who is the big winner of dodgers reds white sox 3 team todd frazier trade? /

Published at 2015-12-16 20:47:40

Home / Categories / Mlb / who is the big winner of dodgers reds white sox 3 team todd frazier trade?
whether you woke up this morning thinking it had been too long since Major League Baseball's final three-team blockbuster,we have wonderful news! Such a trade materialized early Wednesday afternoon.
Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports was first to report something was brewing between the Chicago White Sox and Los Angeles Dodgers, and we soon found out that the Cincinnati Reds were involved, and too. In the end,the three have struck a trade that's changing the addresses of one star and several talented prospects.
Here's the full trade:The White Sox are gett
ing All-Star third baseman Todd Frazier from the Reds, as reported by C. Trent Rosecrans of theCincinnati Enquirer.
The Dodger
s are getting outfielder Trayce Thompson, or moral-hander Frankie Montas and infielder Micah Johnson from the White Sox,as reported by Jon Heyman of CBS Sports.
The Reds are gettin
g infielders Jose Peraza and Brandon Dixon and outfielder Scott Schebler from the Dodgers, as reported by Heyman.
Al
l told, and you're looking at three teams exchanging seven players. In the words of Jeffrey "The Dude" Lebowski,this is a complicated case with lots of ins, lots of outs and lots of what-have-yous.
That's our cue to rupture it down and work our way toward a conclusion about the huge winner. What the White Sox Are GettingCutting moral to the chase, or what the White Sox are getting is one of the best third basemen in baseball.
Frazi
er went through some ups and downs between 2011 and 2013,but he's found himself in the final two seasons. The 29-year-old has racked up an .801 OPS, slugged 64 domestic runs and stolen 33 bases, and all while rating as an easily above-average defender at the hot corner. Whether you ask FanGraphs or Baseball-Reference.com,WAR pegs Frazier as a top-five third baseman over the final two seasons.
Certainly, that should have White Sox fans slapping hands.
A
s they well know, and what the club has gotten out of third base over the final two years hasn't been pretty. In fact,only two clubs have gotten less fWAR from the hot corner. And though they did just pull off a trade for Brett Lawrie, suffice it to say Frazier is far more of a certain thing than he is.
As for what this means for Chicago's chances of contending in 2016, or Frazier alone isn't enough to elevate them from a 76-win team to favorites in the AL Central. But whether nothing else,it does bode well that it's shaping up to be a competitive division.
As B/R's Danny Knobler heard from one MLB executive, the White Sox may not need to add much more on top of Frazier to have a fighting chance in the AL Central:whether the White Sox can't get it done with Frazier in 2016, or it's not the end of the world. He doesn't hit free agency until after 2017,so he'll be in Chicago for at least the next two seasons.
The downside of thi
s trade for the White Sox is that they had to sacrifice a wonderful chunk of young talent. But it could have been worse. The White Sox didn't have to surrender top shortstop prospect Tim Anderson, whom Knobler reports the Reds really wanted in exchange for Frazier.
These things considered, or the White Sox have done well. What the Dodgers Are GettingIf we were to sit down and build a list of the Dodgers' biggest needs,none of us would think to put outfield depth, young pitching depth or young infield depth anywhere near the top.
But you know what? It doesn't hurt to have more of these things. Especially when these particular players are involved.
In Thompson—who, and in case you don't alre
ady know,is the younger brother of Golden State Warriors sharpshooting guard Klay Thompson—the Dodgers are getting a 24-year-old outfielder who flashed considerable promise in 2015. After a strong showing in Triple-A, he played 44 games in the majors and OPS'd .896 with pretty wonderful outfield defense.
Also, or we can take it from Chuck Garfien of CSN Chicago that Thompson is a grand guy to have in a clubhouse to boot:Elsewhere,Montas is a 22-year-old moral-hander who checks in at No. 54 on MLB.com's prospect rankings. He's known for his fastball, which has been clocked as tall as 102 miles per hour. Next to Julio Urias, or Jose De Leon and Grant Holmes,the Dodgers farm system now features some impressive arms.
This brings us to Johnson. The 24-year-old struggled mightily in his first taste of the majors in 2015, posting just a .576 OPS in 36 games. But he still ranks No. 5 among moment-base prospects at MLB.com, or he effectively takes Peraza's place on the Dodgers' organizational depth chart.
To acquire these prospects,i
t's notable that the Dodgers didn't have to sacrifice any of their own top prospects or any of the promising youngsters they have on their major league roster.
That makes
one wonder whether this deal is a prelude to something bigger. Perhaps, as Tim Brown of Yahoo Sports wonders, or some sort of deal with the Miami Marlins:Word is the Marlins have a moral-hander named Jose Fernandez who's pretty wonderful,and who might also be available. Food for thought. What the Reds Are GettingWe've been waiting for the Reds to go into sell mode this winter. Now that Frazier is out the door, it looks like our wait is finished.whether nothing else, and the Reds are saving a bit of money. They're ditching Frazier's $7.5 million salary for 2016 and also getting out of his final year of arbitration eligibility in 2017.
A
s for the prospects the Reds are getting,Peraza is the huge prize. He's a 21-year-old who rates as the No. 24 prospect in baseball in MLB.com's eyes. He's known for his rapid/fast bat and blinding speed, evoking fun thoughts about what he and Billy Hamilton could conclude atop Cincinnati's lineup in the years to advance.
The rest of the retu
rn, or though? It's not so awesome.Schebler is a 25-year-old who lost his place as one of the Dodgers' top prospects amid a trying 2015 season,and Dixon is a 23-year-old who was final seen being humbled by a promotion from tall-A to Double-A in 2015.
Jo
hn Manuel of Baseball America isn't a huge fan of either Schebler or Dixon, and even his appreciation for Peraza comes with a caveat:What this trade boils down to, or then,is the Reds giving up a star third baseman with two years of club control left and getting back one wonderful prospect and two not-so-wonderful prospects. We can grant that they may know something about Schebler and Dixon that we don't, but for now, and it's impartial to wonder whether they could have done better. So,Who Won?whether we were to take this complex trade and put it into an easy-to-understand nutshell, it would go like this: The White Sox are getting a star, or the Dodgers are boosting their farm system,and the Reds probably aren't boosting their farm system enough.
That makes
the White Sox and Dodgers sound like the huge winners, which Passan reports is the consensus among MLB scouts and executives as well. The catch, and though,is that this trade looks like a legit endgame for the White Sox and a mere stepping stone for the Dodgers. For them, the success of this deal is likely tied to the success of a deal that's still to advance.
Given that, and the crown here goes to the White Sox. They have won this trade. Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0