I cant believe we got Ryu. The rebuild is coming along nicely
Comment
JMobile
SBR Posting Legend
08-21-10
19074
#4377
Padres get pitcher Pierce Johnson. Never heard of him.
Comment
stevenash
Moderator
01-17-11
65568
#4378
Originally posted by JMobile
Padres get pitcher Pierce Johnson. Never heard of him.
He’s not a has been but he’s a never will be.
Comment
BigSpoon
SBR MVP
11-04-10
4113
#4379
Originally posted by koz-man
Source: Travis Shaw, Blue Jays have 1-year, $4M deal
Travis Shaw and the Toronto Blue Jays have agreed to a one-year, $4 million contract, a source confirmed to ESPN.
The source said the deal includes $675,000 in performance bonuses.
The deal ends up creating a swap of infielders between the Blue Jays and Milwaukee Brewers, who signed Justin Smoak to a one-year, $5 million contract last week.
After two impressive seasons in which he surpassed 30 home runs for the Brewers, Shaw regressed in 2019. The infielder, who was demoted and spent almost a month at Triple-A San Antonio, slumped to a .157 batting average with seven home runs and 16 RBIs in 86 games last season.
Shaw, 29, played mostly at third base in Milwaukee but also saw action at first and second. He was non-tendered after the season as the Brewers parted with a number of key players after finishing behind the St. Louis Cardinals in a heated National League Central race and losing in the wild-card game to the eventual World Series champion Washington Nationals.
"I kind of wanted a fresh start and was willing to risk to see what was out there, free-agent-wise," Shaw told Boston's WEEI after the season, explaining that he was made an offer by the Brewers but declined.
After he was acquired in a multiplayer deal with the Boston Red Sox, Shaw immediately made his impact felt with the Brewers, averaging 4.0 wins above replacement over the next two seasons. He batted .273 with 31 home runs and 101 RBIs in 2017 and followed that with a .241-32-86 line in 2018.
For his career, Shaw is hitting .244 with 99 home runs and 310 RBIs in five major league seasons.
I like the Jays getting Shaw for Smoak basically since Shaw can play multiple positions.
Comment
Cross
SBR Hall of Famer
04-15-11
5777
#4380
Shaw would need a serious bounce back year. He was awful last year.
Comment
JAKEPEAVY21
BARRELED IN @ SBR!
03-11-11
29294
#4381
Originally posted by jrgum3
Ian Kinsler announced his retirement and is set to join the Padres front office. Interesting development but makes sense since Kinsler was pretty much done. Thoughts Jake?
I like it. Getting him into the front office could be a shrewd move. As you said, he was done as a player.
Comment
jrgum3
SBR Hall of Famer
07-21-17
7005
#4382
Originally posted by batt33
Free agent Nicholas Castellanos values Giants' culture
SAN DIEGO -- With an intriguing but young group of starting pitchers, the Padres have spent the offseason trying to build a lockdown bullpen to shorten games and ease the burden on their rotation.
That bullpen continued to come into focus on Monday.
San Diego signed 28-year-old right-hander Pierce Johnson
Comment
Stallion
SBR MVP
03-21-10
3617
#4384
The Jays are finally making some moves!!!
Comment
stevenash
Moderator
01-17-11
65568
#4385
Originally posted by Cross
Shaw would need a serious bounce back year. He was awful last year.
Shaw I’m not worried about.
Comment
batt33
SBR Hall of Famer
12-23-16
6025
#4386
Originally posted by jrgum3
This would be a nice addition Castellanos is versatile and can swing the bat. Would definitely help the Giants rebuild process.
Yes, Hopefully the Giants can pull the trigger.
Comment
JaimeMiro
SBR MVP
03-14-17
2515
#4387
Chance Adams on his way to the Royals
Comment
jrgum3
SBR Hall of Famer
07-21-17
7005
#4388
Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21
I like it. Getting him into the front office could be a shrewd move. As you said, he was done as a player.
Got to respect a guy who knows when his time is up especially since injuries prevented him from giving 100% every day. You're probably right having a former player in the front office could pay off for the Padres.
Comment
Chi_archie
SBR Aristocracy
07-22-08
63167
#4389
Originally posted by JaimeMiro
Chance Adams on his way to the Royals
Nice pick up
Comment
ApricotSinner32
Restricted User
11-28-10
10648
#4390
Originally posted by jrgum3
Got to respect a guy who knows when his time is up especially since injuries prevented him from giving 100% every day. You're probably right having a former player in the front office could pay off for the Padres.
Comment
koz-man
SBR Hall of Famer
11-21-08
7102
#4391
Wade Miley, Reds finish off $15 million, 2-year contract
CINCINNATI -- The Reds added to their already deep starting pitching Wednesday by finalizing a $15 million, two-year contract with Wade Miley that adds a left-hander to their rotation.
The 33-year-old will get $6 million in 2020 and $8 million the following year. Cincinnati has a $10 million club option for 2022 with a $1 million, and Miley can earn $500,000 annually in performance bonuses based on innings.
Wade Miley, Reds finish off $15 million, 2-year contract
CINCINNATI -- The Reds added to their already deep starting pitching Wednesday by finalizing a $15 million, two-year contract with Wade Miley that adds a left-hander to their rotation.
The 33-year-old will get $6 million in 2020 and $8 million the following year. Cincinnati has a $10 million club option for 2022 with a $1 million, and Miley can earn $500,000 annually in performance bonuses based on innings.
The Indians brought an end to the Corey Kluber era earlier this month, trading the right-hander to the Rangers for reliever Emmanuel Clase and outfielder Delino DeShields. On paper, it may not look like a great return for a two-time Cy Young winner, though it turns out teams just weren’t champing at the bit to surrender hauls for Kluber – a 33-year-old’s who expensive ($17.5MM guarantee for 2020) and coming off an injury-marred campaign. Thanks to those factors, when the Indians left this month’s Winter Meetings, the majority of offers they’d received only included players at the Single-A level, Terry Pluto of cleveland.com relays. So, in an effort to stay competitive in 2020, they took a pair of major leaguers (including Clase, whom they hope can blossom into a late-game force). The goal is to use some of the Kluber savings on an infielder, another outfielder and more bullpen help, per Pluto. The Indians may have crossed one of those needs off the list when they agreed to a $6.25MM deal with second baseman Cesar Hernandez on Monday.
The rebuilding Blue Jays made one of the biggest splashes of the offseason Sunday in agreeing to a four-year, $80MM contract with left-hander Hyun-Jin Ryu. While the former Dodger was among the game’s premier pitchers last season, his age (33 in March) and extensive injury history make him an especially risky pickup at such a high price tag. There’s a solid chance the deal will become regrettable for Toronto, Buster Olney of ESPN observes (subscription links), though he nonetheless applauds the Blue Jays for taking a chance in an attempt improve and become more interesting. As those who’ve followed the past few offseasons know, many teams have drawn the ire of fans and media for sitting on the sidelines instead of making earnest efforts to put a more competitive product on the field. At the very least, considering the active winter the Jays have had, they’re trying.
More from Olney (subscription), who expects Rays righty Charlie Morton to become a hot commodity on the trade market in the next year. There are no indications the Rays, coming off a stellar season thanks in large part to Morton’s elite output, are considering parting with the 36-year-old now. But with so few (or no) sure bets left on the free-agent pitching market, he’d surely bring back a sizable return in a deal at this moment. Morton’s also on a contract that would be appealing to most teams, as he’ll make $15MM in 2020. He has a $15MM option for 2021 that will become guarantee if he spends fewer than 30 days on the injured list, but it’ll likely be a good problem for his employer if it does vest. Morton does not have no-trade protection built into his deal, so Tampa Bay could move him without his permission. However, Olney writes that the Rays have immense respect for the Cy Young contender, and if they do become open to parting with him, they’ll “probably feel out Morton” first.
Last season was one to forget for Orioles righty David Hess, who logged a 7.09 ERA/7.26 FIP over 80 innings. But Hess told Roch Kubatko of MASNsports.com he’s working diligently this winter in hopes of landing a rotation spot for 2020. Specifically, Hess followed the lead of teammate John Means by heading to P3 (Premier Pitching & Performance) in St. Louis. As Kubatko explains, P3 “offers personalized baseball training to athletes across the Midwest with the goal of providing instruction and individualized strength training.” Means, who recommended P3 to Hess, used the center’s guidance last offseason and then turned into one of the O’s true bright spots in 2019. Hess informed Kubatko that “this is really the first offseason where I’ve had baseball-specific work outside of just playing catch. Really trying to work on delivery-based stuff. Working on, not necessarily arm strength – I’ve always worked on that – but really cleaning up my arm path. So it’s similar in a lot of ways, but it’s also different. I guess the best way to say it is it’s very hyper focused.”
Comment
stevenash
Moderator
01-17-11
65568
#4394
Rich Hill and his wife got busted at the Patriots game Sunday for being dickheads.
Caitlyn Hill was trying to enter with an oversized bag when stopped raised a big fuss and wouldn’t get into the police car. Rich intervened and both wound up going to jail for resisting.
Idiots.
Comment
mr. leisure
SBR Posting Legend
01-29-08
17507
#4395
Originally posted by stevenash
Rich Hill and his wife got busted at the Patriots game Sunday for being dickheads.
Caitlyn Hill was trying to enter with an oversized bag when stopped raised a big fuss and wouldn’t get into the police car. Rich intervened and both wound up going to jail for resisting.
The Blue Jays, White Sox, Rangers and Angels each entered the winter amid multiyear playoff droughts and on the heels of sub-.500 showings in 2019. No one from that American League quartet has been a sorrier bunch for longer than the White Sox, owners of an 11-year postseason-less skid. The Blue Jays, Rangers and Angels have at least been relevant more recently than Chicago, but success has still escaped those other clubs for far too long. However, judging by the teams’ actions in the past weeks, they’ve had their fill of serving as doormats in their league. The offseason has gotten off to rollicking starts for all of these franchises, each of which has made more than one significant addition since the floodgates opened in November.
The Angels, they of the pitiful 72-90 record last season, finally look as if they’re in decent position to capitalize on all-world center fielder Mike Trout’s presence. They added the foremost position player on the market, third baseman Anthony Rendon, on a whopper of a contract worth $245MM over seven years. The rotation-needy Halos have also picked up a pair of starters in Dylan Bundy and Julio Teheran. Neither will be confused for an ace, but they should give the team much-needed competent innings at reasonable prices near the back of its rotation. If you’re a glass-half-empty type, though, you may be unimpressed by the Angels’ lack of a front-line starter pickup (though the return of Shohei Ohtani from Tommy John surgery should be a major help) and/or that they haven’t addressed their problems at catcher yet.
The White Sox, also coming off a 72-win season, have been extremely busy in upgrading their lineup. Their offense produced the third-fewest runs in the AL, but that should change for the better in a year with the signing of star catcher Yasmani Grandal (four years, $73MM). The White Sox also helped their cause by retaining first baseman/designated hitter Jose Abreu (three years, $50MM), and they’re clinging to hope that 24-year-old outfielder Nomar Mazara (acquired from Texas) will start living up to his immense promise now that he has changed teams. Even with those three in tow, the White Sox might not be done yet on the offensive end. They’re reportedly at the forefront of the sweepstakes for Edwin Encarnacion, yet another slugging 1B/DH, and remain in the mix for outfielder Nicholas Castellanos – possibly the second-best position player left in free agency.
Of course, upgrading at the plate hasn’t been Chicago’s sole focus. The White Sox made a large splash on the pitching side last weekend when they agreed to sign former Cy Young-winning southpaw Dallas Keuchel for three years and $55.5MM. He followed the much more modestly priced Gio Gonzalez as the second accomplished lefty the team signed for its rotation. With those two, ace Lucas Giolito, the high-upside Reynaldo Lopez–Dylan Cease–Michael Kopech trio, and (once he returns from Tommy John surgery) Carlos Rodon, the club actually has plenty to look forward to with regards to its starting staff.
The same can be said for the Blue Jays and Rangers, who have each spent the majority of the offseason bettering their rotations. Toronto, a lowly 67-95 last season, just took a four-year, $80MM gamble on ex-Dodger Hyun-Jin Ryu. After offering elite production in his final year as a Dodger, Ryu’s in line to lead a Jays staff that will also consist of fellow new additions Tanner Roark, Chase Anderson, Matt Shoemaker (returning from a torn ACL) and perhaps some combination of ex-Japanese star Shun Yamaguchi (yet another just-signed hurler), Trent Thornton, Jacob Waguespack, Ryan Borucki, Anthony Kay and stud prospect Nate Pearson. Unlike late last season, after the Jays traded two vet starters (Marcus Stroman and Aaron Sanchez) and their rotation was a barren wasteland, possibilities abound.
On the offensive side, the Jays replaced departed first baseman Justin Smoak (now a Brewer) with ex-Brewer Travis Shaw in the corner infield. It’s hard to see that as an upgrade on paper, though, after the woeful 2019 Shaw had. But for one year and $4MM, it’ll look brilliant if Shaw returns anywhere near the 3.0-WAR production he managed from 2017-18.
As for Texas, this offseason looks like a bit of a mixed bag. The Rangers have not added at third base or catcher, two positions that still look iffy, even though they partook in the Rendon derby and have also been part of Josh Donaldson’s market. On the other hand, their rotation looks far superior to the 2019 group that got very little outside of the Mike Minor–Lance Lynn duo and played a key role in a 78-84 finish. Those two are back, while two-time Cy Young winner Corey Kluber (acquired from the Indians), Kyle Gibson (three years, $28MM) and Jordan Lyles (two years, $16MM) will round out the quintet. For the first time in a while, it’s fair to say the Rangers’ rotation looks strong one through five.
Comment
stevenash
Moderator
01-17-11
65568
#4402
Originally posted by JMobile
Calhoun with the dBacks
He was expendable now that Rendon is in Anaheim.
I always thought he was overrated anyway.
Comment
JaimeMiro
SBR MVP
03-14-17
2515
#4403
Can Yankees find a way to trade Trade J.A. Happ?!
Comment
jrgum3
SBR Hall of Famer
07-21-17
7005
#4404
White Sox not done adding pieces to the puzzle. Their lineup will be formidable if they land Encarnacion.
Comment
Chi_archie
SBR Aristocracy
07-22-08
63167
#4405
Originally posted by jrgum3
White Sox not done adding pieces to the puzzle. Their lineup will be formidable if they land Encarnacion.
We will see if their youth pans out
Comment
stevenash
Moderator
01-17-11
65568
#4406
Originally posted by jrgum3
White Sox not done adding pieces to the puzzle. Their lineup will be formidable if they land Encarnacion.
White Sox lineup is formidable right now without Encarnacion, with him they would be even more dangerous.
I'm not a White Sox fan nor do I pretend to be but I wish them well this season.
Comment
BigSpoon
SBR MVP
11-04-10
4113
#4407
Originally posted by JaimeMiro
Can Yankees find a way to trade Trade J.A. Happ?!
$17M is alot for him, they will probably have to attach a prospect along with his contract.