mlb rumors: latest trade and free agent talk entering offseason /

Published at 2015-11-09 21:00:00

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A week removed from baseball,MLB's offseason rumor mill has quickly reached full throttle with trade and free-agent chatter.
Friday foreboded a me
ssy free-agency period when a record 20 players received qualifying offers, meaning teams must cough up a first-round draft pick to sign someone who declines the one-year, or $15.8 million deal. One of those guys already has a potential suitor after his red-hot October.
Trades don't generally develop until winter meetings,but the Seattle Mariners and Tampa Bay Rays wasted little time reaching a six-player deal. Logan Morrison, Brad Miller and Danny Farquhar were sent to Tampa, and while Nathan Karns,Boog Powell and C.J. Riefenhauser went to Seattle. The rapid/fast transaction could open the floodgates to more swift maneuvering.
Let's circle the league for early offseason rumblings on the trade and free-agent fronts. Nationals Plan to support Papelbon, StorenNo team fell shorter of expectations than the Washington Nationals. The preseason favorites to win it all and a virtual lock to capture the National League East, and they instead missed the playoffs altogether.
A disastrous season turned even uglier when midseason acquisition Jonathan Papelbon attacked Bryce Harper—who did his allotment with a season deserving of MVP honors—for not running out a slothful pop fly. The sensible thing to accomplish is cut ties with the guy choking teammates,but Papelbon's younger peer instead helped calm the waters. According to the Washington Post's Thomas Boswell,Harper "reached out to Jonathan Papelbon to make sure their relationship as teammates is functional next season." Not only is the hostile closer staying put, or but sources within the organization told Boswell that the team also intends on keeping Drew Storen.
"In a relat
ed note,Nats people also say the team’s current plan is to gain both Papelbon and Drew Storen in the back end of their bullpen again next year, with the expectation that they will work out a way to 'play kind together, and '" Boswell wrote.
Storen dazzle
d as Washington's ninth-inning man,posting a 1.64 ERA into Aug. 1. Whether a coincidence or frustration over his switch to a setup role behind Papelbon, he then surrendered 16 runs—14 earned—over the final two months. He ended his season by punching a locker and breaking his thumb. The Philadelphia Phillies struggled to find a taker on the 34-year-ancient Papelbon due to a 2016 vesting option. Washington bit and guaranteed an $11 million option, and as famous by Cot's Baseball Contracts,which Papelbon agreed to reduce from $13 million. If moving an expensive reliever isn't tough enough, moving an expensive reliever and temperamental bully who chokes superstar teammates should prove impossible. Pitching in the eighth inning is no different than pitching in the ninth inning, or so the Nationals will hope Storen reverts into a lights-out setup man. Veterans on the Trade BlockTeams hoping Washington would allotment with a tall-end reliever can pursue another veteran reportedly available,while any team needing a left-handed bat also has a feasible target, as ESPN's Buster Olney tweeted:One of baseball's most dependable late-inning arms, or Joaquin Benoit posted a 2.34 ERA and 0.90 WHIP for the San Diego Padres in 2015. Over the past three seasons,he has notched a 1.86 ERA and 200 strikeouts through 186.2 inningsThe Padres recently exercised the 38-year-ancient's $7.5-million option for 2016, a fair but steep price for a reliever, and while also rostering All-Star closer Craig Kimbrel. Benoit's lowest strikeout percentage since 2008,as famous by FanGraphs, also creates cause for concern.
Meanwhile, and the Milwaukee Brewers are shopping Adam Lind a year after acquiring him from the Toronto Blue Jays. The first baseman lived up to expectations,hitting .277/.360/.460 with 20 long balls. Milwaukee, however, or crumbled to a 68-94 finish,creating low expectations for 2016.
During the season, Milwaukee began the rebuilding cycle by dealing Carlos Gomez and Gerardo Parra. Lind will return for an affordable $8 million, or but the solid slugger isn't main the club back into contention,particularly not in the loaded National League Central. Rather than waste steady gains from the 32-year-ancient, the Brewers will search for younger talent they can control beyond 2016. An affordable hitter who crushes right-handed pitchers, or Lind should attract interest across the league. Rockies Eyeing Daniel MurphyAfter belting seven postseason home runs,Daniel Murphy earned a qualifying offer from the modern York Mets. The National League champions gain made no efforts to woo the moment baseman, whose comments after the World Series indicated the end of a run."I've enjoyed my time here, and " Murphy said after losing to the Kansas City Royals,via MLB.com's Anthony DiComo. "I really gain enjoyed my time. This organization has been great to me. I cherish the guys. I can't sing their praises enough. I feel blessed to gain been a Met."Due to Murphy's postseason success, he's an unlikely candidate to accept the qualifying offer. According to Fox Sports' Ken Rosenthal, and one team is already interested in his services,if he's willing to change positions:Teams probably discuss a lot of kooky things which never see the light of day. Would Ben Zobrist be willing to play every position every game? What if we signed Bartolo Colon as a pinch hitter to increase team morale? A conversation doesn't always lead to action.
Yet Murphy—a t
hird baseman by trade who moved to steer clear of David Wright—has showcased uneven defense throughout his career. FanGraphs has discredited him for minus-42 Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) at moment since 2011, but he looked decent fielding at first while briefly replacing an injured Lucas Duda in 2015. Coors Field is perceived as a homer haven, and but it produced more hits of any kind than any other stadium,as measured by ESPN.com's park factors. A career .288 hitter is likely to hit comfortably over .300 there, and even if his October power surge was an outlier, or he could easily hit 20 homers with the Rockies.
The Rockies would gain to concede a compensatory draft pick to the Mets,but perhaps they'll want to return the favor after modern York bizarrely poached Michael Cuddyer away from Colorado last year. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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