We covered the National League’s 15 teams earlier today, so now let’s check in on how the American League’s 15 clubs have done (to date) in fixing their biggest problem positions from the 2023 season. Baseball Reference’s position-by-position bWAR breakdown is our guide through last year’s numbers….
Angels (First base, -0.7 bWAR): No team received less from its first basemen than the Angels, even with Brandon Drury hitting well in part-time duty and rookie Nolan Schanuel emerging late in the season. Schanuel and Drury working in a platoon could improve things, yet the Halos are in something of a state of flux in general, as the team is weighing a lot of internal trade possibilities and other free agent signings in the wake of Shohei Ohtani’s departure. Not that there’s a silver lining to Ohtani leaving, but the Angels do now have the DH spot open to potentially add a slugging first base/DH type to pair with Schanuel and perhaps keep Drury at second base.
Astros (First base, 0.0 bWAR): Jose Abreu struggled badly for most of 2023 before finally heating up in the final six weeks of the regular season and throughout Houston’s playoff run. Since the former AL MVP is owed $39MM over the next two years, the Astros can only hope that Abreu has shaken off any new-team jitters and will be back to his old form for the rest of his tenure in Houston.
Athletics (Relief pitching, -0.9 bWAR): Whew, where to begin. Oakland had the second-lowest relief bWAR and rotation bWAR, and thus their 0.0 total pitching bWAR was the lowest in baseball. The A’s also received sub-replacement-level production at third base (-0.8), center field (-0.5), shortstop (-0.3), and an even 0.0 bWAR from their pinch-hitters. Trevor Gott, Osvaldo Bido, and Gerardo Reyes have at least been signed to try and beef up the pitching, yet with the A’s rebuilding and focused more on figuring out where they’ll be playing between the end of their lease at the Coliseum and the opening of their new ballpark in Las Vegas, expect only low-cost additions between now and Opening Day.
Blue Jays (Pinch-hitting, 1.7 bWAR): Toronto’s lack of position-player depth was exposed basically every time the Jays had even one regular out with an injury. The lack of bench help contributed to the Blue Jays’ overall offensive struggles, and this problem won’t be any clearer until the team addresses its big holes at second base and third base. If at least one starting infielder was obtained, the in-house infield options (i.e. Cavan Biggio, Santiago Espinal, Davis Schneider, Ernie Clement, Spencer Horwitz, Orelvis Martinez, Addison Barger, Leo Jimenez) could then make for a relatively deep, if unproven, bench.
Guardians (Shortstop, -0.3 bWAR): Cleveland dealt the underperforming Amed Rosario to the Dodgers prior to the trade deadline, opening the door for Gabriel Arias and Brayan Rocchio to get most of the playing time at shortstop. Neither has hit much at the Major League level, but the Guardians will continue to give the duo (as well as Tyler Freeman, Jose Tena, and perhaps Juan Brito) more opportunities in 2024. It isn’t an entirely ideal situation for a team in sore need of hitting help, yet since spending is again limited, the Guards will stick to their normal plan of relying on their minor league pipeline.
Mariners (First base, 0.7 bWAR): Ty France hit .250/.337/.366 with 12 home runs over 665 plate appearances last season, translating to about a league-average offensive performance. With Mitch Garver now signed as the primary DH, Seattle might stick with France at first base, or the team could continue to explore other first base targets and perhaps look to trade France elsewhere. Isaac Paredes, Josh Naylor and Rhys Hoskins are some of the names linked to the Mariners for a potential trade or signing.
Orioles (Pinch-hitting, 1.5 bWAR): This is a relatively minor weak link as far as “weakest positions” go, as Baltimore still ranked fourth in baseball in pinch-hitting bWAR. The talent floor should only continue to rise as the Orioles introduce even more top prospects to regular Major League action, so there isn’t much to worry about on the position-player side. As for pitching, the O’s still might considering moving a bat for an arm, either for the rotation or for a bullpen that has been somewhat fortified by the signing of Craig Kimbrel.
Rangers (Relief pitching, 0.0 bWAR): The shaky Texas bullpen almost cost the Rangers a postseason berth altogether, yet the relievers stabilized enough in the playoffs to help deliver the team’s first World Series championship. The Rangers signed Kirby Yates to help make up for the departures of Will Smith and Chris Stratton, and the team has also reportedly shown interest in such high-leverage relievers as Jordan Hicks and Robert Stephenson. Though Texas isn’t going to be continuing their spending sprees from the last two offseasons, they should still have enough payroll room to bolster the pen, even if signing Josh Hader might be a reach.
Rays (Catcher, 1.2 bWAR): Tampa Bay has been trying to stabilize the catching position for years, and the quest will continue this winter. Christian Bethancourt was non-tendered, leaving Rene Pinto and Alex Jackson lined up as the current tandem behind the plate. The Rays already moved their biggest trade chip (Tyler Glasnow) without getting a catcher as part of the return from the Dodgers, yet since Tampa’s front office is always actively seeking out deals, the Rays could pick up a backstop in a deal. Some kind of signing seems inevitable, whether it’s adding someone for a more regular role, or simply signing a couple of veterans to minors contracts to provide Spring Training competition.
Red Sox (Second base, 0.0 bWAR): Ten different players lined up at second base for the BoSox last season, with little success to be had. Chief baseball officer Craig Breslow has highlighted the keystone as a natural target area, ideally for a right-handed hitter with a good glove. Free agent Whit Merrifield is one name known to be on Boston’s radar, and Merrifield’s ability to play the outfield also adds more flexibility to the roster, particularly should the Red Sox have interest in giving Ceddanne Rafaela a look at second base. Breslow’s first couple of months on the job have been mostly focused on remaking the Sox outfield, and pitching remains a larger overarching need of the Red Sox offseason.
Royals (Relief pitching, -1.4 bWAR): Few expected the Royals to be one of the offseason’s more aggressive spenders as we hit Christmas, yet Kansas City has splurged (by their standards) to upgrade its dismal pitching situation. Seth Lugo and Michael Wacha were signed to bolster the rotation, and the bullpen has also been a focus with the additions of Will Smith, Nick Anderson, and Chris Stratton. The work done to the rotation could filter down to the relief corps, as such names as Daniel Lynch, Angel Zerpa, or Alec Marsh could be used in the bullpen if they’re not being used as starting depth.
Tigers (Third base, -0.3 bWAR): Zach McKinstry, Nick Maton, and Matt Vierling are still around to man the second and third base positions, and act as utility depth in general. However, the Tigers aren’t likely to seek out a big upgrade since they hope some help is coming on the farm. It isn’t clear where any of Colt Keith, Jace Jung, or Justyn-Henry Malloy might eventually end up around the diamond, yet all of this trio is expected to make their MLB debuts in 2024 and could help immediately at the keystone or at the hot corner.
Twins (First base, 1.4 bWAR): Alex Kirilloff’s young career has been plagued by injuries, so just getting a healthy year from Kirilloff would automatically help the Twins get more from the first base position. Edouard Julien could also play first if Jorge Polanco remains at second base and isn’t traded, though there is an expectation that at least one of Polanco or Max Kepler won’t be in Minnesota by Opening Day. President of baseball operations Derek Falvey identified first base as a likely target area in some fashion back in November, though it’s been a pretty quiet offseason thus far for the Twins, with most of the talk centered around payroll cuts and uncertainty over the club’s TV deal.
White Sox (Right field, -2.4 bWAR): There weren’t many positives in Chicago’s miserable 101-loss season, and that can be taken literally given all of the negative bWAR numbers around the diamond. The White Sox had a league-worst collective 0.4 bWAR for all non-pitchers, and were also below replacement level at shortstop (-1.7), catcher (-1.5), pinch-hitting (-0.6), second base (-0.4), and left field (-0.1). New GM Chris Getz has added talent at some of these positions already, but with so many holes to be plugged, Getz has yet to turn his attention to improving on the right field combination of Oscar Colas and Gavin Sheets. Some outfield additions seem inevitable, and Chicago’s roster might end up looking quite different in 2024 considering that Getz has been open to trade offers for just about any White Sox player.
Yankees (Left field, -1.6 bWAR): This was also the lowest left field bWAR total for any team in baseball in 2023, as New York’s revolving door of outfield options didn’t result in any consistent production. However, the Yankees have already upgraded their outfield in eye-opening fashion, acquiring both Juan Soto as the new right fielder and Alex Verdugo from the Red Sox to handle left field. Though Verdugo had some clashes with Sox manager Alex Cora and Verdugo has been only slightly above average over the last couple of years, that still represents a solid improvement over the mess that was the Yankees’ left field situation. Verdugo and Soto are also both left-handed hitters, so the Yankees have balanced out their heavily righty-swinging lineup.
Bostonsportsforlife
red Sox:
they haven’t
deweybelongsinthehall
I’m telling others to have patience but I’m losing mine. Rumors are Sox ownership believes Montgomery is now prices too high. If they don’t address their starting staff in a meaningful way, why then get rid of Bloom when his drafts and traded for players are starting to mature? I’ll continue to try to be patient but 24 is a pivotal year. If they don’t return to relevance, NESN ratings could take a while to recover from. While seats are sold, there will be empty ones more often (meaning no extra concessions revenue).
Jordan09
Red Sox fans are the biggest spoiled bandwagon crybabies in the whole MLB. So you’re saying boston is only a true fan when they’re winning but yall won more than anyone in the last 2 decades
BloodySox
This is a whole different organization. We’re complaining because at this rate we will have to wait another 100 years for a championship. From your post it sounds like your used to losing.
deweybelongsinthehall
Ownership had the winningest formula as evidenced by the four championships since Henry took over. In 13 the team by getting multiple efficient free agent pieces but the team had starting pitching then.
whyhayzee
The stretches where the Red Sox have been in the hunt so to speak occur with having a great number one starter: Lonborg, Tiant, Clemens, Pedro, Lester, Sale. Additionally, the necessity of a great closer: Foulke, Papelbon, Uehara, Kimbrel. A couple of great hitters and a long lineup certainly help the cause, but aren’t enough without the pitching.
Is Bello the next in line? Can’t tell yet. I thought Yamamoto could’ve been that guy. Too much money, too many years. So we wait.
Poolhalljunkies
Why should any fanbase accept losing under any circumstances? Fans pay for tickets, cable/streaming subsctiptions buy up merchandise and thier wallets are the targets of all these lucrative marketing deals..who are you to tell anyone else how much they should care about thier team?
case
The complaints don’t seem to focus on losing so much as not trying.
DBH1969
Spot on, BloodySox! Henry and Co took over and made the franchise what is supposed to be, an annual world series contender. But then FSG turned it into a piggy bank for other ventures. It is the effing Yawkey Years all over again! I don’t understand why any fan of any team, in any sport, would remain silent when an ownership group’s business model is to produce a mediocre product. I just do not get it!
Look at any historically successful franchise, and you find a very vocal fan base.
I hate the Stankees, but respect that their fanbase is just as vocal as ours. There is no doubt in my mind that Hal and Brian know exactly what their fan base thinks of them at any given time. It is how it should be!!!
Jordan09
“Used** to losing?”
I believe the Rangers just won and are in the driver seat to continue to win. What about the spoiled “union” team of Boston? …are the Gomer fans not really fans?
DBH1969
@Dewey, you and I are in the same canoe!
I have high hopes for Breslow, but am beginning to believe he is being knee-capped by ownership. If we see the exact same outcome with 2 different Pobo’s then the blame has to be with ownership.
That isn’t to say they are wrong about Yamamoto. As I posted all off-season, Sox needed to sign him. But then a 700mils steriod bomb dropped on the table for Ohtani, blowing up the market.
Yamamoto at 20 mils is worth the big risk that he represents. But the Sox seemed willing to get outbid for the extra 7 million. That HAS to be an ownership call!!! Especially if the statement about Montgomery is true.
If the Sox are not going to fix the team via free agency, then they will need to trade from the one true strength that they have… prospects and rookies. That would be a huge mistake! All it does is set this team’s farm system back 6 years and leaves it empty. Worse it drains the near future.
Say what you will about the Sox pitching development, but they are great at producing and developing young position players.
I am now completely disheartened for 2024
martras
Add the Twins to this statement as well, haha.
Cknyc
yankees:”changes will be made. time to spend”
dodgers spending: $1.1 billion
yankees: $0
(soto was a trade)
stymeedone
Even trades cost money. With what’s out there in Free Agency, you shouldn’t hold it against teams that they went the trade route.
Yankee Clipper
Technically the trades haven’t cost them anything though. They simply replaced the players that left, (Donaldson, IKF, Bader, etc.)
dankyank
The Yankees still need to take Soto to arbitration or settle beforehand. Ditto Grisham and Verdugo. These players will be costing us roughly $45 million in salary in 2024.
dankyank
The Yankees still need to take Soto, Verdugo and Grisham to arbitration or settle beforehand. They will be costing us $45 million in salary in 2024.
Or perhaps you think certain players work for free.
dankyank
Also, the team paid a $6 million buyout Donaldson’s 2024 option.
Yankee Clipper
But if you do the math on what they paid last season versus what they’re paying who they acquired the difference will be negligible. So, I’m essence, they’re not paying any additional for the trades. It’s simply and exchange of personnel for the same money.
dankyank
The numbers do not cancel each other out. Donaldson was bought out for $6 million. Bader earned $4.7 million in a down year. IKF earned $6 million last season.
The two trades we made this season added $30 million to next year’s payroll versus the aforementioned deartures, excluding the luxury tax bill.
Yankee Clipper
Dankyank: Jndont know if you’re intentionally conflating the two or not.
You keep taking Donaldson’s payout this year and adding it to IKF and Bader for last season. Why? Donaldson was 25MM…. That in and of itself is almost an even trade-off for Soto.
Thus the difference is negligible. And there are more players they paid to be on the roster that were horrible wastes of money.
Human Being
I wish we could put gifs here because I would comment with the Austin Powers villain meme that says One Billion Dollars.
Anthony maresca
Yankees would need to sign Bellinger, one of Monty or Snell, cuban stud Rodriguez which would cost approx $325 million total and they still only spent 1/3 of what Dodgers shelled out for 3 players. Its an embarrassment to the Yankees brand that they are being so cautious with their unlimited resources.
Raysasineppswasplanted
So the Padres will pay Soto’s over 30 mill salary. Then fine
Bigtimeyankeefan
Yankees need some
Pitching
SweetBabyRayKingsThickThighs
It’s bloody Mary Monday and it’s Christmas and now time for the ham
Lefty_Orioles_Fan
Orioles could make a minor splash by signing JustIN Turner
It would help with pinch hitting, leadership and quite frankly he is more than that, a lot more. He would be a good signing and stretch out the lineup
deweybelongsinthehall
True. My gut though tells me he’ll go to either NY, AZ or return to Boston.
C Yards Jeff
I like it Lefty, but owner will insist on going for cheaper options when filling out roster from here on. Let’s face it, Kimbral is the big off season addition for the Birds.
Lefty_Orioles_Fan
I am hoping Turner still has something left in the tank
deweybelongsinthehall
Absolutely. I was not a Turner fan after he went on the field to celebrate in 20 after testing positive but he won me over in his one year in Boston. Would love for him to return and on days he’s not playing, have him be the bench coach to show Cora what to do…
dankyank
The Orioles appear intent on avoiding prospect trades and auditioning as many of these young guys as possible. I could be wrong but Elias seems to think the answers are already within the organization. Baltimore has a long period of sorting ahead them. It should be exciting to watch it all.
Lefty_Orioles_Fan
Turner would be invaluable for leadership
O'sSayCanYouSee
Lefty — It seems from last off-season that the Orioles/Elias is trying to build on the leadership already in the club house; Hays, Mullins, Mountcastle, Henderson, and really, Addley Rutchsman. Elias brought in Vets (Gibson, (2B/Utl)) to support the Clubhouse leadership.
All reports have the Orioles clubhouse as one of the best in the league, if not the best. Im pretty sure that Elias is very aware of that and is acting carefully not to disrupt that.
I don’t see a need for a 39yo(??) Justin Turner.
Raysasineppswasplanted
And closing his mlb career where he started..great story, even greater than Trevor’s with Basten
nukeg
Merry Christmas y’all.
I would argue the Angels greatest weakness is their owner, but I would also say their #1 “get” this offseason was a manager who actually holds his players accountable and continuously works on their development.
Ron Washington was the greatest acquisition they could have hoped for.
Stevil
Why are comments from some muted users showing? This has been an issue for a few days and it’s not possible to re-mute.
case
BECAUSE THE DEEP STATE COMMUNISTS ARE ABOUT TO TAKE AWAY ALL OF OUR GUNS.
gardyparty
Yanks lineup is actually pretty beast right now, but I’m thinking we need like three starters. Of course we already have Cole, Nestor, Rodon, and Clarke, so I can’t really imagine a couple of quality FA starters signing on to be depth guys. Even though we really need the depth lol. Maybe we get Imanaga for the 5 spot. I dunno how we cover 6-8 tho. That’s why you have guys like King, Brito, and Vasquez on the team! Can’t complain about Soto, Verdugo, and Grisham though. I’m pretty optimistic for 2024 tbh. Merry Christmas all!
Joe says...
Imanaga is the last guy we want. Flyball pitcher with a low 90s straight four seam fastball. I don’t think he’s going to fare well in MLB.
I kinda like Ryu on a short term deal.
Dynasty
5-7 are Warren, Gil, and Beeter. They become 6-8 after we sign Montas and become 7-9 after we sign another.
Anthony maresca
Montas will do Yanks no good as the guy pitched like 40 innings in past 2 yrs. He will be on a 100 inning limit so hard pass!!!
The real Oscar Gamble
What about in kings’ old role?
Dynasty
Not relevant to my post but okay.
Dynasty
Probably one of the guys who doesn’t make the rotation. My guess is Warren.
FatChance65
The Red Sox haven’t done squat, and they won’t at this point. As long as the fannies are in the seats at Fenway, Billionaire John Henry is satisfied. He doesn’t care what the fans think. He made good on his promise when he assumed command to bring multiple championships to Boston, so now he will screw the fans.
deweybelongsinthehall
Fat. See my post. The team cannot live still in the past. Ratings and in-stadium sales matter. The fans forced the team to overpay on Devers last season and another last place, under .500 season will lose many fans. In today’s world, once lost and it’s very hard to get them back. This feels different than 2015 or 2020 when fans returned when the team played well the next season. They changed their spending philosophy while not lowering prices. This off season they announced it will be different and now have to prove to many of us that it really is.
FatChance65
Dewey—I hope you’re right. The problem is that the majority of seats at Fenway, and the best seats, are corporate season ticket holders and as long as those are sold, I doubt ownership would actually pay attention to the rest of us.
deweybelongsinthehall
Their sold but I can only tell you in NY, this past year, my corporate clients couldn’t give their Mets and Yankees seats away. I kept getting emails from multiple firms asking if I knew anyone who wanted them. While the seats are sold, no $12:beer, no $10 chicken sales and no shirts sales from the bodies that normally are there. A couple of games? No big deal but empty seats throughout the season and declining TV ratings adds up.
FatChance65
Again, I hope you’re right.
FartGod
The Rays must have really disliked Blake Hunt’s work behind the plate, to bring in Alex Jackson after trading him to the Mariners. Because he hit pretty well in the minors.
Granted Levins looks pretty good. So who knows?
dankyank
For some AL teams, the weakest position and position of greatest need are different.
The Tigers have Vierling, McKinstry, Maton, Nevin and Lipcius all capable of playing third. Their biggest need is actually a backup to Baez, in case he doesn’t rebound and needs to be released.
The Red Sox will be giving Rafaela his shot at 2B; they need to focus on SP upgrades.
Things aren’t always what they seem.
thecrocusesareinbloom
I agree that some of these are misleading, but I think Rafaela is more likely your center fielder in 2024. Cora has spoken highly of him in that position and you’d have an easier time finding a stopgap 2B until Mayer is promoted than you would shopping for a full-time CF. I’d guess some kind of shuffle between Yoshida, Rafaela, Duran, and O’Neill is going to happen in the grass, with Abreu or a glove-first backup like Michael A. Taylor on hand to spell them on days when Yoshida cycles in at DH.
They’re unlikely to displace Rafaela from CF because I think the long-term plan is to slide Story to 2B (which is better suited to his throwing arm) once Mayer is ready.
dankyank
I am a Yankees fan. Also, thank you for your response.
Marcelo Mayer has overwhelmingly played shortstop in the minors. Trevor Story isthe one who should be moved to a less demanding position given his injury history.
Right now the Red Sox have 7 outfielders on the 40 man roster. While Ceddanne Rafaela is a 70 grade defender in CF, he’s a 60 grade at SS and 2b is a less demanding position. Another option is to put him at short and Emmanuel Valdez at second until Mayer is promoted.
We’ve all heard the tired trope about the Orioles need to trade prospects for SPs. In reality, Boston is the team in that position that needs to trade from a position player surplus to upgrade the rotation.
As a Yankee fan I’m actually quite jealous of the hitting prospects Boston has required (even moreso with Baltimore), but the rotation could single-handedly cost them a playoff birth if they don’t make some upgrades
thecrocusesareinbloom
You’ve got a point about the glut of outfielders, but Cora has spoken of Rafaela in CF like it’s a surefire thing.
Also, if it makes you feel better, I’m jealous of Cashman’s willingness to try and improve the roster in a meaningful way. The O’Neill pickup is a great move by Breslow and the offseason is still very young but the opportunities for splashy Soto-esque moves are quickly closing and I don’t really see the Sox being in on anything more impactful than Montgomery (which is now appearing something of a stretch). The Sox have a promising young core to build around, but they’ve chosen the wrong pieces to anchor that core. Devers, Yoshida, and Story are all mistakes, Sale has sadly turned into something of an albatross (don’t think we’re ever going to see a fully healthy season from him again, though I’d love to be wrong), and you’re dead right about the pitching. It’s a mess.
Yanks have their share of onerous contracts too, but iirc Stanton’s is paid down by Miami and DJ only has two (?) years left on his. You guys are in an enviable position, I think if Rodón and Nestor can figure some things out you’ll be real contenders next year. And I know Volpe, Cabrera, Peraza, Wells, et. al aren’t quite as far along as some of the Sox guys, but there’s way more versatility and flexibility in that group than we have. I’d also point out that aside from Rafaela and Yorke all of their most promising offensive youngsters (Casas, Abreu, Anthony, Mayer, Duran) are lefties, graduating into an MLB class that is egregiously lefty-heavy as it stands. You can’t run seven lefties out there every day.
Good luck with Alex Verdugo, though. Unless he goes on some kind of revenge tour this year his gameplay can be frustrating to watch.
dankyank
A certain minimum level of investment is necessary to build a consistent contender but not all spending is good spending. My personal belief is that Hal is interfering in day to day operations and trying to wow the fan base with big acquisitions. The failure to add a single proven LF last year while handed large contracts to Rizzo and Rendon was inexcusable.
Yes, our outfield will be vastly improved, but we weakened the bench, bullpen and rotation in the proces. The bench was already a major issue last season, as was shown during Judge’s injury stints.
I’m not convinced the team makes the playoffs, let alone improves over last year given how the trades exacerbated longstanding depth issues.
I can’t speak to every issue on the Red Sox roster but their depth on the position player side is far better than the Yankees. Our 26 man roster isn’t deep at all.
thecrocusesareinbloom
Honestly, not a bad theory. You put a lot of pressure on yourself when you start calling New York “the mecca of baseball” to trade effective but lesser-known guys like King for flawed but famous names like Soto. Honestly hope he works out for you, though. Something about an AL East where neither the Sox nor the Yanks are competitive feels wrong.
By the way, curious what your thoughts are on Weissert. Anything to write home about?
dankyank
I was ok with overpaying for Verdugo because of the black hole in LF and the crying need for a contact hitter. With that being said, Weissert has some decent potential. He has four pitches and a quality slider. If he can keep inching down the BB rate he’ll be a nice bullpen addition.
avenger65
The White Sox will look different in ’24. New faces, same garbage-level players.
Aiden Awe
Pretty much unless they catch lighting in a bottle.
James Midway
Merry Christmas all
Whyme
Jays need A LF,3B,2B DH they had no offense last year. Pinch hitter LOL
Melchez17
Tigers haven’t done anything to fix 3b. Harris knows he doesn’t need to do anything because Tiger fans will always support this team no matter how crappy they are.
dankyank
I believe the Tigers will be fine at third. Another 1.5 WAR from Vierling improves the position by nearly 2 wins. Nevin started to put things together in the last 5 weeks of the season. McKinstry does a little bit of everything as a utility man.
The Tigers have a lot of depth and versatility that leave them well positioned to withstand injuries. Their glaring weaknesses appear to be backup catcher and shortstop.
Ask any Orioles fan about the importance of cultivating depth. Their rebuild is ahead of schedule thanks to all of Elias’s under the radar moves.
bcjd
Maybe Boston can take a flyer on bringing Dustin Pedroia back. He’s gotta be worth more than 0.0 WAR even with a bum knee.
I.M. Insane
Mike Andrews won’t be 81 until July. Don’t rule him out.
TroyVan
Tigers also have Ryan Kreidler. Easily forgotten due to his lost season after his injury, but IMO he’s the most likely to succeed first out of all of the prospects and it’ll be his job to lose.
Braves20
Mark: Thanks for the Christmas present of two excellent columns on team’s weaknesses.
misterb71
“As for pitching, the O’s still might considering moving a bat for an arm, either for the rotation or for a bullpen that has been somewhat fortified by the signing of Craig Kimbrel”
How does this move only “somewhat fortify” the O’s bullpen? Bautista is out for 2024 and Kimbrel is one of the best at what he does for the last 14 years. He might not be the monster Kimbrel was in his 20s, but the comment about his acquisition is rather dismissive while the author’s looking for the O’s to find a pinch hitter this offseason — a position almost no team bothers with until the last minute, if at all.
ArianaGrandSlam
Clashes between Verdugo and Cola? What kind? The TV-breaking kind?
kroeg49
The White Sox weakest position is not in right field. It’s Jerry Reinsdorf the team owner!!
BadCo
Is Bloom still running the team, sure as hell seems so. Sooner or later, the fans are going to get the message, that the people upstairs are playing business, not ballgames and don’t care!