the beads?

Mark P

  • Kurtz is narrowly beating Anthony in the poll, so that’s something!

    Perhaps just by dint of their unusual geographic situation, there are fewer A’s rumors than for most teams, so there usually isn’t a ton to really discuss.  Leiter is an okay signing for them.  Severino should be included in every discussion about any “unwanted contract swap” since he’s an interesting trade chip, and it’ll be interesting to see where he lands and for what return

Fred Bird

  • When will the Arenado saga end? Cards can’t move forward with him on the team

Mark P

  • Arenado is one of the more difficult players to move, so if anything, it would’ve been more surprising if the Cardinals had dealt him by Dec. 14

Caught

  • Answering CBA question, you snuck in a 67. I caught ya

Mark P

  • lol, that was pure happenstance.  I am too old for that meme stuff.

JB Reds

  • I’m upset Schwarber didn’t sign with Reds obviously.  But ownership saying the main reason they tried is because he would boost ticket sales it about as bad as “where are you gonna go”….

Mark P

  • Wouldn’t the Reds signing ANY major player bring in extra attendance?  Like, what fan is saying “well, I’ll order a season ticket package because Schwarber is from the Cincy area, but I won’t do it for Cody Bellinger”?

John

  • Alonso the fix to the orioles underperforming lineup?

Mark P

  • It makes retaining Mountcastle look like even more of a head-scratcher, but I like the signing.  Perfectly fair to wonder if Alonso will be productive over the full five years, but he should absolutely make the O’s a better team in 2026.

Giants

  • There was a lot of talk that the Giants aren’t interested in spending long term on a pitcher, but now we have reports from a trustworthy local Giants reporter Susan Slusser that she spoke to agents and the Giants are in fact talking to agents and pursuing the “top starters”. I’m assuming she meant Framber Imai and Ranger. Were the Giants just throwing out a smokescreen with all the “we arent going to commit to long term 100 mil+ starter deals”, or is Posey just doing his own thing separate from ownership

Mark P

  • I think every owner/chairman would prefer to not sign pitchers (or anyone) to pricey long-term contracts.  And, Greg Johnson didn’t expressly say that the Giants would never sign such deals, just that it wasn’t his preference.

    This is a team that has added Chapman, Adames, and Devers just within the last 15 months, so it’s not like the Giants are adverse to spending.  It’s just that SF may be more willing to open the checkbook for a hitter than for a pitcher.  As to the reports of the Giants checking in on available starters, that’s at the very least a due diligence move, or maybe some explorations to see if any of these pitchers are open to a shorter-term deal.

Ebenezer_Batflip

  • Do you think the Padres move Miller?

Mark P

  • Doubtful, after giving such a ton to the A’s at the deadline.  Miller is both controllable and relatively inexpensive for now, plus he is both the anchor of the Padres’ bullpen and still a potential candidate to move back into the rotation if SD wants to roll the dice.

    The fact that credible reporters like the Athletic’s crew were noting that story makes it at least some kind of a possibility, but I do enjoy how most reports about the Padres include some version of “A.J. Preller floats a lot of wild offers or trade ideas, so bear with us.”

Stros

  • Where do you think Christian walker plays next year? Seems like the Astros have get rid of him given the logjam at the corners. Would a McNeil for walker trade make sense for the Mets?

Mark P

  • Since the Mets plan to use Polanco at first base, Walker probably isn’t realistic at this point.  McNeil-for-Walker doesn’t totally work either since that locks McNeil into just OF work, which is a slightly inefficient use of his skillset.

    Walker is another player that probably isn’t being dealt outside of “unfavorable contract swap” territory.  Which leaves the Astros in kind of a bind unless someone gets hurt in Spring Training.

Rays Fan

  • It seems like the Nationals have exactly what we need in Abrams and Ruiz.  What kind of a package would they require back for that duo?

Mark P

  • Ruiz is owed a lot of money on his contract, and his bat has gone ice-cold over the last two seasons as he’s dealt with injuries.  Doesn’t seem like a fit for Tampa at all.

    Abrams is a better fit in theory, but I don’t see the Rays meeting the Nats’ big asking price for the remaining three years of Abrams’ control.

Colton T

  • Do you think Seattle was smart by not matching Met’s offer for Polanco?

Mark P

  • Polanco had a good season and would’ve been a good fit returning to Seattle’s lineup, plus there’s the added value of what he brought to their clubhouse. For a $20MM AAV, however, I’m not sure I’m too broken up if I’m a Mariners fan.

    Really, retaining Naylor was the biggest need for the Seattle offseason.  Polanco or Suarez would’ve been gravy, and we shouldn’t rule out Suarez still possibly returning.

Guest

  • Tork for hunter greene. Who says no

Mark P

  • Cincinnati.  Greene is far more valuable

Guest

  • Poll results- have you ever had a poll closer than the Kurtz/Anthony poll?

Mark P

  • Currently 50.7% for Kurtz, and that’s about as narrow a margin I can remember in any pure 1-v-1 poll question

Philly Love

  • The Phils are an extremely loyal organization always looking to bring back their aging stars.  Although I love the loyalty, mixing in young players is the biggest key to any organization.  I’d love to see Crawford be able to play CF instead of settling for LF and Miller start at 3rd but ultimately play SS moving Turner out to the OF.  Thoughts?

Mark P

  • Philly will give Crawford every chance at sticking in CF, and he can play at least a decent center field, that’s a particularly enormous win for the team.  Given all the big contracts on their books, getting help from the farm system is key to adding some inexpensive depth and quality to the roster, since the Phillies can’t just spend their way to filling every roster hole.

Trip

  • Are the Braves done adding to the bullpen?

Mark P

  • I thought they were done just by re-signing Iglesias, so the Suarez deal really caught me off guard.  One would imagine the rest of Atlanta’s bullpen adds will be minor league signings or very low-guarantee MLB deals, given how much has already been invested in Iglesias/Suarez

Ritch

  • Is Detroit going after Verlander?

Mark P

  • Strangely no buzz at all about Verlander thus far, though perhaps he’s taking his time to evaluate what I’m guessing are a limited amount of preferred landing spots.  Verlander’s not going to sign with the Rockies or someone just to keep pitching — he wants to join a team with a decent-to-great chance at contending in 2026.

    The rotation market as a whole hasn’t really picked up steam yet apart from Cease.  Probably a few more of the bigger names need to find contracts before teams start to really look at second-tier, shorter-term options like Verlander

MoonBeamMcSwine

  • GE Mark…Who gets the accolades as GM for signing the most valuable extension during this offseason.. runner ups?

Mark P

  • Last year’s title went to Jerry Dipoto, for wisely locking up Cal Raleigh just before Raleigh had the season of his life.
  • I’ll provide more of an answer in April, since most extensions get worked out once the bigger offseason business is through

Bobby

  • Scale of 1 to 10 with 10 being the most likely. How likely is it that the Dodgers will trade Teoscar Hernandez this offseason? I feel like he would not yield a great return (propects at most) and his postseason bat carries a lot of value.

Mark P

  • Teo’s postseason numbers aren’t great, just a career .792 OPS.  LA probably wouldn’t mind flipping Hernandez elsewhere to open up an outfield spot and free up some money, since even the Dodgers have a budget.  Now, the Dodgers would then surely re-invest those savings into another name player, potentially another outfielder L.A. thinks is a better long-term investment.

Friend

  • Severino for Cronenworth straight

Mark P

  • I feel like this was mentioned in a recent chat.  Makes sense on paper, but it could be that the A’s are wary of locking Cronenworth in at second base, since Kurtz/Rooker have 1B/DH spoken for

Me

  • Verlander to Detroit HAS TO happen, right?

Mark P

  • Oh yeah, I guess I didn’t address the Verlander/Detroit possibility in that last JV question.  Oops!

    It would be fun to see it happen, and the Tigers both need pitching and have a preference for shorter-term signings.  It’s a match on paper, but who knows how Harris and company might feel about Verlander, or if Verlander has interest in returning to Motown

Chatman

  • Have you seen running man?

Mark P

  • The new one, not yet.  The old one, several times.  Richard Dawson was legit robbed of an Oscar nomination.

Curious A’s Fan

  • Trading Severino would mean having to overpay for another SP. Why do that?

Mark P

  • Severino openly hates playing at the ballpark, the A’s can’t love that he is so public with his displeasure, and Severino doesn’t pitch well at home anyway, so his value to the team is limited.
  • We’ve over two hours into this chat now, so time to wrap things up.  Thanks so much for all the questions!
  • If you’re interested in more baseball Q&A, one of the many benefits of our Trade Rumors Front Office subscription is the exclusive weekly live chats. The more limited field means you’re about 10 times more likely to get a question answered, as opposed to battling for space with hundreds of other questions in today’s chat. For more on our memberships, check out this link:

    https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/membership?ref=chat-12-14-25

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