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Astros Exercise 2017 Option On Evan Gattis

By Steve Adams | November 4, 2016 at 1:34pm CDT

Astros catcher/designated hitter Evan Gattis tells Mark Berman of FOX 26 Houston that the team has informed him that his $5.2MM club option for the 2017 season will be exercised (Twitter link). Houston could have otherwise bought out the option for $100K and retained Gattis via arbitration, but he’ll instead have his 2017 salary locked in at that amount.

Gattis, 30, saw his offensive output take a step forward with the Astros in 2016, as he batted .251/.319/.508 with a career-high 32 home runs. Gattis’ average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage each represented increases from his 2015 season as well, and he returned to part-time catching duties (55 games) after spending all of 2015 as an outfielder/DH, making the decision an even easier one for Houston. Gattis will be arbitration-eligible next winter and is controllable through the 2018 season before he can test the open market in search of his first free-agent deal.

With Jason Castro set to hit the open market, Gattis currently lines up as Houston’s primary receiver in 2017, with Max Stassi, Tyler Heineman and Roberto Pena representing other internal options. However, the Astros also figure to pursue a reunion with Castro and check in with other free-agent backstops this winter as well.

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Houston Astros Transactions Evan Gattis

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Offseason Outlook: Detroit Tigers

By Steve Adams | November 4, 2016 at 11:15am CDT

MLBTR is publishing Offseason Outlooks for all 30 teams.  Click here for the other entries in this series.

“We want to run the organization without having to go over our means. We want to stay competitive, but at the same time, this organization has been working way above its means for some time.” ~ Tigers GM Al Avila, Oct. 18, 2016

Guaranteed Contracts

  • Miguel Cabrera, 1B: $180MM through 2023 (including $8MM buyout of 2024 club option)
  • Justin Upton, LF: $110.625MM through 2021 (may opt out of contract after 2017 season)
  • Jordan Zimmermann, RHP: $92MM through 2020
  • Justin Verlander, RHP: $84MM through 2019 (plus 2020 vesting option)
  • Victor Martinez, DH: $36MM through 2018
  • Anibal Sanchez, RHP: $21MM through 2017 (including $5MM buyout of 2018 club option)
  • Ian Kinsler, 2B: $16MM through 2017 (including $5MM buyout of 2018 club option)
  • J.D. Martinez, RF: $11.75MM through 2017
  • Mike Pelfrey, RHP: $8MM through 2017
  • Francisco Rodriguez, RHP: $6MM through 2017
  • Mark Lowe, RHP: $5.5MM through 2017

Arbitration Eligible Players (service time in parentheses; projected salaries via MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz)

  • Andrew Romine (4.049) – $1.2MM
  • Jose Iglesias (4.036) – $3.2MM
  • Justin Wilson (4.035) – $2.7MM
  • Alex Wilson (3.038) – $1.2MM
  • Bruce Rondon (3.037) – $900K
  • Nick Castellanos (3.029) – $2.8MM
  • Non-tender candidates: Romine

Free Agents

  • Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Erick Aybar, Casey McGehee

Other Financial Commitments

  • Prince Fielder: $6MM paid to Rangers annually through 2020

Tigers Depth Chart; Tigers Payroll Information

The comment from Avila that opened this outlook was one of many headline-grabbing quotes he delivered last month, as the second-year GM’s words were the first significant indication that Tigers owner Mike Ilitch may not continue his free-spending ways. Avila was charged with spending aggressively to assemble a contender last year in his first winter atop Detroit’s baseball ops hierarchy — business as usual in the Detroit front office — and responded by shelling out more than $270MM to sign Justin Upton, Jordan Zimmermann, Mike Pelfrey, Mark Lowe and Jarrod Saltalamacchia while also swinging trades for bullpen help in the form of Francisco Rodriguez and Justin Wilson.

The results, clearly, were not encouraging. Though the Tigers finished with 86 wins and were in contention for much of the year, each of the free agents signed to a multi-year deal flopped in year one of their contract. Zimmermann suffered injuries and faded after a brilliant start, while Upton looked lost at the plate until a strong six-week finish. Pelfrey’s contract was baffling from the get-go, and Lowe was unable to recreate the terrific 2015 campaign he authored with the Mariners and Blue Jays. The trade results were more promising, at least. K-Rod proved still capable of handling a late-inning role, and Wilson posted terrific peripherals that suggest his 4.14 ERA will improve in 2017 and beyond (10.0 K/9, 2.6 BB/9, 54.9 percent ground-ball rate, 3.02 SIERA).

The disappointing performance of last winter’s additions, though, didn’t simply cause the Tigers to miss out on the 2016 postseason. Rather, they further clogged what was already a dreadful long-term payroll outlook and seemingly served as the tipping point to curb some of the team’s offseason aggressiveness. That’s not to suggest that a full tear-down is in the offing. Franchise cornerstones like Miguel Cabrera and Justin Verlander — both of whom have full no-trade protection via 10-and-5 rights anyhow — seem unlikely to move. Zimmermann, too, has full no-trade rights early in the five-year deal he inked last November. Upton, meanwhile, can block trades to 20 teams and would be difficult to unload. The Tigers would probably love to deal Sanchez, Pelfrey and Lowe, but it seems unlikely that any team would line up to take on those onerous financial commitments. If they’re to be moved, the Tigers will have to chip in some cash or take on a similarly unwanted deal.

Where, then, do they turn to accomplish Avila’s stated goals of getting younger and trimming some of the payroll? Detroit wasted such little time in beginning the process that this outlook required a last-minute update before publishing. Avila’s first move of the offseason came less than 24 hours after the completion of the World Series, as he traded Cameron Maybin and his $9MM club option to the Angels in exchange for young right-hander Victor Alcantara. The move sheds Maybin’s $9MM salary next year and also prevented the Tigers from needing to pay a $1MM buyout. Beyond that, Detroit added a hard-throwing prospect to its minor league ranks. The return on Maybin wasn’t especially strong, but he’s a one-year rental coming off an injury-shortened season, and it didn’t appear to be a huge secret that the Tigers preferred to deal their center fielder.

Rodriguez’s $6MM option was probably an easier call, as it came with a $2MM buyout, thus it a net $4MM decision for the team. Detroit exercised the option shortly after trading Maybin, so Rodriguez looks to be in the fold for the time being, although there’s still a chance that the Tigers could field offers for him later this winter. The game’s emphasis on relief pitching is trending up, after all, and while no one is going to mistake K-Rod for the powerhouse reliever he was during his peak with the Angels, he’s still a very serviceable late-inning arm on a reasonable one-year deal. Moving K-Rod to a club that can’t afford to pursue one of the top free-agent closers or to a team looking to use him to set up for a top-flight closer could net another interesting young piece.

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Beyond Rodriguez, right fielder J.D. Martinez (pictured) is perhaps the most palatable veteran for the Tigers to shop this winter. While the loss of an elite bat will unequivocally sting, Martinez is likely headed for a $100MM+ contract next winter, and extension talks with him aren’t likely to come with any kind of notable discount just one year removed from such a tantalizing payday.

MLBTR’s Mark Polishuk recently looked at Martinez’s extension candidacy and suggested that something in the vein of $120MM-140MM over five to six years would be a realistic price (depending on the inclusion of an opt-out clause). That indeed seems like a fair prognostication for a player who just turned 29 and has laid waste to opposing pitchers with a .299/.357/.540 slash line and 83 home runs in 401 games since coming to Detroit. Avila candidly said he doesn’t foresee a long-term deal happening with Martinez, making him a natural trade candidate. Though Martinez comes with just one more year of control (and some defensive question marks), his imposing bat and reasonable price tag could net a package fronted by at least one premium young prospect while also trimming some money off the payroll. The Mets (if Yoenis Cespedes signs elsewhere), Giants, Blue Jays, Orioles, Rangers, Mariners, Angels and Dodgers all seem like plausible landing spots (to varying degrees).

Kinsler, too, figures to have widespread trade appeal, though as a similarly excellent player with two years of club control remaining ($11MM 2017 salary, $10MM 2018 option), the asking price could be greater and the urgency to deal him lesser. Certainly it’s fair to assume Avila and his staff would entertain offers on Kinsler, but contending teams in need of a definitive second base upgrade aren’t as plentiful as those looking for corner outfield sluggers. The Dodgers, Mets (if Neil Walker departs) and possibly the Angels stand out as win-now clubs that could look to upgrade at second base.

Victor Martinez represents another highly productive veteran controlled for two more seasons, but the $36MM he’s owed for his age-38 and age-39 seasons is probably excessive, and his market would be limited to AL-only teams with open DH slots. That’s not to say a deal couldn’t be worked out — the Dave-Dombrowski-led Red Sox do have a new opening at DH, for instance — but trading V-Mart looks decidedly more cumbersome than parting with the other middle-of-the-order Martinez on the roster.

With all the talk of selling pieces and trimming payroll, though, it’s easy to forget that the Tigers won 86 games this season and could be firmly in the thick of things in the AL Central next year with better health from some of their veterans. A rebound from Zimmermann, for instance, would give the team a strong quartet of Verlander, Zimmermann, American League Rookie of the Year candidate Michael Fulmer and Daniel Norris on which to lean in the rotation. Meanwhile, the strides made by Nick Castellanos at third base give the team another intriguing bat to pair with Cabrera and a hopefully resurgent Upton in the middle of the order. Jose Iglesias is an elite defender, so much so that his glove largely offset the decline in his offense this year. A rebound with the bat shouldn’t be ruled out for Iglesias, as his K/BB numbers remained identical in 2016 while his BABIP fell off (in part due to an increase in fly balls). With some combination of Kinsler and/or either Martinez likely to return in 2017 as well, the makings of a strong lineup are present.

And in the bullpen, Rodriguez could again anchor an improved relief corps if he’s not dealt. Even if the Tigers do part ways with the game’s active saves leader, there’s still hope. Wilson’s peripherals, as mentioned above, were outstanding. Young Bruce Rondon took a huge step forward with a 2.97 ERA on the season and a 1.52 ERA over his final 25 games. Joe Jimenez, one of the top bullpen prospects in baseball, logged a 1.51 ERA and 13.1 K/9 across three minor league levels and should be a factor at some point in the first half of the 2017 season. Alex Wilson quietly recorded his third straight season with a sub-3.00 ERA and his second in which he reached 70 innings.

Detroit could look to supplement that core group, though paying top dollar early in the offseason (as it has in some instances in the past) doesn’t seem likely. Instead, help could come in the form of controllable relief arms via trades. (Alcantara, conceivably, could occupy a relief role later this year.) Alternatively, the Tigers could look to opportunistically wait out the free-agent market and snatch up a quality setup arm on a modest one- or two-year deal late in the winter. The relief market somewhat resembles a game of musical chairs each winter, and inevitably there’s a name or two that’s left standing without a big contract when the music stops.

Center field, too, presents an opportunity to make a value play, though Avila suggested immediately after the Maybin trade that his team’s center field job will be a “wide-open competition.” That could give out-of-options outfielders Anthony Gose and Tyler Collins a shot at cracking the roster, and young JaCoby Jones will certainly get a look as well. Jones could use more time to improve on his offense and familiarize himself with center field (most of his experience is in the infield), though, and Collins hit poorly in both Triple-A and in the Majors in 2016. Gose, meanwhile, was suspended by the team this summer for arguing with Toledo manager Lloyd McClendon, who is now the Tigers’ Major League hitting coach and also posted a .521 OPS in Triple-A. If Detroit does take to the open market to look for a more affordable option than Maybin, then names like Peter Bourjos, Michael Bourn and even old friend Austin Jackson are among the options.

As for other possible spots where a low-cost addition might make sense, the utility infield and backup catcher roles need to be addressed. It’s possible that Romine is tendered a contract and reprises the role he’s filled in Detroit since 2014, but his bat has never developed. Dixon Machado represents a mildly cheaper (by about $700K) in-house alternative, and the team could also look to re-sign Erick Aybar to fill the role or pursue Ruben Tejada, as either could be an offensive upgrade. James McCann still hasn’t hit much in Detroit, but all accounts seem to indicate that the Tigers think he’s their man behind the plate in the long run. He figures to get at least another year to prove them right, so a backup option like Geovany Soto, Drew Butera or even old friend Alex Avila (GM Al Avila’s son) could fit.

A new corner outfielder could make sense in the event of a J.D. Martinez trade, especially now that Maybin is gone. In addition to the aforementioned Gose and Collins, the Tigers have another out-of-options outfielder in Steven Moya that could compete for everyday at-bats in right field. Moya ripped 25 homers between Triple-A and the Majors last season in just 526 combined plate appearances, so his power is certainly intriguing even if it comes with a questionable OBP and some defensive uncertainty. Affordable value plays on the free-agent market could include Colby Rasmus (who is coming off a pair of surgeries and a down season) or former big leaguer Eric Thames, who has dominated the Korea Baseball Organization over the past three seasons.

And if the team is truly interested in forming a sustainable core that doesn’t force it to play “above its means,” perhaps there’s the possibility of an extension for a younger star this winter. Fulmer is the most appealing youngster to lock up, but he’s still three years from arbitration eligibility, so there’s little in the sense of urgency. At the same time, his distance from significant earnings make it easier to sign him at a lower cost. Castellanos, too, could be an extension candidate if the team believes his 2016 strides at the plate and in the field to be legitimate improvement instead of a short-term blip on the radar. And even Rondon, who a year ago was sent home due to the Tigers’ discontent with his “effort level,” could be the recipient of a modest multi-year deal that would prevent his arbitration price from soaring in the event that he eventually inherits the ninth inning.

The potential spending standstill has been a long time coming and one that we’ve speculated about here at MLBTR on multiple occasions. Eventually, the Tigers’ hyper-aggressive outlays were going to create long-term payroll difficulties, and that’s very much the case right now. Detroit already projects to have a $195.7MM payroll in 2017, a $138.1MM payroll in 2018 and $111.1MM in 2019. Even as far out as 2020, the team is guaranteeing a fairly stunning $83.1MM to just three players (or $105.1MM to four players if Verlander’s 2020 option vests).

Though a change in approach finally seems to be at hand, the Tigers don’t need to wave the white flag. While the extent to which they continue to shed payroll (i.e. trade productive veterans) will of course be a significant factor in determining next year’s postseason hopes, there’s enough talent on the roster to withstand some financial housekeeping and still find success.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

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2016-17 Offseason Outlook Detroit Tigers MLBTR Originals

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Indians Exercise 2019-20 Club Options On Terry Francona

By Steve Adams | November 4, 2016 at 10:01am CDT

10:01am: The Indians have now formally announced that both the 2019 and 2020 options on Francona’s contract have been exercised. The team also announced that Carlos Santana’s 2017 option has been exercised, as was previously reported yesterday and widely expected prior to that news.

9:15:am: The tweet in question has since been deleted, calling into question whether Francona’s options have or have not yet been picked up. The Indians had yet to make a formal announcement, though it remains entirely possible that such a move will ultimately come to fruition in light of the Indians’ excellent 2016 season.

9:00am: The Indians have exercised a pair of club options on manager Terry Francona that will extend his current contract through the 2020 season, reports Paul Hoynes of the Cleveland Plain Dealer (via Twitter). Francona’s previous contract with Cleveland had been slated to expire at the end of the 2018 campaign, but the team’s World Series run under his leadership prompted the club to make an even longer-term commitment in its skipper.

The 57-year-old Francona has been serving as Cleveland’s manager since the 2013 season, guiding the team to a winning record in each of those four seasons including a pair of 90+ win seasons and two postseason berths (this year’s World Series drive and a Wild Card loss in 2013). As manager of the Indians, Francona has compiled an impressive 352-294 record, with this most recent season undoubtedly representing his most impressive campaign.

The Indians not only made it to Game 7 of the World Series against the Cubs (where they took part in an instant classic) — they did so without their best player, Michael Brantley, for much of the season and did so in spite of an injury-ravaged rotation late in the year. Cleveland didn’t receive a start from either Carlos Carrasco or Danny Salazar in the postseason and also had to deal with a highly abbreviated start from Trevor Bauer in the ALCS due to a bizarre finger injury. Francona, though, leaned heavily on ace Corey Kluber and some expert usage of bullpen stars Andrew Miller and Cody Allen in order to maximize the team’s chances throughout the duration of the playoffs.

While the end result of his managerial savvy certainly wasn’t what Francona or the Indians had hoped, it did nothing but reinforce the stellar reputation that Francona has amassed throughout his 16-year managerial career. Francona has previously served as the manager of the Phillies (1997-2000) and the Red Sox (2004-11), winning a pair of World Series in Boston. He has a lifetime record of 1381-1209 (.533 winning percentage) as a Major League manager.

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Cleveland Guardians Terry Francona

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Angels Acquire Cameron Maybin, Exercise His Option

By Steve Adams | November 3, 2016 at 11:00pm CDT

The Angels wasted no time in filling their left field need this winter, as they announced on the first afternoon of the offseason that they’ve acquired Cameron Maybin from the Tigers in exchange for minor league righty Victor Alcantara and exercised Maybin’s $9MM club option for the 2017 season.

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After an aggressive 2015-16 offseason, the Tigers shifted course recently, with GM Al Avila saying the team was going to prioritize getting younger and would no longer “play above its means.” Moving Maybin allows the Tigers to trim some money off the 2017 ledger without losing the talented outfielder for nothing, and they’ll now not only save his $9MM salary but also the $1MM they’d have paid by simply buying the option out. It remains to be seen what the Tigers are receiving in exchange, though the Angels notoriously have one of the league’s worst farm systems (if not the worst). Nonetheless, the Tigers can still pick up a piece or two to add to the farm system and better position themselves for the future.

Maybin, 30 in April, was originally drafted by the Tigers in the first round back in 2005 but found himself traded to the Marlins as one of the centerpieces of the Miguel Cabrera blockbuster (Andrew Miller was the other headliner). After bouncing around the National League a bit for the next several years, Maybin ended up back with the Tigers last season in a trade that sent Ian Krol and Gabe Speier to the Braves. A fractured wrist and a sprained thumb cost Maybin nearly half the season, but in the 94 games that he was healthy, he was quite productive, batting .315/.383/.415 with four home runs and 15 stolen bases. Defensive metrics have been down on Maybin’s work in center field for the past couple of years, but a move to left field should yield more favorable ratings.

Maybin will line up in the Halos’ outfield alongside superstar Mike Trout in center field and the highly undervalued Kole Calhoun in right field to give the Angels a talented and athletic trio of outfielders. With left field taken care of on the first day of the offseason, the Angels can quickly shift their focus to other areas of need this winter, namely second base, catcher and the pitching staff. As for the Tigers, the subtraction of Maybin will leave the team looking for center field help, although they could also turn to young JaCoby Jones in center field.

The 23-year-old Alcantara spent this past season with the Angels’ Double-A affiliate and logged a 4.30 ERA with 6.4 K/9, 4.6 BB/9 and a 55.6 percent ground-ball rate in 111 innings (20 starts, nine relief appearances). MLB.com rates Alcantara as the Halos’ No. 8 prospect and gives him a plus fastball and above-average slider on the 20-80 scouting scale. He’s been a starter for most of his minor league tenure, though the MLB.com report on him notes that Alcantara may not have the command or third pitch required to be a starter in the Majors and could instead be a highly effective reliever.  Baseball America pegged him fourth among Angels farmhands in their midseason update and noted that his fastball velocity has dipped as he’s developed a more controlled delivery that is easier to repeat.

MLB.com’s Jason Beck (Twitter link) first reported that the Tigers were exploring trades for Maybin, and Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports reported that the Angels were acquiring him (Twitter link). Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press reported that Alcantara would head back to the Tigers (Twitter link).

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

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Detroit Tigers Los Angeles Angels Newsstand Transactions Cameron Maybin Victor Alcantara

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Coaching And Front Office Notes: Rockies, Rangers, Cardinals

By charliewilmoth | November 3, 2016 at 10:15pm CDT

As we head into the offseason, here’s the latest on MLB coaching and front office changes:

  • Earlier today, it emerged that the Rockies could hire their next manager within the next couple of days. One former manager who won’t be getting the position is former Brewers skipper Ron Roenicke, who was interested in the job but who has not been interviewed and does not believe he is a candidate, according to Patrick Saunders of the Denver Post. Roenicke currently serves as the Angels’ third base coach.
  • With assistant Thad Levine departing to become GM of the Twins, Rangers GM Jon Daniels says his team could replace Levine with an outside hire but could also distribute his duties to other members of the front office, as Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram tweets.
  • The Cardinals have hired Bob Gebhard as a special assistant to GM John Mozeliak, tweets Bob Nightengale of USA Today. The 73-year-old Gebhard briefly pitched for the Twins and Expos in the early 1970s, and he was the Rockies’ first GM, serving in that capacity throughout most of the 1990s.
  • It would appear the Cardinals have also created an entirely new coaching position. Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch tweets that they’ve promoted Mike Shildt to the big leagues as a “quality control coach.” They’ve also promoted Oliver Marmol to be their new first base coach. Shildt has eight years of managerial experience in the Cardinals’ minor league system, spending the last two years with Triple-A Memphis. The 30-year-old Marmol spent several years in the Cards’ system as an infielder before transitioning to coaching. He managed at Class A+ Palm Beach last year.
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Colorado Rockies St. Louis Cardinals Texas Rangers Ron Roenicke

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Minor MLB Transactions: 11/3/16

By charliewilmoth | November 3, 2016 at 8:34pm CDT

Here’s a collection of minor moves from around the game, to add to the long list of outrights we posted earlier:

  • The Braves have signed righty Danny Reynolds to a minor league deal, tweets MLBTR’s Zach Links. Reynolds struggled with Double-A Arkansas in the Angels’ system in 2016, with a 5.61 ERA, 8.3 K/9 and 6.4 BB/9 over 33 2/3 innings. The 25-year-old was released in June and wound up in independent ball. Most reports offer praise for his velocity, however, and his stuff was interesting enough that he went from the Angels to the Dodgers to the Astros and back to the Angels in a four-month series of waiver claims starting last December, so the Braves might hope he provides a bit of upside than the typical organizational player.
  • Mariners catcher Steve Clevenger has elected to become a free agent, SB Nation’s Chris Cotillo tweets. The M’s announced yesterday that they had outrighted Clevenger. The 30-year-old hit .221/.303/.309 while playing sparingly in the big leagues last season. He missed time to an elbow injury, then was suspended by the team following a pair of offensive tweets.
  • The Rangers have announced that they’ve selected the contract of IF/OF Drew Robinson, preventing him from becoming a minor league free agent. The 24-year-old had a solid season with Triple-A Round Rock in 2016, batting .257/.350/.480 with 20 home runs in 539 plate appearances. Robinson has struck out in more than a quarter of his career minor league plate appearances and typically doesn’t hit for good averages, but his walk-heavy offensive game has been resilient as he’s moved through the Rangers’ system, and his ability to play six positions (first, second, third and all three outfield spots) could help make him useful at the big-league level.
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Atlanta Braves Seattle Mariners Texas Rangers Steve Clevenger

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Avila: Tigers To Have “Wide Open Competition” In Center Field

By charliewilmoth | November 3, 2016 at 7:40pm CDT

Following the Tigers’ decisions to exercise closer Francisco Rodriguez’s option and to trade center fielder Cameron Maybin to the Angels for pitcher Victor Alcantara, the team issued a statement with quotes from GM Avila. In the wake of Maybin’s departure, the team will sort through various options at center field next season, Avila says.

“We will weigh our options as far as center field is concerned for next season,” says the GM. “There will be a wide open competition starting in the spring and we’ll see how it plays out.”

The team’s options at center field could include JaCoby Jones, Tyler Collins and Anthony Gose. All three, though, come with drawbacks. Jones mostly played infield in the minors, has limited experience above Double-A and batted just .243/.309/.356 while striking out in 29.9% of his plate appearances at Triple-A Toledo last year. Collins posted a .687 OPS for Detroit last season and fared even worse at Toledo. And Gose also failed to hit, batting .209/.287/.341 in the big leagues in 2016. In contrast, Maybin’s 2016 season was a highly successful one, and it appears the Tigers will miss his .383 OBP in particular. Avila’s comments don’t preclude the possibility that the Tigers could expand their search for a center fielder outside the organization, however.

Regarding Rodriguez, Avila says, “We liked the job K-Rod did last season and the numbers show he was a reliable closer for us. He stabilizes the back end of our bullpen and provides veteran leadership to our younger bullpen arms.” The 34-year-old K-Rod figures to close for the Tigers next season, unless the Tigers decide to put him on the trade market.

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Detroit Tigers Anthony Gose Cameron Maybin Francisco Rodriguez JaCoby Jones Tyler Collins

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Dick Williams On Reds’ Bullpen

By charliewilmoth | November 3, 2016 at 7:02pm CDT

The Reds want to upgrade their bullpen this offseason, but GM Dick Williams admits that will be a challenge, as MLB.com’s Mark Sheldon writes. “There is not a ton of options available, and there are a lot of teams talking about needing bullpen help right now. We just have to be careful that we don’t get swept up in a market that is overheated,” says Williams, who adds that he might prefer internal options like Raisel Iglesias and Michael Lorenzen to pitch in multiple-inning bullpen roles next season, rather than hunting for that sort of pitcher on in free agency. Both pitchers were among the Reds’ best in 2016, and both also have experience starting.

“In the second half of the season, we were trying to promote the usage of Iglesias and Lorenzen in that type of multi-inning role,” says Williams. “People are always looking for the market inefficiency, and if all of a sudden everybody is out chasing multi-inning guys, then you might have to look elsewhere.”

Williams adds that the Reds do not plan to re-sign J.J. Hoover, who was outrighted in August and became a free agent last month. Hoover was a solid contributor in the Reds’ 2015 ’pen, but he was awful in 2016 after being called upon to replace Aroldis Chapman as the Reds’ closer, allowing 29 runs in 18 2/3 innings in the big leagues. He did, however, fare well in an extended stay at Triple-A Louisville.

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Cincinnati Reds J.J. Hoover Michael Lorenzen Raisel Iglesias

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Rangers Prefer To Have Joey Gallo Start 2017 In Minors

By charliewilmoth | November 3, 2016 at 6:22pm CDT

The Rangers’ plans for first base in 2017 aren’t entirely clear, but it appears Joey Gallo does not top their list of potential starters at the position, as Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News notes. “We think Joey is going to be a very good player in this league, but when is still too early to say,” says GM Jon Daniels. “Ideally, he’d probably get a little more time, unless there is a big jump like Ryan Rua took last year.” Daniels cites Jurickson Profar and Rua as candidates for playing time at first.

Incumbent first baseman Mitch Moreland is a free agent this winter, and Gallo is a talented minor league slugger with a long history of hitting for incredible power — he’s hit 152 home runs, many of the light-tower variety, in parts of five minor league seasons. He’s a third baseman by trade, but he played 32 games at first base in for Triple-A Round Rock last season and would appear to be an obvious candidate to take over the position now that there’s a vacancy. The Rangers could also have playing time available at DH, depending on how this offseason shakes out.

Gallo also has obvious weaknesses, however. He struck out in nearly 35% of his plate appearances last year at Round Rock, and has whiffed a ridiculous 76 times in 153 plate appearances in the big leagues. He would likely have a hard time posting batting averages above the Mendoza Line without improvements in that category, and the Rangers might feel Round Rock is the best place to address his deficiencies. Gallo went to Venezuela this offseason to work on his game in winter ball, but has been sidelined by a hamstring injury.

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Texas Rangers Joey Gallo

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Tigers Exercise 2017 Option On Francisco Rodriguez

By Steve Adams | November 3, 2016 at 5:55pm CDT

The Tigers announced today that they’ve exercised their $6MM club option on closer Francisco Rodriguez. That option came with a $2MM buyout, effectively making this a $4MM decision for the Tigers.

Rodriguez, 35 in January, enjoyed a strong first year with the Tigers in 2016 after being acquired from the Brewers in exchange for minor league infielder Javier Betancourt. The active saves leader (430 in his career), Rodriguez picked up 44 saves in the Motor City and pitched to a 3.24 ERA with 8.0 K/9 against 3.2 BB/9 to go along with a career-best 54.7 ground-ball rate in 58 1/3 innings.

The Tigers were faced with two option decisions this offseason and elected to pick up their option on K-Rod while trading center fielder Cameron Maybin to the Angels in exchange for minor league righty Victor Alcantara. That would appear to be the first step in GM Al Avila’s stated goal of getting younger while scaling back the team’s payroll. However, while Rodriguez looks to be in the fold next season for now, there’s no guarantee that he won’t be shopped around later this winter.

If K-Rod is indeed back with the Tigers, he’ll join hard-throwing setup man Bruce Rondon in the bullpen along with lefty Justin Wilson and right-hander Alex Wilson. The Tigers also possess one of the game’s more intriguing bullpen prospects in minor league strikeout machine Joe Jimenez, giving the team the foundation for a potentially strong bullpen next season. (Alcantara, acquired in the Maybin deal, could potentially factor into that mix at some point as well.)

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Detroit Tigers Newsstand Transactions Francisco Rodriguez

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