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Post by Blunashun on Jan 17, 2021 21:48:15 GMT
Dodgers' Julio Urias: Avoids arbitration Rotowire JAN 16, 2021 Urias and the Dodgers reached a one-year, $3.6 million deal Friday, avoiding arbitration, Jon Heyman of MLB Network reports.
Urias has been impressive in limited innings over the last two seasons, and he'll be rewarded with a significant pay increase in 2021. The southpaw served mainly as a starter last year, posting a 3.27 ERA and 1.15 WHIP over 55 innings during 11 appearances (10 starts).
Dodgers' Corey Seager: Avoids arbitration Rotowire JAN 16, 2021 Seager and the Dodgers reached a one-year, $13.75 million deal Friday, avoiding arbitration, Jon Heyman of MLB Network reports.
Seager will get a significant pay increase heading into 2021 and won't require an arbiter during the offseason. The 26-year-old performed incredibly well over the shortened season in 2020, posting a .943 OPS with 15 home runs and 41 RBI.
Dodgers' Cody Bellinger: Signs big one-year deal Rotowire JAN 15, 2021 Bellinger (shoulder) and the Dodgers avoided arbitration Friday by agreeing to a one-year, $16.1 million contract, Jon Heyman of MLB Network reports.
Bellinger had his worst season at the plate last year, though his .239/.333/.455 line would have been quite good for many players, especially ones who spent the majority of their time in center field. He's spending the offseason recovering from surgery to repair a dislocated right shoulder, an injury he suffered as the result of an overly exuberant celebration during the NLCS.
Dodgers' Rayne Doncon: Inks deal with Dodgers Rotowire JAN 15, 2021 Doncon signed with the Dodgers on Friday, Jesse Sanchez of MLB.com reports.
A 17-year-old shortstop with imposing physicality, Doncon has a long wingspan and may eventually move to a different position as he matures. That said, he is expected to add value with the glove somewhere. The big selling point for dynasty is that he could grow into impact power.
Dodgers' Wilman Diaz: Dodgers land potential star Rotowire JAN 15, 2021 Diaz agreed to a contract with the Dodgers on Friday, Jesse Sanchez of MLB.com reports.
His deal is expected to be worth roughly $2.8 million. A 17-year-old shortstop from Venezuela, Diaz has a great 6-foot-2, 170-pound frame to grow into. He has superlative bat speed and makes it look incredibly easy in the field and at the dish. Diaz plays loose and should grow into impact power to all fields. It's possible he could outgrow shortstop, but the hope is that his bat will play anywhere on the field.
Dodgers' Dylan Floro: Avoids arbitration with Dodgers Rotowire JAN 15, 2021 Floro and the Dodgers agreed to a one-year deal worth $975,000 dollars to avoid arbitration, Robert Murray of FanSided.com reports.
Floro was a workhorse out of the bullpen for the Dodgers during the 2020 season, working 24.1 innings in 25 appearances. He was quite effective as well, posting a 2.59 ERA and 1.11 WHIP with 19 strikeouts. Floro isn't likely to factor into the saves picture for the team.
Dodgers' Corey Knebel: Avoids arbitration Rotowire JAN 14, 2021 Knebel signed a one-year, $5.25 million contract with the Dodgers on Thursday, avoiding arbitration, Bob Nightengale of USA Today reports.
Knebel was dealt to the Dodgers in early December, and he won't have to go through arbitration with his new club after agreeing to terms Thursday. The right-hander struggled in his return from Tommy John surgery in 2020, posting a 6.08 ERA over 13.1 innings, but he'll attempt to return to form in 2021 and could get to work in some lower-leverage situations given the depth of the Dodgers' bullpen.
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 22, 2021 22:16:55 GMT
Looks like Kike is close to signing with the Red Sox. Good luck.
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 23, 2021 1:26:57 GMT
The Keekster is now a Red Sock. However that would be spelled. No details yet.
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 23, 2021 2:35:58 GMT
He supposedly got two years & $14,000,000.
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 23, 2021 2:36:50 GMT
Big opportunity for Gavin Lux. Don't choke.
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jrgreene6
Legend
Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,438
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Post by jrgreene6 on Jan 23, 2021 5:17:34 GMT
He supposedly got two years & $14,000,000. Seven mil a year for a .200 hitting utility player that wasn’t even a regular starter for us and likely won’t be for the Sox. I wonder if I won that $1 billion Mega-Millions jackpot? GO DODGERS!!!
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20DodgerMiracle24
Legend
Rob Manfred is a disaster to our national pastime.
Posts: 1,790
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Post by 20DodgerMiracle24 on Jan 23, 2021 7:00:06 GMT
Looks like Kike is close to signing with the Red Sox. Good luck. Right, good luck. I posted the other day that we need to sign Kike for his versatility and we shouldn't disrupt team chemistry or the Padres will see an oppurtunity and pounce on us.
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Post by truedodger on Jan 29, 2021 18:12:18 GMT
Jacques was rumored to be courted by the Giants. I thought there or Atlanta is where he would end up with a possibility of fitting in Anaheim.
He signed a one year $7 million dollar deal with the Cubs.
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 29, 2021 19:02:54 GMT
Jacques was rumored to be courted by the Giants. I thought there or Atlanta is where he would end up with a possibility of fitting in Anaheim. He signed a one year $7 million dollar deal with the Cubs. A slight dip in salary.
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Post by truedodger on Jan 29, 2021 19:57:38 GMT
Jacques was rumored to be courted by the Giants. I thought there or Atlanta is where he would end up with a possibility of fitting in Anaheim. He signed a one year $7 million dollar deal with the Cubs. A slight dip in salary. Thought is a lot of the free agent middle class in MLB will see a drop or be around the same in salary because of COVID. Shit I love to take a pay cut to $7 million bucks
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jrgreene6
Legend
Married . . . With Cats
Posts: 7,438
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Post by jrgreene6 on Jan 29, 2021 21:30:01 GMT
Thought is a lot of the free agent middle class in MLB will see a drop or be around the same in salary because of COVID. Shit I love to take a pay cut to $7 million bucks TRUE DAT!!! GO DODGERS!!!
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 30, 2021 5:30:16 GMT
Reports: Cardinals acquire Nolan Arenado from Rockies
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 30, 2021 17:56:06 GMT
Cardinals' Trade for Nolan Arenado Is an Absolute Heist
Another day, another homegrown star traded for a fraction of the value they provided.
MATT MARTELL38 MINUTES AGO
Years from now, what transpired in the baseball world on Jan. 29, 2021, will be remembered as the Friday Night Heist. The Cardinals held up the aimless Rockies for their best player, made Colorado fork over $50 million to cover their tracks and left behind an undisclosed bundle of mid-tier prospects for their troubles. Pleasure doing business.
Of course, the intricacies of the Nolan Arenado trade are far more complex than Wild West stagecoach robberies of Colorado lore. Among other things, the two teams still need to sort out: Arenado’s no-trade clause, his opt-outs (at least one, probably two), the deferred payments, a possible extension and the specific St. Louis farmhands heading to Denver. The league and the players association also have to get involved and sign off on the shakedown. The trade, first reported by The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal, likely won’t become official for a few days, but the framework of this blockbuster is brewed, with Arenado leaving the only team he's ever known.
The deal is yet another frustrating example of a billionaire owner sacrificing competitive integrity at the altar of the Efficiency Gods. It’s the third time within the last 12 months that a team has traded its homegrown star on a Hall of Fame trajectory because it callously and dubiously concluded that the face of its franchise would be more valuable playing for another team.
And yet, there are obvious differences between Colorado’s trading of Arenado and the deals that shipped Mookie Betts to Los Angeles and Francisco Lindor to Queens. The Red Sox easily could have afforded the 12-year, $365 million extension Betts signed with the Dodgers—Boston simply didn’t want to pay him that much. Cleveland, too, did not want to pay Lindor what he’d be worth on the open market, but at least the players it got in return for him could develop into strong contributors for its next winning team.
The Rockies, on the other hand, did pay Arenado a contract befitting baseball’s best third baseman, when they signed him to an eight-year, $260 extension before the 2019 season—which briefly held the record for highest average annual value for a position player. The problem was they assured him they would commit to fielding a winning team around him—which requires spending more money—and then proceeded to cut costs and sign one major-league free agent, reliever José Mujica, over the next two offseasons. If the Rockies were commencing one of those tank-and-rebuilds, well, Arenado wanted no part of it.
“I want to win,” he told Sports Illustrated’s Stephanie Apstein last February. “If we win here, that’s why I signed, right? To win here. But if we’re not gonna win, I’d rather play for a winner. I don’t care where it is. I’d rather win a World Series than have my number retired.”
Jamie Schwaberow/Sports Illustrated
In St. Louis, Arenado will win. The only team awake in a hibernating division, the Cardinals have added the impact bat they’ve so desperately needed over the past five years. And they’ve done so without taking anything away from their three greatest strengths: pitching, defense and a steady pipeline of young talent. None of the prospects named as probable pieces in Colorado’s return package rank among the top players in St. Louis' system. So, unless the final version of the deal is drastically different from what’s now being reported, the Cardinals will keep their No. 1 prospect, third baseman Nolan Gorman, and Jordan Walker, their first-round pick in the 2020 draft who is also a third baseman. Should Arenado exercise his opt-out clause after this season—or his additional opt-out that could be included in his reworked deal with the St. Louis after 2022—the Cardinals would have the hot corner covered.
Still, the Cardinals are planning on Arenado staying for the remaining six years of his contract. That’s why they roped the Rockies into paying them approximately $50 million, to help them cover the $199 million he’s owed. Since 2015, Arenado leads all third basemen in games played (835), hits (952), home runs (207) and OPS (.926). His 33.0 WAR over those six seasons ranks third in the majors—behind only Mike Trout and Mookie Betts—and first among third basemen.
Arenado is also one of the best defensive third basemen ever. He’s won the Gold Glove award in each of his eight seasons. He leads all active third basemen in fielding runs, and already ranks 11th all-time at the position.
There are concerns about how Arenado will perform without playing his home games at Coors Field. At the altitude-assisted hitters haven, he has a lifetime .985 OPS, well above his .793 road OPS. Yet, the more we learn about the disadvantages of playing half the season at Coors Field, the easier it is to envision Arenado thriving with his new team. Look at DJ LeMahieu’s production since leaving Colorado. He’s become one of the game's best offensive players with the Yankees.
Perhaps former slugger Matt Holliday is a better example of what to expect from Arenado with the Cardinals. As is the case now with Arenado, the Cardinals traded for Holliday knowing he could leave in free agency after the season. Holliday re-signed with St. Louis and the next year, he batted .312 with 28 home runs and 103 RBIs. He was 30, the same age Arenado will be this season. Over seven-plus years with St. Louis, Holliday posted a 138 OPS+ and led the Cardinals to two NL pennants (2011, ‘13) and one World Series title (‘11).
Now, with Arenado and first baseman Paul Goldschmidt anchoring the St. Louis infield and hitting in the middle of the order, the Cardinals have capitalized on what was already a winnable NL Central. Their pitching staff is deep, with ace Jack Flaherty and Adam Wainwright leading the rotation and a daunting bullpen to follow them, and franchise icon Yadier Molina is expected to re-sign soon. Switch-hitting outfielder Dylan Carlson, their best young player since the late Oscar Taveras, is entering his first full season in the majors. Shortstop Paul DeJong is one of the game’s more underrated players.
Arenado’s beef with the Rockies was that they were not in position to contend, and the organization had no feasible plan to do so. It’s a shame to see a major league organization as clueless as Colorado.
But somehow, under the maddeningly misguided direction of owner Dick Monfort and GM Jeff Bridich, the Rockies have gifted Arenado and most of us in the baseball world what we’ve wanted all along: to see one of the best third baseman in the playoffs for years to come.
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 30, 2021 18:11:17 GMT
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Post by Blunashun on Jan 31, 2021 21:44:56 GMT
MLB News: League Proposes 154-Game Season With Delayed Start Date to the Union
It appears as though we are going to get a shorter season in 2021.
by Brook Smith
01/31/2021, 10:58 AM
Up until now, it did not seem that MLB and the Player’s Union were at a place where fans could feel confident about the 2021 season. The two sides had reportedly disagreed about the concept of expanded playoffs and shortening the season just a week ago. The good news is, that appears to have changed.
Tim Brown of Yahoo Sports reported today that MLB has sent another proposal for the season over to the Union. That proposal suggests pushing the start date back a full month and extending the season one more week. Under that format, the league would only play 154 games rather than the normal 162. An expanded postseason is a part of that proposal, per the report.
Under normal circumstances, the Union would probably decline MLB’s request right from the start. But it seems to be a little different this time, as the league is offering full pay as a part of the deal. The full payment has been a major sticking point for the Union as they try to get everything they can for the players after a shortened 2020 season.
Pushing back the start date would allow MLB to start things up under presumably safer conditions. Spring Training officials already requested that the league push back the report date as Arizona and Florida both struggle with COVID-19 numbers. A large influx of players, media, and MLB workers in February certainly wouldn’t help that cause.
Pushing back a month would mean that more people — namely players — have time to get vaccinated, and the hope is that the numbers would go down. It is not yet known if the Universal DH was included in the league’s proposal, but they were reported to be in on it should the players accept the extended playoffs. This could be the best-case scenario for all.
UPDATE MLB Network’s Jon Heyman added that the DH is included in the proposal.
Pitchers and catchers are currently set to report to spring training in about two weeks, so there should be some urgency to these talks.
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