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Posted: Tue Nov 22, 2022 9:07 am
A roadmap to the Cleveland Guardians’ offseason
CLEVELAND, OH - OCTOBER 03: Cleveland Guardians catcher Bo Naylor (44) waits for a throw from the outfield during the sixth inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and Cleveland Guardians on October 3, 2022, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire) (Icon Sportswire via AP Images)
By Zack Meisel
3h ago
6
Save Article
CLEVELAND — There’s a choose-your-own-adventure vibe to this Guardians offseason. Their most pressing need is fortifying the starting lineup. They could address the catching position or the first base/designated hitter spots. They also could upgrade the rotation.
They’re equipped with loads of trade capital and, as team president Chris Antonetti would lead you to believe, some financial flexibility. But how do they best deploy their resources to enhance the roster? That’s the basis of the dialogue taking place at 2401 Ontario St. A trade for a catcher and a free-agent signing of a right-handed bat? Vice versa? Is there a trade that would allow them to consolidate some of their upper-level prospect surplus? There’s a lot to sort out, and one move, in many cases, influences the next.
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Here’s a guide to the Guardians’ offseason.
The catching situation
Bo Naylor will factor into this equation, perhaps on Opening Day. The organization hopes he’s its next franchise catcher, a Sandy Alomar Jr.-esque staple behind the plate. But he’s 22, and there’s a steep learning curve for young catchers, who must learn to hit big-league pitching and partner with big-league pitchers. Naylor’s October experience, albeit brief, should help. So, too, should another spring training waddling like an eager duckling behind Alomar, Luke Carlin and whichever veteran catcher the front office lands to pair with him.
There are enough at-bats to go around for an established catcher to join Naylor in some sort of arrangement at catcher and at designated hitter or, depending on defensive versatility, first base. There’s no guarantee Naylor won’t need more time at Triple A at some juncture. The Guardians want insurance at the position. It’s why they pursued Oakland’s Sean Murphy at last season’s trade deadline. It’s why they’ll revisit Murphy, among others, this winter.
Alejandro Kirk slashed .285/.372/.415 with 14 homers and 19 doubles. (Joe Nicholson / USA Today)
The Blue Jays are dangling their three catchers. The Guardians coveted top prospect Gabriel Moreno when the two clubs discussed José Ramírez last spring, but Alejandro Kirk — an All-Star in 2022 — is probably their dream fit. Cleveland prioritizes defense and the handling of a pitching staff above all else when evaluating catchers, but the front office wants some offense from the position. Kirk walked more than he struck out and posted a 129 wRC+ (meaning he was 29 percent better than the league-average hitter, and 40 percent better than the league-average catcher). Danny Jansen might make sense, too.
Granted, those two potential trade partners, Oakland and Toronto, would be asking for quite different returns, since the former is mired in a rebuild and the latter is aiming for a title. The Guardians are far from the only team seeking catching help, which should be no surprise, given the average catcher logged a .226/.295/.367 slash line last season. But that looks like a Cooperstown-worthy slash line compared to Cleveland’s catchers, who registered a .178/.265/.265 line. (Side note: A recent straw poll of The Athletic’s MLB beat writers suggests the number of teams at least entertaining the idea of adding a catcher is in the double digits.)
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As for free agents, the Guardians weren’t crazy about Willson Contreras at the deadline, and they certainly won’t pay him the $84 million MLBTradeRumors projects he’ll earn over four years. Christian Vázquez, Mike Zunino and Omar Narváez are available. (Narváez, like Naylor, is a left-handed hitter, which might remove him from the conversation.) Gary Sanchez probably isn’t their cup of tea. A flock of former Cleveland catchers are also looking for work: Roberto Pérez, Kevin Plawecki and Sandy León.
And then, of course, there’s Austin Hedges, an unquestioned team leader who built a strong rapport with the club’s pitchers. But it’s impossible to ignore his .171/.231/.278 slash line of the last two years. The team has maintained contact with Hedges, but that seems like one of those “someone asks you to hang out this weekend and you have no plans, but you want to explore if there could be any better plans before you commit” situations.
Bottom line: The Guardians will be adding someone. They cut ties with Luke Maile last week, leaving Naylor and Bryan Lavastida as the only catchers on the 40-man roster.
The right-handed power bat
Cleveland ranked 29th in the majors in home runs, ahead of only Detroit. The five teams with the fewest home runs: Royals, A’s, Nationals, Guardians, Tigers. That is not the company you want to keep. And it’s why the Guardians want to add thump to manager Terry Francona’s lineup.
They’re also left-handed-heavy, and they struggled against southpaws last season (.646 OPS). Many of their on-the-cusp/not-quite-sure-where-they-fit young players are lefties, too (George Valera, Will Brennan, Richie Palacios, Will Benson). The solution: Acquire a right-handed hitter, one who can hang in the middle third of the order. And what do you know? The free-agent market has plenty, including José Abreu, J.D. Martinez, Trey Mancini, Josh Bell, Brandon Drury, Wil Myers, Luke Voit, Carlos Santana and Justin Turner.
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Now, several of those players are in the twilight of their careers. The team will need to carefully sidestep the land mines on the list, the guys whose production is about to plummet. The trade market could bear fruit, too, if the Diamondbacks were to make Christian Walker available, or if the Rockies dangle C.J. Cron, or if the Rays listen on Yandy Díaz. Josh Naylor scuffled against lefties last season, so a platoon partner (even if not a strict timeshare) could suffice. Evan Longoria, perhaps? Hey, Jordan Luplow is a free agent. What’s Ryan Raburn up to?
Although the Guardians could squeeze another outfielder into the mix, it doesn’t seem like that’s the priority. Steven Kwan has left field locked down. They believe Oscar Gonzalez deserves a starting spot. And Francona supplied Myles Straw with a vote of confidence in center. If any of those players falter, the club has major league-ready prospect depth (or close to it) in Brennan, Valera and others.
The starting pitching timeline
Here’s a rundown of starting pitchers who could be ticketed for Triple-A Columbus in April or May: Cody Morris, Xzavion Curry, Hunter Gaddis, Konnor Pilkington, Peyton Battenfield, Logan Allen, Joey Cantillo, Daniel Espino, Gavin Williams, Tanner Bibee, Tanner Burns.
I’m not sure an 11-man rotation benefits anyone. The Guardians have trade ammunition.
With Shane Bieber having only two years of control remaining, past extension talks plowing into a dead end and his vanishing velocity (despite ace-like numbers in 2022) complicating his long-term projections, questions will surely surface about his future and his availability. It doesn’t make sense to deal him this winter, not until that trio of top-100 prospects — Espino, Williams and Bibee — develops a bit more. The Guardians can’t lean on those three to guide the rotation in 2023. Even 2024 might be a stretch.
They need Bieber. They need Triston McKenzie. And, frankly, it wouldn’t hurt to have another starter of that ilk in the rotation, just in case Cal Quantrill, Aaron Civale and Zach Plesac don’t outperform their metrics. The Guardians made a multiyear offer to Carlos Rodón before the 2022 season, and he’s a free agent again, but he’s likely to get nine figures this time. Given the price of free-agent starters, a rotation upgrade would probably have to come via a trade, unless it were a one-year flier on someone such as Corey Kluber or Ross Stripling. (Hey, Mike Clevinger’s out there, too). The Guardians certainly have the internal depth to fill out the back of the rotation if they were to move Plesac or another starter.
The shortstop situation
Amed Rosario: Extend him, trade him or pay him in his final year of arbitration? (Brad Penner / USA Today)
Amed Rosario tends to spark a ton of debate. Everyone seemingly either treasures him and wants the club to sign him to a century-long extension or is unimpressed by him and wants the club to trade him to the first team that answers Antonetti’s call. It’s one end of the spectrum or the other, which is ironic considering every season, Rosario posts a solid, league-average, middle-of-the-spectrum stat line.
Rosario by year (excluding COVID season)
2019
.287/.323/.432
101
2.0
2021
.282/.321/.409
99
2.4
2022
.283/.312/.403
103
2.4
There are three choices: Extend him, trade him or pay him $8 million to $9 million in his final year of arbitration and go from there. Ramírez would choose door No. 1 for his close companion. Some front office number-crunchers would choose door No. 2. Members of the coaching staff, who appreciated his hustle and leadership in 2022, would choose door No. 1 or 3.
Gabriel Arias and Tyler Freeman reached the majors this year. Brayan Rocchio advanced to Triple A. Jose Tena and Angel Martinez are on the 40-man roster, as is newcomer Juan Brito. There’s no guarantee any of those candidates would provide more value than Rosario in 2023, but the team does need to capitalize on its depth at the position, whether that means trading from the surplus or finding more opportunities for the young players who are ready for the majors. The Guardians either need learn what Arias, Freeman and, eventually, Rocchio can do with 500 plate appearances, or they need to deal them before their trade value declines. Timing is everything with prospects, as the Guardians learned with Nolan Jones.
If they were to consider a Rosario trade — and they consider a trade of anyone other teams inquire about — could they get much in return? It’s a loaded free-agent shortstop class, with Carlos Correa, Trea Turner, Xander Bogaerts and Dansby Swanson all expected to command six-, seven- or eight-year deals for north of $150 million. If Cleveland hadn’t positioned itself as a contender, trading Rosario would be a no-brainer. But they can’t simply dismiss his speed and his ability to feast on lefties, especially if he wouldn’t fetch much in a trade.
The payroll
The organization has downplayed how the addition of David Blitzer’s minority ownership group will influence change on the payroll front. But Antonetti did say he expects the club’s payroll “to be appreciably higher” than last season’s figure of about $68.2 million. Here’s your annual Antonetti statement on the matter:
“Where, exactly, that settles, we’re just not quite sure. Some of that will be a function of not just our internal projections, but what opportunities are going to be available to us on the market, and we don’t only look at things in a one-year snapshot. We really think about team building on a multiyear horizon.”
The Cot’s Baseball Contracts estimation, when including projected salaries for the team’s seven arbitration-eligible players, is $68.7 million. I’m not sure $500,000 qualifies as “appreciably higher.”
So, expect long-term extension conversations in the spring. McKenzie, Kwan and Andrés Giménez seem like obvious targets. Expect the Guardians to scour the trade market and the list of second- and third-tier free agents to locate a useful hitter or two. With trades and free agency (to a degree) both at their disposal, countless scenarios are in play.
CLEVELAND, OH - OCTOBER 03: Cleveland Guardians catcher Bo Naylor (44) waits for a throw from the outfield during the sixth inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and Cleveland Guardians on October 3, 2022, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire) (Icon Sportswire via AP Images)
By Zack Meisel
3h ago
6
Save Article
CLEVELAND — There’s a choose-your-own-adventure vibe to this Guardians offseason. Their most pressing need is fortifying the starting lineup. They could address the catching position or the first base/designated hitter spots. They also could upgrade the rotation.
They’re equipped with loads of trade capital and, as team president Chris Antonetti would lead you to believe, some financial flexibility. But how do they best deploy their resources to enhance the roster? That’s the basis of the dialogue taking place at 2401 Ontario St. A trade for a catcher and a free-agent signing of a right-handed bat? Vice versa? Is there a trade that would allow them to consolidate some of their upper-level prospect surplus? There’s a lot to sort out, and one move, in many cases, influences the next.
ADVERTISEMENT
Here’s a guide to the Guardians’ offseason.
The catching situation
Bo Naylor will factor into this equation, perhaps on Opening Day. The organization hopes he’s its next franchise catcher, a Sandy Alomar Jr.-esque staple behind the plate. But he’s 22, and there’s a steep learning curve for young catchers, who must learn to hit big-league pitching and partner with big-league pitchers. Naylor’s October experience, albeit brief, should help. So, too, should another spring training waddling like an eager duckling behind Alomar, Luke Carlin and whichever veteran catcher the front office lands to pair with him.
There are enough at-bats to go around for an established catcher to join Naylor in some sort of arrangement at catcher and at designated hitter or, depending on defensive versatility, first base. There’s no guarantee Naylor won’t need more time at Triple A at some juncture. The Guardians want insurance at the position. It’s why they pursued Oakland’s Sean Murphy at last season’s trade deadline. It’s why they’ll revisit Murphy, among others, this winter.
Alejandro Kirk slashed .285/.372/.415 with 14 homers and 19 doubles. (Joe Nicholson / USA Today)
The Blue Jays are dangling their three catchers. The Guardians coveted top prospect Gabriel Moreno when the two clubs discussed José Ramírez last spring, but Alejandro Kirk — an All-Star in 2022 — is probably their dream fit. Cleveland prioritizes defense and the handling of a pitching staff above all else when evaluating catchers, but the front office wants some offense from the position. Kirk walked more than he struck out and posted a 129 wRC+ (meaning he was 29 percent better than the league-average hitter, and 40 percent better than the league-average catcher). Danny Jansen might make sense, too.
Granted, those two potential trade partners, Oakland and Toronto, would be asking for quite different returns, since the former is mired in a rebuild and the latter is aiming for a title. The Guardians are far from the only team seeking catching help, which should be no surprise, given the average catcher logged a .226/.295/.367 slash line last season. But that looks like a Cooperstown-worthy slash line compared to Cleveland’s catchers, who registered a .178/.265/.265 line. (Side note: A recent straw poll of The Athletic’s MLB beat writers suggests the number of teams at least entertaining the idea of adding a catcher is in the double digits.)
ADVERTISEMENT
As for free agents, the Guardians weren’t crazy about Willson Contreras at the deadline, and they certainly won’t pay him the $84 million MLBTradeRumors projects he’ll earn over four years. Christian Vázquez, Mike Zunino and Omar Narváez are available. (Narváez, like Naylor, is a left-handed hitter, which might remove him from the conversation.) Gary Sanchez probably isn’t their cup of tea. A flock of former Cleveland catchers are also looking for work: Roberto Pérez, Kevin Plawecki and Sandy León.
And then, of course, there’s Austin Hedges, an unquestioned team leader who built a strong rapport with the club’s pitchers. But it’s impossible to ignore his .171/.231/.278 slash line of the last two years. The team has maintained contact with Hedges, but that seems like one of those “someone asks you to hang out this weekend and you have no plans, but you want to explore if there could be any better plans before you commit” situations.
Bottom line: The Guardians will be adding someone. They cut ties with Luke Maile last week, leaving Naylor and Bryan Lavastida as the only catchers on the 40-man roster.
The right-handed power bat
Cleveland ranked 29th in the majors in home runs, ahead of only Detroit. The five teams with the fewest home runs: Royals, A’s, Nationals, Guardians, Tigers. That is not the company you want to keep. And it’s why the Guardians want to add thump to manager Terry Francona’s lineup.
They’re also left-handed-heavy, and they struggled against southpaws last season (.646 OPS). Many of their on-the-cusp/not-quite-sure-where-they-fit young players are lefties, too (George Valera, Will Brennan, Richie Palacios, Will Benson). The solution: Acquire a right-handed hitter, one who can hang in the middle third of the order. And what do you know? The free-agent market has plenty, including José Abreu, J.D. Martinez, Trey Mancini, Josh Bell, Brandon Drury, Wil Myers, Luke Voit, Carlos Santana and Justin Turner.
ADVERTISEMENT
Now, several of those players are in the twilight of their careers. The team will need to carefully sidestep the land mines on the list, the guys whose production is about to plummet. The trade market could bear fruit, too, if the Diamondbacks were to make Christian Walker available, or if the Rockies dangle C.J. Cron, or if the Rays listen on Yandy Díaz. Josh Naylor scuffled against lefties last season, so a platoon partner (even if not a strict timeshare) could suffice. Evan Longoria, perhaps? Hey, Jordan Luplow is a free agent. What’s Ryan Raburn up to?
Although the Guardians could squeeze another outfielder into the mix, it doesn’t seem like that’s the priority. Steven Kwan has left field locked down. They believe Oscar Gonzalez deserves a starting spot. And Francona supplied Myles Straw with a vote of confidence in center. If any of those players falter, the club has major league-ready prospect depth (or close to it) in Brennan, Valera and others.
The starting pitching timeline
Here’s a rundown of starting pitchers who could be ticketed for Triple-A Columbus in April or May: Cody Morris, Xzavion Curry, Hunter Gaddis, Konnor Pilkington, Peyton Battenfield, Logan Allen, Joey Cantillo, Daniel Espino, Gavin Williams, Tanner Bibee, Tanner Burns.
I’m not sure an 11-man rotation benefits anyone. The Guardians have trade ammunition.
With Shane Bieber having only two years of control remaining, past extension talks plowing into a dead end and his vanishing velocity (despite ace-like numbers in 2022) complicating his long-term projections, questions will surely surface about his future and his availability. It doesn’t make sense to deal him this winter, not until that trio of top-100 prospects — Espino, Williams and Bibee — develops a bit more. The Guardians can’t lean on those three to guide the rotation in 2023. Even 2024 might be a stretch.
They need Bieber. They need Triston McKenzie. And, frankly, it wouldn’t hurt to have another starter of that ilk in the rotation, just in case Cal Quantrill, Aaron Civale and Zach Plesac don’t outperform their metrics. The Guardians made a multiyear offer to Carlos Rodón before the 2022 season, and he’s a free agent again, but he’s likely to get nine figures this time. Given the price of free-agent starters, a rotation upgrade would probably have to come via a trade, unless it were a one-year flier on someone such as Corey Kluber or Ross Stripling. (Hey, Mike Clevinger’s out there, too). The Guardians certainly have the internal depth to fill out the back of the rotation if they were to move Plesac or another starter.
The shortstop situation
Amed Rosario: Extend him, trade him or pay him in his final year of arbitration? (Brad Penner / USA Today)
Amed Rosario tends to spark a ton of debate. Everyone seemingly either treasures him and wants the club to sign him to a century-long extension or is unimpressed by him and wants the club to trade him to the first team that answers Antonetti’s call. It’s one end of the spectrum or the other, which is ironic considering every season, Rosario posts a solid, league-average, middle-of-the-spectrum stat line.
Rosario by year (excluding COVID season)
2019
.287/.323/.432
101
2.0
2021
.282/.321/.409
99
2.4
2022
.283/.312/.403
103
2.4
There are three choices: Extend him, trade him or pay him $8 million to $9 million in his final year of arbitration and go from there. Ramírez would choose door No. 1 for his close companion. Some front office number-crunchers would choose door No. 2. Members of the coaching staff, who appreciated his hustle and leadership in 2022, would choose door No. 1 or 3.
Gabriel Arias and Tyler Freeman reached the majors this year. Brayan Rocchio advanced to Triple A. Jose Tena and Angel Martinez are on the 40-man roster, as is newcomer Juan Brito. There’s no guarantee any of those candidates would provide more value than Rosario in 2023, but the team does need to capitalize on its depth at the position, whether that means trading from the surplus or finding more opportunities for the young players who are ready for the majors. The Guardians either need learn what Arias, Freeman and, eventually, Rocchio can do with 500 plate appearances, or they need to deal them before their trade value declines. Timing is everything with prospects, as the Guardians learned with Nolan Jones.
If they were to consider a Rosario trade — and they consider a trade of anyone other teams inquire about — could they get much in return? It’s a loaded free-agent shortstop class, with Carlos Correa, Trea Turner, Xander Bogaerts and Dansby Swanson all expected to command six-, seven- or eight-year deals for north of $150 million. If Cleveland hadn’t positioned itself as a contender, trading Rosario would be a no-brainer. But they can’t simply dismiss his speed and his ability to feast on lefties, especially if he wouldn’t fetch much in a trade.
The payroll
The organization has downplayed how the addition of David Blitzer’s minority ownership group will influence change on the payroll front. But Antonetti did say he expects the club’s payroll “to be appreciably higher” than last season’s figure of about $68.2 million. Here’s your annual Antonetti statement on the matter:
“Where, exactly, that settles, we’re just not quite sure. Some of that will be a function of not just our internal projections, but what opportunities are going to be available to us on the market, and we don’t only look at things in a one-year snapshot. We really think about team building on a multiyear horizon.”
The Cot’s Baseball Contracts estimation, when including projected salaries for the team’s seven arbitration-eligible players, is $68.7 million. I’m not sure $500,000 qualifies as “appreciably higher.”
So, expect long-term extension conversations in the spring. McKenzie, Kwan and Andrés Giménez seem like obvious targets. Expect the Guardians to scour the trade market and the list of second- and third-tier free agents to locate a useful hitter or two. With trades and free agency (to a degree) both at their disposal, countless scenarios are in play.