With a record of 35-57, the Cubs are 14 1/2 games behind the Brewers in the National League Central and 14 games out of a Wild Card spot. That makes them one of the more clearcut sellers at this year’s trade deadline.
Naturally, there were a number of Cubs featured on MLBTR’s list of top trade candidates, with Willson Contreras, David Robertson, Mychal Givens and Ian Happ all making the cut. Contreras and Robertson are both hitting the open market at year’s end, with Givens almost certainly joining them. He has a mutual option for 2023 but those are almost never picked up by both sides. That makes them all logical trade candidates. Happ has an extra year of control but still makes sense to be on the block, as MLBTR’s Anthony Franco recently explored. Taking players with limited control and turning them into prospects that can help in the long term is the standard playbook for losing teams.
They also have another player who could make sense as a trade chip, though for different reasons. Third baseman Patrick Wisdom is not nearing free agency. He came into this season with one year and 58 days of MLB service time, meaning he should finish this season at 2.058. He won’t even qualify for arbitration until after 2023 and is set to become a free agent after the 2026 campaign. The Cubs will almost certainly get out of this rebuild and return to contention at some point in that window, though Wisdom could still make sense to move given his unusual journey.
Wisdom was selected over a decade ago, when the Cardinals used the 52nd overall pick on him in the 2012 draft. He got a taste of affiliated ball that year, playing in Low-A, faring well enough to be ranked the 11th best Cardinals prospect in 2013 by Baseball America. However, he struggled as he climbed the minor league ladder and eventually fell off that list.
Wisdom always had power, but also strikeouts and low batting averages. In 2014, he got his first taste of Double-A, hitting 14 home runs but striking out 29.9% of the time, with a .215/.277/.367 line and wRC+ of 83. He repeated the level in 2015 and had fairly similar results. Going up to Triple-A in 2016, he missed time with injuries and only played 78 games, producing tepid results when on the field. 2017, his second shot at Triple-A, he showed some promise, hitting 31 homers and batting .243/.310/.507. He struck out 29.4% of the time but was still a bit above average, with a wRC+ of 105. He got a third stint with the Memphis Redbirds in 2018, reducing his striking rate a bit to 26.6% and increasing his batting average to .288.
That was enough to get him a call-up to the big leagues, where he fared very well. He hit four home runs in 32 games and slashed .260/.362/.520. Jumping to major league pitching made his strikeout rate tick up even higher, coming in at 32.8%, though he still produced a 142 wRC+ in his debut.
Blocked for playing time in St. Louis, the Cardinals traded him to the Rangers prior to the 2019 campaign. The new jersey didn’t help Wisdom, though, as he struggled badly as a Ranger. They only let him play nine games at the big league level, where he struck out in over half of plate appearances. Spending most of his time in Triple-A, he hit 31 home runs for the Nashville Sounds but struck out 27.6% of the time and hit .240/.332/.513 for a wRC+ of 97. Reaching free agency, he signed with the Mariners in 2020 but they designated for assignment before he appeared in a game with them. He then signed with the Cubs, appearing in just two games for them that season. He was designated for assignment again at the end of the year.
Then came 2021, which would prove to be a tremendous breakout for Wisdom. Re-signing with the Cubs on a minor league deal, he began the year in Triple-A. Injuries opened a roster spot for him in May, and the Cubs eventually underwent a massive deadline selloff, trading away Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javier Baez. That opened up at-bats for Wisdom, who made the best of them. He would go on to hit 28 home runs and 13 doubles in 106 games, slashing .231/.305/.518. He still struck out a lot, even more than usual, in fact. Among players with at least 350 plate appearances last year, his 40.8% rate was the easily the highest, more than five points higher than the next guy on the list, Mike Zunino at 35.2%.
Wisdom has seemingly always had the same formula and this year is no exception. He’s hit 17 home runs and 18 doubles, slashing .220/.316/.441. Despite the low batting average, he provides enough power to be above average, as evidenced by his 111 wRC+. He’s improved his strikeout rate to 34.5%, though that’s still well above the league average mark of 22.3% and third in the league among qualified hitters.
Through all of those twists and turns and despite his flaws, Wisdom has turned himself into a productive big leaguer. He produced 2.2 wins above replacement last year, according to FanGraphs, and has racked up another 1.1 already this year. But due to the prolonged nature of his development, he is now 30 years old and turns 31 in August. Though the Cubs could conceivably have a very aggressive winter and get back into contention next year, it becomes more probable in 2024 and 2025, seasons in which Wisdom will celebrate his 33rd and 34th birthdays.
It’s entirely possible that Wisdom is still mashing dingers in those years, but rebuilding teams generally prefer to open a competitive window with players who are just entering their prime years and will remain productive core pieces for five, six, seven years into the future. Given his age, Wisdom would be a better fit on a win-now club. Getting Wisdom out of the way could also allow the Cubs to move Christopher Morel back to the dirt. An infielder throughout most of his minor league career, he’s hitting very well in his rookie season despite being pushed into more outfield work. He has -5 Outs Above Average on the grass this year, a -5 Defensive Runs Saved and -3.3 Ultimate Zone Rating.
There’s also the fact that Wisdom’s high-strikeout approach comes with volatility. Players that strike out at these incredible rates are prone to swoons in performance. Looking at last year’s highest strikeout rates among qualified hitters, you get Joey Gallo, Miguel Sano, Javier Baez, Matt Chapman, Adam Duvall and Tyler O’Neill. Other than Chapman, all of those guys are having disappointing seasons compared to last year, and Chapman’s is still disappointing compared to some of his previous seasons. Gallo had a 123 wRC+ last year but 85 this year, Sano went from 110 to 19, Baez from 116 to 74, Chapman from 101 to 102 (but was higher in the four previous season), Duvall from 103 to 87 and O’Neill from 144 to 87. In the case of Sano and O’Neill, injuries are playing a big factor, but it still demonstrates the unsustainability of this style of hitting.
For the Cubs, perhaps they should try to cash in the Wisdom chip before it cracks. There haven’t been any public rumors mentioning Wisdom, but there are a few fits that make sense. He largely plays third base but has also lined up at first base and the outfield.
The Mets are using Eduardo Escobar at third most of the time, who’s hitting just .224/.279/.397 on the year for a 94 wRC+. They’re also known to be looking for another bat to supplant Dominic Smith and J.D. Davis in the bench/DH mix. Wisdom could perhaps be viewed as a better version of Davis, who is striking out 31% of the time but has just three homers and eight doubles.
The Rays have been shuffling various guys through the hot corner, with Yandy Diaz and Isaac Paredes both having great seasons. Though Diaz also plays first base and Paredes second. If Brandon Lowe, fresh off the IL, is healthy enough to move to the outfield, that would help them cover for the injuries to Kevin Kiermaier, Manuel Margot and Harold Ramirez. Even if not, Wisdom would certainly be a better bench bat than Yu Chang and his batting line of .181/.253/.264. Of course, the low-spending Rays would certainly like Wisdom’s lack of a meaningful salary.
The Brewers are leading the Central due to their pitching but are just about league average offensively. They’ve been spreading at-bats around to Luis Urias, Jace Peterson and Mike Brosseau, though all of those three are capable of playing elsewhere. Bob Nightengale of USA Today recently reported the Brewers are open to moving Kolten Wong, which could open room for Wisdom to take some time at third and bump that trio into spending more time at second.
The Phillies keep trotting out Alec Bohm at the hot corner, who’s hitting .276/.311/.388 for a wRC+ of 92. His numbers were even worse before he went on a tear here in July, hitting .382/.421/.647 for the month. They’ll probably just stick with Bohm and hope he sustains that, but Wisdom would certainly fit financially. The Phils are in uncharted territory in terms of payroll, crossing the luxury tax line for the first time. Since Wisdom hasn’t yet reached arbitration, he wouldn’t stretch them in that regard.
The Rangers have been mixing veterans in at third all year but have given most of the playing time to rookie Josh Smith lately, who’s hitting at a below-average rate. They’re 7 1/2 games out of a playoff spot and probably sellers but could acquire Wisdom to see what happens down the stretch. He could also hold down the position next year while they wait to see what’s going on with Josh Jung. Their top position player prospect had a chance to be the Opening Day third baseman this year but suffered a shoulder injury in February. He underwent surgery and has yet to return to game action.
There are also a handful of teams that aren’t necessarily “win-now” in the strictest sense but could try to implement Wisdom next year. The Rockies, Orioles, Angels, Tigers and Diamondbacks all have long odds of cracking the postseason here in 2022 but are all likely to make moves towards competing next year.
Even if a team doesn’t have an obvious fit at the hot corner, he’d likely serve as an upgrade on one of their bench bats, even among the best teams in the league. The Dodgers, for instance, have Hanser Alberto who’s hitting .227/.236/.364 for a wRC+ of 66. The red-hot Yankees have Marwin Gonzalez and his .234/.301/.378 batting line, 95 wRC+. The Astros have rookie J.J. Matijevic, who’s hitting a tepid .150/.209/.350 for a wRC+ of 58. Limiting Wisdom to a part-time role could also improve his output, as he’s generally been better against lefties. He has a 120 wRC+ against southpaws and 106 against righties for his career, with a more pronounced 142-100 split this season, though he still strikes out a lot against both.
There’s certainly no urgency for the Cubs to work out a Wisdom trade right this second. They will no doubt be busy working out trades for Contreras, Robertson, Givens and Happ in the coming weeks. With Wisdom’s extra years of control, he’s certainly on the backburner in terms of priorities. However, given the volatile nature of his production, they could look to strike while the iron is hot.
cubsmetsbrewers
I would agree but how high could they actually sell him? I’d just keep him and stay marginally competitive throughout the season
davemlaw
It’s a slow day in MLB news when you see an article like this. That’s OK, trades are coming soon.
Dogbone
Lol, your right. But if the Cubs are offered anything “decent”, I agree. The Cubs should trade him. But he does have value due to his defensive versatility and his dangerous power. He is a valuable bench piece for a contender.
rondon
He’s having a horrible year defensively at third this season. He was better last year. But either way, this guy is not part of their future.
winonarider
Wisdom Ks too much for even a normal human being. Maybe even Chris Davis.
TexasLeaguer
Nobody is that bad
Deadguy
New world slavery, duh! It’s better than old world slavery cause they don’t have to house or feed anybody. Ryan Ludwick stand out as a player Wisdom might have a career resembling. A few good years, Cubs would be very wise to sell him to a contender
Dumpster Divin Theo
Key to a deal for Soto per Cub nation. Add Happ and some pitching and you have a deal
MyCommentIsBetter
LOL
JoeBrady
Michalelchavisbooty
I’d just keep him and stay marginally competitive throughout the season
===================================
The Cubs are in 27th place, and are within striking distance of the #2 pick. They aren’t close to competitive. If the only return they got for Wisdom was a bag of balls, but got the #2 pick, that alone would be a major success.
Cosmo2
No it wouldn’t. Draft position means virtually nothing in baseball. This ain’t the NBA. And Wisdom isn’t that big of a difference maker.
bucsfan0004
This is a long long piece about a player who isn’t getting traded, and certainly not to one of the teams mentioned. Good effort on the article, though.
Holy Cow!
Jed made eight trades at the deadline last season. I would not be surprised if Wisdom is traded. I bet Contreras, Happ, Smyly, Robertson, Givens and Martin all have a bag packed.
Pedro 4 Delino
Yankee fans: Wisdom for Gallo
junior25
Yah ok!
Common man
Cubs have alot of young OFs
If you want to do that
Wisdom for Andujuar
Pedro 4 Delino
I’m only teasing Yankee fans for spamming Gallo trade proposals in the comments.
pt57
Throw in a decent prospect and it might make sense. But Ricketts is too cheap to eat salary.
Logjammer D"Baggagecling
Hard pass. I like Gallo mainly because he’s out of Vegas but he’s a DH at best. And is a shell of his former self. K rate is high too. He’s slightly lower than Wisdom. I would do Heyward and 100% of his salary for Miguel Andújar. He asked for a trade. He can probably play 2nd. He’s better defensively at 3rd. Heyward unfortunately will never wavie his no trade and he has 5-10 rights.
jhanley108
Sell high…. if you’re high. C’mon
Macbeth
Hardly worth more than a lotto ticket type of prospect.
BeansforJesus
Agreed. And it’s not like teams aren’t going to be mindful he reaches arb after next season. His approach at the plate definitely helps him when it comes to the old arb process, but not sure how different arb decisions will be after the new CBA.
I doubt teams will be happy to fork over millions for a breeze machine.
Catuli Carl
“breeze machine” lol I’ve never heard that. That’s great.
rdiddy75
It’s a no brainer to get rid of Wisdom. I am sure they would get a scratch off lottery ticket or two for him.
Ignorant Son-of-a-b
Haha selling high on Wisdom is like getting two kicks in the junk instead of three.
amk1920
Thank you MLBTR for consistency pointing out the Dodgers need to move on from Hanser Alberto. Friedman doesn’t seem to see the best team in the NL doesn’t need to roster a negative WAR player all season.
ohyeadam
Every superhero group needs a commoner
Whiskey and leather balls
I remember when selling high on a player meant he was hitting more than he weighed
CujoMarlin
Agree. Baseball is in a sad place nowadays.
Cosmo2
Selling high is a relative term, y’know?
TexasLeaguer
LOL Makes zero sense to sell a 30 home run guy who won’t even make 40 million over 4 more years.
PutPeteinthehall
He’s not going to make anything compared to many other players. Probably making league minimum this year.
RyanD44
He’s also just not good. Sweet, he can hit HRs, but he is going to strikeout 200x, hit .220 at best and not get on base at a high clip.
He’s fine for a team that has no expectations, but he’s a fringe major league player on a good team.
Cosmo2
He’s 30 years old and leading the league in Ks. He’s unlikely to be very good over the next four years, thus sell now.
Captain Dunsel
Getting rid of Wisdom is stupid.
msqboxer
Is there a big need for 200+K .220 Avg. mediocre fielding 3B?
CujoMarlin
What is “selling high” in this case? Not one, but two, buckets of baseballs?
fisher40
Ask the giants and Yankees from 12 months ago u pathetic cubs fan lol
brian214
Goodness, this was a whole bunch of words for an average, dime a dozen player. I’ll never get that 2 hours back that it took reading this article.
Sherm623
If it took you two hours to read, a) go punch your English teacher and b) punch yourself
TexasLeaguer
Most home runs in the league by any third baseman since he was traded to cubs. In less games… position flexibility and takes a lot of walks. If he hits .250 the guy is Uber valuable at his contract.
hiflew
I hate it when people assume it is “selling high” on a player. No one knows how Wisdom’s career is going to go. He could easily go higher in value.
Some Rockies fans n another board I no longer visit used to say after every single year from 2014 on that the Rockies should “sell high” on DJ LeMahieu. And every single year he improved. They’d still say sell high on him. And when he left and was STILL rising, well I realized there was no such thing as selling high.
Cosmo2
He’s thirty years old and never been that good. Obviously no one can predict the future but the overwhelming probability is that he’s going downhill from here. If you run a baseball team you have to think about these things and make predictions based on probability. You can’t just be like, hey anything can happen, no one knows anything!
hiflew
But don’t you think other clubs have that knowledge as well? If posters on here know that he is 30 and never been that good, do you really think any of 29 MLB GMs are going to give up that much for him? He is far more valuable to the Cubs than any other team because he keeps them from having to burn service time for the 3B on their next winning team. And he entertains the crowd that is still showing up, I just don’t see how picking up a rookie ball lotto ticket prospect is better than that.
flamingbagofpoop
I think the other gms know this, but different teams evaluate and project players differently. I don’t think he has much value around the league…but if someone does like him for whatever reason, the cubs should absolutely trade him.
Cosmo2
Yes, he may be more valuable to the Cubs, you are correct in that but I feel like the goal posts are getting moved a bit here. Your original assertion seemed to be that teams can’t make predictions on these things at all.
hiflew
And my point was not that people should just sit back and see what happens. My point was that the entire time everyone was saying sell high on LeMahieu, myself and a less vocal minority were saying he had not peaked yet. We weren’t saying let’s see what happens, we were saying he will keep getting better. Now I am not going to argue that Wisdom is on the same path. But as I stated n the other comment, he is more valuable to the Cubs as a starting 3B than to a contender as a bench bat.
Cosmo2
DJ Lamahieu is a completely different situation. Your comparing a very good player to a pretty bad one with a season and a half of not terrible-ness. Your kind of creating a straw man in the process.
ohyeadam
A player’s peaking value is a different thing than the value of their contract’s value peaking
JoeBrady
hiflew19 hours ago
I hate it when people assume it is “selling high” on a player. No one knows how Wisdom’s career is going to go.
===========================
As I’ve said many, many times, in here, as it is elsewhere, when someone refers to a future event, it is an educated guess. So here is our lesson:
He could get better.
He could get worse.
“Selling high” simply means the poster has chosen option 2. But I doubt anyone in here is giving 100% guarantee.
Voice of Reason
Selling high? Trading Wisdom right now gets them a dice roll prospect. That said, he actually has more value to the Scrubs than he does to any other team.
fisher40
Year in and year out for the Cubs!! Lol What a pathetic franchise
rondon
Ah yes.. And here come the ankle biters. Sad
Cosmo2
I dunno what’s worse. The useless, idiotic hating on a franchise not far removed from contention let alone a WS victory, or that two people were absurd enough to give the moronic comment a like.
Steinbrenner2728
“a franchise not far removed from contention let alone a WS victory” says the Mets fan of course.
cubsmetsbrewers
This n-gga cosmo2 a cop or something?
RyanD44
If a team gave up one of their top 20 prospects for Wisdom, that would be worth it for the Cubs. If that’s selling high, great, but there’s not much value in Wisdom either way.
jbeerj
Who tf would want him?
I Like Big Bunts
This Writer Should Think About Proofreading This Article.
scottaz
Yesterday, this website dropped the green flag to start a “frenzy” of trade activity leading up to the deadline??? Writers are still giving advice to teams about players this website thinks they should trade??? Yawn.
Rsox
So according to the article it would be a wise move…
Domingo111
Very well researched and written article. Sometimes mlbtr articles are more like a quick news update but the author here is really going the extra mile for example in looking for the player comps with a similar profile.
cpdpoet
Agreed, articles like this deep-dive are great to read over morning coffee or after supper cocktail. Take your time, click on a few players and enjoy….thanks Mr McDonald…
Darye davis
Here’s a good example of inconsistent statistic reporting, in the same article:
“Spending most of his time in Triple-A, he hit 31 home runs for the Nashville Sounds but struck out 27.6% of the time and hit .240/.332/.513 for a wRC+ of 97. ”
“trading away Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javier Baez. That opened up at-bats for Wisdom, who made the best of them. He would go on to hit 28 home runs and 13 doubles in 106 games, slashing .231/.305/.518. He still struck out a lot, even more than usual, in fact. Among players with at least 350 plate appearances last year, his 40.8% rate was the easily the highest, more than five points higher than the next guy on the list,”
How is this slashing????
drasco036
First, “slashing” refers to his triple slash line. A guy can be SLASHING .010/.110/.010
A 117 OPS+, 28 home runs in only 106 games is raking pretty well…
But Wisdom’s playing time was well established BEFORE the Cubs moved Rizzo, Bryant and/or Baez. Not to mention, Wisdom’s best numbers were when Rizzo, Baez and Bryant were on the team. He came up and absolutely destroyed pitching in his first 30 games or so, Averaging a home run in a very Bonds-ish 8 at bats.
I also am not sure what is inconsistent about the reporting (other than it being wrong as I pointed out)….
drasco036
Wisdom is an interesting case due to the fact that he actually does provide a lot of value to the rebuilding Cubs. He obviously isn’t a guy you’re going to build around but he is a nice piece and can play corner infield or outfield. Wisdom’s offensive profile as far as barrels, barrel rate, hard hit percentage and exit velo are all excellent with the only really negative being that he is hitting the ball on the ground too often.
Not only does Wisdom have value due to the flexibility but there is also the “Manfred effect”, the guy tinkers more than any commish to date. If he goes back to using a more live ball or changes the humidifier rule, Wisdom could easily be a 40 home run bat. He’s also lost several home runs this year at Wrigley due to the wind conditions.
I don’t think for the reasons above you can trade Wisdom straight up, he has more value to the Cubs than a team is willing to give up prospect wise, however adding Wisdom to a trade… if it means you get a blue chip prospect and a good prospect in a Willson Contreras trade vs. just two solid prospects, then you have to do it and not play the “what if” game.
Dumpster Divin Theo
Selling high on Wisdom would be Wise
MyCommentIsBetter
Hitting .220 and leading the league in K’s…. Hard pass.
scottaz
11 days…0 frenzy