Braves appear to be slight favorites for Realmuto
Dec. 15: The race for J.T. Realmuto may have a new leader, as Craig Mish of SiriusXM reports that the Braves appear to be slight favorites to land the Marlins backstop. Per Mish, third baseman Austin Riley -- Atlanta's No. 5 prospect (No. 43 overall, per MLB Pipeline) -- is on the table, though nothing is imminent.
Surprisingly, Mish notes that the Yankees are still in, even though general manager Brian Cashman once again gave Gary Sanchez a vote of confidence as New York's starting catcher during the Winter Meetings and said the club wasn't pursuing any primary backstops.
The Mets also remain in the mix, as do the Rays and Padres, though Mish deemed the latter two clubs "long shots." Meanwhile, the Reds have fallen behind.
Atlanta has one of the top farm systems in baseball, but it's unclear just how far the club is willing to go to get Realmuto when it already has veteran catchers Tyler Flowers and Brian McCann on the roster.
Dec. 15: The race for J.T. Realmuto may have a new leader, as Craig Mish of SiriusXM reports that the Braves appear to be slight favorites to land the Marlins backstop. Per Mish, third baseman Austin Riley -- Atlanta's No. 5 prospect (No. 43 overall, per MLB Pipeline) -- is on the table, though nothing is imminent.
Surprisingly, Mish notes that the Yankees are still in, even though general manager Brian Cashman once again gave Gary Sanchez a vote of confidence as New York's starting catcher during the Winter Meetings and said the club wasn't pursuing any primary backstops.
The Mets also remain in the mix, as do the Rays and Padres, though Mish deemed the latter two clubs "long shots." Meanwhile, the Reds have fallen behind.
Atlanta has one of the top farm systems in baseball, but it's unclear just how far the club is willing to go to get Realmuto when it already has veteran catchers Tyler Flowers and Brian McCann on the roster.