Headlines

  • Athletics Acquire Jeff McNeil
  • Nationals Sign Foster Griffin
  • Padres Sign Sung-Mun Song
  • Rangers Re-Sign Chris Martin
  • Red Sox Acquire Willson Contreras
  • White Sox To Sign Munetaka Murakami
  • Previous
  • Next
Register
Login
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Rumors

MLB Trade Rumors

Remove Ads
  • Home
  • Teams
    • AL East
      • Baltimore Orioles
      • Boston Red Sox
      • New York Yankees
      • Tampa Bay Rays
      • Toronto Blue Jays
    • AL Central
      • Chicago White Sox
      • Cleveland Guardians
      • Detroit Tigers
      • Kansas City Royals
      • Minnesota Twins
    • AL West
      • Athletics
      • Houston Astros
      • Los Angeles Angels
      • Seattle Mariners
      • Texas Rangers
    • NL East
      • Atlanta Braves
      • Miami Marlins
      • New York Mets
      • Philadelphia Phillies
      • Washington Nationals
    • NL Central
      • Chicago Cubs
      • Cincinnati Reds
      • Milwaukee Brewers
      • Pittsburgh Pirates
      • St. Louis Cardinals
    • NL West
      • Arizona Diamondbacks
      • Colorado Rockies
      • Los Angeles Dodgers
      • San Diego Padres
      • San Francisco Giants
  • About
    • MLB Trade Rumors
    • Tim Dierkes
    • Writing team
    • Advertise
    • Archives
  • Contact
  • Tools
    • 2025-26 Top 50 MLB Free Agents With Predictions
    • Free Agent Contest Leaderboard
    • 2025-26 MLB Free Agent List
    • 2026-27 MLB Free Agent List
    • Projected Arbitration Salaries For 2026
    • Contract Tracker
    • Transaction Tracker
    • Agency Database
  • NBA/NFL/NHL
    • Hoops Rumors
    • Pro Football Rumors
    • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • App
  • Chats
Go To Pro Hockey Rumors
Go To Hoops Rumors

Joey Jay Passes Away

By Anthony Franco | October 28, 2024 at 11:53pm CDT

Former All-Star pitcher Joey Jay passed away last month at age 89, according to an obituary from a Florida funeral home. A 6’4″ right-hander, he pitched 13 seasons in the big leagues.

A native of Middletown, Connecticut, Jay signed with the Milwaukee Braves for a $20K bonus in 1953. Under the so-called “bonus baby” rules of the time, a player who signed for more than $4K could not be assigned to the minor leagues. Jay therefore jumped right to the majors as a 17-year-old for the 1953 season. He remarkably tossed 10 scoreless innings in an abbreviated stint. He only made 15 appearances the following year, struggling to a 6.50 ERA across 18 innings in his age-18 season.

After two seasons in the majors, Milwaukee was able to assign Jay to the minors. He wouldn’t make a permanent return to the big leagues until 1958, his age-22 campaign. Jay pitched well in a swing role over the next three years. His career really took off when he was dealt to the Reds as part of a package for Gold Glove shortstop Roy McMillan during the 1960-61 offseason.

Cincinnati plugged Jay into the rotation. He seized on his first permanent rotation spot, working to a 3.53 ERA over 247 1/3 innings covering 34 starts. He led the National League with 21 wins and four shutouts among his 14 complete games. Jay was selected to both All-Star teams in 1961 — MLB had multiple All-Star games for a few years during that time — and finished fifth in NL MVP balloting. Three of the four players above him (Frank Robinson, Orlando Cepeda, Vada Pinson and Roberto Clemente) went onto Hall of Fame careers.

The Reds finished 93-61 that season to secure the NL pennant before the introduction of the Championship Series. Cincinnati met the Yankees in the World Series. Jay got the ball in Game 2 and tossed a two-run complete game to get the victory. That’d be the Reds’ only win of the set. Jay was hit hard in the Game 5 clincher, as the Yanks tagged him for four runs without allowing him to escape the first inning.

That season was the highlight of Jay’s career, but he had another productive season in 1962. He again won 21 games with a 3.76 ERA through a personal-high 273 innings. While his production tailed off from there, he remained a fixture of the Cincinnati rotation through ’65. The Reds dealt him back to the Braves, who were playing in Atlanta by that point, midway through 1966. He finished his career with nine appearances there before being released.

Jay ended his playing days with 3.77 ERA in more than 1500 innings. He fell one win shy of the century mark and was one strikeout away from reaching 1000. Jay’s obituary notes that he went on to run companies in West Virginia and Florida during his post-playing days. MLBTR sends our condolences to his family, friends and loved ones.

Share Repost Send via email

Atlanta Braves Cincinnati Reds Obituaries

24 comments

MLB Player Agency Updates

By Tim Dierkes | October 28, 2024 at 11:14pm CDT

MLBTR maintains a database of players and their agencies, which is exclusive to Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers.

Today, we updated this database to contain only players who appeared in the Majors from 2022-24.  The resulting database contains 2,117 players.  We have the agency for about three-quarters of these players.

If you click below, there’s a list of 540 players for whom we do not have their agency.  If your company represents these players and you would like to fill in some blanks or correct errors, that would be welcome!  Please reach out through our contact form.

Here’s our list of players without known agencies:

Read more

Garrett Acton
Luisangel Acuna
Riley Adams
Ty Adcock
Joan Adon
Keegan Akin
Samuel Aldegheri
Cam Alldred
Logan Allen (Guardians)
Jake Alu
R.J. Alvarez
Armando Alvarez
Miguel Amaya
Jacob Amaya
Grant Anderson
Justin Anderson
Clayton Andrews
Mark Appel
Victor Arano
Kohei Arihara
Javier Assad
Willians Astudillo
Pedro Avila
Jose Azocar
Lake Bachar
Sam Bachman
Ji-Hwan Bae
Michel Baez
Luken Baker
Jordan Balazovic
David Banuelos
Luke Barker
Jorge Barrosa
Brady Basso
Peyton Battenfield
Brett Baty
Eduard Bazardo
Jeremy Beasley
Tristan Beck
Seth Beer
Andrew Bellatti
Anthony Bender
Jonathan Bermudez
Wynton Bernard
Steward Berroa
Christian Bethancourt
Tanner Bibee
Osvaldo Bido
Spencer Bivens
Bradley Blalock
JJ Bleday
Scott Blewett
Cody Bolton
Cam Booser
Sean Bouchard
Caleb Boushley
Jonathan Bowlan
Kyle Bradish
Bobby Bradley
Taj Bradley
Huascar Brazoban
Beau Brieske
Braden Bristo
Jhony Brito
Trenton Brooks
J.T. Brubaker
Justin Bruihl
J.B. Bukauskas
Ray Burgos
Ryan Burr
Alan Busenitz
Jose Butto
Trey Cabbage
Genesis Cabrera
Kelvin Caceres
Blair Calvo
Jair Camargo
Gustavo Campero
Yennier Cano
Matt Carasiti
Drew Carlton
Luis Castillo
Diego Castillo
Diego Castillo
Kervin Castro
Rodolfo Castro
Anthony Castro
Slade Cecconi
Gilberto Celestino
Luis Cessa
Andres Chaparro
J.T. Chargois
Marc Church
Jonatan Clase
Kody Clemens
Oscar Colas
Mark Contreras
Tom Cosgrove
Jharel Cotton
Colton Cowser
Austin Cox
Kutter Crawford
Declan Cronin
Narciso Crook
Tyler Cropley
Steven Cruz
Davis Daniel
Hagen Danner
Noah Davis
Angel De Jesus
Enmanuel De Jesus
Chase De Jong
Luis De Los Santos
Austin Dean
Jason Delay
Jonny Deluca
Zach Dezenzo
Jhonathan Diaz
Yilber Diaz
Yusniel Diaz
Miguel Diaz
Yainer Diaz
Dylan Dodd
Jasson Dominguez
Camilo Doval
Kyle Dowdy
Robert Dugger
Blake Dunn
Parker Dunshee
Nick Duron
Cam Eden
Bryce Elder
Duke Ellis
Jerar Encarnacion
Mason Englert
Jose Espada
Raynel Espinal
Paolo Espino
Anderson Espinoza
Sandro Fabian
Alex Faedo
Brady Feigl
Mario Feliciano
Angel Felipe
Jose Fermin
Jose A. Ferrer
Matt Festa
Jake Fishman
Richard Fitts
Estevan Florial
Luis Frias
David Fry
Shintaro Fujinami
Kody Funderburk
Matt Gage
Giovanny Gallegos
Gerson Garabito
Aramis Garcia
Jose Garcia
Bryan Garcia
Rony Garcia
Robert Garcia
Kyle Garlick
Ralph Garza
Mickey Gasper
Zack Gelof
Logan Gillaspie
Connor Gillispie
Yoendrys Gomez
Nick Gonzales
Oscar Gonzalez
Victor Gonzalez
Erik Gonzalez
Tanner Gordon
Phil Gosselin
Tristan Gray
Michael Grove
Sean Guenther
Javier Guerra
Luis Guerrero
Jake Hager
Caleb Hamilton
David Hamilton
Emerson Hancock
Brenan Hanifee
Michael Harris
Brett Harris
Louis Head
Ryan Hendrix
Tommy Henry
Kevin Herget
Michael Hermosillo
Daysbel Hernandez
Elier Hernandez
Jose Hernandez
Nick Hernandez
Jonathan Hernandez
Yadiel Hernandez
Jose Herrera
Ivan Herrera
Tim Herrin
Garrett Hill
Sean Hjelle
Bryan Hoeing
Jordan Holloway
Gavin Hollowell
Tyler Holton
Brent Honeywell
TJ Hopkins
Bailey Horn
Bryan Hudson
Dakota Hudson
Brandon Hughes
Jacob Hurtubise
Jairo Iriarte
Cole Irvin
Alex Jackson
Zach Jackson
Joe Jacques
Tyler Jay
Seth Johnson
Bryce Johnson
Damon Jones
Levi Jordan
Corey Julks
Evan Justice
Connor Kaiser
James Kaprielian
Ricky Karcher
Gosuke Katoh
Zack Kelly
Casey Kelly
Buddy Kennedy
Brett Kennedy
Ray Kerr
Grae Kessinger
Bryan King
John King
Austin Kitchen
Heston Kjerstad
Adam Kloffenstein
Jared Koenig
Taylor Kohlwey
Mark Kolozsvary
Jackson Kowar
Evan Kravetz
Joey Krehbiel
Brooks Kriske
Zac Kristofak
Jason Krizan
Matt Krook
Travis Lakins
Peter Lambert
Jimmy Lambert
Alex Lange
Jack Larsen
Joe LaSorsa
Jake Latz
Bryan Lavastida
Jordan Lawlar
Charles Leblanc
Khalil Lee
Evan Lee
Casey Legumina
Brandon Leibrandt
Jacob Lemoine
Pedro Leon
Josh Lester
Luis Liberato
Jeff Lindgren
Andre Lipcius
Luke Little
Mauricio Llovera
Tyler Locklear
Nick Loftin
Christian Lopes
Jack Lopez
Jose Lopez
Jorge Lopez
Irving Lopez
Jacob Lopez
Ryan Loutos
Richard Lovelady
Rhett Lowder
Easton Lucas
Marco Luciano
Nathan Lukes
Josh Maciejewski
Ty Madden
Drew Maggi
Anthony Maldonado
Kyle Manzardo
Rafael Marchan
Michael Mariot
Cade Marlowe
Deven Marrero
Alec Marsh
Jose Marte
Yunior Marte
Corbin Martin
Angel Martinez
Seth Martinez
Julio Pablo Martinez
Nick Martini
J.J. Matijevic
Nick Maton
Luis Matos
Isaac Mattson
Mike Mayers
Patrick Mazeika
James McArthur
Darren McCaughan
Chayce McDermott
Mickey McDonald
Ryan McKenna
Matt McLain
John McMillon
Wade Meckler
Victor Mederos
Luis Medina
James Meeker
Jean Carlos Mejia
Cristian Mena
Conner Menez
Daniel Mengden
Matt Mervis
Drew Millas
Ryan Miller
Bryce Miller
Wyatt Mills
Juan Minaya
Anthony Misiewicz
Garrett Mitchell
Calvin Mitchell
Carmen Mlodzinski
Anthony Molina
Sam Moll
Andruw Monasterio
Nate Mondou
Keider Montero
Coco Montes
Mason Montgomery
Francisco Morales
Christopher Morel
Zach Muckenhirn
Yairo Munoz
Roddery Munoz
Chris Murphy
Patrick Murphy
Parker Mushinski
Dane Myers
Edgar Navarro
Zach Neal
Jack Neely
Zach Neto
Tyler Nevin
Dedniel Nunez
Riley O’Brien
Cristofer Ogando
Brian O’Keefe
Chris Okey
Edward Olivares
Jack O’Loughlin
Jonathan Ornelas
Oliver Ortega
Eric Orze
Michel Otanez
Andy Pages
Jermaine Palacios
Daniel Palencia
Michael Papierski
Enoli Paredes
Kyren Paris
Luis Patino
Elvis Peguero
Sammy Peralta
Oswald Peraza
Angel Perdomo
Jhonny Pereda
Everson Pereira
Francisco Perez
Carlos Perez
Carlos Perez
Eury Perez
Dillon Peters
Michael Petersen
Konnor Pilkington
Zach Pop
Sean Poppen
Quinn Priester
Ford Proctor
Austin Pruitt
Juniel Querecuto
Johan Quezada
Esteban Quiroz
Tanner Rainey
Luke Raley
Nick Ramirez
Yohan Ramirez
Emmanuel Ramirez
Henry Ramos
Heliot Ramos
Lane Ramsey
Zach Reks
Zach Remillard
Franmil Reyes
Gerardo Reyes
Orlando Ribalta
Lyon Richardson
Alfonso Rivas
Leo Rivas
Daniel Robert
Ethan Roberts
Kramer Robertson
Chuckie Robinson
Jose Rodriguez
Carlos Rodriguez
Endy Rodriguez
Johan Rojas
Chris Roller
Drew Rom
Jhon Romero
Eguy Rosario
Kenny Rosenberg
Bubby Rossman
Chris Roycroft
Drew Rucinski
Blake Rutherford
Jackson Rutledge
Ryder Ryan
Andrew Saalfrank
Blake Sabol
Eduardo Salazar
Bryan Sammons
Miguel Sanchez
Jesus Sanchez
Ali Sanchez
Cole Sands
Donny Sands
Reiver Sanmartin
Gregory Santos
Tayler Saucedo
Matt Sauer
Casey Schmitt
Jesse Scholtens
Chandler Seagle
Colin Selby
Brian Serven
Anderson Severino
Jordan Sheffield
Ryan Sherriff
Jared Shuster
Jose Siri
Justin Slaten
Ethan Small
Cade Smith
AJ Smith-Shawver
Collin Snider
Nick Snyder
Tyler Soderstrom
Jose Soriano
George Soriano
Lenyn Sosa
Bennett Sousa
Mitch Spence
Carson Spiers
Cody Stashak
Justin Sterner
Hunter Stratton
Andrew Suarez
Albert Suarez
Brett Sullivan
Jack Suwinski
Matthew Swarmer
Trey Sweeney
Devin Sweet
Leody Taveras
Samad Taylor
Jose Tena
Juan Then
Dillon Thomas
Keegan Thompson
Zack Thompson
Mason Thompson
Ka’ai Tom
Justin Topa
Jared Triolo
Erich Uelmen
Naoyuki Uwasawa
Enmanuel Valdez
Phillips Valdez
Cesar Valdez
Chris Vallimont
Carlos Vargas
Ildemaro Vargas
Andrew Vasquez
Randy Vasquez
Luis Vazquez
Cameron Vieaux
Thyago Vieira
Meibrys Viloria
Hurston Waldrep
Josh Walker
Jordan Walker
Forrest Wall
Brandon Walter
Andrew Walters
Nash Walters
Thad Ward
Art Warren
Will Warren
Zack Weiss
Greg Weissert
Alexander Wells
Shay Whitcomb
Brendan White
Eli White
Kodi Whitley
Joey Wiemer
Luke Williams
Gavin Williams
Alika Williams
Amos Willingham
Marcus Wilson
Steven Wilson
Allan Winans
Josh Winder
Keaton Winn
Brett Wisely
Jackson Wolf
Connor Wong
Jake Wong
Simeon Woods-Richardson
Randy Wynne
Jimmy Yacabonis
Eric Yang
Juan Yepez
Huascar Ynoa
Rob Zastryzny
Yosver Zulueta

Share Repost Send via email

Uncategorized

3 comments

Carlos Carrasco Plans To Continue Pitching

By Anthony Franco | October 28, 2024 at 9:30pm CDT

Carlos Carrasco was in attendance this evening as Venezuelan countryman Salvador Perez was honored as MLB’s Roberto Clemente Award winner. Carrasco told reporters that he has begun his offseason training regimen and hopes to pitch for two more seasons (X link via Anthony Castrovince of MLB.com).

The veteran right-hander turns 38 in March. Pitching two more seasons would take him near his 40th birthday. Carrasco elected minor league free agency after the Guardians were eliminated from the AL Championship Series. He’d have gotten to the open market five days after the conclusion of the World Series anyhow since he has well over six years of MLB service.

Carrasco is almost certainly looking at a minor league deal for the second straight offseason. The longtime Cleveland hurler rejoined the organization on a non-roster contract in January. He broke camp and locked in a $2MM base salary. Carrasco held a rotation spot for the majority of the season, making 21 starts and tossing 103 2/3 innings. That was enough to land him third on the team in workload, though his results weren’t impressive. Carrasco allowed 5.64 earned runs per nine with a middling 19.9% strikeout percentage. The Guardians ran him through outright waivers in September.

That marks consecutive subpar showings for the 15-year veteran. Carrasco also scuffled during his third and final season as a member of the Mets. Opponents tagged him for a 6.80 ERA over 90 innings in 2023. He owns a 6.18 ERA across 41 starts over the last two seasons. Carrasco still throws strikes and gets ground-balls at decent rates, but declining velocity has cost him whiffs and led to trouble keeping the ball in the park.

Share Repost Send via email

Uncategorized Carlos Carrasco

24 comments

Will Venable, Craig Albernaz Reportedly Finalists For Marlins Manager

By Anthony Franco | October 28, 2024 at 7:35pm CDT

Rangers associate manager Will Venable and Guardians bench coach Craig Albernaz are finalists for the Marlins’ managerial vacancy, report Barry Jackson and Craig Mish of the Miami Herald. It seems the search will come down to one of those two. Mish notes in a separate post (on X) that he’s “not aware” of other finalists, though he leaves the door slightly open for the possibility of a mystery candidate emerging.

If it is indeed down to Venable and Albernaz, they’ll settle on Skip Schumaker’s replacement shortly. (An announcement may not come in the next few days, as MLB discourages teams from releasing significant news on days with a postseason game.) The Herald reports that both Albernaz and Venable are flying to Miami for in-person meetings with owner Bruce Sherman after conducting Zoom interviews for the first round. Jon Heyman of the New York Post tweets that Venable’s latest interview is occurring today.

Venable and Albernaz have been two of the hottest names in this year’s managerial cycle. They’ve both gotten consideration from the White Sox in their search. Venable has interviewed for the Chicago position. It’s not clear if Albernaz has had a formal sit-down with Sox brass or is simply on their list of potential hires.

Neither has major league managerial experience. Venable might have gotten an MLB job by now if he hadn’t taken himself out of consideration in previous offseasons. The former outfielder has a fair amount of experience as the #2 on a coaching staff. He spent two seasons as Alex Cora’s bench coach in Boston and has logged the last two years as an associate manager under Bruce Bochy in Arlington. The 42-year-old, a Princeton product, also logged three years on the Cubs’ staff after ending his playing career in 2016.

Albernaz, 41, did not reach the big leagues as a player. He has less experience than Venable in the coaching ranks as well. He joined the Giants as bullpen and catching coach during the 2019-20 offseason. After four seasons in San Francisco, he made the jump to bench coach for first-year skipper Stephen Vogt in Cleveland.

While Albernaz only has one year in a bench coach role, he’s a known commodity for Miami baseball operations president Peter Bendix and assistant GM Gabe Kapler. Albernaz was a minor league player and coach in the Rays’ organization while Bendix was Tampa Bay’s general manager. His four years with the Giants coincided with Kapler’s managerial tenure.

In other staffing news, MLB.com’s Christina De Nicola reports (on X) that Miami has hired Joe Migliaccio as director of hitting. Migliaccio, who had been with the Yankees as a hitting coordinator, will work in the player development department and oversee the team’s offensive performance at multiple levels. He is not going to be the MLB hitting coach. That role has yet to be filled and will probably wait until the managerial decision. Miami parted ways with Schumaker’s entire staff, including hitting coach John Mabry.

Share Repost Send via email

Cleveland Guardians Miami Marlins Texas Rangers Craig Albernaz Will Venable

17 comments

Mets, Chris Devenski Agree To Minor League Deal

By Darragh McDonald | October 28, 2024 at 5:15pm CDT

The Mets and right-hander Chris Devenski are in agreement on a minor league deal, according to Anthony DiComo of MLB.com on X. The righty also receives a camp invite and will be competing for a job in next year’s spring training.

Devenski, 34 in November, has had an up-and-down career but is coming off a rough campaign. The Rays signed him to a one-year deal with a $1.1MM guarantee after getting a good look at him late in 2023. After being cut loose by the Angels, the Rays signed Devenski at the end of August last year. He posted a 2.08 earned run average over his nine appearances in Tampa so they decided to bring him back.

While the Rays are known for their savvy under-the-radar pickups, this one didn’t work out. Devenski tossed 26 2/3 innings for the Rays in 2024 but with a 6.75 ERA. His 19.7% strikeout rate, 11.5% walk rate and 25% ground ball rate were all below league averages. He missed about a month from late April to late May, going on the injured list due to right knee tendinitis. He was designated for assignment and released at the end of June.

He was then signed by the Mariners and spent the final months of 2024 with Triple-A Tacoma. He was able to finish his 2024 with a strong showing there in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League, throwing 23 innings with a 2.35 ERA, 33.3% strikeout rate, 10.8% walk rate and 43.1% ground ball rate.

The Mets are presumably intrigued by that performance with Tacoma, though the veteran’s longer track record may play a role as well. He had a dominant showing with the Astros to start his career, tossing 189 innings over 2016 and 2017 with a 2.38 ERA, 28.2% strikeout rate and 6.4% walk rate.

But as mentioned, his career has been up-and-down, and those highs were followed with some serious lows. Over 2018 and 2019, he tossed another 116 1/3 innings for Houston but with an ERA of 4.56 in that time. His 6.9% walk rate was still good but his strikeout rate dipped to 24.9%. Elbow soreness limited him to just four appearances in 2020 and he eventually required Tommy John surgery in 2021. His attempts to get back on the mound in 2022 and 2023 were largely unsuccessful before his aforementioned stint with the Rays late last year.

Devenski has a 6.46 ERA since the start of 2020 but was injured for a lot of that. He showed some promise with the Rays late last year and with the Rainiers more recently. There’s no real risk for the Mets on a minor league deal, so they’ll take a look at what Devenski has come spring.

President of baseball operations David Stearns did plenty of tinkering with the bullpen this year. He gave one-year deals to Adam Ottavino, Jake Diekman, Shintaro Fujinami, Jorge López, Michael Tonkin and Austin Adams last winter as well as several minor league deals. As the season progressed, many of those guys ended up losing their roster spots while guys like Phil Maton, Huascar Brazobán, Ryne Stanek and others were acquired from other clubs. Ottavino and Stanek are now about to hit free agency with Maton likely joining them if the Mets turn down his club option. The 2024 Mets were only eliminated about a week ago and the World Series is still ongoing, but the club has already made one move to provide some bullpen depth for next year.

Share Repost Send via email

New York Mets Transactions Chris Devenski

18 comments

Reds Designate Brandon Leibrandt, Amed Rosario For Assignment

By Darragh McDonald | October 28, 2024 at 3:05pm CDT

The Reds announced that infielders Christian Encarnacion-Strand and Matt McLain have been reinstated from the 60-day injured list. To open 40-man roster spots for those two, they designated left-hander Brandon Leibrandt and infielder Amed Rosario for assignment. Gordon Wittenmyer of the Cincinnati Enquirer relays on X that the moves were necessary because McLain and Encarnacion-Strand are technically on rehab assignments in the Arizona Fall League and they reached their maximum rehab time, therefore needing to retake spots on the 40-man roster.

The Reds suffered a large number of significant injuries in 2024, with McLain and Encarnacion-Strand two of the biggest losses. McLain underwent left labrum surgery in March and was hoping to come back around August. But he suffered a stress reaction in his rib cage while trying to make his way back and ended up missing the entire season.

Encarnacion-Strand played 29 games but may have been playing hurt as he put up a dismal .190/.220/.293 line in that time. He was hit by a pitch on his hand in April and an X-ray revealed an old fracture that CES couldn’t figure out how he suffered. He went on the IL in May with a right ulnar styloid fracture and eventually underwent surgery in June. That procedure came with a three-month timeline and he wasn’t able to return in the remainder of the regular season.

Both players missed significant time in 2024 but apparently got healthy as the season was ending, so the Reds sent both to the Glendale Desert Dogs of the Arizona Fall League to get some reps before the winter sets in. The Dogs played their first game on October 8 and rehab assignments come with a 20-day maximum for position players. It seems that MLB views their time in the AFL as a rehab assignment, so they had to be reinstated from the 60-day IL today with their rehab window closing.

The moves are largely technicalities, as both players would need to be reinstated from the injured soon regardless. There’s no injured list from five days after the World Series until spring training begins, so all players on the 60-day IL need to be reinstated soon anyway. This rehab formality just forced the Reds to do it slightly ahead of schedule.

Of the two players they bumped off, Rosario was slated to be off the roster soon anyway. He signed a one-year deal with the Rays for 2024, eventually getting traded to the Dodgers before landing with the Reds via waivers. There’s no reason for any club to claim him now, as 28 of the 30 clubs are eliminated. He wouldn’t be postseason eligible with the Yankees or Dodgers since it’s after the September 1 cutoff date. As a veteran with more than six years of service time, he has the right to reject an outright assignment. He’ll soon hit free agency, a few days earlier than anticipated.

Leibrandt, 32 in December, could have been retained for next year as he has less than a year of service time but seemingly wasn’t in Cincinnati’s plans. He signed a minor league deal with the club in May and got added to the roster at the end of August. He stuck on the 40-man for the final month of the season but was mostly on optional assignment. He only got into two major league games this year, allowing seven earned runs in 6 1/3 innings.

He was fairly serviceable in the minors this year, with a 4.41 ERA in 17 Triple-A starts. He had a 22.7% strikeout rate and 6% walk rate. However, he was pitching independent leagues last year and at the start of 2024. As a journeyman sliding towards his mid 30s, he was surely viewed as a temporary option on the club’s roster this year as they dealt with numerous pitching injuries.

As a player with a previous career outright, he has the right to elect free agency as opposed to accepting another outright assignment. Most clubs are facing roster crunches in the coming days, so he’ll presumably clear waivers and return to the open market shortly.

Share Repost Send via email

Cincinnati Reds Transactions Amed Rosario Brandon Leibrandt Christian Encarnacion-Strand Matt McLain

31 comments

Skip Schumaker, Daniel Descalso Out Of Running In White Sox’ Managerial Search

By Steve Adams | October 28, 2024 at 11:18am CDT

11:18am: ESPN’s Jesse Rogers reports that Cardinals bench coach Daniel Descalso is also out of the running in Chicago.

11:05am: Former Marlins manager Skip Schumaker, who won National League Manager of the Year honors with Miami in 2023, is no longer being considered by the White Sox in their ongoing managerial search, per Jim Margalus and James Fegan of Sox Machine.

It’s not clear whether Schumaker removed his own name from consideration or whether the Sox moved on, either due to fit or asking price. Regardless, the report largely eliminates the possibility of Schumaker leading a new dugout in 2025. His former Marlins club and the Reds (who hired Terry Francona earlier this month) marked the only other managerial vacancies of the offseason (barring an unexpected late decision from another club or a surprise shakeup in the Bronx or L.A. following the World Series).

Even without an immediate managerial opening that makes sense for Schumaker, he’ll have no trouble finding work if he’s open to other roles. He served as a bench coach in St. Louis prior to being hired in Miami, and he’s also held the titles of associate manager and first base coach with the Padres. Schumaker would surely have his pick of coaching roles as teams round out their staffs ahead of the 2025 season, and given his baseball acumen and the manner in which he’s regarded as a coveted managerial prospect, it stands to reason that there are clubs that would welcome the opportunity to add Schumaker in a player development or baseball operations capacity while he bides his time and waits for an appealing managerial opportunity to surface.

Schumaker’s subtraction from the Sox’ list of candidates leaves Guardians bench coach Craig Albernaz, Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann, Cardinals bench coach Daniel Descalso, Rangers associate manager Will Venable, former Angels manager Phil Nevin and current interim manager Grady Sizemore as the current list of known candidates still in the running for the position. Rangers bench coach Donnie Ecker was removed from consideration last week, while Dodgers first base coach Clayton McCullough and Padres special assistant A.J. Ellis were taken off the list over the weekend. Tigers bench coach George Lombard is also out of the running as of last night.

Share Repost Send via email

Chicago White Sox St. Louis Cardinals Daniel Descalso Skip Schumaker

75 comments

Submit Your Questions For This Week’s Episode Of The MLB Trade Rumors Podcast

By Darragh McDonald | October 28, 2024 at 9:44am CDT

On the MLB Trade Rumors podcast, we regularly answer questions from our readers and listeners. With the next episode set for Wednesday, we’re looking for MLBTR’s audience to submit their questions and we’ll pick a few to answer.

The World Series will be done within a week, meaning the offseason fun is about to begin. If you have a question about a past transaction, a look ahead to the winter or anything else baseball related, we’d love to hear from you! You can email your questions to mlbtrpod@gmail.com.

Also, if you want to hear your voice on the podcast, send us your question in audio form and we might play it. iPhone users can find instructions on how to do so here.

In the meantime, don’t forget to subscribe to the podcast on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

Share Repost Send via email

Uncategorized

3 comments

The Opener: World Series, Judge, White Sox

By Nick Deeds | October 28, 2024 at 8:51am CDT

As the World Series continues, here are three things we’ll be keeping an eye on around the baseball world throughout the day today:

1. World Series Game 3:

The Dodgers won both of their home games over the weekend, but after a travel day yesterday the series will resume this evening on the Yankees’ home turf at 8:08pm local time. Right-hander Clarke Schmidt will be on the mound for New York after posting an impressive 2.85 ERA in a season shortened to just 16 starts by injury. In the postseason so far, Schmidt has drawn two starts and sports a 3.86 ERA with six strikeouts and three walks in 9 1/3 innings of work.

His opponent this evening will be Dodgers right-hander Walker Buehler, who struggled to a 5.38 ERA in 16 regular season starts this year and was shelled for six runs in five frames during his NLDS start against the Padres. Despite that shaky track record this year, Buehler did manage to put up four scoreless innings while striking out six in Game 3 of the NLCS against the Mets. On offense, meanwhile, the Dodgers are currently expecting to have star slugger Shohei Ohtani back in the lineup after a shoulder injury Saturday night gave baseball fans a scare.

2. Can Judge break out of his slump before it’s too late?

With the question of Ohtani’s status likely answered, the other likely MVP winner in the series is facing his own set of questions. Aaron Judge has struggled to a meager .105/.280/.325 slash in 50 plate appearances across 11 postseason games this year. Any hitter can have a tough stretch in a sample that small, of course, and Judge even had two separate 11-game stretches not dissimilar to this one back in April alone. His slump has deepened even more since the World Series began, however, as he’s struck out six times in nine trips to the plate over the last two games while collecting just one hit. Can Judge get back to his dominant regular season form in time to help the Yankees fight back from their current 0-2 deficit?

3. Is the White Sox managerial search heating up?

This weekend saw some noticeable movement on the managerial front in Chicago. Three candidates were noted to be out of the running for the White Sox vacancy yesterday, and Jon Heyman of the New York Post suggested last night that the Sox were taking a “hard look” at Rangers associate manager Will Venable for the role. Heyman cautioned that there was no indication that an agreement was close just yet, but the report nonetheless adds to the sense of movement that’s begun to surround the search for the South Siders’ next manager. Other candidates who are not yet known to have been eliminated from the running include current interim skipper Grady Sizemore, Guardians bench coach Craig Albernaz, former Marlins manager Skip Schumaker, former Angels skipper Phil Nevin, Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann and Cardinals bench coach Daniel Descalso.

Share Repost Send via email

The Opener

104 comments

Dodgers Expected To Be In On Juan Soto’s Free Agent Market

By Mark Polishuk | October 27, 2024 at 11:23pm CDT

The Dodgers’ focus on Juan Soto is currently directed towards figuring how to get the slugger out during the remainder of the World Series, but once the offseason begins, the club could be looking to add Soto to its own lineup.  The New York Post’s Jon Heyman reports that the Dodgers are interested in Soto and will start more of a full-fledged pursuit “if he’s interested” if coming to Los Angeles.

As Heyman notes, the Dodgers’ deep pockets have allowed them to at least check in on virtually every major free agent in recent years, so if anything, it would be unusual if L.A. didn’t have Soto on its offseason wish list.  The Dodgers are also one of the few teams that can reasonably meet Soto’s asking price, which is widely expected to be the most upfront guaranteed money ever given to a baseball player.  The “upfront” caveat is necessary since Shohei Ohtani’s $700MM deal is so heavily deferred that the contract is worth around $437.8MM in present value, and Soto’s next deal is expected to surpass the $500MM mark.

According to RosterResource, the Dodgers already have roughly $257.2MM committed to their 2025 payroll, as well as a $253.1MM estimate on their luxury tax number.  The latter again puts the Dodgers over the tax threshold ($241MM) for next season, and naturally adding Soto for a minimum of a $50MM average annual value would put the club over the highest tax penalty tier of $301MM.  Since Los Angeles has already been a tax-paying team for the last four seasons, crossing the $301MM threshold would more than double the size of the team’s tax on any overages beyond the $241MM mark.

Of course, the luxury tax has clearly not been a major concern for the Dodgers in their pursuit of top-tier talent.  With Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and Will Smith signed through the rest of the decade and Freddie Freeman and Tyler Glasnow both signed through at least 2027, the Dodgers won’t be ducking under the tax line any time soon, and the financial penalty is offset by the simple fact that the team is a revenue-generating juggernaut.

There are plenty of obvious reasons why Soto would have his own interest in joining a perennial contender like the Dodgers, though geography continues to be the lingering question surrounding Soto’s impending free agency.  While Soto and Padres owner Peter Seidler made some headway in extension talks prior to Seidler’s passing a year ago, Heyman repeats the long-held belief that Soto would prefer to play on an East Coast team, all things being equal.  This could make the Yankees or Mets the favorites to sign him this winter, as the two New York teams can better fit Soto’s preferences of both location and contract.

While the Yankees and Mets alone could generate a nice bidding war, Soto and agent Scott Boras would certainly have a vested interest in keeping other teams in the hunt, be it the Dodgers or other potential suitors like the Giants, Blue Jays, or Nationals.  If the Dodgers perceive that Soto’s interest in coming to L.A. is fairly limited, the team could easily move onto any number of other options on the free agent market.

For instance, re-signing Teoscar Hernandez would be much less expensive than signing Soto, and Hernandez is already a known quantity in Los Angeles and a big offensive force in his own right.  Heyman also figures the Dodgers will look to add another big pitcher to its injury-ravaged rotation, even though Ohtani, Glasnow, Clayton Kershaw, and others are expected to be healthy by Opening day.

Share Repost Send via email

Los Angeles Dodgers Juan Soto

381 comments
« Previous Page
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    Athletics Acquire Jeff McNeil

    Nationals Sign Foster Griffin

    Padres Sign Sung-Mun Song

    Rangers Re-Sign Chris Martin

    Red Sox Acquire Willson Contreras

    White Sox To Sign Munetaka Murakami

    Blue Jays Interested In Alex Bregman

    Tigers Re-Sign Kyle Finnegan

    Astros, Pirates, Rays Finalize Three-Team Trade Sending Brandon Lowe To Pittsburgh, Mike Burrows To Houston, Jacob Melton To Tampa

    Rays Trade Shane Baz To Orioles

    Nine Teams Exceeded Luxury Tax Threshold In 2025

    Royals Acquire Matt Strahm

    Twins Sign Josh Bell

    Diamondbacks Sign Merrill Kelly

    Padres Re-Sign Michael King

    Giants Sign Adrian Houser

    Phillies Sign Brad Keller

    Cardinals Sign Dustin May

    Royals Sign Lane Thomas

    Mets To Sign Luke Weaver

    Recent

    Athletics Designate Ken Waldichuk For Assignment

    Athletics Acquire Jeff McNeil

    Mariners Sign Rob Refsnyder

    Phillies Sign Zach Pop To Major League Deal

    Nationals Sign Foster Griffin

    Cubs To Sign Christian Bethancourt To Minor League Deal

    Padres Sign Sung-Mun Song

    Rangers Re-Sign Chris Martin

    Trade Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript

    Cardinals, Jared Shuster Agree To Minor League Deal

    MLBTR Newsletter - Hot stove highlights in your inbox, five days a week

    Latest Rumors & News

    Latest Rumors & News

    • Every MLB Trade In July
    Trade Rumors App for iOS and Android App Store Google Play

    MLBTR Features

    MLBTR Features

    • Remove Ads, Support Our Writers
    • 2025-26 Top 50 MLB Free Agents With Predictions
    • Front Office Originals
    • Tim Dierkes' MLB Mailbag
    • 2025-26 Offseason Outlook Series
    • MLBTR Podcast
    • 2025-26 MLB Free Agent List
    • 2026-27 MLB Free Agent List
    • Projected Arbitration Salaries For 2026
    • Contract Tracker
    • Transaction Tracker
    • Extension Tracker
    • Agency Database
    • MLBTR On Twitter
    • MLBTR On Facebook
    • Team Facebook Pages
    • How To Set Up Notifications For Breaking News
    • Hoops Rumors
    • Pro Football Rumors
    • Pro Hockey Rumors

    Rumors By Team

    • Angels Rumors
    • Astros Rumors
    • Athletics Rumors
    • Blue Jays Rumors
    • Braves Rumors
    • Brewers Rumors
    • Cardinals Rumors
    • Cubs Rumors
    • Diamondbacks Rumors
    • Dodgers Rumors
    • Giants Rumors
    • Guardians Rumors
    • Mariners Rumors
    • Marlins Rumors
    • Mets Rumors
    • Nationals Rumors
    • Orioles Rumors
    • Padres Rumors
    • Phillies Rumors
    • Pirates Rumors
    • Rangers Rumors
    • Rays Rumors
    • Red Sox Rumors
    • Reds Rumors
    • Rockies Rumors
    • Royals Rumors
    • Tigers Rumors
    • Twins Rumors
    • White Sox Rumors
    • Yankees Rumors

    Navigation

    • Sitemap
    • Archives
    • RSS/Twitter Feeds By Team

    MLBTR INFO

    • Advertise
    • About
    • Commenting Policy
    • Privacy Policy

    Connect

    • Contact Us
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • RSS Feed

    MLB Trade Rumors is not affiliated with Major League Baseball, MLB or MLB.com

    Do not Sell or Share My Personal Information

    hide arrows scroll to top

    Register

    Desktop Version | Switch To Mobile Version