Next week at this time, the Winter Meetings will be full go, so the offseason here for Major League Baseball should really start ramping up after a predictably slow start. We might even get the biggest news of the offseason before the meetings start, as Juan Soto is rumored to be possibly signing his deal by the end of this week.
As for everything else, let’s get to it.
Two more teams in on Crochet?
Nearly any contending team or those hoping to contend have shown some level of interest in White Sox All-Star starting pitcher Garrett Crochet. Add the Cubs and Reds to the list, reports Jon Morosi of MLB Network.
Crochet, a 25-year-old lefty, is under team control through 2026. Last season, he went 6-12 (remember, the White Sox were 41-121) with a 3.58 ERA (115 ERA+), 1.07 WHIP and 209 strikeouts in 146 innings. He took a big step back in the second half and his workload was limited, but this was his first full year in an MLB rotation. He was 6-6 with a 3.02 ERA and 0.95 WHIP in the first half.
The Cubs are already heavy on lefties with Justin Steele, Shota Imanaga and Matthew Boyd, but it couldn’t hurt to grab someone with the upside of Crochet. The team is much more likely at this point to trade, given the roster, than sign a major free agent, given the front office’s aversion to big-dollar risk.
The Reds seem to have a full rotation with Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo, Brady Singer, Andrew Abbott and Nick Martinez, but there are plenty of questions there and having six starters in this day and age is just good business.
Astros could float trades of big pieces
Between what is a robust MLB payroll and relatively barren farm system, the Astros are at a bit of a crossroads. Alex Bregman is a free agent while Kyle Tucker and Framber Valdez are both one year away from hitting the market. The Astros have already been said to have discussed trading back-end reliever Ryan Pressly, but The Athletic floats a far more jarring idea.
Making either Kyle Tucker or Framber Valdez available in trade discussions may be the easiest path for Houston to balance its present and future. Both men are estimated to make more than $15 million in their final trip through the arbitration process. Next winter, both will demand the sort of free-agent deals Crane is loath to give. Parting with either Valdez or Tucker would not signal a rebuild, but would bring back the sort of prospect haul to help stabilize a fledgling farm system.
Tucker only played in 78 games last year due to injury, but he was incredibly productive when on the field and is arguably their best position player. Valdez is their ace and just went 15-7 with a 2.91 ERA, finishing seventh in Cy Young voting.
Who the Astros chose to trade from the two — if either — would surely be determined based upon the returns that were being offered. It’s obviously just in the speculation stage, but this is a juicy one for sure.
Bohm to Seattle?
There’s been plenty of talk about the Phillies possibly trading All-Star third baseman Alec Bohm this offseason while the Mariners seem to be perpetually looking for offense. Might there be a match?
A report in the Seattle Times says the Mariners’