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Senin, 31 Juli 2023

Cubs Acquire Jeimer Candelario - MLB Trade Rumors

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Jeimer Candelario is headed back to Chicago. The Cubs announced they acquired the switch-hitting third baseman from the Nationals for prospects DJ Herz and Kevin Made. The Cubs had an open 40-man roster spot after outrighting Edwin Ríos yesterday.

Candelario was one of the best rental hitters on the market after a strong four months in Washington. It was exactly what the Nats had envisioned when signing him to a one-year, $5MM free agent contract last winter.

Originally signed by the Cubs as an amateur more than a decade ago, Candelario made his big league debut with Chicago. His first stint on the North Side was short-lived. He played in five games in 2016 and 11 more the following season before being dealt to the Tigers in the Justin Wilson trade, as the Cubs pushed in young talent for veterans while trying to defend their World Series title.

Candelario got his first extended run down the stretch in Detroit and was an everyday player by the following season. He was a below-average regular for the first two years but took a significant step forward in 2020. Candelario carried that over a full schedule the following season, when he led the majors in doubles. Between those two seasons, he hit .278/.356/.458 in more than 800 trips to the plate.

As was the case for essentially everyone in the Detroit lineup, things fell apart in 2022. Candelario slumped to a .217/.272/.361 line over 124 games. The Tigers non-tendered him in lieu of paying around $7MM for his final season of arbitration eligibility. While it’s a move Detroit probably wishes they had back in hindsight, the subsequent $5MM free agent deal indicates the market didn’t value Candelario as a $7MM player just a few months ago.

The 29-year-old has certainly elevated his stock since that point. He has more or less regained his 2020-21 form. Candelario hit .258/.342/.481 through 419 plate appearances with Washington. He connected on 16 homers and 30 doubles, ranking fifth in the majors in the latter category. He’s walking at a roughly average 8.6% clip against a decent 21% strikeout rate.

Candelario has been better from the left side of the plate this season, a departure from his early-career work. He’d typically fared better against southpaws but now has similar platoon splits overall. Since the start of 2020, he’s a .253/.334/.438 hitter against right-handed pitching and owns a .256/.330/.437 line versus lefties. That well-rounded offensive production adds to a Chicago lineup built mostly on strong depth as opposed to impact talent aside from Cody Bellinger.

While his profile has mostly been built on offense, Candelario has also gotten solid reviews from public metrics for his third base defense this year. Defensive Runs Saved has pegged him two runs above par in 834 1/3 innings of hot corner work, while Statcast has estimated him as four runs above average. Candelario had gotten mixed to below-average marks throughout his time in Detroit but should at least be a solid gloveman in Chicago.

He has some experience at first base as well but hasn’t played anywhere aside from third since 2020. The Cubs could plug him in at either spot but will presumably use him more often at the hot corner. Nick MadrigalPatrick WisdomChristopher Morel and Miles Mastrobuoni have been part of a revolving door at the position. Morel has raked but isn’t a good defender. Wisdom hits for power but doesn’t consistently put the ball in play; Madrigal has the opposite profile. Candelario is the most balanced of the group.

It’s a modest financial addition for Chicago. Candelario is due around $1.67MM in salary through year’s end. He’d tack on another $200K in incentives if he reaches 600 plate appearances, though that’s also fairly modest. As calculated by Roster Resource, the Cubs have a luxury tax number a bit north of $228MM.

That’s a little less than $5MM shy of the $233MM base threshold. It had seemed the Cubs were trending towards staying below that mark and selling away veteran pieces, but a recent eight-game win streak completely changed the calculus. The addition of one of the top rental hitters available affirms their status as buyers, which had already become clear when they took Bellinger off the trade market yesterday. They also added some middle relief depth tonight in acquiring José Cuas from Kansas City and figure to look for more impactful bullpen upgrades in the next 24 hours.

Candelario’s time in Washington proved fruitful for both parties. He revitalized his stock and now looks positioned for a much more lucrative free agent trip. He’ll be one of the top hitters available in a below-average class for bats. The Nats never seemed likely to issue him a qualifying offer, but the trade officially takes that off the table. Players dealt midseason are ineligible for the QO, so Candelario will hit the market unencumbered by draft compensation.

The club adds a pair of players to a continually improving farm system. Made, 20, is a right-handed hitting shortstop from the Dominican Republic. He didn’t appear on Chicago’s midseason top 30 prospects at Baseball America but ranked 19th on the organizational list at FanGraphs. The outlet credited the 5’9″ infielder with roughly average tools and suggested he has an outside shot to be an everyday shortstop. He’s hitting .240/.328/.355 over 300 plate appearances with High-A South Bend. He hit just three homers there but walked at a solid 10% clip against a lower than average 18% strikeout rate.

Herz, 22, has gotten 14 starts with Double-A Tennessee. The former eighth-round pick owns a 3.97 ERA across 59 innings, striking out an excellent 30.4% of opponents but walking 14% of batters faced. He was 19th among Cubs’ prospects at Baseball America and 22nd at FanGraphs. He sits in the low 90s with his fastball and has an excellent changeup, but the obvious control woes lead most evaluators to point to a bullpen future. There’s little harm for the Nats in letting him continue to start in the minors. Herz and Made will have to go on the 40-man roster this offseason to stay out of the Rule 5 draft.

It’s the first of likely multiple deadline deals for the rebuilding Nats. Candelario was their most obvious trade chip. Middle reliever Kyle Finnegan could be on the move as well. Washinton’s top realistic trade piece would be outfielder Lane Thomas, though it remains to be seen how eager they are to deal him.

Michael Cerami and David Kaplan of Bleacher Nation reported the Cubs and Nationals were in discussions about Candelario. Ken Rosenthal of the Athletic first reported Candelario was being traded to Chicago. Cerami was first with Herz and Made going back to Washington.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.

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If You Were Dreaming About a Pete Alonso Trade, There's Nothing Doing As of Now - bleachernation.com

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Because the New York Mets are sellers, and because the Chicago Cubs don’t have an obvious first baseman locked up long-term (and could definitely stand to add an impact bat at first base this year), it was inevitable that folks would ask about a Pete Alonso trade. I get that one a lot from folks.

I totally get it, and I do think the Cubs would have to explore it if Alonso were available – we don’t KNOW what Matt Mervis can or cannot be, and if Alonso became available, well, you’ve gotta look into that. He’s 28, he’s posting another 30+ homer season, and he’s controllable via arbitration for another year. That’d be a potentially critical bat for the 2024 Cubs, to say nothing of a boost the Cubs would get this year.

But, just to keep you in the loop, it doesn’t sound like the Mets are seriously entertaining offers for Alonso:

In other words, if you want to ring up the Mets and make an obscene offer, go for it. With the Cubs, I’m sure they would START by asking for PCA back and then more, more, more on top of it.

It’s not a serious trade rumor situation. This is not a Max Scherzer situation, where the Mets were clearly desiring to move on for whatever reason. Thus, as Martino says, it is “not something to follow as of now.”

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Minggu, 30 Juli 2023

Rangers trade for Cardinals' Jordan Montgomery, Chris Stratton - ESPN - ESPN

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The Texas Rangers further fortified themselves for a championship run Sunday, acquiring left-handed starter Jordan Montgomery and right-handed reliever Chris Stratton from the St. Louis Cardinals one day after finalizing a deal for ace Max Scherzer.

With the best offense in baseball, the Rangers tapped into their plentiful minor league system, sending two top prospects -- infielder Thomas Saggese and right-hander Tekoah Roby -- along with left-handed reliever John King to St. Louis.

While the cost was heavy, the 30-year-old Montgomery was one of the prizes of this deadline season, and adding him and Scherzer not only changes the Rangers' expected playoff rotation but protects them with right-hander Nathan Eovaldi hitting the injured list Sunday with forearm tightness.

Montgomery, who is a free agent this winter, was 6-9 with a 3.42 ERA, 108 strikeouts and 35 walks over 121 innings with St. Louis. Acquired last year at the deadline from the New York Yankees for center fielder Harrison Bader, Montgomery was the Cardinals' best starter this season and drew interest from numerous teams before landing in Texas.

Stratton, 32, adds to the Rangers' bullpen depth, which they augmented already in June with the acquisition of left-hander Aroldis Chapman. In 53⅔ innings, the fifth most of any reliever in baseball this season, Stratton sported a 4.36 ERA, though his underlying metrics suggest that he has been unlucky and could see positive regression.

For a pair of rental players, St. Louis' return was significant.

Saggese and Roby, both 21, were part of Texas' haul in the 2020 draft. Saggese, who's likely to end up at second or third base, is hitting .314/.380/.514 with 15 home runs and 78 RBIs this season and was a particular favorite of evaluators who have covered the Rangers' system. Roby has a four-pitch mix, and while his 5.05 ERA is unsightly, he has struck out four times as many hitters as he has walked this season and limited hitters to five home runs over 46⅓ innings.

King, 28, nearly was traded to the Yankees at the deadline two years ago in the Joey Gallo deal. When a new iteration of that deal did not include him, he stayed with the Rangers. He has a 5.79 ERA in 18⅔ innings this season while shuttling between the big leagues and Triple-A.

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Rangers trade for Cardinals' Jordan Montgomery, Chris Stratton - ESPN - ESPN
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Colts RB Jonathan Taylor requests trade following meeting with owner Jim Irsay - NFL.com

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After a conversation in his owner's bus, Jonathan Taylor is looking to motor out of Indy.

The All-Pro running back requested a trade following a meeting with Jim Irsay on the team bus during Saturday's training camp session, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported.

Taylor, who is currently on the physically unable to perform list, wants a contract extension that puts him in line with the league's highest-paid running backs, but the Colts have not yet made a contract offer, according to Rapoport.

Irsay told reporters following the meeting that the team is still not planning an extension for Taylor at this time, and later told Albert Breer he was not trading the Pro Bowler.

"We're not trading Jonathan ... end of discussion," Irsay texted Breer. "Not now and not in October!"

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The 2021 rushing champ is Indianapolis' most prolific offensive weapon, with 3,841 rushing yards, 33 touchdowns and an average of 5.1 yards per carry in his career. He's also collected 104 receptions for another 802 yards and three scores in the passing game.

Taylor's desire for a change of scenery comes in the final year of his rookie contract at a time when the value of running backs appears to be bottoming out. It's also notable that he told Irsay he desires a trade days after the owner inserted himself into the conversation regarding the RB market and revealed no contract talks have taken place between Taylor and the team.

An offseason that included Miles Sanders being the highest-paid free-agent runner with an average of just $6.4 million per year, and three stars -- Saquon Barkley, Josh Jacobs and Tony Pollard -- receiving the franchise tag without a long-term deal by the July 17 deadline, culminated in a recent Zoom call between the best at the position to discuss the depressed market.

Najee Harris then said Wednesday that he and his fellow backs had exchanged solutions that included changing the franchise tag so it isn't applied according to position, per ESPN, thus equaling the playing field.

That brought about Irsay's comments on social media Wednesday evening: "NFL running back situation -- We have negotiated a CBA, that took years of effort and hard work and compromise in good faith by both sides. To say now that a specific player category wants another negotiation after the fact, is inappropriate. Some agents are selling 'bad faith.'"

Taylor's agent, Malki Kawa, replied by saying, "Bad faith is not paying your top offensive player."

Although Irsay clarified on Thursday that his comments were not aimed at Taylor, that added layer of contention, plus a lack of discussion over rewarding one of the team's best, has apparently tipped the scale in favor of a trade as far as Taylor's view goes.

New head coach Shane Steichen, who was asked about Taylor's contract situation on NFL Network's Back Together Weekend moments before Rapoport's report, provided a by-the-numbers response.

"That's part of the business and my job is to be the head football coach of this team and go lead these guys," he said.

During the scrum in which Irsay held firm on not currently negotiating an extension, the owner was far more brash.

"I mean, if I die tonight and Jonathan Taylor's out of the league, no one's going to miss us," he told reporters. "The league goes on. We know that. The National Football (League) rolls on. It doesn't matter who comes and who goes, and it's a privilege to be part of it. Now's the time for us to do our work. Now's the time as an organization. And, you know, players who are 24, 25 years old, now's the time to seize the moment."

There are several ways this particular moment could play out in the month ahead.

Should Indy grant Taylor's request before the season, the team would need to regroup with the likes of Zack Moss, Deon Jackson, Jake Funk in the backfield and possibly another veteran free agent. A trade could provide some future draft ammo for a team in transition, but the windfall would need to be worth it, which could be difficult considering the apparent devaluation of running backs.

The Colts could also sit tight and compel the 2021 rushing champion to play out his rookie deal, a result that would certainly ease the learning curve of rookie quarterback Anthony Richardson.

Doing so could set up another standoff following the 2023 season, when Taylor would be able explore free agency if Indianapolis doesn't attempt to keep a back who requested a trade even longer by placing the tag on him.

There are many months to go before a more drawn-out situation like that would play out -- and plenty of time for the continued plight of RBs around the league to take further turns.

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5 Yankees most likely to be dealt at the trade deadline - Yanks Go Yard

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The New York Yankees are in an interesting spot approaching the 2023 MLB trade deadline -- or, at least, interesting to trainwreck enthusiasts.

With Aaron Judge returning and Gerrit Cole dealing, both within their primes, this team technically owes the roster and fan base a few "get right" moves in an effort to sneak into the dance and make some noise. Their Wild Card and AL East deficits are far from insurmountable, even though this fan base knows better by now.

But the 2023 Yankees aren't a Juan Soto away from automatic contention. No matter what they do on Tuesday, they'll need Anthony Rizzo, DJ LeMahieu and Giancarlo Stanton to perform better. That's no secret.

They'll also need to shed some salary to make room for mid-tier imports.

Brian Cashman will need to thread 100 different needles this week to reinvigorate the Yankees, and these five Bombers could find themselves on the outs while the transition occurs.

Harrison Bader

Knowing that the Yankees intend to supplement their roster and find (at least) a platoon partner for Jake Bauers/Billy McKinney, trading Gleyber Torres seems out of the question. Considering how unwilling the team has been to hand the job outright to Oswald Peraza, if they have designs on contending in 2024, they'll be keeping Torres. They certainly have those designs. He'd rank seventh here, with Clarke Schmidt in the No. 6 spot.

Bader is a free agent at the end of the season, and has been widely speculated as an extension candidate in New York. Did his price rise too high for the Yankees when he was sparking victories throughout April, May and June? Is it low enough to make sense for Brian Cashman that he's battled injuries and ineffectiveness this summer? Is a "moderate bat, high energy, impressive defense, poor health" center fielder worth a long-term financial commitment?

If the Yankees deem Bader to be a luxury, not a necessity, they might try to send him to a contender at the deadline. Who knows? He might even re-sign anyway with a handshake agreement. It seems more likely than not, though, that his future is too uncertain to make him a long-term Yankee.

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BenFred: Nolan Arenado's trade-deadline comments seem to show cost of Cardinals' 'due diligence' - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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When The Los Angeles Times, citing anonymous sources, reported this week that not only were the Dodgers aiming to trade for Nolan Arenado but that the Cardinals’ star third baseman was disgruntled here and willing to drop his no-trade clause to join the Dodgers, it became just a matter of time until Arenado was going to have to say something.

Unlike members of the Cardinals’ no-comment front office, Cardinals players have a harder time ducking reporters during trade-deadline drama at Busch Stadium.

So, after a Friday night loss to the Cubs that would have been heartbreaking if this team wasn’t so broken, Arenado faced the cameras and the recorders.

At first he said he would comment only on the game. He found no takers with those parameters — because of course — so he left the clubhouse. But then he returned and said he had changed his mind. He wanted to get this conversation over with, at least this edition of it.

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Arenado then answered every question that was asked, though some of his responses probably won’t calm Cardinals fans who are fearful his departure to the Dodgers could become a trade-deadline reality.

Could that chance be present (and growing?) because that’s what Arenado wants, or because of how poorly Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak and his front office have handled an ongoing recruitment campaign by the Dodgers? Could it be some of both? Fair questions. Ones with answers that cannot be entirely known at the moment.

What was clear Friday night was a sense of frustration from Arenado. With the losing and with this lost Cardinals season. With this Cardinals-Dodgers chatter. With being asked to be very specific about his updated desires when the Cardinals’ front office stands behind its trade-deadline shield.

Arenado said he has not talked to anyone about if he would or would not drop his no-trade clause. He questioned the origin of reports that say differently. He said the Cardinals have not asked him if he would. He declined to say he would use his no-trade clause to block any deal no matter what, and people will surely read into that. Yes, Arenado could have poured cold water on the whole thing if he said he would not approve a trade to the Dodgers. Whether he stopped short of that because he wants one, or because he wants the Cardinals to play their cards first, was not entirely clear. It's also worth considering that sometimes, when a player knows a team is considering trading him, he begins to feel differently about a no-trade clause.

What was crystal clear, multiple times, is Arenado doesn’t seem thrilled about the current state of communications as this cloud hovers.

“I haven't heard anything yet," Arenado said at one point.

“I haven’t talked to anybody, really,” Arenado said at another point. “So, I don’t know where those reports came from, but when Mo comes up to me and have those conversations, we will have them.”

“Whatever happens happens,” Arenado said at another point. “It’s hard for me to sit here and speak on these things. Like I said, I think the Cardinals, those guys are smart up there, and they’re looking at every way to make this team better. That’s just how I see it.”

Arenado was not hooked up to a lie detector during this time. But if he has been stirring this Dodgers pot from behind the scenes, he’s pulling off a pretty impressive acting job less than a year after suggesting he wanted to be with the Cardinals for the long haul. Now he has pushed his way off a team before, remember. He did it to get here from the Rockies. But he was rather candid during that Colorado process that he was unhappy, that he was clashing with then Colorado general manager Jeff Bridich, that he was wanting out. His answers Friday didn’t sound angry. More agitated. At times, somewhat confused.

“Whatever they (the Cardinals) want,” he said. “I think it’s a business, and they want to find ways to make this team better. So, they’re doing their due diligence about what’s going on and what’s out there. Like I said, if we have those discussions, we will have them.”

If the Cardinals are not going to trade Arenado, the front office has really botched the handling of this thing. Bigger than any of this season’s other mishandlings, other than ignoring the pitching needs that would have made all of this a moot point, considering the Cardinals would be buying instead of trying to learn how to sell on the fly.

The Cardinals’ preferred way of keeping front-office lips zipped through the trade deadline’s end should have been adjusted to consider Arenado’s status, the Dodgers’ status, and the nonstop recruitment of Arenado to Los Angeles that continues to play out, even on the TVs in the Cardinals’ clubhouse lobby, where MLB Network was recently showing where Arenado could slot into the Dodgers’ lineup. The Cardinals have been given multiple chances to squash this. They haven’t. And now Arenado is calling the Cardinals’ front office “they” in his comments. Not great. 

If the Cardinals really are willing to trade Arenado, well, then the front-office gag order makes a little more sense.

What would not add up, though, is how the Cardinals could possibly think they could get that kind of trade right and be better off for it — unless their talk about wanting to be good in 2024 has been scrapped for plans of a much bigger rebuild.

Does anyone else get nervous about how the Cardinals would fare against the Dodgers in conversations about which pitchers to prioritize? I do. The Dodgers have become industry leaders in pitching. The Cardinals have been questioning everything they thought they knew about it. If the Dodgers are so rich in pitching prospects who could be very close to helping a team win in 2024, I'm not so sure they would be adding pitching at this trade deadline, like they have been.

It’s hard to see how Mozeliak could trade away one of the two rare definitive wins of his recent roster building — dealing for Paul Goldschmidt being the other one in addition to Arenado — without chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. finally starting to wonder what the heck is going on with this front office. If trading an affordable-contract-holding future Hall of Famer is the answer to addressing a pitching gulch created on the front office’s watch, ownership needs to start having serious questions about this front office. Everyone else already does.

It’s hard to see how a team that would consider trading away 32-year-old Arenado should not also consider trading away 35-year-old Goldschmidt. If you're going to blow it up, blow it up.

It’s hard to see how the Cardinals created a reality in which Arenado is now the only one talking about his future, and doing so while sounding pretty uncertain about what the Cardinals even want. These days, I'm not sure the Cardinals know what they want. You better believe the Dodgers do.

Cardinals’ Nolan Arenado and Jordan Montgomery address trade rumors after loss to Cubs
BenFred: When trade-deadline dust settles, it's time for shortstop Masyn Winn to join Cardinals
When will trade winds gust for Cardinals? A rundown of what's swirling as deadline nears.

Sports columnists Ben Frederickson and Jeff Gordon want to see the Cardinals' top prospect start getting a feel for his future major league shortstop position after the trade-deadline dust settles. He's electric, and his offense is blooming.

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Sabtu, 29 Juli 2023

The Chicago White Sox have now traded reliever Kendall Graveman to the Houston Astros for catcher Korey Lee. - Sports Illustrated

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  1. The Chicago White Sox have now traded reliever Kendall Graveman to the Houston Astros for catcher Korey Lee.  Sports Illustrated
  2. Kendall Graveman trade: Astros acquire veteran reliever in deal with White Sox for former first-round pick  CBS Sports
  3. Astros bolster bullpen with trade deadline looming  SportsMap Houston


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The Chicago White Sox have now traded reliever Kendall Graveman to the Houston Astros for catcher Korey Lee. - Sports Illustrated
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MLB trade deadline tracker: White Sox send pitchers to Dodgers, Astros - FOX Sports

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MLB trade season is upon us. 

While the best player in baseball is staying put, a frontline starter has already joined Shohei Ohtani on the Angels, who knocked over the first big domino by dealing for Lucas Giolito.

The action is sure to ramp up before Tuesday's deadline, as a whopping 20 teams entered this weekend less than five games out of a playoff spot. That can blur the line between buyers (AL, NL) and sellers — a few clubs might operate as both — but also tempt some teams to dangle their superstars. Juan Soto or Nolan Arenado, anyone?

Here's a rundown of all the swaps thus far, along with grades and analysis for the bigger transactions from FOX Sports MLB writers Rowan Kavner, Jake Mintz, Jordan Shusterman and Deesha Thosar.

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JULY 28

Astros acquire White Sox reliever Kendall Graveman

Key Stats: 3.48 ERA, 44 IP, 42 SO, 1.205 WHIP

Who else was involved: Chicago received minor league catcher Korey Lee, ranked fifth on MLB Pipeline's list of top Astros prospects.

Dodgers acquire White Sox starter Lance Lynn, reliever Joe Kelly

Key Stats:
Lynn: 6-9, 6.47 ERA, 119.2 IP, 144 SO, 1.462 WHIP
Kelly: 4.97 ERA, 29 IP, 41 SO, 1.310 WHIP

Who else was involved: Chicago received minor league pitcher Nick Nastrini (No. 9 on MLB Pipeline's list of top Dodgers prospects), minor league pitcher Jordan Leasure and outfielder Trayce Thompson.

Why it matters: The Dodgers are betting on their ability to extract the most out of players having down years. All four of their deadline additions have played below replacement-level in 2023 but have demonstrated past productivity and cost relatively little to acquire.

Like the Kiké Hernández deal, their latest move brings back a known commodity and fan favorite who was part of their 2020 World Series club. A mercurial talent, Kelly hasn't experienced the same level of success he enjoyed with the Dodgers in 2020 (1.80 ERA) or 2021 (2.86 ERA) since joining the White Sox. He sports a 5.59 ERA and 1.47 WHIP over the last two years, both career highs for any stop in the reliever's 12-year career. He has dealt with groin and elbow injuries this season that have limited him to 29 innings in 2023.

The Dodgers had expressed interest in Lynn for years, but this season is unlike any in the past for the 2021 All-Star, who has a career-high 6.47 ERA. Lynn and Kelly are similar, however, in that their struggles are juxtaposed with an incredible ability to miss bats.

Kelly's strikeout rate the last two years are the best of his career. While he's actually throwing harder this year at 35 years old than he did last season, it wouldn't be a surprise to see him go back to using his curveball more often in Los Angeles. Lynn's struggles are more confounding. He has allowed more homers and earned runs than any pitcher in baseball this season — and it's not particularly close — while getting more whiffs than ever before.

It'll be easier to judge these moves once we find out how much more the Dodgers do in the coming days. They desperately needed to address their pitching staff at the deadline, so the floor-raising fliers make sense. If Lynn finds his past form, he has the talent to start postseason games. Plus, he has a club option in 2024, making him potentially worth more than the typical rental. The Dodgers are betting this reclamation attempt goes better than it did with Noah Syndergaard, who was just dealt to Cleveland for Amed Rosario.

What do the Astros do, is Blake Snell on the move & more Trade Deadline predictions

The White Sox, meanwhile, continue doing the necessary work of restocking their farm after getting two of the Angels' top prospects back for Lucas Giolito earlier this week. In this deal, they turned two scuffling major leaguers into multiple members of the esteemed Double-A Tulsa pitching staff. Nastrini, a top-10 Dodgers prospect and 2021 fourth-round pick, has struck out more than 10 batters per nine innings at every stop while improving upon the command issues that plagued him at UCLA. Leasure sports a 3.09 ERA with 56 strikeouts in 35 innings at Tulsa. —Kavner

Dodgers grade: B
White Sox grade: B+

JULY 27

Marlins acquire Mets ace reliever David Robertson 

Key Stats: 2.05 ERA, 44 IP, 14 SV, 48 SO, 1.000 WHIP

Who else was involved: New York received infielder Marco Vargas and catcher Ronald Hernández, ranked 18th and 21st, respectively, on MLB Pipeline’s top prospects list for Miami.

Why it matters: If ever there was a sign that the Mets are sellers at this deadline, general manager Billy Eppler made sure nobody would miss it. Word spread that Robertson was traded to the Marlins — the Mets’ NL East foe sitting just ahead of them in the wild-card race — mere minutes after they sat through a 90-minute rain delay, broke a tied game, and managed to beat the basement-dwelling Nationals. Congratulations on the win, but we’re selling, the front office broadcasted. Try again in 2024. 

Ken Rosenthal on the latest trade deadline rumors on the Mets & Padres

Robertson is one of the top relievers on the trade market, and the Mets in exchange received a pair of interesting minor-league position players. That is in part a puzzling return for the Mets, seeing as how they deeply lack upper-tier arms. Rather than trade Robertson for more pitching, the Mets acquired a pair of teenagers. While it's worth noting they're rated a bit more favorably by FanGraphs, it’s surprising the Mets didn’t wait at least a few more days to field superior offers. The deadline itself is still five days away, and Robertson was their best trade asset.

The Marlins, a half-game back of Cincinnati and Philadelphia in a tight NL wild-card race, just gained a proven veteran closer with playoff experience who has been terrific this season. Suddenly, their bullpen looks much improved with Robertson joining another new high-leverage right-hander in Jorge López, whom they acquired from Minnesota earlier this week. The Marlins found the right-handed balance they needed in the relief corps to complement lefties A.J. Puk and Tanner Scott. Plus, Miami earns bragging rights for being on the contending side of an intradivision trade. — Thosar

Marlins grade: A
Mets grade: B-

Brewers trade for Pirates first baseman Carlos Santana

Key Stats: .235/.321/.412, 12 HR, 53 RBI, 98 OPS+

Who else was involved: Pittsburgh netted 18-year-old shortstop prospect Jhonny Severino.

Why it matters: Santana figures to slot right in at first base for the Brewers, who have struggled to garner much production from the position all season long. The switch-hitting 37-year-old has been worth 1.5 bWAR this season and brings a lot of playoff experience with him. 

JULY 26

Angels land RHP Lucas Giolito from White Sox

Key Stats: 6-6, 3.79 ERA, 121 IP, 131 SO, 1.223 WHIP

Who else was involved: The Angels also added a valuable bullpen piece in Reynaldo López. In exchange, they sent Chicago their Nos. 2 and 3 prospects, according to MLB Pipeline’s rankings: catcher Edgar Quero, a top-100 prospect by most outlets, and left-handed pitcher Ky Bush.

The Angels going for it with Shohei Ohtani is the right move

Why it matters: You can put those Ohtani trade rumors to bed. 

Mere hours after FOX Sports' Tom Verducci reported that Ohtani would not be dealt at the deadline, the Angels went into buy mode and acquired arguably the most coveted starting pitcher on the market. 

It’s a move the Angels would only make if they planned to push for their first playoff berth since 2014 — and to keep their two-way superstar for whatever lies ahead

While it always seemed like a long shot that Ohtani would be dealt, it wasn’t entirely out of the question when this month began. 

Their pitching staff bolstered, the Angels’ move all but assures Ohtani will finish out his contract year in Anaheim before becoming the most coveted free agent in baseball history this winter. 

And if Giolito helps the Angels play meaningful baseball in October, it will be a move well worth the cost. — Kavner

Angels grade: B+
White Sox grade: A-

Guardians send SS Amed Rosario to Dodgers for RHP Noah Syndergaard

Key Stats: 
Rosario: .265/.306/.369, 3 HR, 40 RBIs, 89 OPS+
Syndergaard: 1-4, 7.16 ERA, 55.1 IP, 38 SO, 1.446 WHIP

Twins swap reliever Jorge López for Marlins reliever Dylan Floro

Key Stats: 

López: 5.09 ERA, 35.1 IP, 27 SO, 1.274 WHIP
Floro: 4.54 ERA, 39.2 IP, 41 SO, 1.487 WHIP

JULY 25

Dodgers bring back Red Sox OF/IF Kiké Hernández  

Key Stats: .222/.279/.320, 6 HR, 31 RBI, 60 OPS+

Who else was involved: Boston received reliever prospects Nick Robertson and Justin Hagenman.

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MLB trade rumors: Mets could ship out Justin Verlander; Mariners dangle young starting pitching as bait - CBS Sports

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Major League Baseball's 2023 trade deadline is set for Tuesday, Aug. 1, giving teams precious little time to make moves. Trade activity has kicked into a higher gear over the last several days, including the Angels acquiring Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo López just hours after declaring Shohei Ohtani was off the market. 

Friday, the White Sox sent Lance Lynn and Joe Kelly to the Dodgers (full story and grades here) while also trading reliever Kendall Graveman to the Astros (story here). 

More moves are certain to be finalized in the coming days. Here are Friday's rumors to hold you over until then.

Mets could move Verlander?

The Mets have been one of the most disappointing teams in the majors this season, and that might convince them to do something shocking at the deadline: trading veteran right-hander Justin Verlander. According to MLB.com's Mark Feinsand, there's a "belief within the industry" that the Mets could part with Verlander over the coming days. 

Feinsand identifies the Rangers and Astros as the favorites should the Mets get serious. The Reds are also floated as a dark horse candidate.

Verlander, 40, joined the Mets over the winter on a two-year deal worth nearly $87 million. The pact includes a full no-trade clause as well as a conditional player option for the 2025 season worth $35 million. The combination of Verlander's age, outstanding financial commitments, and ability to block any movement made a deal seem highly unlikely as recently as a few weeks back.

Verlander has posted a 3.24 ERA (127 ERA+) and a 2.53 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 15 starts this season. After five appearances in July, he's sporting a 1.69 ERA with 12 more strikeouts than walks over the course of 32 innings pitched.

Canha, Pham likelier to move

According to SNY's Andy Martino, Verlander is "far from certain" to be moved. More likely to go are a pair of right-handed hitting outfielders: Mark Canha and Tommy Pham.

CBS Sports broke down earlier Friday why Canha and Pham are two of a handful of potential Mets trade candidates who could find themselves on new teams by 6 p.m. on Tuesday

Rangers pursuing Hicks

The Rangers have already added one veteran late-inning arm this summer, in Aroldis Chapman, but now they're in hot pursuit of another. According to USA Today's Bob Nightengale, the Rangers are "aggressively" pursuing Cardinals right-hander Jordan Hicks.

Hicks, an impending free agent, has been excellent over the last few months. Since taking the loss on May 5, he's appeared in 26 games and has compiled a 1.88 ERA and a 3.7 strikeout-to-walk ratio. The Athletic recently reported that the Cardinals were exploring an extension with their star reliever that would take him off the trading block, but the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Derrick Goold said Thursday that those talks have not progressed.

Hicks is likely to be one of several Cardinals veterans to change hands in the coming days.

Mariners could be in control of deadline

According to Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic, the Mariners are considering "trading a starter for a package that would include a hitter of similar age and impact." The Mariners currently employ George Kirby, Logan Gilbert, Bryce Miller, and Bryan Woo, and they have Emerson Hancock, the No. 6 pick in the 2020 draft, stationed away at the Double-A level.

Gilbert entered the season with the most service time, and he's projected to finish the campaign around two years and 144 days. That should make him eligible for arbitration for the first time this winter. Kirby was the next closest, coming into the year three weeks shy of amassing a full season. Miller and Woo both debuted this season.

Rosenthal speculates that among contending teams, the Diamondbacks, Rays and Orioles could make sense as a match with the Mariners. 

Pirates fielding calls on veterans

The Pirates have received inquiries on several players, according Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Among those: catcher Austin Hedges, lefty Rich Hill, and righties Mitch Keller and Colin Holderman. The Pirates already made one deal this week, shipping first baseman Carlos Santana to the Brewers for a shortstop prospect.

Of that group, Hedges and Hill would seem likeliest to go. They're both impending free agents who could free up roster spots for younger players. Keller, meanwhile, would be a bit of a surprise given he's under team control through the 2025 campaign. Still, the market yearns for cost-controlled pitching, and he would qualify.

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4 Jack Flaherty trade ideas after the Lucas Giolito trade - Red Bird Rants

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While there have been smaller bullpen moves thus far at the Trade Deadline, Lucas Giolito's move to Los Angeles from Chicago has by far been the biggest. Giolito was a top pitcher available at this deadline, and it was assumed by many that he would fetch a high return for the White Sox. It wasn't suspected, however, to be two of the top-three players in a team's farm system.

The Giolito trade gives us a better idea of the market and the demand for starting pitchers. It is most definitely a sellers' market at this point, as if it weren't already. The return for Giolito gives us a better idea of what Jack Flaherty and Jordan Montgomery might get the Cardinals in return. The Chicago White Sox gave up Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo Lopez for catcher Edgar Quero (#70 overall, 9th best catcher) and Ky Bush (unranked overall, 3rd in Angels organization).

It is important to remember that each farm system and prospect list is different. The Angels, for example, have right around the 19th-best farm system, per Bleacher Report. Teams such as the Dodgers (2nd), Diamondbacks (16th), Texas Rangers (10th), and Orioles (1st), four teams most linked to starting pitchers, have substantially better farm systems. Therefore, we can start to predict the prospects the Cardinals can expect. They may not be top-3 prospects for one of the two starters alone, but the Cardinals can expect a top-100 prospect for one player or multiple prospects should Jack or Jordan be paired with a reliever.

I'll identify four new trades, one for each of the teams mentioned, for Jack Flaherty. Some will be Jack alone, while others will include Flaherty in a package. The Dodgers, for example, have been very outspoken about wanting a starter and a reliever. The Orioles, meanwhile, could use just a starter, as they are trying to be savvy buyers at this deadline.

Before the trade discussions, it is important to note what Flaherty has done for the Cardinals. While he has fought injuries for most of his career, he has been quite outspoken about his love for the city. After his most recent start against the Diamondbacks, his emotions were clear. Katie Woo made this very evident in her recent threads on Twitter. Like Flaherty's personality or not, he was always a competitor who gave it his all and continually gave the Cardinals a chance to win. All Flaherty knows is the Cardinals, and he has spent nearly 10 years in the organization. If he is traded or not resigned, he will be missed in the city.

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BenFred: Nolan Arenado's trade-deadline comments seem to show cost of Cardinals' 'due diligence' - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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When The Los Angeles Times, citing anonymous sources, reported this week that not only were the Dodgers aiming to trade for Nolan Arenado but that the Cardinals’ star third baseman was disgruntled here and willing to drop his no-trade clause to join the Dodgers, it became just a matter of time until Arenado was going to have to say something.

Unlike members of the Cardinals’ no-comment front office, Cardinals players have a harder time ducking reporters during trade-deadline drama at Busch Stadium.

So, after a Friday night loss to the Cubs that would have been heartbreaking if this team wasn’t so broken, Arenado faced the cameras and the recorders.

At first he said he would comment only on the game. He found no takers with those parameters — because of course — so he left the clubhouse. But then he returned and said he had changed his mind. He wanted to get this conversation over with, at least this edition of it.

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Arenado then answered every question that was asked, though some of his responses probably won’t calm Cardinals fans who are fearful his departure to the Dodgers could become a trade-deadline reality.

Could that chance be present (and growing?) because that’s what Arenado wants, or because of how poorly Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak and his front office have handled an ongoing recruitment campaign by the Dodgers? Could it be some of both? Fair questions. Ones with answers that cannot be entirely known at the moment.

What was clear Friday night was a sense of frustration from Arenado. With the losing and with this lost Cardinals season. With this Cardinals-Dodgers chatter. With being asked to be very specific about his updated desires when the Cardinals’ front office stands behind its trade-deadline shield.

Arenado said he has not talked to anyone about if he would or would not drop his no-trade clause. He questioned the origin of reports that say differently. He said the Cardinals have not asked him if he would. He declined to say he would use his no-trade clause to block any deal no matter what, and people will surely read into that. Yes, Arenado could have poured cold water on the whole thing if he said he would not approve a trade to the Dodgers. Whether he stopped short of that because he wants one, or because he wants the Cardinals to play their cards first, was not entirely clear. It's also worth considering that sometimes, when a player knows a team is considering trading him, he begins to feel differently about a no-trade clause.

What was crystal clear, multiple times, is Arenado doesn’t seem thrilled about the current state of communications as this cloud hovers.

“I haven't heard anything yet," Arenado said at one point.

“I haven’t talked to anybody, really,” Arenado said at another point. “So, I don’t know where those reports came from, but when Mo comes up to me and have those conversations, we will have them.”

“Whatever happens happens,” Arenado said at another point. “It’s hard for me to sit here and speak on these things. Like I said, I think the Cardinals, those guys are smart up there, and they’re looking at every way to make this team better. That’s just how I see it.”

Arenado was not hooked up to a lie detector during this time. But if he has been stirring this Dodgers pot from behind the scenes, he’s pulling off a pretty impressive acting job less than a year after suggesting he wanted to be with the Cardinals for the long haul. Now he has pushed his way off a team before, remember. He did it to get here from the Rockies. But he was rather candid during that Colorado process that he was unhappy, that he was clashing with then Colorado general manager Jeff Bridich, that he was wanting out. His answers Friday didn’t sound angry. More agitated. At times, somewhat confused.

“Whatever they (the Cardinals) want,” he said. “I think it’s a business, and they want to find ways to make this team better. So, they’re doing their due diligence about what’s going on and what’s out there. Like I said, if we have those discussions, we will have them.”

If the Cardinals are not going to trade Arenado, the front office has really botched the handling of this thing. Bigger than any of this season’s other mishandlings, other than ignoring the pitching needs that would have made all of this a moot point, considering the Cardinals would be buying instead of trying to learn how to sell on the fly.

The Cardinals’ preferred way of keeping front-office lips zipped through the trade deadline’s end should have been adjusted to consider Arenado’s status, the Dodgers’ status, and the nonstop recruitment of Arenado to Los Angeles that continues to play out, even on the TVs in the Cardinals’ clubhouse lobby, where MLB Network was recently showing where Arenado could slot into the Dodgers’ lineup. The Cardinals have been given multiple chances to squash this. They haven’t. And now Arenado is calling the Cardinals’ front office “they” in his comments. Not great. 

If the Cardinals really are willing to trade Arenado, well, then the front-office gag order makes a little more sense.

What would not add up, though, is how the Cardinals could possibly think they could get that kind of trade right and be better off for it — unless their talk about wanting to be good in 2024 has been scrapped for plans of a much bigger rebuild.

Does anyone else get nervous about how the Cardinals would fare against the Dodgers in conversations about which pitchers to prioritize? I do. The Dodgers have become industry leaders in pitching. The Cardinals have been questioning everything they thought they knew about it. If the Dodgers are so rich in pitching prospects who could be very close to helping a team win in 2024, I'm not so sure they would be adding pitching at this trade deadline, like they have been.

It’s hard to see how Mozeliak could trade away one of the two rare definitive wins of his recent roster building — dealing for Paul Goldschmidt being the other one in addition to Arenado — without chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. finally starting to wonder what the heck is going on with this front office. If trading an affordable-contract-holding future Hall of Famer is the answer to addressing a pitching gulch created on the front office’s watch, ownership needs to start having serious questions about this front office. Everyone else already does.

It’s hard to see how a team that would consider trading away 32-year-old Arenado should not also consider trading away 35-year-old Goldschmidt. If you're going to blow it up, blow it up.

It’s hard to see how the Cardinals created a reality in which Arenado is now the only one talking about his future, and doing so while sounding pretty uncertain about what the Cardinals even want. These days, I'm not sure the Cardinals know what they want. You better believe the Dodgers do.

Cardinals’ Nolan Arenado and Jordan Montgomery address trade rumors after loss to Cubs
BenFred: When trade-deadline dust settles, it's time for shortstop Masyn Winn to join Cardinals
When will trade winds gust for Cardinals? A rundown of what's swirling as deadline nears.

Sports columnists Ben Frederickson and Jeff Gordon want to see the Cardinals' top prospect start getting a feel for his future major league shortstop position after the trade-deadline dust settles. He's electric, and his offense is blooming.

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