With Giancarlo Stanton joining the Yankees, the offseason’s most prominent trade piece is officially off the board. Other significant players have swapped jerseys recently, including former Stanton teammates Dee Gordon and Marcell Ozuna as well as veteran second baseman Ian Kinsler, among others.
That said, there are still quite a few significant players left that seem to be plausible or even likely trade pieces. Unlike our trade deadline version of this post, we’re not going to attempt a ranking — though, generally, I’ve attempted to list players in order of my subjective assessment of their trade likelihood and value. The primary focus here is to give a sense of the most notable names that appear to be in play at this stage.
Starting Pitchers
- Chris Archer, Rays: His favorable contract, compelling peripherals, and youth make Archer the top arm on the market — if he’s truly made available.
- Michael Fulmer, Tigers: Detroit is said to be listening, and several organizations are circling, but the question remains whether the club will truly be willing to let a top-end, controllable starter go for anything shy of an astronomical price.
- Danny Duffy, Royals: While a recent DUI and elbow surgery introduce some questions, Duffy is still just shy of 29 years of age and has shown enough the past two years to make his contract ($60MM remaining over four years) a notable bargain.
- Gerrit Cole, Pirates: While not in top form in 2017, he did throw 200 frames and teams still see a front-line arsenal and history of success. There are some hints that the Bucs are ready to make a deal, but it’s not clear yet whether that’ll come to pass.
- Jake Odorizzi, Rays: Much like Drew Smyly last year, Odorizzi is coming off of a season where he wasn’t at his best and is owed a decent sum (a projected $6.5MM arb tab) with an extra year of control to go. It seems reasonably likely that he’ll be moved and that there will be strong interest.
- Zack Greinke &Â Patrick Corbin, Diamondbacks: Arizona needs to free up payroll space if it is to make other moves, and both of these hurlers have come up in recent days. Greinke’s huge remaining commitment is a major barrier to any deal; Corbin, meanwhile, should have solid value as a one-year rental but also wouldn’t free up nearly as much cash.
- Dan Straily, Marlins: While he continued to pile up solid innings, Straily also doesn’t seem to be the type of pitcher that teams will go wild to acquire. For the budget-conscious Fish, holding him will have appeal.
- Danny Salazar, Indians: Many other organizations would love to take a chance on this talented hurler, though it’s fair to wonder whether Cleveland would rather just keep the upside in-house.
- Ian Kennedy & Jason Hammel, Royals: The contracts still outstanding to these two hurlers are both under water, but if Kansas City decides to hit “go” on a rebuild, some of the obligations could be moved elsewhere.
- Julio Teheran, Braves: Coming off of a down year, it seems less than likely that Teheran will be moved, and we haven’t heard any suggestion that’ll come to pass. Then again, has anyone asked new GM Alex Anthopoulos whether there’s a body part he’d stake on keeping Teheran?
- Matt Harvey, SP, Mets: The idea that the Mets might look to move Harvey was a short-lived Winter Meetings side story, but it’s conceivable it could occur. But Harvey’s value is at an all-time low.
Relievers
- Brad Hand, LH Reliever, Padres: Anyone hear any juicy Brad Hand rumors? Yeah, me neither. But we haven’t seen action at the very top of the relief market yet, and Hand is now established as an elite pen arm, so I suspect we haven’t heard the last of him for the offseason.
- Alex Colome, RH Reliever, Rays: The Tampa Bay closer has received the most attention on the trade market, but a deal hasn’t yet been completed. That could reflect the fact that the Rays are still a bit uncertain in their direction, or it may indicate that some teams with interest still want to explore other options.
- Kelvin Herrera, RH Reliever, Royals: It’s always hard to give up your favorites, but the Royals parted with Wade Davis last year and have much greater cause to move Herrera now — though his value is down after a less-than-excellent 2017.
- Zach Britton, LH Reliever & Brad Brach, RH Reliever, Orioles: Attention has shifted to another, even more important possible trade candidate. But the O’s still have two really good relief assets to market.
- Raisel Iglesias, RH Reliever, Reds: There’s no indication that Iglesias is going to be available for anything approaching his market value, but you never know if a team will end up offering up something the Reds can’t turn down.
- Brad Ziegler, RH Reliever, Marlins: The wily veteran is probably slated to earn a bit more than he’d receive on the open market after a down season, but he’s still an appealing roster target so Miami can anticipate finding some payroll savings here.
- Joakim Soria, RH Reliever, Royals: Speaking of trimming payroll, finding a taker for some of Soria’s remaining $10MM guarantee (that includes a 2019 buyout) is surely near the top of the Royals’ to-do list.
- Shane Greene & Alex Wilson, RH Relievers, Tigers: The rebuilding Detroit organization is willing to consider anything, but also won’t just give way affordable players such as these.
- Kyle Barraclough, RH Reliever, Marlins: That reasoning likely holds for the Marlins, too; they could hand over closing duties to the powerful but volatile Barraclough.
- Arodys Vizcaino, RH Reliever, Braves: With two years of control remaining, Vizcaino is coming off of a promising 2017 campaign. But if the organization wants to compete — or, at least, project an intention to do so — then it’d be tough to deal away such a prominent part of the bullpen.
- Darren O’Day, RH Reliever, Orioles: Sure, he’s 35 and hasn’t been as spectacular in the pat two seasons as he was in the four prior. But given the way the market has treated relievers this winter, two years at a $18MM commitment isn’t an unapproachable price tag for a high-quality relief arm.
- Junichi Tazawa, RH Reliever, Marlins: The Fish gave Tazawa a $12MM guarantee in hopes his results would catch up to his K/BB rates, but the opposite occurred in 2017. Miami will need to eat most of the $7MM remaining to make a deal.
- Dellin Betances, RH Reliever, Yankees: It seems clear that the Bronx Bombers have set their sights on some top-end pitching after finagling the acquisition of Stanton. The rights to the high-powered Betances, who struggled with command down the stretch, could help fill other needs and open some added payroll space.
Outfielders
- Christian Yelich, OF, Marlins: With his two outfield mates already gone, Yelich is now in the spotlight. While Miami is sending out signs that it may not deal the controllable, high-quality performer, that feels mostly like posturing.
- Andrew McCutchen, OF, Pirates: With some hints the Bucs may feel that 2018 just isn’t their year, perhaps we ought to expect a move involving McCutchen. His $14.75MM salary is a good price for a quality player, though it’s nothing like the bargain rate for an MVP the club no doubt expected it would be when the contract was signed.
- Billy Hamilton, OF, Reds: There has been plenty of smoke coming from Hamilton — not just from him tearing around the bases, but from the trade signal fires being sent up around the game. It seems the Reds have gone fairly far down the line on moving the speed-and-defense specialist, though there seem to be scenarios where he stays, too.
- Randal Grichuk, OF, Cardinals:Â With a 40-man roster loaded up with righty outfield bats, it seems that additional players will likely need to follow Stephen Piscotty out the door. Since the Cards now have settled their primary outfield mix, with eyes on some other improvements, Grichuk feels likeliest of the remaining players to be shipped out.
- Avisail Garcia, OF, White Sox: There has been some word of interest, but more of the exploratory variety. Odds are the ChiSox will hang onto Garcia and see whether he can sustain his 2017 outbreak before deciding upon next steps. It’s also possible the team could make a run at extending him this spring.
- Domingo Santana & Keon Broxton, OF, Brewers: After a highly promising 2017 season for both player and team, you might expect that Santana would not be on the market. And perhaps, realistically, he isn’t. But the Milwaukee organization is blessed with an impressive slate of outfield talent, and it makes sense to consider moving even Santana if it could mean a drastic improvement in the rotation. The likelier outcome, perhaps, is a deal involving Broxton, who is looking over his shoulder at a group of talented center field options.
- Adam Duvall, OF, Reds: There’s been some chatter here, but nothing yet that would suggest the Reds are preparing to deal away a player that has hit the ball out of the park thirty times in each of the past two seasons — but also has a sub-.300 MLB on-base percentage.
- Jacoby Ellsbury, OF, Yankees: A no-trade clause and large contract make Ellsbury a difficult piece to move, but he doesn’t seem to fit very well on a roster that includes Aaron Hicks and Brett Gardner along with corner sluggers Stanton and Aaron Judge. The Yanks would love to move some salary, but doing so will be tough — unless, perhaps, they are willing to hold onto the bulk of the remaining commitment and find a contending team that Ellsbury wouldn’t mind playing for.
- Shin-Soo Choo, OF/DH, Rangers: As the Rangers look for ways to improve their rotation, taking on a big contract while moving some of the dollars owed to Choo seems to have emerged as something of a possibility. It’ll be a tall order to get rid of much of the $62MM Choo still has coming his way, though, after he again hovered around league average at the plate in 2017.
- Yasmany Tomas, OF, Diamondbacks: Likewise, the D-Backs would surely love to get some of these dollars off of their books. But Tomas struggled early before losing the rest of his season to injury, so it seems unlikely that a trade will come to pass.
- Jackie Bradley Jr., OF, Red Sox:Â There are conflicting signs here, but it seems there’s at least some plausibility to the idea that Boston could move Bradley if it finds cause to put a big slugger in the outfield. On talent, he’d be much higher up this list, as Bradley has a significant defensive and baserunning floor along with a history of some high-quality output at the plate. But the odds still seem to weigh against a deal at this stage.
- Kyle Schwarber, OF/?, Cubs: On the one hand, it just makes good sense for Schwarber to be playing in the American League. On the other, the Cubs front office may not be able to part with him — at least, not for what the market would likely bear at this point. While everyone knows the upside, Schwarber wasn’t good in 2017 and the market is flooded with defensively limited power bats.
Infielders
- Manny Machado, 3B, Orioles: While reporting now suggests the O’s are likely to deal their best player, this is one we’ll need to see to believe. The key difficulty here is that Baltimore still wants to compete in 2018 while also improving in the future. Threading the needle on a trade wont be easy.
- Jose Abreu, 1B, White Sox: On paper, Abreu is a pretty likely trade piece. But indications are the South Siders have a high asking price. And the rebuiding team’s present strategy is a bit difficult to discern at the moment given its reported interest in renting Machado.
- Yasmani Grandal, C, Dodgers: There have been some suggestions that Grandal can be had, as he has seemingly been bypassed as the number one option by Austin Barnes. But the Dodgers don’t need to deal him and talks seemingly haven’t really heated up.
- Evan Longoria, 3B, Rays: The veteran had a tepid season at the plate and is still owed a big chunk of change, but he has been durable and mostly productive for quite some time now, so there will be interest. The seriousness of the Rays’ dabbling in trade considerations remains unclear.
- Cesar Hernandez, 2B, Phillies: The departure of Freddy Galvis leaves Hernandez with more breathing room. It’s still possible he’s shipped out if the right opportunity arises, but the Phils will surely also be mindful of rushing to part with a valuable and controllable player when the younger options still have some learning and growing left to do.
- Jed Lowrie, 2B, Athletics: Oakland has sent conflicting signals on the veteran, but the latest word is he’s on the block again. There should be solid interest if that’s the case.
- Josh Harrison, INF, Pirates: There should be quite some interest in Harrison, a versatile player who’d add many dimensions in just one roster spot. It helps that the last two years of his contract (2019 and 20) come via option, leaving an escape clause if he can’t sustain his return to league-average offensive output.
- Jason Kipnis, 2B, Indians: Chatter on the 30-year-old has gathered some team despite the fact he’s owed $30.5MM over the next two years (including a 2020 buyout). He’s coming off of an injury-plagued, sub-standard 2017 season, but Kipnis has mostly been a quality MLB regular.
- Jose Iglesias, SS, Tigers: With Galvis being dealt to the Padres, the avenues for an Iglesias deal seem less clear. Perhaps there are still some possibilities, but it feels increasingly likely he’ll remain with Detroit to open the season.
- Starlin Castro, INF, Marlins: The just-acquired Castro is no more bolted to the deck than is any other player, though the team could hang onto the relatively marketable player while also hoping he’d be an even better chip at the trade deadline. Teammate Derek Dietrich could also be considered.
- Jurickson Profar, INF, Rangers: The Profar saga has continued to twist and turn over the offseason, as the once-forgotten man now could be back in the team’s plans. We’ll just sit back and see how this situation turns out.
- Yangervis Solarte & Chase Headley, INF, Padres: Taking on Headley’s salary was not about adding the veteran infielder. The Pads will be looking to move either or both of these players; despite a desire to begin winning before long (despite an overarching focus on the future), there’s just no real reason for both of these solid but unspectacular veterans to be on the same roster.
- Martin Prado, 3B, Marlins: It stands to reason that some organization would take on some money to get the respected Prado. But Miami will have to decide whether to take what it can get now or roll the dice that he’ll turn in a big first half in 2018.
- Nicholas Castellanos, 3B/OF, Tigers: Despite somewhat surprising extension talks, it still seems possible that Castellanos could be parted with. He has been a quality hitter in the past two seasons, but defensive question marks weigh down his trade value.
- Javier Baez (INF), Addison Russell (INF) & Ian Happ (INF/OF), Cubs: Coming into the winter, it seemed one of these three would likely be moved for pitching. Now? It’s really not clear.
- J.T. Realmuto, C, Marlins: How deep will the cuts go? There’s an argument to be made that any and all trade assets should be marketed, and Realmuto would be an excellent one. He’s an established, affordable, and controllable young regular catcher — one of baseball’s rarest birds — and it is hard to see Miami truly being competitive during his three remaining arb seasons.
- Josh Donaldson, 3B, Blue Jays: While Donaldson is in theory in a similar spot to Machado, the rumor flow has been in quite the opposite direction. It seems unlikely that Toronto will move him.
Phillies2017
While obviously a long shot, I’m a bit surprised Moss isnt on this list. Relatively affordable $7.25m salary on a rebuilding club and recent enough success for him to be viewed as a salary dump lottery ticket.
Houston We Have A Solution
Brandon Moss? Too many players like him on tbe market atm to be considered an option. Morrison, Hosmer, Adams, and some I am probably forgetting.
TLB2001
As a Royals fan, I support this. We’ll take your third string batting practice pitcher and a bag of balls.
Lefty_Orioles_Fan
Threading the needle on a trade wont be easy. for the Orioles
No worries about being easy, #JustRebuild!!!
spudchukar
They could recoup quite a haul from the Red Birds.
BravesCanada
Toronto would be dumb not to move Donaldson
bluejaysfan
Completely agree
Houston We Have A Solution
idk why they dont trade donaldson.
they could easily ship him off to atlanta for austin riley and some good pitching prospects or to the cardinals for kelly and some good pitching prospects.
so many teams would be in on donaldson and have enough pieces to make it worthwhile.
jdubs346
They want to put fans in the seats and make money for Rogers … the jays need a good SP, catching depth, another versatile player, and at least 1 more quality OF, if not 2 more… so good luck because all that isn’t going to happen
spudchukar
Most of those the Cards have to offer.
Houston We Have A Solution
kelly (c) , bader (of), greg garcia (utility), flaherty (p), gomber (p)
JFactor
Not all of that for one hear of JD.
Take off Kelly and Gomber and you likely have a match.
Benklasner
Too much
bravesfan88
If Toronto allows a receiving team to negotiate an extension with Donaldson, and one is worked out, it would significantly increase their return for him…
If they did work out an extension, I could see a Donaldson trade justifying a return like Bader, Flaherty, Gomber, and another top prospect…
Although, even with that being said, I am still not so sure the Cardinals would let go of Kelly. He’s their Catcher of the future, and their heir-apparent to Molina, who isn’t getting any younger these days…
southi
While I think that the Blue Jays should definitely trade Donaldson and that he’d instantly make a positive impact on almost any team, I don’t see a any reason for Atlanta to deal away their future for one year of him. Donaldson by himself isn’t going to make the Braves a World Series contender for 2018.
bravesfan88
Acquiring Donaldson, for me, is an easy no, especially since you’d have to give up some significant talent to acquire him, and work out a contract extension. Plus, that extension will not provide enough value to justify that kind of long-term, financial commitment.
Donaldson’s injuries are starting to add up, and that extension could very well start to look down right bad after years 3-4…especially if Donaldson has to be moved off of 3B..The Braves aren’t in a position to take that kind of risk..
Machado, for me, I’m definitely all for signing, after the year is up. He’s still young, and unless he’s offered some ridiculous type of 10 year deal, he should play out his contract, providing quite a bit of surplus value.
Now, I wouldn’t trade for Machado though, unless the Braves are contending, AND can get an extension worked out before trading for him…Which, isn’t even really an option, since apparently the Orioles are REFUSING to allow inquiring teams that 72-hour window to negotiate with Machado..So, for me, it’s either sign Machado for the 2019 season, or bring up Riley..
Speaking of Austin Riley, he is an offensively gifted 3B prospect, with a very strong arm, and plays slightly abive average defense at 3B. He has the potential to hit 25 plus HR’s, hit around .275, and draw his fair share of walks, but he does have a tendency to strike out at a little higher clip than one would like. Although, with that being said, he has made some significant strides quieting his critics recently by improving upon his weaknesses offensively and defensively..
While speed is certainly not Riley’s calling card, he is not exactly a statue either, so with his rocket arm, clocked pitching at 94+ coming out of the 2015 draft as a pitcher in HS, he very well could play a solid, albeit a probably unspectacular LF.
bravesfan88
So, IF the Braves do in fact sign a third baseman, after the 2018 season, it would not directly impact Riley’s future as a starter in their line-up..Personally, I have DREAMED of the following 2019 lineup:
2B-Albies
RF-Acuña
1B-Freeman
3B-Machado
LF-Riley
CF-Inciarte
C-Flowers or C prospect Alex Jackson
SS-Swanson
I actually think that very well could be one of the most dynamic, well-rounded lineups in the NL. They’d have plenty of speed coming from Albies, Acuña, Inciarte, and to a lesser extent Swanson and Machado…They’d have a good amount of power coming from Acuña, Freeman, Machado, Riley, and possibly Alex Jackson, who is more than capable of putting up 20+ HR’s..Also, with Albies, Swanson, Flowers, and Inciarte as 4 wild cards possibly hitting anywhere from ~10-15 HR’s each.
They’d just have gritty, quality players capable of drawing walks and providing quality at-bats with solid situational hitting. All in all, up and down the whole line-up, the Braves would cause opposing pitchers to work hard to get all three outs every time out.
Couple that line-up with a young, improving bullpen, and an extremely young, yet extremely talented group of starting pitchers and you very well could have a team built for sustainable success…
Now, obviously, I realize Machado is a LONG SHOT, but even still, the Braves could just as easily slide Riley over to 3rd, and the Braves could add a a LF’er with a dynamic bat to fill in that #4 spot in their line-up..
The future is definitely bright, and the future is VERY CLOSE fellow Braves’ fans!!
AndThisGameBelongsToMySanDiegoPadres
Orioles aren’t giving the negotiation window because it’d be pointless. Machado will just shut down extension talks and the trade won’t happen.
swanhenge
It’s just a travesty what’s going on in MIA. If they would’ve just tried to tack onto their pitching corps (i.e. heavy bullpen help like COL) they would’ve been a legitimate contender in the NLE. That was an outstanding outfield. Solid leadoff hitter…what a joke. Loads of sympathy for Marlins fans. Who knew Fernandez’ passing would cause such an implosion to an entire organization…
southi
Many people predicted it would have a serious negative impact on the Marlins.
In all honesty it was a horrible tragedy all around and just another example of the repercussions of poor decision making. As much a positive impact that Fernandez had when alive, his death caused a ripple effect that had negative repercussions for many as well.
Hopefully the good Fernandez did in life will out weigh the impact of his death. In truth only time will tell.
simschifan
Next thing you know Jeter will send the Marlins guy to The Yankees for a double a mascot.
Free Clay Zavada
I wouldn’t be comfortable saying that the loss, however tragic, of one player is the primary reason for this rebuild.
mj-2
Nick Markakis is better than some of those outfielders listed
southi
I’d really love to see Christian Yelich and Prado tied together and packaged to Atlanta even though I definitely don’t think it is likely (of course BOTH Kemp and Markakis would need to be dealt away too).
Yelich, Inciarte and Acuna should make a superior defensive outfield. Prado could primarily man thirdbase until (and if) Austin Riley ever deems himself ready, then he could slide into more of the super sub role he once filled (although assuredly he’s lost a step or two). Prado also has the reputation of being a positive clubhouse presence.
I’m definitely not sure what type of package would be going back to Miami, although certainly it would still be costly even with Prado’s negative impact on the deal. It would probably start off with something along the lines of Allard, Anderson, Pache and Alex Jackson (and again it may be more or less since admittedly I’m just guessing). But I’d think that the Braves would definitely consider it and have the pieces available if Atlanta decides to pay the price.
Houston We Have A Solution
Kemp makes sense as a salary dump trade candidate to the red sox as a DH instead of paying hosmer or trading for abreu.
Idk if the braves would stomach what it would cost to get yelich- a top 50 prospect plus 2 or 3 more solid guys or two top 100 and 1 to 2 solid guys depending on the 100s ranking.
it could easily take 1 of soroka, anderson, wright, or allard, a 2nd piece like wentz or fried, and weigel to get yelich. doubt the marlins package a bad contract like prado to bring his value down.
therealryan
I say it will cost more than that. Look at the Adam Eaton deal last year as a good framework. That trade took two 55 FV SP and a 50 FV SP. An equivalent would be two of Gohara/Wright/Soroka/Anderson/Allard and one of Wentz/Fried/maybe Muller.
southi
Isn’t that more or less what I offered:
#21 overall prospect Allard (55fv)
#51 prospect Anderson (55fv)
Pache (50fv)
Jackson (45fv)
AND take all of Prado’s salary.
I just offered two position player prospects at the end instead of one pitching prospect. Of course if that was Miami’s preference something could be worked out.
Besides a little give and take I’d have to think that offer would be pretty competitive for both sides.
therealryan
Yeah it was. I think your package is the kind of package it would take. I was referring to bringinthereliefpitcher who offered one of the pitchers and a second piece of Fried or Wentz, whereas you and I both agree that a Fried/Wentz prospect would be the 3rd piece. I think if the Braves could get Yelich it would be a nice get for them. His contract and youth would also fit nicely with their first real strong wave of prospects about to hit in the next 1-2 seasons.
I’m a Rays fan and think they should move Longo and Colome and possibly Archer, but would still like it if they went out and traded for Yelich. I think the Rays should target Yelich for a lot of the same reasons I think the Braves should. Would be great to see him playing LF next to Kiermaier for the next half decade.
madmc44
Why overpay for JDM when you have this kind of talent ready to be moved
Longoria—Red Sox make him a 1 B or make Devers a 1 B and play EL @ 3 B—what an opportunity.
I’m pretty certain the Rays wouldn’t trade him to the Sox but he would be a nice addition.
Wow some impressive names DD–please abandon JDM; save John’s & Tom’s money.
NOPelicanFangirl696969
Definitely wouldnt trade their franchise player to their rival lol
spudchukar
The Cards can make the Machado deal work by signing him to a 300 million detention. They have the assets. Their 1 billion dollar TV deal kicks in in 2018, plus the extra 68 mil all teams will receive in the Spring. A 7 year deal of 30 mil with a mutual option sounds about right. Make it happen Mo.
JFactor
Yes, but Machado is unlikely to sign any extensions.
spudchukar
300 mil ought to get it done.
Ry.the.Stunner
Except Angelos has stated that he will not give teams a window to speak to Machado’s agent in a possible extension. That, along with assurance that he won’t be flipped to the Yankees, were two of his conditions on trading Machado.
spudchukar
Extention.
Coast1
If you’re going to rebuild, find the best deal and make it even if it doesn’t look that good. The alternative is that there might not be a better deal later and you could end up like the Phillies did with Jeremy Hellickson. They paid him $26 million over a year and a half and let him go for a AA pitcher with a 6 ERA.
simschifan
Herrera and Soria to the Cubs for 3 minor leaguers.
Houston We Have A Solution
Hand to the cardinals makes too much sense at this point. They lost a lot of guys to FA and havent really replaced them via trade or on the open market, they signed gregerson.
Cardinals get Hand
Padres get Hudson or Flaherty and Yairo Munoz
ABCD
Cubs don’t really need to trade anyone. Joe likes to mix and match. Happ and Almora can absorb the PAs that Jay had in 2017. Someone is bound to get injured and they will have someone better than average to step in.
Hopefully, they sign Cobb, maybe another reliever (doesn’t need to be Davis or Holland), maybe a backup catcher if they feel Caratini isn’t suited for that role yet.
simschifan
Cobb better drop his asking price. I agree on another reliever and I have a feeling Caratini is gonna be the backup
Ry.the.Stunner
Yep. Cubs offered 4/60, Cobb countered with 4/80. That’s just not happening.
mp2891
I’m a Rays fan. Figured Cobb would get a 4 year deal worth between $70 and $80 million before the offseason began. I still think that’s what he gets. I’d certainly rather pay him $20 million AAV than Arrieta $30 million.
Solaris601
CLE really needs to pull out all the stops to deal Kipnis. He’s a man without a position on a small market team making $15M/year. Very expensive bench piece who they couldn’t convert to OF due to his inadequate throwing arm. If they can’t ship him out I think they’ll slot him in as the starting 1B which is less than ideal.
Rickey O'Sunnyvale
Add Brandon McCarthy to the likely SP to be traded list.
simschifan
He was
Cardinals17
Machado fits the Cardinals needs for 2018 at ss while moving DeJong to 3rd. The Cards might consider taking a chance on obtaining Machado and lure him to stay on a high dollar, multi year contract with Ozuna and their young pitching staff. Of course, if Ozuna works out well this year, extend him too. That would make for an exciting team.
DoItDoug
Any chance the Tigers can move Zimmerman and his enormous contract?
El Duderino
Doubtful. Zim has a No-Trade Clause, and he reportedly wants to be close to his family in Wisconsin. Not to mention he’s been awful.
DoItDoug
True. Can’t see the Brewers wanting him nor the Chicago teams.
slider32
For the most part teams seem to be exhausting all trading possibilities before going to free agents.. They realize that free agents are the worst way to obtain players and at a high cost to the team, but a necessary evil to having a winning team. The key is to only sign one free agent.
Steve Klawitter
I’ve been trying GM this Brewers club into a division winner this off-season… they arrived early and were just on the doorstep of a playoff game last year, but STL & CHC aren’t making it easy for 2018. However as soon as the Stanton deal went down I’ve been waiting to see breaking news: Starlin Castro and Kyle Barraclough to the Crew. It would solve Milwaukee’s 2B shortcomings and with only Jeffress to set up for Knebel, the Brewers could use a powerful hoss like Barraclough in a currently weakened bullpen. In addressing SP, stay away from Arrieta and sign Darvish! If Stearns doesn’t want to shell out the clams, they could move Santana and a upper prospect… for Archer. Or Broxton, maybe I. Diaz and another minor league OF, plus a promising pitching prospect could get it done.
Ski to Coors
Just can’t see Rays trading Evan Longoria. He’s the face of the franchise, still a slightly above average player at least, and has a very team friendly contract. Rays will be getting better offers for Odorizzi and Archer, possibly even Colome also.
agentx
Friedman and Anthopoulos just exchanged four who understandably didn’t make Jeff’s list, so anything can happen!!
Ry.the.Stunner
That’s because Jeff’s list was made yesterday after the trade was already announced.
eatonculo
Love these kind of articles! Thanks.
tigerdoc616
The answer is no. The Tigers will not part with Fulmer for anything less than an astronomical price.
Donnie B
Tommy Joseph, Cameron Rupp both need to be added as well as one of Altherr, Williams or Herrera from the Phillies… And they have way too many young starters that are cheap and controllable and with good potential / upside.