For the past few seasons, there’s been loose deadline speculation around the possibility of the Royals dealing Whit Merrifield. To this point, Kansas City has resisted that possibility. A career-long member of an organization that is generally among the game’s most loyal, Merrifield was a late-bloomer who signed an affordable early-career extension. That allowed the Royals to keep him at little cost through his prime seasons, which included consecutive MLB-leading hit totals in 2018-19 and a pair of All-Star appearances.
As recently as last season, Merrifield participated in the Midsummer Classic. He went on to appear in all 162 games, led baseball with 42 doubles and swiped an AL-best 40 bases. The Royals hoped he’d be a top-of-the-order sparkplug for a more competitive team in 2022, but that hasn’t panned out. Not only has the team found itself 20 games below .500 at the All-Star Break, Merrrifield is having a career-worst season. He owns a .240/.292/.343 line through 373 plate appearances, offense that checks in 22 percentage points below league average by measure of wRC+.
Merrifield is signed through the end of next season. The Royals restructured his deal during Spring Training, so he’s making $7MM this year (about $2.73MM of which will be paid out after the August 2 deadline) and $6.75MM next season. The deal also contains a $500K buyout on a 2024 mutual option. With the affordable control and Merrifield’s trade value at a low ebb, the Royals don’t have to force a trade over the next two weeks. Nevertheless, Jon Heyman of the New York Post wrote last month the club was more amenable to dealing him than they’ve been in years past.
Even during a down year, Merrifield should draw attention from other clubs. He remains a high-contact bat and an excellent baserunner, having stolen 14 more bags while being caught just twice. He’s typically a solid defender at both second base and in the corner outfield, although public metrics are down a bit on his first-half performance in that regard. Merrifield has also looked more like himself of late, hitting .269/.322/.392 with 15 doubles and 11 steals in 65 games since the start of May. His April was abysmal, but he’s been productive for the past two and a half months and has a quality career body of work.
If the Royals were to seriously market Merrifield over the next two weeks, which teams stand out as the best fits? With a season and a half of remaining control, it’ll have to be a team that realistically feels it can compete by 2023. The Pirates, Reds, A’s, Cubs, Diamondbacks and Nationals can probably be ruled out on that alone. The Rockies and Rangers have their sights set on competing next year, but neither is likely to preemptively acquire a second baseman this summer. The Tigers are perhaps a bit more plausible given the tough season they’ve gotten from Jonathan Schoop, but they’re going to be more focused on dealing some players than acquiring a notable veteran from a division rival with an eye towards 2023.
Of the remaining two-thirds of the league’s teams, which seem likeliest to be in touch with Royals president of baseball operations Dayton Moore and general manager J.J. Piccolo?
Best Fits
Mariners — Seattle has won 14 in a row to go into the All-Star Break owners of a 51-42 record. It’s still an uphill battle to catch the Astros in the AL West, but they’re firmly in the Wild Card mix and likely to look for ways to upgrade over the next two weeks. No position stands out more than second base, where Seattle has gotten a collective .212/.279/.299 line. Offseason acquisition Adam Frazier has underwhelmed, as has last year’s deadline pickup Abraham Toro. The M’s could move Ty France to second base, but he’s better suited for first base/designated hitter duty. Frazier’s headed towards free agency after this season anyhow, and Merrifield could be an affordable upgrade for both the remainder of this season and next.
White Sox — The White Sox have had a generally underwhelming season, but they’re coming out of the Break just three games back in the AL Central. The second base tandem of Leury García and Josh Harrison hasn’t panned out, although Harrison has been alright over the past month. Merrifield would still be a definitive upgrade there, and his relatively modest salary should be particularly appealing to a team already sporting a franchise-record payroll. Would the Royals be willing to deal Merrifield inside the division? They’d surely like to compete next season, so perhaps that’ll give them some hesitance, but he’d only be under contract for one season of plausible contention.
Dodgers — Heyman reported last week that the Dodgers have already been in touch with the Royals. Second base isn’t really a need for L.A., with former top prospect Gavin Lux enjoying his awaited breakout season. Lux has seen some time in left field of late while the Dodgers have been without Chris Taylor, though, and their offseason pickup of Hanser Alberto as a righty-hitting utilityman hasn’t worked. Landing Merrifield may lead to a bit of a position player surplus once Taylor returns from the injured list, but the Dodgers haven’t been deterred by having “too much talent” in recent years.
Giants — The Giants are in a similar boat as their archrivals. They have a handful of second base-caliber players, and righties Wilmer Flores and Thairo Estrada are playing well. Tommy La Stella is off to a rough start after opening the year on the injured list, and the Giants have already been tied to Brandon Drury. That suggests they’re open to adding another righty-swinging versatile infielder. Merrifield doesn’t have Drury’s power, but his high-contact game may be a better fit for Oracle Park.
Brewers — The Brewers are expected to look for another bat this summer as they battle the Cardinals at the top of the NL Central. Kolten Wong has been a slightly below-average hitter this year, and his public defensive metrics have tumbled. That’s not too dissimilar from Merrifield, and perhaps Milwaukee will feel he’s not much (if any) of an upgrade over Wong. However, Bob Nightengale of USA Today recently wrote that the Brew Crew could listen to offers on Wong even as they look for other ways to add to the offense.
Longer Shots
Orioles — The Orioles are within 3 1/2 games of a Wild Card spot despite their second basemen hitting only .196/.269/.363. Rougned Odor is just a stopgap, and the O’s are likely to look for a better second baseman this offseason. Actually reaching the playoffs this year is unlikely, but Merrifield is affordable and would be a good fit for a 2023 team that could more earnestly compete. With the 2022 club at least hanging around, there’s an argument for GM Mike Elias and his staff to strike a little early for a controllable player.
Angels — It’s a similar argument for the Angels, although their involvement in the bidding would be strictly about 2023. The Halos have gotten nothing from second base this year, one of the reasons they’re set to miss the playoffs again. Next season will be a turning point, with Shohei Ohtani slated to reach free agency after the year. They’re going to have to aggressively address the roster’s flaws over the next eight months. Nothing stops them from adding controllable players this summer while still dealing rentals like Noah Syndergaard and Michael Lorenzen.
Rays — The Rays haven’t gotten much out of second base this year, but that’s largely because Brandon Lowe missed more than a month. With Lowe back, the keystone is no longer a concern, although Tampa Bay’s myriad outfield injuries could cause them to look at a versatile infield/outfield type.
Braves — Atlanta hasn’t gotten much from Orlando Arcia since Ozzie Albies broke his foot. They acquired Robinson Canó as a stopgap and anticipate Albies returning late next month. That probably reduces the urgency to add a second baseman, although they’re in a tight battle with the Mets and could work Merrifield into the corner outfield once Albies returns.
Phillies — Continuing the theme of “contenders whose second basemen got hurt,” the Phils have been without Jean Segura since May. He’s expected back this year, though, and the presence of top prospect Bryson Stott gives Philadelphia some cover until then. Bullpen or center field help seems likelier.
No Pressing Second Base Need
Each of the Yankees, Twins, Marlins, Mets, Astros, Guardians, Cardinals, Blue Jays, Padres and Red Sox have everyday second basemen locked into the lineup. Merrifield’s ability to play the corner outfield could make him an option for some of this group — the Yankees and Padres, in particular, could look into outfield additions — but they seem less likely to be motivated than teams searching for a second baseman. Much of Merrifield’s appeal lies in his defensive flexibility, and pigeon-holing him into the corner outfield reduces a good bit of his value. Contenders looking for an impactful corner bat to upgrade the middle of the order seem likely to find cleaner fits elsewhere.
Merrifield’s vaccination status also impacts some teams’ pursuits, most notably the Blue Jays. He was not permitted to travel to Canada for the Royals series in Toronto last week, and similar concerns reportedly diminished the Yankees’ interest in teammate Andrew Benintendi. Merrifield told reporters he’d be open to reconsidering his stance on getting vaccinated if dealt to a playoff contender that could have to travel across the border for meaningful games. He stopped short of firmly declaring he’d do so, however, and questions about his availability for those games could be of concern for some teams.
There’s no guarantee the Royals will actually follow through on a Merrifield trade. This is far from the first time his name has made the rounds on the rumor circuit, and Kansas City has yet to pull the trigger on a deal (or seemingly come close). If the front office takes a different approach this summer, teams like the Mariners, White Sox, Dodgers, Giants and Brewers feel like the most plausible suitors.
LouWhitakerHOF
A leg injury and a walking boot for a player that relies on his speed. Plus no word on when he will return will effect his value.
Big whiffa
Right. Pointless for KC to just give him away at his lowest value in a long long time. Might as well ride him out, hope he rebounds in 2nd half and then look to move in the off-season.
That being said – orioles should have some interest. If royals will take a diminished return – that’s a great place for him to right the ship. Let him bat 9th til he finds his groove.
RedFraggle
Why would the Orioles want him? So he can block their prospects and not go to Toronto when they play the Jays who are, you know, in the same division? Makes no sense. Odor is even playing better than he is this year.
tuck 2
Agreed O’s next second baseman is either Urias moving back there or either Vavra or Westburg.
Kris Smith
You just said exactly what’s on my mind!
allweatherfan
They waited too long to get maximum value.
astros_fan_84
They didn’t want maximum value. They wanted the player.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
That decision would look a lot better if the rebuild hadn’t stalled.
paddyo furnichuh
Almost every full rebuild stalled since the Cubs’ and Astros’ rebuilds. Far less effective when several teams are trying to do a full rebuild across the league.
One could argue the Sox’ rebuild has been a success, just delayed by a regressive managerial hire.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
Ok, but there’s different levels of stalling.
I’d deem the Sox rebuild as a bit of a disappointment if the last two years were as good as it gets. They got to the playoffs in consecutive years for the first time in club history (monumentally sad as that is), but they need at least one deep playoff run, preferably two, to qualify this rebuild as successful.
Meanwhile, a number of people, myself included, thought the Royals would have turned the corner by now. Maybe not be contending for the division, but at least have things looking up. The Tigers may be even more disappointing this year because they ended the season by playing slightly above .500 ball for a few months, iirc. I have more faith in the Tigers rebuild, but the Royals seem to be going nowhere.
cdouglas24000
I agree. The rotation was/is nowhere near an imposing force. I think they should have aimed for 2023 not the last 2 years to be making a push. Thus not dealing Merrifield when he was at his peak at end 2021 was a mistake. He’s already 33 yrs old and could have gotten a good fetch 8 months ago in Dec.
BashBroJoe
If it’s on the cheap I love this move for the orioles.
Samuel
Orioles are awash in young infielders and OF’s.
Rougned Odor is on a one year contract. A very slim chance he plays for them in 2023.
Whit would only be blocking guys that need playing time.
BashBroJoe
No he wouldn’t be blocking anyone. He plays multiple positions. There’s a DH spot and he’s a veteran presence with a history of success. Which the orioles could use. Managers understand how to rotate players. Hyde would find plenty of playing time for him.
Samuel
First of all, they already have players that can DH when Mancini leaves….which is why he’s leaving. If they wanted a “veteran presence” in 2023 they’d bring Mancini back.
They have 3 guys that can play 3B and 2B. Already have 4 OF’s (all of whom can play CF) they rotate . And more of each coming in 2023.
BashBroJoe
Yea man I’m familiar with the Orioles active roster and system. Silly me believing the Orioles would waste their time on Whit Merrifield. May be the first time in the history of MLBTR a user has made another user see the light. Thank you Samuel. In Urias, Mateo, Nevin and Odor we trust. Westburg and Henderson be patient young ones you will not be blocked for long.
Samuel
BashBroJoe;
Am not trying to knock you.
The Orioles are the best young team I’ve seen since the 2013 Royals….that went to 2 WS’s and won one. And Elias is setting it up for sustainable contention, not a 3-4 year window.
There is nothing more satisfying for a fan of a team then a championship contending team made up of players that either came through their farm system, or never amounted to much until they came over to the team and were developed. In short, the team will truly be “Our Guys” and not a patchwork like Yankees, Red Sox, Cardinals, and Dodgers teams.
Be excited. It’ll take a few years, but American sports fans are going to fall in love watching this Orioles team. They hustle and play solid, smart, fundamental baseball. You may well find the Guardians to be your competition in the AL Championship series for multiple years.
tstats
Neither the Yankees or Dodgers are patchwork teams. Yankees have both developed and acquired superstars. The dodgers have developed all but one of their starting five, drafted three of their starting nine and aqquired three more of them in their minor league days or as free agents looking for minor league deals. The other three are either signed or are a result of trading talent developed to get the player. The only dodger starting nine member that has truly been made a dodger without developing players is Freddie.
Cosmo2
Yay let’s trade assets for a guy who’s only value right now is his versatility in the field and then use him as a 92 OPS+ DH. Huh?…. Orioles don’t need him much less to give up anything for him.
Joe says...
You can’t expect any better from Samuel. He’s about the biggest fool up here. At least other trolls know they’re trolling. He actually thinks he knows what he’s talking about.
BashBroJoe
@Samuel I’ve been excited for the Orioles well before this season. You’re speaking to me like you know me or my knowledge of professional baseball lol it’s weird. @cosmo2 Yea man because ‘if it’s on the cheap’ must mean trade Colby Mayo for him. And I didn’t suggest using him as a full time DH. You people just read and twist words so you can be snarky and appear intellectually superior. He could rotate in and out of DH along with the rest of the roster that does the same thing. He could find reps at a ton of positions. I don’t see a world where having a guy like Whit Merrifield on a roster is a bad thing. If it’s cheap and makes sense I repeat it would be a great move for the Orioles.
Edp007
Let’s not forget the O’s are cash heavy , they were in on Correa , I believe the O’s will be holding on to almost all their depth , especially pitching , and augment with high priced stars soon. Astros as a model.
Samuel
BashBroJoe;
Last thing……
All this is moot.
Whit will be with the Royals for the next 25 years in some capacity or other. Maybe on TV-Radio, probably in Baseball Ops. He’ll be groomed for something.
Whit stayed through a rebuild. Signed for less money than he could have squeezed out of them. Never publicly complained about his contract or the state of the team. Whit is what Freddie Freeman wanted to be but didn’t have the convictions to see it through.
RedFraggle
He also can’t (won’t) go to Toronto…a divisional opponent.
kcmark
He did not sign for less money. He was such a late bloomer he just became arbitration eligible.
Cap & Crunch
The Dodgers and Yankees have internally grown some of the best staffs in the games
Patchwork? Once again Sammy shows he he know very little about MLB
Shockingly your takes just keep getting worse and worse by the team – It’s damn impressive tbh on some kind of bizzaro level
Bobcastelliniscat
Do you really believe the Yankees and Dodgers would be as good as they are without having an overwhelmingly economic advantage ? Come on. They are able to find, acquire and keep talent because they can basically print money.
Cam
@Samuel tstats just completely picked you apart. Damn dude, you’ve really gotta stop saying things that just aren’t true
compassrose
Sammy the Mariners are standing and laughing at you. I know you don’t see us and probably couldn’t name 5 starters but they have a young team with little payroll and some very good prospects still in the system. They also have 1 very big hole which Witt would fit nicely in. We also have 2 of our best hitters coming off IL soon. I guess we will see who is major comp for years to come in the AL pretty sure it is more than just you.
User 1413108128
I concur tstats
The entire they bought their championship take is tired and worn. Every team signs free agents and every team develops players in their minor league system that play in the big leagues. Some just do it better and are more willing to spend in order to win consistently.
stevep-4
White Sox should make this move but won’t.
keysox
Doesn’t bat left handed. Tony Kemp or N. Lopez?
Cosmo2
Why? Are they that desperate for a utility guy who is barely a utility guy?
cwsOverhaul
No, they shouldn’t get another 30 something 2B who has seen better days. They need to get several games over .500 with what they have sink or swim.
snoopy369
OMG, please don’t. Another light hitting moderate defending 2b? Uninterested. 2019’s version sounds great, but not 2022’s.
rememberthecoop
So wait – the Royals hold onto him all these years despite being lousy & getting tons of trade interest. So now that they are seemingly starting to come out of their rebuild, they are willing to move him? And they’d be selling low too. Doesn’t make sense.
RonDarlingShouldntBeInTheHallOfFame
Agreed..He’s only worth about a B level prospect now..seems like a waste..
hyraxwithaflamethrower
I doubt it’ll happen because of being in the same division, but I’d love if the White Sox got him. Harrison has been better of late, but is only signed through this year (with a club option for 2023 with an effective cost of $4M). Mendick was good in his games, but not sure that wasn’t just a fluke. And, as the article mentions, Merrifield is, if nothing else, at least a defensive upgrade over anyone the White Sox are deploying. If they can buy low on him, they should. Part of me wonders if he wouldn’t come out of it just by changing his scenery.
keysox
Dream on. Veteran player on the downside. No thanks.
Nicki Lopez better option
hyraxwithaflamethrower
Last year, he led the AL in 2B and SB. You really think he’s just fallen off a cliff in one year and has no chance of recovery? And Lopez has had only one season with an OPS+ north of 70. I’d rather take a chance on Whit coming back to somewhere between last year and this one. Barring that, I’d rather the Sox wait on Mendick than grab Lopez.
Baseball Pickers
Last year he was healthy and still had an OPS of 711. It doesn’t take much falling off for Whit to be Leury 3.0.
Really not interested in this as a White Sox fan.
Cosmo2
He’s 33. It’s no surprise he’s not that good anymore.
UWPSUPERFAN77
I have always viewed him as a star player at a ham and egger salary! Would look great on any team. Agree that the Royals took too long to trade him!
Cosmo2
He was. Doesn’t look great anywhere anymore.
DonOsbourne
I think this article is proof that the MLBTR writers are as eager to see some substantive trades occur as the rest of us. When you are imagining trade fits for the player who used to be Whit Merrifield, you have officially run out of stuff to talk about.
UWPSUPERFAN77
A little harsh my friend!
Samuel
DonOsbourne;
It’s a trade rumors site that’s obsessed with how much players will get on their next next contract, and fills a lot of space analyzing daily transactions – which in today’s MLB are often reversed within a week or so.
This is what they do.
tstats
If you’re gonna complain about it you don’t need to read it
DonOsbourne
To clarify, I’m not complaining about the article. I read every word of it. My comment is intended to describe the anxious anticipation baseball fans are feeling right now. Including the writers on this site. Sorry if I offended anyone. Again.
pfunk
As a royals fan please get rid of him. Play the kids.
Louholtz22
Merrifield is a loser. He’ll “consider” vaccination if on a contender? How about doing it, knowing Toronto is a trip every year. Buyer be ware.
CJ81
If the cardinals move gorman in a Soto deal, they may need another move for a 2nd basemen. That being said, theyd probably move edman back to 2nd and bring dejong back up instead of spending more on merrifield.
Like Butter
Merrifield said, maybe he’d have gotten vaccinated if he’d been on a better team. That’s evidence enough not to trade for him. No leadership skills.
Stormintazz
So the Brewers will look to improve offense at second base. To improve the sliding offense of Kolten Wong. The Brewers will look to shop Wong to a team looking for a bat at second base position.
Did I get that correct?
kcmark
But what if Merrifield is part of a trade package that also includes Benintendi? The Brewers get a rental OF bat as well as a player that is controllable through next year.
Louholtz22
Well, Wong sucks. Might as well. He can’t even play D right now. It’s like he has stick ‘em in his glove. Can’t get it out. Must be a Lester Hayes fan or something…
socalbum
Dodgers just say no!
solaris602
Royals won’t trade him – they never will. Not even worth speculating about. At this point the return they’d get for Merrifield is negligible.
BobGibsonFan
Now really, who would want Merrifield now? He’s 33 years old and having his worst season ever. When he had value, the Royals refused to deal him… now that he has little value, now they want to deal him? I doubt it. He’s a Royal for life. He will be happy, the Royals will be happy.
Cosmo2
Right. Too many folks talking about this player as if it’s 3 years ago. He’s terrible now.
ASapsFables
Merrifield had a brutal April but he’s been back to his near-normal self since the beginning of May. A contender with a hole at 2B or in the OF with a clear championship window this year and next are likely to be interested in his services, no?
Cosmo2
No.
BlueSkies_LA
But then, we know the Dodgers have already inquired. So, yes.
Sunday Lasagna
Anyone look to see the stats on players pre and post trade? Rosario had an OPS+ of 87 with Cleveland, goes to the Braves and it’s 132! Soler, 78 with the Royals, 129 with the Braves! No one knows what a trade might do for Merrifield. What if AA thought ‘these guys peaked in 2019, they aren’t going to get better, look at their OPS+, they stink”. I can guess what would have happened, the Dodgers would have played the Astros in the WS last year…
Cosmo2
Yea I know. I’m just being a bit salty today. He’s terrible right now but if he can be picked up for nothing someone will give him a shot. Can’t imagine giving up anything for him though.
BlueSkies_LA
April was terrible, but he’s been pretty good since. My guess is he nets a mid-level or lottery ticket prospect at best, unless the Royals pay down a big part of what he’s owed.
Michael Macaulay-Birks
Great, then Boston we have four players that can’t play in Toronto
holecamels35
He’s been not very good for three years now, I don’t see many teams offering much for him. Borderline starter/bench bat on a contender.
For what it’s worth, I always give credit to KC for better or worse because they pay and keep their talent, even though many think they should just be a feeder to top teams.
Northeasternskier
Red Sox should pick him up and put him at 1B. Then next year move Story to SS and put Wit at 2B.
Sideline Redwine
Chronologically, the best fit was about three years ago…for anyone.
jessaumodesto
Japan?
muskie73
FanGraphs projects Whit Merrifield with 0.9 WAR in 51 remaining games after Merrifield posted 0.3 fWAR in 84 games so far this year.
FanGraphs projects Seattle 2B/OF Adam Frazier with 0.8 WAR in 52 remaining games after Frazier posted 0.6 fWAR in 91 games so far this year.
FWIW Frazier has posted a .314/.321/.412/.733 line in 53 plate appearances this month.
Merrifield, who is nearly three years older than Frazier, does not represent an upgrade for the Mariners.
Ski to Coors
O’s could give Terrin Vavra a shot at the bigs, suspect they will soon.
BlueSkies_LA
Merrifield’s value to the Dodgers would not be playing 2B so much it would be reducing the need to play Lux in LF.
ASapsFables
2B/OF Whit Merrifield and lefty hitting corner OF Juan Soto are two clear fits for the White Sox ahead of the trade deadline along with another SP. Royals lefty hitting LF Andrew Benintendi is yet another. Will the ChiSox strike a deal for any of these needs by August 2nd in order to boost their chances for an AL Central title and a long postseason run? Stay tuned!
Cosmo2
You expect him to completely turn things around? Cuz he’s terrible right now.
RonDarlingShouldntBeInTheHallOfFame
He’s having a down year, and is definitely on the decline, but I could see him going to a contender and being a big piece for a playoff run..He’s a grinder, and can still steal a few bags..I have a feeling the heat of a pennant race would get him going..
Cosmo2
He had a down year last year too. He’s 33 it’s likely decline. But true, someone will take the chance that he simply turns it around for the stretch run.
hyraxwithaflamethrower
Depending on the cost, Benintendi might be a good fit. As a rental, he should be affordable, even for the White Sox’ thin farm. Rather have another pitcher, though, in case Lynn can’t figure it out. He’s been awful so far this year.
darkstar61
33 years old and on a very clear downward trajectory?
Yea, has Angels written all over it
Rsox
Do we really believe the Royals will trade Merrifield?
swinging wood
2028 MLBTR article: Best Fits For Royals’ Whit Merrifield Trade
hogansgoat
To say Arcia hasn’t provided much is flat out untrue. He’s at the very least as good as Ozzie and I would say a little better because of his arm. He’s not an automatic out at the plate either. What more could you want from a bench guy who can play 4 positions and contribute
snoopy369
Very curious why the suggestion the White Sox should trade for him, or would. RHB, well below average bat this year, never really was _above_ average (93 OPS+ last year, 105 the year before – basically one very good year (120) and a couple above average). Speed has always been his main thing, and that’s clearly hurt this year. Might as well have Josh Harrison playing.
JPR
Merrifield would consider reconsidering his vaccination status should a trade to a contender become an option? So much for those deeply held convictions, eh?
Stevil
No, no, NO! Merrifield does not make sense for Seattle.
First, Merrifield is running a 78 wRC+. Dylan Moore:, 112, and he can be used in a platoon with Frazier, who was running an extremely low BABIP in June and is now more in line with his career norms this month (.366/.372/.463, 142 wRC+ his last 11 games; 111 wRC+ overall in July).
Second, Seattle already has a logjam on their hands with Lewis & Haniger returning, and yet another better option than Merrifield, Sam Haggerty, playing excellent baseball. As things stand right now, Upton will be DFA’d and Toro will likely be optioned. Any further moves would mean subtracting a good player.
Last, if they’re going to add a fielder, it’s going to be a superstar–and that’s unlikely. Far more likely they get a starting pitcher, a reliever, and see what happens with the internal options they have at the plate.
Tdat1979
Royals are always a little too late in trading their players. They held on too long with Cain, Hosmer, and Moustakas trying to squeeze out another playoff appearance. They’re loyal to a fault. Sometimes you have to know when to move on.