The Yankees showed interest in Mets second baseman Neil Walker before the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline, according to FanRag’s Jon Heyman. The crosstown rivals actually had a deal for Walker in place, tweets Mike Puma of Newsday, but it fell through over medical concerns. Walker suffered a partially torn hamstring in mid-June and returned shortly before the deadline. At that point, the Yankees had recently lost second baseman Starlin Castro to a hamstring injury of his own, but he’s now nearing a rehab assignment, per Bryan Hoch of MLB.com (Twitter link). As for Walker, the impending free agent has already cleared revocable waivers this month, making him eligible for a trade, though he’s owed sizable sum (around $6MM) through season’s end.
More from Heyman via a trio of columns, all of which are worth reading in full:
- The Rangers don’t expect to reunite with Yu Darvish in free agency, suggests Heyman, who adds that they decided a couple days before the non-waiver deadline that they were going to trade the ace. Texas ended up dealing Darvish to the Dodgers right before the clock ran out. The Astros were a rumored Darvish suitor leading up to then, but they didn’t make a real effort to land him, reports Heyman.
- Speaking of the Astros, their talks with the Tigers regarding Justin Verlander are all but dead, per Heyman, which jibes with a report from USA Today’s Bob Nightengale. “It never got close,” a personal familiar with the discussions told Heyman, and that source expects Verlander to still be in a Tigers uniform when the 2018 season begins. Houston was unwilling to deal any of its best prospects for the expensive, aging Verlander (or any of its other deadline targets), but a Tigers official told Heyman, “You’re trading an icon, you’ve got to get something back.” The Astros have been conservative in terms of making acquisitions this summer, surely because a 71-42 team doesn’t need a ton of help, but GM Jeff Luhnow’s lack of bold moves has led to frustration within the organization, writes Heyman. Ace Dallas Keuchel voiced some displeasure immediately after the club’s quiet deadline (only scuffling lefty Francisco Liriano came aboard), and outfielder Josh Reddick followed suit Thursday in an interview with MLB Network Radio (Twitter link). Astros players were “down in the dumps” after the deadline, Reddick revealed.
- The Twins reportedly listened to offers for righty Ervin Santana in advance of the deadline, but their interest in dealing the solid mid-rotation starter was minimal, relays Heyman. Santana is under control through next season on fair $13.5MM salaries (his deal also features a $14MM club option for 2019), making it unlikely he’d go unclaimed on waivers this month, notes Heyman.
- Although GM Sandy Alderson is in the last year of his contract, people around the Mets expect him to return in 2018. There’s less certainty surrounding manager Terry Collins, who’s also in a contract year. Heyman lists Mets bench coach Dickie Scott, Dodgers bench coach Bob Geren (who previously held that post with the Mets) and Athletics third base coach Chip Hale as potential replacements for Collins if he’s not back next year.
- Meanwhile, both Pirates GM Neal Huntington and skipper Clint Hurdle appear safe. As long as the two want to return in 2018, the Pirates will exercise their options.
- The White Sox would like to deal veteran hurlers Derek Holland, Miguel Gonzalez and Tyler Clippard, which isn’t surprising considering they’re impending free agents on a rebuilding team. Given the seasons they’re having, Holland and Gonzalez probably won’t carry much appeal to rotation-needy contenders, though Clippard has put up six straight scoreless appearances out of Chicago’s bullpen. Across that seven-inning span, Clippard allowed three hits and three walks, with nine strikeouts. MLBTR’s Steve Adams noted Wednesday that Clippard’s a prime August trade candidate.
- The Diamondbacks were in on reliever Joe Smith before the Blue Jays dealt him to the Indians, but David Hernandez “seemed to be” Arizona’s top target, Heyman writes. The D-backs ended up acquiring Hernandez from the Angels, making this his second stint in Arizona. Hernandez has only thrown 2 2/3 innings in his return to the club, but they’ve been spotless (no runs, hits or walks allowed).
HubcapDiamondStarHalo
“Astros players were “down in the dumps” after the deadline, Reddick revealed.”
What, at 71-42 with a 13 game lead, does Reddick et al not feel they’re good enough to last the season?
bastros88
with the way they have been playing lately, the won’t make It far in the postseason
mannyl101
Hmmm, as a Dodger fan, I would like a refund from last years trade deadline! Reddick was a big bust!
hiflew
Then he went to the perfect team. The Dodgers are used to busting in the playoffs.
Sibert18
Is this a legitimate question? The season isn’t the problem it’s the playoffs because their goal is the WS. Just because they have the 2nd best record doesn’t mean they’re going to do well in the playoffs or need help via trade.
Retired NFL Player
The Buccaroos should keep Huntington and fire their owner.
mannyl101
Haha
Danny Wood
If only. Unfortunately, the greedy and absurdly cheap Nutting family refuses to sell the team. I constantly imagine the what=if scenarios over the past ten years had Mark Cuban been successful in his attempt to buy the franchise. There are a few things for certain in my mind. Neil Walker would still be a Pirate, we would not have been so cheap as to let J.A: Happ go after Searage and co. had helped him make adjustments and become a top tier starter, we would have acquired Jose Quintana, and we would not have given up two really good prospects in Reese Mcguire and Hanley Ramirez just to unload Lirianos salary. And that is just the tip of the proverbial iceberg.
Danny Wood
I think Huntington is effective given what he is provided, but he is not aggressive enough when it comes to acquiring players if they are expensive. For the most part, he makes fairly shrewd moves that can often seem bad at the time. For example, when Melancon was traded, I think, like me, most Pirates saw it just as a way for the Pirates to avoid paying the rest of his 2016 salary knowing they were not going to resign him the following season. The fact that he was able to do that whilst acquiring a budding-star of a closer in Felipe Rivero that can touch up to 100-102 MPH and has a wicked slider, who also happens to be controllable for a good period of time, is positively brilliant. Or how about acquiring Trevor Williams from the Marlins in exchange for them poaching our executives? And, now, most recently, getting two prospects, one of them a very good prospect, from the Dodgers, in exchange for Tony Watson, who, while has been nothing short of consistent and fantastic for us for years, was also definitely going to depart via free agency after the end of the year and appears to have already peaked in his prime? Hurdle isnt bad, although he makes some seriously awful decisions sometimes. But, for the most part, Hurdle is a solid manager. I do really wonder what the deal is with our budget sometimes. They are always referencing that they basically have 20 million more to spend if they wanted, but never do, which tells me that Huntington gets extra bonuses the more money he doesnt spend and thus the more money pocketed by the Nuttings, all while at least appearing to be fielding a competitive team.
Orland Sox
Clippard has improved under Don Cooper’s coaching. Gonzalez had a great start last evening. Rick Hahn’s garage sale could continue.
Priggs89
Miguel had an excellent 3-start stretch before the Fenway debacle as well. He gave up only 5 earned in 19.1 innings against the Dodgers, Cubs, and Indians prior to that Boston game.
Also, the Miguel Gonzalez link is to the wrong guy.
mannyl101
White Sox & Marlins have the worst owners! Beyond greedy! Especially the Sox! Always giving up with so much talent & trading away their stars! There a disgrace!
Jon_Snow
I know nothing, but they’re*
Connorsoxfan
Haha the White Sox trade away all their talent, and get potentially better talent. Moncada looked like a stud, Kopech can throw over 100, Jeimer Candelario looks good, they’ve been getting really really good prospects because they can’t compete right now. Your comment is the real disgrace.
Connorsoxfan
I mean Jimenez. Wrong guy lol
up2drew
There is no such thing as getting a better player than Sale. While acknowledging that pitchers are always one slider away from the end of thrurbpriductive career, Sake is a cost-controlled generational talent.
up2drew
There is no such thing as getting a better player than Sale. While acknowledging that pitchers are always one slider away from the end of their productive career, Sale is a cost-controlled generational talent.
Connorsoxfan
That’s true, but those years would’ve been wasted on a White Sox team that wasn’t competing over the next couple years even with Quintana and Eaton. With all the talent they’ve amassed if half of them reach their potential they’ve got a great core to build around.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
So you think they should’ve kept the same guys that got them to be a .500 team? We all know Sale is a stud and Quintana and Eaton were good players, but last year the White Sox had holes at C, 2B, CF, LF (all due respect to Melky, but his defense was always a liability), DH, and especially at the back end of the rotation. Between the draft and trades and Avi’s emergence, they seemed to have filled all of these holes in less than a year. They’ll be awful this year and bad next year, but their time is coming.
rocky7
Um, maybe Hahn can make a deal for Clippard whereas Don Cooper can continue coaching him after/if he is traded to another club.
Is Clippard new and improved, or just the same Yankee guy in a different uniform, having a little success. This was, the guy for the Yankees that was horribly and consistently ineffective whether by being hit or firing wild pitches BIGTIME in every inning he was brought into.
bigcubsfan
Hey man, it’s Heyman. Writing about base balls. I like!
Pedro Cerrano's Voodoo
I’m very excite!
ericl
I don’t blame the Astros for not wanting to take on Verlander’s contract & part with top prospects. Maybe if the Tigers were willing to eat some of his contract, they’d get a bigger return. The Astros clearly need another starter, but I understand their stance here
Priggs89
I don’t blame them for not wanting Verlander either, but I do blame them for not pushing harder for Quintana or Gray though (more-so Quintana). Quintana would’ve fit into that rotation perfectly for this year’s championship run and for years to come. Maybe it won’t come back to haunt them, but I think they messed up a HUGE opportunity.
fatelfunnel
Rumor was Tucker, Martes and Musgrove for Quintana. But Astros deemed that to expensive. I believe the Astros made a mistake, and I’m glad they did. As a Sox fan, I love Jimenez and Cease over those three.
Priggs89
Agree 100%. I would’ve been extremely happy with Tucker, Martes, and Musgrove at the time, but I’m absolutely thrilled to have Eloy in the organization. He was my #1 target in a Q deal (even when everyone was reporting about how a Sox/Cubs deal wouldn’t happen), so I couldn’t be happier with the move for the Sox.
therealryan
Jimenez is one of my favorite prospects in MiLB and I think the White Sox received a nice return for Quintana, but how could you prefer Jimenez and Cease over Tucker, Martes and Musgrove. I don’t even see how you could prefer Jimenez and Cease over just Tucker and Martes. Jimenez and Tucker and basically the same prospect and Martes is a better prospect than Cease. They’re the same age, but Martes is holding his own pitching in MLB and Cease is down in A ball. Martes was better in A ball at 19 than Cease is today as a 21 year old.
ericl
The Astros definitely needed to add a starting pitcher. I think they should’ve pushed harder for Gray. The A’s lowered their asking price from the Yankees & they probably would’ve lowered it for the Astros. Houston dropped out of those talks far too soon. They easily could’ve put a trade offer in that was comparable to or better than what the A’s took from the Yankees. Heck, two of the guys from the Yankees are out injured. Houston needed to try to get Gray.
sngehl01
You don’t lower the price on an in division trade, usually.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
I think the injuries are why Oakland did the trade. If they’re not injured, I don’t think they get all three. Oakland got a bigger return because it took on a bigger risk. I agree, though, that I’m disappointed with Houston for not pushing harder. They could definitely use another solid starter for the playoffs.
SimplyAmazin91
Please bring in fresh management. The Mets need a change in that department.
mikeyank55
Hey Simply–you need to aim higher. The mets need a change of ownership from the cheap Wilpon’s. Nothing else will matter while Jeff and Daddy sit in the owners box pretending to be committed while they invest their loot (taken from foolish fans( to buy Brooklyn Dodgers’ memorabilia.
notagain27
Don’t overlook former Met and current Diamondback Bench Coach Ron Gardenhire as a potential candidate for the Mets job as well.
DXC
Top baseball people are not going to want to work for the Wilpons – disorganized, dishonest and cheap to the point of stupidity. Alderson was doing Selig a favor and the Wilpons had to respect him a bit since if Selig wasn’t a friend, they likely would have been compelled to sell. The quality people under Alderson came because of him, not Fred and Jeff. I’d love to see new blood and a different/fresh organizational philosophy, but it might not get any better than who we have.
mikeyank55
Who are the quality people under Anderson?
“TC”-Laughable
“kL”-strikeout
Dan Worthen-sorry my arm hurts
Coaching staff-too busy spoon feeding
cespedes water.
Fitness and Conditioning staff-lol
fox471 Dave
Roberts way over thinks his pitching staff. Check the Dodger score after he took Darvish out.
BlueSkyLA
I did.
-106 pitches for Darvish
-Game won
-16 game lead
-Dodgers win every series since early June
Any questions?
fox471 Dave
No questions. My bad. Saw the 10 strikeouts and thought WT…? Still think Dave over manages the bullpen a bit. Need to look before I leap.
Blue_Painted_Dreams_LA
He putting people in position to win or lose playoff jobs. I’m not sure how that’s overthinking if? Putting RPs in potential roles in which they may need to fair in the playoffs is overthinking it how? Stewart was pulled from his start as they still want to stretch him out and he hasn’t thrown in 7 days. I’m guessing they would have preferred to have him go 4, but he wasn’t as sharp. Idk about you, but at this point I would rather find out if anyone can take hold of that Left on Left role now that throwing crap to the wall in October.
BlueSkyLA
True this.
BTW the story here suggests that the Dodgers’ FO was aware enough of the situation to not bid against themselves for Darvish.
I have tickets to the game next Wednesday, the expected Darvish home debut. Looking forward to it!
Richard K
Folks the Astros need a bull pen, at the trade deadline it was ranked 19th, so unless any of those above pitchers can pitch nine innings they would not have helped. The Astros may still win the division but they will be exited out in the first round of the playoffs. The GM is totally inept as he treats his prospects as they are and will be stars in this league.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
They could have used a BP upgrade, true, but having a starter who can usually give you six or seven strong innings allows you to mask a weak bullpen. A bad bullpen is exposed when you need to dig deep into it.