There’s still plenty of time left in the offseason for teams to check items off their winter to-do lists, but with the spirit of holiday shopping in the air, let’s take a look at what baseball’s teams have already done to fix their roster’s weakest links from last season. Using Baseball Reference’s list of how each team performed (as per bWAR) by position in 2022, let’s start with the 15 National League clubs….
Braves (Pinch-hitting, 0.3 bWAR): We’ll start with a team without many weak points, as the Braves amassed 104 wins thanks mostly to one of the best offensive lineups in baseball history. Atlanta’s everyday players were so good and so durable that the bench didn’t get much of a chance to even hit the field, even as late-game subs. As to how the bench depth might improve, Vaughn Grissom is expected to take on a larger role, and David Fletcher was acquired from the Angels as a backup infield upgrade over Nicky Lopez.
Brewers (First base, 0.4 bWAR): Carlos Santana is a free agent, Rowdy Tellez was non-tendered, and Mark Canha was traded to the Tigers as the Brew Crew might more or less completely reshuffle their first base mix. GM Matt Arnold did hint that Santana could return and highly-touted prospect Tyler Black could factor at either corner infield position, but for now, first base remains somewhat in flux. Jake Bauers was acquired from the Yankees and currently projects to work with Owen Miller in a platoon at the cold corner.
Cardinals (Pinch-hitting, 0.2 bWAR): St. Louis’ rotation problems have been well-documented, and their 4.1 rotation bWAR ranked 28th of 30 teams. However, pinch-hitting was technically the Cardinals’ weakest point by pure bWAR metrics, and this area might just improve with better results from the team’s in-house options. On paper, the Cards have plenty of versatile position-player depth, though they need to figure out which members of this group will be lineup regulars or perhaps off the team altogether.
Cubs (First base, 0.4 bWAR): Even with Cody Bellinger getting a big chunk of the playing time at first base, he hit only .267/.310/.467 over 200 plate appearances as a first baseman, in contrast to his red-hot .323/.381/.548 slash line in 339 PA as a center fielder. A Matt Mervis/Patrick Wisdom/Christopher Morel combination is currently in place at the cold corner, yet it doesn’t feel like the Cubs are going to just stand pat the position. Wrigleyville has been linked to such trade and free agent targets as Pete Alonso, Josh Naylor, and Rhys Hoskins, plus a reunion with Bellinger can’t yet be ruled out.
Diamondbacks (Third base, 0.0 bWAR): The NL champions only got replacement-level production at the hot corner last year, but Arizona has already made a big move by adding Eugenio Suarez in a trade with the Mariners. It’s a possible short-term fix since 2024 is the last guaranteed year of Suarez’s contract, though he should provide the D’Backs with some extra power while the team gets some more time to evaluate Jordan Lawlar’s readiness at shortstop (which could shift Gerardo Perdomo to third base in the future).
Dodgers (Pinch-hitting, 1.3 bWAR): Unsurprisingly, the Dodgers’ “weakest position” is still pretty respectable. The return of Gavin Lux and the acquisition of Manuel Margot should raise the talent floor on the roster in terms of bench depth, as younger players like Miguel Vargas or Michael Busch could contribute in backup or part-time roles, rather than being relied on (as Vargas was last season) for a high-pressure starting role. The left field position also generated 1.4 bWAR in 2023, and Los Angeles hopes that the addition of Margot can help on that front, plus a return to form for Chris Taylor would help a ton.
Giants (Shortstop, -1.3 bWAR): Longtime shortstop Brendan Crawford battled injuries all season long and wasn’t very productive when he was on the field, leaving the Giants short-handed at one of the most important positions on the diamond. Top prospect Marco Luciano made his MLB debut last season and will get a longer look in 2024, but San Francisco is also looking around for shortstop help, perhaps just as a one-year stopgap to help Luciano ease into the big leagues.
Marlins (Catcher, -0.6 bWAR): Jacob Stallings wasn’t tendered a contract, and Christian Bethancourt was acquired from the Guardians as president of baseball operations Peter Bendix picked up another of his former players from the Rays. The Bethancourt/Nick Fortes tandem is at least a defensively-stout pairing behind the plate, though Miami isn’t done in exploring the market for more catching help, and former Cardinal Andrew Knizner is reportedly of interest.
Mets (Third base, -1.2 bWAR): No team got less from the hot corner than the Amazins, but New York’s initial plan for the offseason was to keep rolling with younger players like Brett Baty, Ronny Mauricio, or Mark Vientos. However, Mauricio will now miss most or all of the season due to a torn ACL, reducing the options to Baty, Vientos, or utilityman Joey Wendle. Justin Turner is reportedly a player of interest for the Mets, which could fit since Turner would also get a lot of time as a DH, allowing for the youngsters to get action at the third base spot. If not Turner, some other veteran infield depth option could be obtained, yet the Mets want to give their top prospects some time since 2024 is looking like something of an evaluation year for the team.
Nationals (Designated hitter, 0.7 bWAR): Joey Meneses got the bulk of DH at-bats in 2023, and he couldn’t keep up the magic of his surprising 2022 breakout, hitting only .275/.321/.401 in his second year in the majors. Meneses could get more time at first base now that Dominic Smith has been non-tendered, and Washington also brought in Juan Yepez and Lewin Diaz on minor league deals. In short, both the DH and first base spots are basically open-call auditions at this point, as the Nationals probably aren’t likely to acquire a longer-term answer for either position while the team is still rebuilding. The designated hitter role might not be addressed directly, as the Nats might end up cycling several players through the position.
Padres (First base/pinch-hitting, 0.5 bWAR): San Diego’s crowded infield picture resulted in Jake Cronenworth getting most of the first base opportunity, and he struggled after posting some very solid numbers from 2020-22. Cronenworth is still the favorite for the position at this point, and his big contract makes it likely that he’ll still be on the roster next year even though Cronenworth’s name has surfaced in some trade talks. Manny Machado will be used as a DH early in the season until he fully recovers from his elbow surgery, which somewhat complicates any plans San Diego might have in obtaining a slugging first base/DH type, yet such a player might still be a wise addition if the Padres feel confident Machado won’t need too much time to get fully healthy. As much as the Padres’ offseason has been defined to date by payroll cuts, their recent signing of reliever Yuki Matsui indicates that the team is still planning to contend, and getting another big bat in the lineup seems like a must.
Phillies (Third base, 0.4 bWAR): Alec Bohm and Edmundo Sosa mostly split the third base duties in 2023, as Bohm saw a lot of time at first base with Rhys Hoskins out and until Bryce Harper was ready to take over as the regular first baseman. Harper will be sticking at first base in 2024, so Bohm will be back as the full-time third baseman. The former top prospect has been roughly a league-average hitter in his four MLB seasons and his glovework at third base still garners mixed reviews, so if the Phillies did want to make a bigger move to their everyday core, Bohm might be a candidate to be the odd man out. That said, president of baseball ops Dave Dombrowski has indicated that the Phils are more or less done with their top-tier winter shopping.
Pirates (Catcher/shortstop, -0.9 bWAR): The answer is the same at both positions for the Bucs — get full and healthy seasons from two of their best young players. Oneil Cruz missed almost the entire season due to ankle surgery, while Henry Davis made his MLB debut but barely played any catcher, mostly seeing time as a right fielder instead. Unfortunately, another top catching prospect in Endy Rodriguez will miss the entire season due to UCL surgery, so Davis now looks to be the top choice behind the plate unless the Pirates prefer to use Jason Delay and Ali Sanchez while Davis gets more acclimated to the position.
Reds (Right field/DH/Pinch-hitting, 0.7 bWAR): Cincinnati had a three-way tie in the “weakest position” race, and the answer to all three positions might be internal improvements. Or, at least a shuffle caused by the signing of Jeimer Candelario, which will further crowd the infield and push Spencer Steer into a clear left field role. This will in turn make Will Benson and Jake Fraley into the right field platoon, and Christian Encarnacion-Strand or Jonathan India might now be in line for DH duty now that the Reds have parted ways with Joey Votto. There are plenty of moving parts here for the Reds, not to mention the fact that Cincinnati might still move one of their infielders in a trade for pitching.
Rockies (First base/second base, -0.6 bWAR): Colorado hopes to have Kris Bryant and Brendan Rodgers healthy, which would automatically make things better at the two lackluster infield positions. It’s been a pretty quiet winter to date for the Rockies, as their limited transactions to date have understandably been focused on addding pitching. Colorado only received 0.6 bWAR from its starting pitchers in 2023, the lowest mark in baseball.
braveshomer
How the Braves fixed their weakest position (Playoff Rotation): ‘Nothing’….there I fixed it….lol, Merry Xmas all!
Ma4170
I hate the braves but this is true… actually, they could use a strong number 3 sp as morton has lost a little, but if thats your biggest need, youre in great shape
getrealgone2
Their hitting lost them the NLDS. Not the pitching. I’m still baffled that many Braves fans think otherwise.
gbs42
getreal, anything can happen in a short series. Atlanta had a regular season SLG over .500 as a team, which is staggeringly, historically good.
braveshomer
Aka we got out pitched, I’m still baffled people don’t see that it goes both ways. Plus they gave up 10 runs in game 3…and if it wasn’t for that miracle walk-off double play in game 2 they would’ve been swept.
avenger65
I think the same thing that happened to the Dodgers, Phillies and, last year, the Mets, happened to the Braves. All great teams during the regular season, but pressure isn’t only reserved for NY teams. Those previous teams don’t have a lot of pressure on them for 162 games because there’s always another game coming up. But after winning at least 100 games (with the exception of the Phillies), the pressure is on to win in the PO. The Dodgers and Phillies stopped hitting against the DBacks and the DBacks and O’s stopped hitting against the Rangers, who never stopped hitting, maybe at least in part because there were no real expectations for them to win. I don’t remember what happened to the Braves, who won in ’21 because no one expected them to.
ChipperChop
@braveshomer I’m surprised you don’t see how different it is pitching with a lead or having an offense that is producing rather than feeling like you have to shut the other team out to win. The playoff loss was 100% on a cold offense, not the pitching. And it wasn’t “getting out pitched”. Guys were pressing, doing things they did not do all year long up and down the lineup. Both Strider starts were very winnable games with any offense at all. Not to mention, even in Elder’s start, if the Braves push a few across early that becomes a completely different game. Tonkin never steps foot on the field (shouldn’t have anyway). Also that Philly crowd works completely against the Phil’s playing from behind as you saw against AZ. The crowd gets tight and it carry’s right over to the Philly players.
JackStrawb
@avenger65 It not pressure. These guys have been playing in front of screaming fans and filled stadiums (or bleachers) since they were 10 years old.
A 3- and 4-round postseason is MLB’s answer to the NFL’s grisly ‘parity.’ The 1927 Yankees or 1975-76 Reds would not regularly win a WS and wouldn’t be favorites to do so in a postseason of the current type, never mind merely mortal teams like the 2023 Braves.
You could go into each round of a 3-round postseason as a 2 out of 3 favorite to win that series (your odds in a postseason series will never be that good, fwiw), and still have only a 30% chance of winning the World Series.
It’s luck and the gantlet nature of the proceedings, not the shakes.
braveshomer
Yes I absolutely agree the offense died off! It was actually trailing off the last few weeks of the season, but you have to acknowledge both sides…Bryce Elder was not good after the Allstar break, followed by the rotation being ignored at the trade deadline. Any momentum the Braves gained in game-2 comeback win was completely erased game-3 Elder started and we lost 10-2. If anyone can’t admit that a rotation upgrade would’ve helped, then there’s nothing I can tell you and I’m just banging my head against the wall lol
Ma4170
Im not saying that because of the playoffs, just in general
99CaptainJudge99
Well good for the NL teams.
CubsWin108
why tf you writing, its christmas
SocoComfort
Not everybody celebrates Christmas
CubsWin108
revised statement: “why the f*** are you writing articles, for many peoples around the world, they are currently celebrating the events known as: Christmas, Hanukkah, Ramadan, Kwanzaa, and more.
Bill the Cat
why tf you reading, its christmas
whyhayzee
Whether you celebrate or not, it is Christmas. Heck, if someone says “Happy July 4th”, do you get all upset because you’re not independent?
I.M. Insane
In this day and age, some do.
CubsWin108
was simply looking to see if anybody had the ball to write on a holiday
NashvilleJeff
Plenty of people work on holidays.
PoisonedPens
Yep, And plenty of newspaper people worked yesterday so there would be a newspaper today. I certainly used to do that.
NashvilleJeff
@Poisoned: So did I. Worked for USA Today here in Nashville for 20 plus years. Also medical courier delivery that was 24/7 365.
SalaryCapMyth
Damn guys. I think CubsWin108 was coming from a good place.
ham77
why tf do you have to write nasty comments, it’s christmas
braveshomer
How in the world was CubsWin a nasty comment?!….he simply saying ‘why are you working on Xmas? Enjoy the day off’. Is how i read it anyways…Sheesh relax, it’s Christmas!
Trotski
Probably the tf part. A little more aggro than Christmas spirit.
braveshomer
true lol….that’s how the young people talk these days I guess….Get off my lawn!
avenger65
I think Socomfort was coming from a good and more realistic place. I’m working out in the gym right now and the place is packed. I guess they should all be in church, even the Muslims and the Buddhists.
Bill the Cat
Just to be clear, my reply to CubsWin108 was not meant to be nasty, it was done in good jest. I mean c’mon, I’m here reading as well lol.
99CaptainJudge99
@CubsWin108- At least you are rooting for the correct NL team. You the man!
Slider_withcheese
Most likely was written before Christmas and just published today. Or he hates his family. Either work.
Yankee Clipper
Merry Christmas MLBTR!
Merry Christmas everyone!
wvredsfan
Merry Christmas
agnes gooch
Merry Christmas Yankee Clipper and to all of the tireless writers at MLBTR and the kind informed posters who brighten a winter day!
Flanster
Merry Christmas,Clip!!!
DarkSide830
Merry Christmas all.
Cat Mando
Merry Happy Christmahannakwanzaayule Greetings (just covering all bases…lol)
drasco036
Happy Saturnalia
Javia135
C’mon guys, it’s Festivus. We’re done with the airing of grievances, it’s time for the feats of strength.
Cat Mando
Thanks Sheldon
I.M. Insane
Merry Christmas Yankee Clipper and all!
dh4all
You didn’t list the Angels biggest need: a new owner
Roidville Slugger
I think it’s an NL article…now don’t use that joke tomorrow, too, for the AL article. Haha!
EndinStealth
When did the Angels move to the NL?
rememberthecoop
Jed Hoyer is asleep at the switch. Somebody wake him up! They are a joke.
Trotski
New manager fixes everything
avenger65
rememberthecoop: Come on, let’s not be negative about the not-so-lovable-losers. After all, they did sign Ohtani, Yamamoto, Snell and every other top FA on the market. Can Alonso be far behind?
rondon
The only thing the Cubs have “addressed” is the Christmas cards they sent out.
clayton.shields88
Pinch hitting?
This one belongs to the Reds
The Reds never addressed their biggest need, starting pitching, in a meaningful way and at this point it looks like they will not, just like last offseason, last year during the season and at the trade deadline when they had a big reason to do so.
I think if Po Boy shot himself in the foot on Pete Rose Way, some people would think he made a good move.
cguy
By “positions” the author meant those players who still use bats= excluding pitching. Almost every NL team needs more pitching or pitching depth. BTW if Krall shot himself in the foot wouldn’t you have to give him credit for actually achieving something he set out to do?
cguy
According to baseball reference Reds were #1 in the NL in relief pitching with 10.2 WAR and 6th in all pitching in NL with 15.2 WAR.
Cincyfan85
It’s not even January. I think you’re jumping to gun to say they won’t address it. They wouldn’t have spent the money they’ve spent this off-season if they weren’t interested in upgrading the rotation. Dylan Cease isn’t worth what the White Sox want.
As far as the article goes, Jake Fraley and Will Benson are practically the same player. They both only hit RHP and play below average defense. I’m not sure they make a good platoon.
This one belongs to the Reds
The history of this front office proves they won’t address it.
You are right about Fraley and Benson. I think Fraley may end up more a DH than RF going forward due to constant injury. He might also be moved.
Ed koverman
I was going to post the same comment about Fraley and Benson
avenger65
Cincyfan: You’re right about Getz asking too much from the Reds. Even if the Sox got those players, they’ll never reach their potential in Chicago. Even though there has been a lot of negativity about Cease, you’d be glad to have him. This season he had no defense behind him. Him and Giolito left a lot of games with leads only to have our pathetic bullpen blow it. Once players get away from the Sox environment, they’re going to be much better.
Armaments216
I doubt Fraley and Benson would be platoon partners. They could each be parts of the strong side of a platoon but they’re both awful versus left-handed pitching. Versus lefties the Reds will be using Steer in LF and maybe Fairchild or Hinds in RF, or even trying another of their right-handed infielders there.
A'sfaninLondonUK
@this one belongs…
Is Pete Rose Way a crooked alley?
Phree4u
Whatever it is, it’s a dead end street with no plans to annex land to extend it to the HOF.
MortDingle
Mariners need Josh Naylor if they want to continue to be the T- mobile maulers…/s
EndinStealth
Using lowest bwar as the weakest team aspect is misleading. Cardinals pitching was far more impactful than their pinch hitting.
Superstar Prospect Wander Javier
Weakest aspect doesn’t necessarily mean biggest need
avenger65
EdwinStealth: That’s why analytics are garbage. Anyone who watched the Cards knows they need pitching. Mozeliak said they needed pitching, not pinch-hitting, and he went out and got two good ones.
EndinStealth
This, just like all metrics, needs to be weighted properly. Pinch hitting doesn’t have the impact that starting pitching has. So determining weakest by this particular analytic doesn’t work.
gbs42
Thanks for the hard work by every MLBTR writer year round. I hope today is very light reporting-wise and you all get some time off to spend with loved ones.
agnes gooch
Happy Holidays gbs42 and thanks to all the hard workers at MLBTR for year round baseball heaven!
Rishi
Not sure how Fletcher is an “upgrade” over Nicky Lopez. Although using pinch hitter seems like an easy way out I commend you for not saying Rosario was a “weak link” simply because he’s on a team of superstars. He’s always being bashed but he’s a decent player really. Not outstanding. But decent.
RunDMC
Rosario is “average”, which says more about that lineup and expectations. Considering his 1.1-bWAR each of the last 3 years (2020 inc), that’s about the 8M going rate in FA per 1-WAR, but you know AA is willing to pay more via Kelenic to a long term value, if he exceeds that 1.1-bWAR/season through ’29.
The bench bat will be improved before ST considering most of the names still available on the FA market, if they go through route. Don’t think Grissom would be used as a 4th OF.
avenger65
Run DMC: Your post reminds me of the 1979 Pirates, who had the best bench I’ve ever seen, led by Rennie Stenett and Gene Cline, whose name isn’t listed in BR for some reason.
BigFred
This guy? baseball-reference.com/players/c/clinege01.shtml
Nats ain't what they used to be
His name was ClineS not Cline. He is in BR.
Nats ain't what they used to be
Interesting you thought of Clines as an asset. Of 8 seasons with at least 200 AB he had OPS+ over 100 only twice and had six season OPS+ under 86.
avenger65
Rishi: On a team like the Braves, they can afford to carry a glove-first player.
oscar gamble
Fletcher is not even on the 40 man roster.
Flanster
Justin Turner to the Mets—-get it done
dankyank
I always love these rundown types of pieces. Thank you and happy holidays.
The big head scratcher here is the Giants’ complacence around shortstop. The free agent class at the position is historically weak and to use one example, Kyle Farmer’s 2023 production would translate into an extra 3 wins (1.6 WAR vs. Crawford’s -1.3).
Conversely, the starting pitching market is deep and the team has plenty of funds available. Zaidi has historically excelled at crafting short term deals under $50 million to preserve draft picks.
Zaidi himself has admitted that San Francisco, through no fault of his own, is a polarizing city for most free agents. Quality 4 and 5 starters, along with a high floor placeholder is more than enough to push them back into the wildcard race.
I agree with the high floor approach, but leaving black holes at numerous positions isn’t an option for a team hoping for balanced, across the board production.
The front office isn’t doing enough to grab the low hanging fruit and present a viable contender to future free agents.
sufferforsnakes
Finally, a writer who understands Lawlar is our future SS, not Perdomo, who has more versatility around the infield.
Merry Christmas, all.
User 1404051815
The Pirates began the off season with one starting pitcher. They watched as a bunch of low cost guys signed with other teams and brought in two soft throwing junk ball types who are “iffy” at best. If this is “addressing their needs,” then maybe it’s time for a better plan. You wouldn’t run a mom and pop corner store like these guys
Two years away from being two years away. Perpetual rebuilding. It’s the Pirates Way
YourDreamGM
Please name this bunch of low cost guys who will be better than Perez.
User 1404051815
Dream, I always appreciate your comments and insights, but too often you see the glass-half-full aspects of the front office’s dealings.
The point of departure I always have is that any fan would think their team is at least—at least—trying to build a program that will be competitive season after season. Granted, we have different views as to what “competitive” means.
But it’s a stark reality here that this team will always be “two years away from being two years away”.
The guys they’ve brought in are place holders until the surgically repaired starters return and/or the young guns are ready. I get that
You documented the situation Nutting is in for me a couple years ago and it was right on target. But it’s hard to see the Pirates as is competing for anything but last place in the NL Central this season.
Injuries happen.
You’d hope that the farm system provides a pipeline of guys who can step in and perform at MLB level but while they’ve re-stocked the minors, that largely hasn’t happened—a departure from true farm systems you see in places like TB, Baltimore, Arizona or Texas
And you’d hope that once in a while, the idea of spending a little more to augment the guys who are performing would be the goal. That is never the method, however
I’ll refrain from listing guys who’ve gone to other teams this off season as I’m sure you’d pick them apart as being overpays and the like
They’ve added scrap and nothing more
5-inning guys who if lucky will yield .500 w/l records at best. Maybe that rates as “ competitive” to some but one can’t help but feel it’s business as usual for ‘24, struggling to get to 75 wins
Happy Holidays
YourDreamGM
I think Perez will be as good or better than not 1 or 2 but multiple guys signed for more $ than him. He is my #1 favorite pitcher signing by any team. Will he be better than guys making 25 30 million a year? Unlikely. But 10 12 15 million a year most likely.
Just wondering who you thought was better? Because I didn’t see many or any.
Bill the Cat
Just to be clear, my reply to CubsWin108 was not meant to be nasty, it was done in good jest. I mean c’mon, I’m here reading as well lol.
deepfryar
Is pinch hitter a position now?
ray1
Merry Christmas, MLBTR! Wouldn’t mind seeing Hoskins at 1B for the Cubs.
avenger65
Ray1: Then where would they play Alonso, who is right now being fitted for a cubbie uniform?
Mojo37
The Dodgers weakest position was pinch hitting? Not starting pitching?
ericl
Bohm had 97 RBI’s & hit 20 homer runs. He’s fine offensively. If the Phillies leave him at 3rd and let him work on his defense there, he can improve. He’ll never be Arenado or Chapman defensively, but he can be solid. Bohm was hurt by bouncing between third & first. Let him play 3B & work with him on his D.
619MetroFriars
Has there ever been thought to have Machado play 1B? This would allow Cronenworth to move back to 2B (where he was a two time all star) and then Kim could take over at 3B. As for DH? Campusano can DH unless we intend to sign someone similar to a Mitch Garver type to take over at DH. Why not shift Machado to 1B? He has the size for that position, and I’m sure would catch on there quickly defensively. It would also help stretch out his long contract as his energy would be slightly more preserved as a 1B. Kyle Higashioka would start as catcher while Campy can DH in the above scenario.
Javia135
Machado plays GG quality 3B and has a cannon arm. All that would be wasted at 1B. It is much cheaper to get a quality bat at 1B than 3B.
619MetroFriars
Then the Padres should sign JD Martinez to a two year deal to take over at DH.
BlueSkies_LA
Pitching not included?
Javia135
I’m pretty sure that is why this is called “weakest positions”. It seems almost every team needs pitching, so this appears to be only about position players.
BlueSkies_LA
We might expect otherwise given the introduction, “let’s take a look at what baseball’s teams have already done to fix their roster’s weakest links from last season.”
619MetroFriars
We are led by a trio of stars in: Joey Musgrove/Yu Darvish/Mike King. With Drew Thorpe on the way. (Our pitching will be just fine)
619MetroFriars
Padres should think about trading for Gavin Sheets. Sheets needs a change of scenery. Maybe trade Steven Wilson to the White Sox so that the Padres can get cheap help in Left Field as replacement for Juan Soto?
Blackouts are racist
Dumb article and my case in point, Cardinals finished at the bottom of the Central and their weakest area is pinch hitting? I stopped reading at that point.
619MetroFriars
Kyle Higashioka is a top 5 catcher in the National League.
aberdeen101
Pirates haven’t addressed the C or 2B, or SP slot at all and it’s embarrassing. Ali Sanchez was a horrid sign. Is the Pirate rotation of Keller, Perez, and Gonzo any better?
petcopadre
So no mention of the Padres obtaining 4 pitchers to address that need? Instead, just negative journalism. Weak.
619MetroFriars
Amen, brother.
Javia135
This article is only about position player needs, not pitching. If you notice, pitching isn’t mentioned for ANY team.
riffraff
I have no idea why I feel this way but my gut is telling me the cubs are going to bring back either Rizzo or DJ Lemathieu or worse..both. Not sure how smart it would be or if either team would have interest in some sort of swap but I think its gonna happen.
Nats ain't what they used to be
Nats rebuild is getting odd. Sure be nice to see some real progress.