Rangers To Sign Mike Hinckley

According to T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com, the Rangers are close to inking left-hander Mike Hinckley to a minor league contract.  

The 26-year-old opted for free agency after he was designated for assignment by the Nationals last week.  He had a 1.93 ERA and 1.29 WHIP in two seasons with Washington, but displayed major control problems out of the gate this year.  The Rangers will add him to their Triple-A Oklahoma City roster.

Odds & Ends: Sheets, Blanco, Coghlan

Links for Friday…

Heyman On Teixeira, Melvin

A couple of hot stove highlights from Jon Heyman's latest

  • Heyman gives props to Rangers GM Jon Daniels for his Mark Teixeira haul from 2007: Elvis Andrus, Matt Harrison, Neftali Feliz, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, and Beau Jones (the Rangers also gave up Ron Mahay).  The Braves ended up acquiring Casey Kotchman and Stephen Marek from the Angels for Tex and drafting lefty Brett DeVall as a compensation pick for Mahay.  Heyman says Daniels also talked to the Red Sox, Angels, Yankees, Dodgers, and Diamondbacks about Teixeira at the '07 trade deadline.
  • Bob Melvin knew for two days he was going to be fired before the D'Backs announced the move publicly.  He handled the situation with class.  Arizona brass considered John Farrell and Brett Butler before going with A.J. Hinch.

2010 Options: Texas Rangers

Let's take a look at the 2010 options facing the Rangers.

  • Ron Washington – club option.  Back on April 20th, GM Jon Daniels said there had been "zero discussions" about firing Washington despite media speculation.  Things have changed for the better since then; the 17-14 Rangers are in first place in the AL West.  I'll speculate that an over-.500 finish could result in Washington's option being exercised.
  • Kevin Millwood – $12MM 2010 salary becomes guaranteed with 180 innings pitched in 2009.  Nice timing for Millwood, who is second in baseball right now with 52.3 innings pitched.  He needs only 127.6 innings, maybe 20 more starts, for his 2010 salary to become guaranteed.  Tom Hicks said in March that he wanted Millwood to reach the innings target.  The 34 year-old has been the subject of trade speculation, but it doesn't make sense with the team in contention.
  • Vicente Padilla – $12MM club option with a $1.75MM buyout.  It's difficult to imagine the Rangers exercising this option.  Padilla's level of production can be found more cheaply on the open market.

Odds And Ends: Manny, Rangers, Pie

Links for Saturday morning…

  • On ESPN Radio, Keith Law says no team would pass on Manny Ramirez if he's available for $5MM in the near future, regardless of his suspension. He won't be available at that rate this offseason, as he has a $20MM player option for 2010.
  • Andrew Baggarly of the San Jose Mercury News passes on a quote from Dodgers GM Ned Colletti: "My concern is still with the pitching."
  • Phil Rogers of the Chicago Tribune believes the Dodgers' pitching will carry them while Manny serves his suspension.
  • Jamey Newberg suggests on the Newberg Report  that the Braves would deal the haul they received for Mark TeixeiraCasey Kotchman and Stephen Marek– for any one of four players they gave up to get Tex- Elvis Andrus, Matt Harrison, Neftali Feliz or Jarrod Saltalamacchia.
  • The Chicago Tribune suggests the Orioles may try to sneak Felix Pie to Triple-A through waivers.

Odds And Ends: Yankees, Pedro, Mets

Links for Saturday morning…

Rangers Release Derrick Turnbow

According to Jamey Newberg of TheNewbergReport.com, the Rangers have released Derrick Turnbow after the pitcher triggered a clause in his contract that allowed him to demand a release. Turnbow and the Rangers agreed that he would be able to ask for his release if he wasn't on the team by May 1st. Turnbow walked nine and allowed 11 hits in 6.1 innings in AAA, striking out one batter.

The information comes from Newberg's online newsletter.

Odds & Ends: Glavine, Thorman, Sheffield

Links for Tuesday…

Odds & Ends: Perez, D’Backs, Baez

Links for Monday…

Pedro Martinez May Sign Soon

6:47pm: Just to clarify, Nationals GM Mike Rizzo says the team maintains mild interest in Pedro.

1:41pm: For what it's worth, Dave Sheinin of the Washington Post would like to see the Nationals ink Pedro.  He believes the organization has more than enough money, citing the recent Forbes findings, to match the right-hander's high salary demands.

FRIDAY, 8:53am: MLB.com's Bill Ladson has a source saying the Nationals haven't had interest in Pedro since Spring Training.  The door remains just a crack open in the event that Martinez becomes amenable to an inexpensive contract.  Otherwise, Ladson's Nationals source says, "We are satisfied with our rotation even though there is going to be some bumps along the way. We wouldn't want to make any changes there."

Meanwhile, here's Dodgers GM Ned Colletti talking about Pedro.

THURSDAY: According to Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports, Pedro Martinezcould decide on his next team within two weeks.  He's set to begin throwing off a mound tomorrow.  Rosenthal says Pedro is open to both contending and rebuilding teams, but continues to demand a $5MM salary.  ESPN's Jayson Stark suggested today that Martinez's exorbitant asking price may be a way of delaying his return.

A rundown of possible suitors, from Rosenthal:

  • Angels GM Tony Reagins recently admitted to contacting Pedro's agent, but Rosenthal says "the two sides have not spoken in more than two weeks."
  • Rosenthal learned from Nationals acting GM Mike Rizzo that the team has mild interest in Pedro and scouted him in March.  Martinez's asking price is the issue.
  • The Rangers have some interest.
  • Rosenthal's Yankees source denies interest in Pedro, despite the pitcher telling friends the opposite.  There is a Dominican newspaper report floating about suggesting a Pedro-Yankees union, but we'll trust Rosenthal's source.
  • The Indians don't have the money, the Dodgers don't like the price, and the Mets aren't interested.
  • Rosenthal does not mention the Orioles, Cardinals, or Pirates, teams that have been linked to Pedro in the past.
Show all