This offseason’s crop of free agents featured a clear top four in the shortstop category. Carlos Correa, Trea Turner, Xander Bogaerts and Dansby Swanson were all highly sought after and all ended up securing deals well into nine-figure territory. There was a steep drop to the fifth best option, Elvis Andrus. Though there were many teams who expressed interested in the “Big Four” that ended up missing out, none have made a pivot to Andrus as a backup plan thus far. With just three weeks remaining until Spring Training begins, Andrus is still unsigned.
The 34-year-old Andrus has 14 years of MLB experience, having debuted with the Rangers as a 20-year-old back in 2009. He spent many years with Texas, hitting at a below-average level but still proving to be a valuable player via his speed and defense. In the 11 seasons from 2009 to 2019, he hit just 73 home runs and walked in just 7.3% of his plate appearances, but he also struck out at just a 13.6% rate. His batting line in that time was .275/.331/.373 for a wRC+ of 86, indicating he was 14% below league average. However, he also stole 302 bases and also graded very well on the dirt. Defensive Runs Saved had him just a hair above average, but Ultimate Zone Rating gave him a score of 28.2, the fifth-highest among shortstops in that time. Outs Above Average, which was only introduced in 2016, graded him at plus-14, which was also fifth-best at the position. Despite the subpar batting, his 30.3 wins above replacement from FanGraphs was the second-most of all shortstops in that timeframe, trailing only Troy Tulowitzki.
Andrus had a down year in the shortened 2020 campaign and was traded to the A’s prior to 2021. He ended up having another typical season for him, hitting at a 74 wRC+ level but stealing 12 bases and getting some good grades for his work on the dirt. That led to him accumulating 1.6 fWAR on the year. In 2022, Andrus actually had a better season, despite being released by the A’s in the summer. That release seems to have been financially motivated, as Andrus had a slightly complicated finish to his contract. The 2022 season was the final guaranteed year of the extension he signed with the Rangers back in 2013. There was also a $15MM club option for 2023 but it would become a player option if Andrus was traded at some point and also logged 550 plate appearances in 2022.
Andrus was getting regular playing time with the rebuilding A’s and was well on his way to meeting that plate appearance threshold, but they instead released him in August. Andrus signed a new contract with the White Sox who needed a shortstop replacement for the injured Tim Anderson, eventually getting to 577 plate appearances on the year. Because he signed a new contract with the White Sox, the option was a moot point. He finished the year with a .249/.303/404 batting line and a wRC+ of 105. Thanks to his 18 steals and shortstop defense, he was worth 3.5 fWAR on the season between the two clubs.
Despite that solid platform year, Andrus lingers on the market. It’s probable that clubs are a bit skeptical of the 2022 output since Andrus hit .255/.302/.360 over the four prior seasons — but even that diminished version of Andrus was worth 4.3 fWAR in 419 games. Many teams still have shortstop deficiencies, and Andrus could also potentially help out teams that are weak at second base. He’s never played on the other side of the bag but expressed a willingness to do so last year with the White Sox when there was a possibility Anderson could return from the IL and retake the shortstop position. Despite the lack of experience at the position, many shortstops have found it easy to make the transition to second, which is considered a less-demanding spot.
Even with various qualities he could bring to a club, the market for Andrus has seemingly been quiet. The primary public link has been to the Red Sox, in the wake of Trevor Story requiring internal brace surgery on his elbow. Given that the club also lost Bogaerts to the Padres, they are now doubly lacking in the middle infield. Since then, they’ve signed Adam Duvall to hopefully be their everyday center fielder, thus moving Enrique Hernández to shortstop. Hernandez has only ever had part-time work at the position but recently expressed his excitement about a lengthier stint there, appearing on NESN during the club’s Winter Weekend festivities. With Christian Arroyo playing second base, it’s possible the Sox consider themselves set, but Duvall has never been a full-time center fielder and the same goes for Hernandez at short. That’s risky enough as it is, but one injury suddenly makes the situation look even worse. Adding Andrus and moving Hernandez to second or center field would improve the depth significantly. Jon Morosi of MLB Network recently suggested the Sox would like to bring Andrus aboard as a non-roster invitee, but it would register as a surprise if he couldn’t get a modest major league deal elsewhere, given his decent floor and solid year in 2022. The Sox are still more than $15MM shy of the luxury tax, per Roster Resource, and could still fit a modest deal on the books without pushing against it.
There are plenty of other logical suitors. The Diamondbacks currently have Nick Ahmed lined up to be their primary shortstop. Like Andrus, he’s a strong defender who doesn’t hit much, but he’s also been dealing with shoulder problems for years. Those shoulder troubles put him under the knife last year and he was only able to get into 17 games. Geraldo Perdomo was pushed into regular duty to cover for Ahmed but had a poor season on both sides of the ball. The club has an excellent second baseman in Ketel Marte but he’s been battling lingering hamstring issues for the past couple of seasons. A reliable veteran middle infielder would make plenty of sense for the Snakes.
A return to the White Sox would also make sense, even though Anderson should be back in the shortstop position. The second base spot is less clear, with Josh Harrison a free agent and Danny Mendick having signed with the Mets. Romy González, Leury García, Lenyn Sosa and non-roster invitee Hanser Alberto are some of the options that will be in camp next month, though none of those options are particularly inspiring. Andrus already said he’d be willing to play second next to Anderson and perhaps that would be a better option for the Sox than anything else currently on hand.
The Angels seem set to go into the year without a clear-cut shortstop. Luis Rengifo, David Fletcher and Gio Urshela are all possibilities, though none of them are really perfect. All three of them are multi-positional players that have spent much more time at other spots on the diamond. Fletcher probably has the strongest defensive argument to get the job, since he’s been graded a bit above average by all three of DRS, UZR and OAA for his career. However, he’s provided very little at the plate outside of the shortened 2020 season. Also, with Anthony Rendon and Jared Walsh coming off injury-marred campaigns, the Halos have question marks at both corner infield spots. Brandon Drury and Urshela can help out, but there’s still sense in further bolstering the depth.
The Marlins have been busy on the trade market lately, sending shortstop Miguel Rojas to the Dodgers and acquiring Luis Arraez in a trade sending Pablo Lopez to the Twins. Their current plans seems to be to move Jazz Chisholm Jr. to center field, leaving them with an infield of Jean Segura at third, Joey Wendle at shortstop, Arraez at second base and Garrett Cooper at first. They’ve been recently connected to first baseman Yuli Gurriel, with Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reporting that Gurriel could play some second or third base. That’s a risky plan since he’ll turn 39 in June and hasn’t seen meaningful time at either of those positions since 2019. He’s also coming off a pretty poor year at the plate. The club is already taking a big risk on defense by having a center fielder with no experience there and two left-side infield positions manned by players who have spent much more time elsewhere. Arraez has plenty of second base experience but was graded poorly there, and the Twins bumped him to first base before trading him to Miami. Perhaps adding Andrus and moving Wendle back to a utility role would be a more elegant solution than the Gurriel option.
The Astros have Jeremy Peña and Jose Altuve up the middle and certainly don’t need help there. However, they lost their backup/utility option Aledmys Díaz to the A’s in free agency. They could replace him in-house with Mauricio Dubón and David Hensley, but Dubón had a poor year at the plate in 2022 and Hensley has been more of a utility player than a regular at shortstop. The Astros are probably fine if everyone is healthy, but an injury to Peña could make the depth start to feel a little shaky.
The Braves have lost Swanson to the Cubs but haven’t done anything to replace him. It seems the plan is to install 22-year-old Vaughn Grissom in the position and hope he can handle it. There’s risk in that plan as he has just 41 games of MLB experience, including just 10 innings at short. He has much more experience at the position in the minors, but many prospect evaluators have suggested he’s stretched at that spot and should move to second, third or the outfield. Should the Grissom experiment fail, the club’s best backup plan right now is Orlando Arcia. He has lots of shortstop experience with the Brewers but doesn’t hit much and eventually got moved into a utility role.
The Rockies had José Iglesias as their shortstop last year, but he is now a free agent. They seem ready to hand the reins over to prospect Ezequiel Tovar, who made his MLB debut last year. However, he’s still just 21 years old, has played just 80 games above the High-A level and only 14 of those above Double-A. Should he struggle in his first real taste of the majors, their backup plan would be to turn to Alan Trejo or Cole Tucker, neither of whom having much major league success of their own.
There’s also the wild card that is the World Baseball Classic, which takes place in March. Dozens of major league players will be ramping up quicker than they would in a normal spring and diving into competitive action. That creates the possibility that someone will sustain an injury that creates a new opening for Andrus. Some of the middle infielders that are set to participate in the WBC include Francisco Lindor, Jeff McNeil, Andrés Giménez and many more.
What do you think? Where do you think Andrus winds up? Have your say in the poll below.
(poll link for app users)
deweybelongsinthehall
Let the Braves sign him so the Sox can pivot to Iglesias. I realize I’ve repeatedly suggested this but it’s obvious to me he’s the best fit. He was a cheerleader in 21 when he signed too late to be playoff eligible and last year he showed he can still play at least average short. He was also great at second down the stretch in 21. Add to it he came up with Boston and didn’t want to leave in 13. A perfect fit in my view.
Randy Red Sox
TOO perfect it seems for BLfloom
thickiedon
Rockies should but won’t. Colorado should be the prime reclamation destination but instead it’s a AAAA playground
seamaholic 2
If you’re gonna diss a team you should probably know at least a little something about it. The Rockies have a top ten in baseball prospect who is major league ready at shortstop, named Ezequiel Tovar. And a backup who hit league average last year (i.e. better than Iglesias did as a starter). They have less than zero interest in signing a shortstop.
kmk1986
Really that’s your argument Tovar showed nothing last year
seamaholic 2
They’re a rebuilding team. Of course they’re gonna play their 21 year uber prospect despite his 33 AB’s in the majors last year!
deweybelongsinthehall
Iglesias batted .292 in nearly 500 ABs. I don’t care how many walks he had nor his lack of power. I’d love to have that production from my #9 hitter who also handles himself well in the field.
thickiedon
Seamy, I’m well aware of Tovar. The point is Andrus is one of many FAs COL could’ve signed to boost team production, been a possible later trade piece, or give fans reason to believe they could attempt to compete. It’s sad. They have a great fanbase but a careless FO. Of course, fans want to see prospects play but also want to see gaps filled with competent pieces
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
The most desperate
After a flat tire. putting on a bicycle tire to get to the next gas station
PutPeteinthehall
What do you know about tires? You used a slice of salami to fix one!
Rocker49
I’d say the team called couch, he needs to retire.
Travis’ Wood
I guess you missed his entire time in Chicago where he was excellent? And even his 96 wRC+ in Oakland last year is acceptable for a SS
Rocker49
Oh man, sorry I missed that. I don’t watch terrible baseball teams, so I definitely missed his outstanding seasons in Chicago and Oakland. Thank you for pointing that out for us. Look forward to hearing about how great he is this season on another garbage team, you can tell me all about it.
This one belongs to the Reds
In other words, you don’t watch anything but large market teams because that’s where you live.
There’s actually baseball elsewhere.
rememberthecoop
The White Sox actually have a lot of talent. They had a bad year in 22, mainly due to injuries and Tony LaRussa’s awful managing. I think they will win the division this season. And I’m definitely not a Sox fan. You’re off your “Rocker” if you think they are a “bad baseball team”.
avenger65
He should still be with the White Sox. I know he hasn’t played second base but he’s willing to make the switch. because he’s a team-first player. The Sox desperately need a 2b man and I think he could do a good job there and also be a backup to Anderson at SS. But Hahn let him and Cueto the team’s second best starter last year. It has to have something to do with money but we’ll never know because Hahn, whose hands are likely tied by Reinsdorf, can’t tell us.
kmk1986
U exaggerate how great he was last year
Rallyshirt
Hanser Alberto’s reunion with Grifol could be a sleeper pick.
ASapsFables
I anticipate Hansel Alberto making the White Sox opening day roster as their primary utility infielder, not as their starter at 2B. It’s a role he’s best suited for on a contender which the White Sox ought to be in 2023.
If the White Sox don’t sign one of the remaining 2B free agent options or trade for one, I expect one of Lenyn Sosa or Romy Gonzalez to win the starting gig with the other getting full time PA’s at AAA Charlotte as insurance. This likely means sayonara to Leury Garcia although it’s possible he could remain as a second utility infielder and their 4th or 5th outfielder.
avenger65
Garcia is their top utility player. I’d rather see him playing second instead of a AAA and AA players, neither of which are ready for the big leagues, but they’ll probably play because the Sox are too cheap to sign an established second baseman. Three years and counting.
Spotswood
AaronS, unfortunately the Sox owe Garcia $5.5M the next 2 years. Doubt Sox eat the $11M and release him. The best play would have been to sign a free agent to fill the spot, cause none of the minor league guys are going to hit enough. I’d have more confidence in bringing up Montgomery and pushing him to 2nd, but that’s a crapshoot.
ASapsFables
The White Sox have seemingly been better at DFA’s and eating contracts lately than actually signing productive players. The ate far more money with the Dallas Keuchel and Adam Eaton DFA’s than what Leury Garcia would cost them with his release. They might also have an opportunity to include Garcia as part of a trade package or move his contract for a more ‘desirable’ underwater one at a position of greater need.
Spotswood
You are right $14M for Keuchel for 4 months and $3M for Eaton for 3 months. I guess $11M for Leury for 2 full seasons is possible.
CluHaywood
I would imagine that would be Leury’s role. You really need two subpar utility men on the pro roster?
avenger65
You underestimate him because you didn’t watch him play, making you unqualified to make a judgement about his level of play.
dirkg
I looked at his stats and he had a remarkable good run last year. 2017 and 2019 were also pretty good years. He’s definitely worth a flyer and I’m assuming he’s still out there because he’s asking more than teams are willing to give.
Red Sox and Angels make the most sense to me…but again, at what price is the key.
JockStrap
I don’t see the Sox signing him.
HalosHeavenJJ
I’m not sure he’s a notable upgrade from this point forward than a Fletcher/Rengifo tandem.
I’d be fine with bringing him in, though.
roiste
Andrus isn’t very good, but with the Red Sox looking very unlikely to swing a bigger upgrade, he makes so much sense for them. Andrus probably isn’t going to hit much, but he has a very steady glove at short. Put him there, and you can start Hernandez at second and keep Arroyo as the utility infielder, where he can thrive. This would also allow them to move Hernandez to center on occasion to give Duvall a day off or some time in right against lefties. Andrus would also give them so much-needed infield depth in the case of an injury, and would enable them to field a top-flight defensive infield if Story is able to return.
All the PR has been about Hernandez at short, but hopefully it’s just posturing. This makes too much sense for Boston not to pursue.
kingken67
If the Sox could put Story on the 60-day IL right now to open the 40-man roster spot they’d likely try and work out a deal with Andrus right now. As it is they have to clear a spot to finalize the Duvall deal. I don’t see them backing themselves into more DFAs right now to do this. But this is one area that Bloom needs to get better addressing. He’s locked himself in a bit in regards to the prospects he had to add to the 40-man roster or risk losing them. Overall he hasn’t managed the 40-man roster limitations as best he could.
This one belongs to the Reds
They will probably overpay for him to get someone solid at SS. They don’t have much of a choice if they want to compete.
Wadz
He will put up 4 WAR for ATL
bhambrave
By playing for the Marlins.
User 1413108128
Bravo bhambrave
Bravo
Henry Silvestre
A SS story without a San Diego destination can’t be taken seriously
hiflew
From this story, my biggest takeaway is that the WBC should be cancelled. I’d really hate to see someone’s pennant chances hurt due to a glorified exhibition.
MortDingle
As long as they keep Pete Rose off the field everything will be 0k.
This one belongs to the Reds
Yet MLB is in bed with Bally Sports. How does that compute?
hiflew
With the dollar sign key. Bally Sports makes them a lot more money than Pete Rose would.
brandons-3
The Braves should sign him or Iglesias and keep Arcia in his super utility role. I’d rather Grissom start the year in Triple-A and call him up once he’s got going or there’s a need. If he stumbles and you demote him you’re then just left with Arcia and/or no depth.
rememberthecoop
Elvis has left the building.
ASapsFables
My heart votes White Sox but my brain insisted on the Red Sox, no thanks to Jerry Reinsdorf.
jaxcards
There was no mention of Livan Soto in your rundown of Angels’ Shortstop options. He only hit .400 in his MLB debut.
Hebner3B
Wow.
It must really, really be a slow day in the world of baseball news.
acoss13
I voted for the White Sox but knowing them, they won’t because reasons.
Mercenary.Freddie.Freeman
What kind of a salary do you guy think Andrus will get for 2023? He’s not the player he once was so I would imagine he won’t get a top dollar AAV anymore.
scottaz
There isn’t a ghost of a chance the Dbacks sign Andrés. He’s Nick Ahmed light and the Dbacks are already paying Ahmed $10M+ this season. If you think the Dbacks would even consider this, it proves you know absolutely nothing about the Dbacks.
Motor City Beach Bum
He was not half bad last year, especially with the White Sox. Early in I would have been good with the Tigers signing him to play 2B and shifting Schoop to 3B. Then they traded for Maton so it wouldn’t make sense now. I think he still has value.
Rsox
The Red Sox make the most sense with the clearest need at SS. Even after signing Adam Duvall to play CF the Sox could still shift Keke to 2B and him in CF when Duvall plays LF/DH or needs an off day or as a defensive replacement latein games. Arroyo is better suited as a super utility until he can make through a whole season without missing significant time to injuries
Randy Red Sox
typical Bloom–trying to bring the guy in on a M/L deal
Randy Red Sox
RSox–if Bloom can get him on a M/L deal then he will be a Red Sox. Bloom is a genius.
davemlaw
Andrus’ numbers show he can still play and has value. So why hasn’t he been signed?
Does he want too much money or years? Clearly there are teams with a need. Anybody know why this signing hasn’t happened yet?
bravesfan
I’m gonna guess the Braves will ultimately sign him to a 1 year deal with a club option and buyout in year 2.
❤️ MuteButton
I think it’s a bit of desperation if he is signed to be a starting SS. Now, if he were willing to be a super utility player, I think $5 to $7 mil.
No I don’t think he’s gonna hit 17 home runs again.
YEP
White Sox sign Elvis Andrus then trade Garcia to Minnesota as part of a package for Max Kepler.