Houston Astros Receive: 1B Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (from TOR), RHP Chris Bassitt (from TOR), OF Kevin Kiermaier (from TOR), LHP Parker Messick (from CLE)
Cleveland Guardians Receive: SS Bo Bichette (from TOR), LHP Yusei Kikuchi (from TOR), C Danny Jansen (from TOR), OF Colin Barber (from HOU)
Toronto Blue Jays Receive: RHP Cristian Javier (from HOU), OF Chase DeLauter (CLE No. 1 prospect), OF Jacob Melton (HOU No. 1 prospect), SS Brice Matthews (HOU No. 3 prospect), RHP Daniel Espino (CLE No. 4 prospect), RHP Jake Bloss (HOU No. 5 prospect)
Yes, the most outrageous part here might be the idea that Cleveland would ever be an aggressive buyer. We're talking about a franchise that hasn't been on the star power side of a significant deadline deal since, what, trading for Andrew Miller eight years ago?
Just go with it, though.
Technically, some exchange between Houston and Cleveland has to happen for this to be a three-team deal, or else it's just a pair of simultaneous two-team swaps. So, sure, Houston flips the Guardians a Double-A outfield prospect and Cleveland sends a Double-A pitching prospect back to the Astros. Neither ranks top 10 in either team's farm system. That part doesn't really matter.
The main result is Houston upgrades what is currently a disastrous first base situation, gets a much-needed starting pitcher who isn't on the IL and adds an experienced outfielder with a great glove.
Meanwhile, the Guardians do something about Brayan Rocchio's sub-.300 slugging percentage, get a solid starter to replace Carlos Carrasco in the rotation—giving them the option of maybe pulling Logan Allen's 5.72 ERA from the rotation if and when Gavin Williams is back—and add one more bat who can catch so they can stop playing Austin Hedges' .435 OPS on a semi-regular basis.
Lastly, but maybe most notably, Toronto punts on the next 1.5 seasons to reload in a big way for 2026 and beyond, with a boatload of quality prospects and an established starting pitcher who is signed through 2027, but who is going to miss the rest of this season and possibly all of 2025 after recently undergoing Tommy John surgery.
Houston is giving up more capital than Cleveland in the deal, but the Guardians' top prospect is regarded as a top-25 guy while the Astros' top prospect is barely a top-75 guy. Houston is also getting more than Cleveland, as Guerrero is the more coveted of Toronto's two big-name chips, while Bassitt still has a year left on his deal compared to Kikuchi being a few months away from free agency.
The moral of the story, though, is that Toronto has become the linchpin of this entire trade deadline.
If the Blue Jays embrace what is very clearly a seller's market otherwise lacking in marquee names available, they could put together a monster of a trade / series of trades, likely getting more in return than the Nationals did for 2.5 years of Juan Soto two summers ago.
But if they don't, it could be a pretty uneventful trade deadline.
"trade" - Google News
June 30, 2024 at 06:09PM
https://ift.tt/i4Paqzo
8 Outrageous Trades to Shake Up the 2024 MLB Trade Deadline - Bleacher Report
"trade" - Google News
https://ift.tt/naspbYW
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar