RosterResource Chat – 11/29/24

2:01
Avatar Jason Martinez: Welcome to our 2nd RosterResource Live Chat! Thanks for joining us. Not a lot has happened since last week other than the Snell/Kikuchi signings and mostly unsurprising non-tenders. Still a lot of fun topics to discuss. Here we go …

2:01
Matt: Bellinger opting in has put a bit of a wrinkle into Jed’s offseason plans. If you were Hoyer, how would you approach improving the offense , while trying to give some room for some of their top-100,guys to emerge?

2:03
Jon Becker: This certainly wasn’t ideal for Hoyer, who would certainly rather have the Bellinger money to spend elsewhere, not to mention the plate appearances. Improving the offense will be tough outside of just hoping for internal improvements — the obvious lane for that would have been to trade Hoerner, but his surgery complicates things — or trading Bellinger himself (also difficult!). A catcher with offensive upside (Sánchez, Higashioka, etc.) to pair with Amaya is the only place they can add a starter without trading someone else.

2:03
NT: Have heard nothing about the Twins. Where do you think they need to upgrade and how do you think they do it? Any chance of a Correa trade in your estimation?

2:06
Avatar Jason Martinez: I don’t think Correa will be traded. Would take a lot of creativity and either the Twins eating a lot of $ or taking on another big contract in return. And that’s tough to do. Would love to see it. I think there are a few others teams in the same boat.

They have to figure out a way to build a team that is competitive while not counting on Correa/Buxton/Lewis. And anything those guys can contribute is a bonus. Brooks Lee and some of the other youngsters stepping up will be huge. Same with pitching. Lots of youngsters who can take the next step.

2:07
Jon Becker: It’s definitely going to be a quiet offseason for them, so much so that it wouldn’t at all surprise me to see them rank 30th in FA spending. Internal improvements + adding on the margins (RH OF, a lefty reliever) will probably be about it for them.

2:07
TD: How do you think the Padres will approach the off-season, considering that they are currently up against the luxury tax?

2:09
Jon Becker: They don’t have a Juan Soto-level contract to move to simultaneously lower payroll and infuse talent; Arraez wouldn’t bring back all that much, Cronenworth and Bogaerts are close to un-trade-able, etc. I think they basically have to commit to being a luxury tax payor since we already have them projected at $3M over (https://www.fangraphs.com/roster-resource/payroll/padres) and they desperately need a catcher and left fielder, at minimum.

2:09
Guest: Has there been any discussion about assuming less optimistic PAs in the Depth Chart projections? If so, what’s the reasoning for this assumption?

2:12
Avatar Jason Martinez: I love discussing this topic but this is probably not the best place to give the best answer. Better for more specific players. But I will say that they can be less optimistic for starting pitching prospects. That’s because we only project 100% even though it should be more like 125% just because we know for sure there will be injuries. We just can’t assume who will get hurt. For position players, I think they can be too optimistic because my definition of “injury-prone” might be different than others.

So I’d look at it the pitchers more like a depth chart order. Who is next in line if one of the top 5 is out for the season? For position players, when should Royce Lewis be considered “injury-prone” and penciled in for 75-80% instead of 85-90%? He was 25 years old last season and had a few freak injuries so I didn’t think he was “injury-prone” yet. I was probably wrong.

2:13
BuccoFan: Do you agree that the Pirates would be better off spending $30M on one or two difference makers, instead on 6 or 7 guys that inevitably will finish around replacement level?

2:14
Jon Becker: Definitely, yes. The pitching looks pretty good but they badly need an actual threat in the middle of the lineup, not another Grandal + Taylor + Tellez “let’s hope for improvements” offseason. Bringing McCutchen back feel like a given and along with that I’d look into FA like Walker, Santander, and O’Neill, if I was Ben Cherington.

2:15
MilledgeReport: The Cardinals selected Tink Hence’s contract from AA this week. Do you guys anticipate he makes his MLB debut this year, or is he someone who needs more time building up innings in the minors?

2:17
Avatar Jason Martinez: He’s talented enough to force his way into the mix. But I doubt the Cardinals are counting on it. Only 79.2 IP last season. Maybe he can reach 130 IP this season. If that’s the case, do they bring him up early until they have to shut him down? Do they bring him along very slowly in case he can help them in the 2nd half? Too many unknowns for the Cardinals to assume either of those scenarios. I think they just hope he continues to progress and not worry about when to call him up.

2:18
Jon Becker: I also don’t think “needs more time building up innings” and “makes his MLB debut” have to be mutually exclusive either. Looking at how the White Sox handled Crochet down the stretch, the Cardinals could call Hence up when rosters expand to get him on an every-fifth-day schedule, but limit him to three innings apiece.

2:18
Guest: Have the Dodgers completely given up on Lux as a SS?

2:19
Jon Becker: It wouldn’t surprise me if they give him a shot there in Spring Training, but the throwing really did look rough before they flipped him and Betts at the very end of Spring Training this past season. Being able to platoon at short with Rojas and having Betts play 2B, where he’d better, would make things easier for sure. Or they could just sign Adames, of course.

2:19
White Sox: Any particular low cost free agents that would be into some playing time? Crochet likely fetching two Top 100s?

2:24
Avatar Jason Martinez: 2 Top 100 prospects is what it would take to start a conversation. Red Sox have to be the favorite but I think there are a few other teams who would be willing.

Free Agent market is full of these low-cost veterans … https://www.fangraphs.com/roster-resource/free-agent-tracker

But why would they want to play for the White Sox? Only if it’s their best chance at regular playing time. I think there is room for two bats (OF/DH), 2 SP, and a few RPs.  Maybe a David Peralta or Randal Grichuk. Maybe a Cal Quantrill or Griffin Canning.

2:25
Jon Becker: I’ll also throw Sócrates Brito in there, only because Jon Heyman reported this morning he’s getting MLB interest, and veterans coming back from the KBO is fun!

2:25
Seattle_54percenters: What realistic options for Mariners at 3B, 2B, and 1B/DH? Ownership prefers profits to winning unfortunately:/

2:27
Jon Becker: I totally get why people want to tie them to players like Alonso and Bregman, but Dipoto and ownership have just never operated in that stratosphere for FA. I do think they’ll still be looking at some good players, though. Gleyber, Profar, Joc, Conforto come to mind, and they’ve got reported interest in a reunion with Justin Turner or Carlos Santana.

2:27
Matt (Oceanside): I saw you have Mookie listed as the Dodgers starting SS. With his poor metrics there last season after the surprise switch from second. He had spent all the last offseason prepping for a return to 2B- doesn’t that suggest that 2B is his most obvious position and either trading Lux or trying Lux again at SS after a longer time away from the knee surgeries?

2:29
Avatar Jason Martinez: It’s one of those tricky things to communicate on the RR Opening Day roster projection. Mookie is playing infield. We know that for sure. And I don’t think they’re going to give Lux another chance at SS, mostly because they’re the Dodgers and they don’t have to go into the season with that level of uncertainty at an important spot. So what that projection tells you is that they don’t have their starting SS on the roster at this time.

2:29
The Final Boss: High School Reunion in Boston? Giolito + Fried and Flaherty?

2:30
Jon Becker: Definitely plausible considering they’ve been connected to just about every big FA, and if they don’t get Soto (or even if they do, I suppose) I could see them going big for one or two significant SP. Would have to share the inside jokes with Houck and Bello, though.

2:30
friday scaries: Tim Tawa and Joe Elbis struck me as interesting 40 man additions for a likely playoff contender, what do you make of them?

2:33
Avatar Jason Martinez: Tawa has put up good offensive numbers in the upper minors and he can play multiple positions (INF and OF). So I think he’s just a guy who would likely be popular in the R5 draft and the Dbacks didn’t want to lose him. Elbis is probably in a similar position. Not a top prospect with the big-time arm, but looks like he has good command and teams could probably see him as a capable long reliever in 2025.

2:33
Matt: Think Cubs more likely to go FA signing of vet without QO attached , in order to upgrade SP, or will they look to trade mkt(SEA?)?

2:35
Jon Becker: If they can line up with the White Sox for Crochet or the Mariners for a starter, they certainly have the upper-level impact prospects to make a trade feel like the “easier” lane. If they’re not interested in starters with QOs attached, the only top of the rotation (or close to it) options are Flaherty, Eovaldi, or an upside play on Bieber, who won’t be ready for the start of the season.

2:35
David Stearns: Prediction on who the Mets sign this offseason? Also is Taylor really gonna start over Siri?

2:37
Avatar Jason Martinez: I know it probably seems like Siri would start in CF, but he was really, really, really bad in 2024. And in many parts of previous seasons. And Taylor was very good while playing regularly at the end of the season. I don’t think either will start, though.

Jon and I both predicted last week that Soto would sign with the Mets, which would likely push Nimmo to CF. And if they fall short on Soto, I think they’ll get someone like Teoscar or Santander. I also think they’re going to re-sign Pete Alonso. Cohen isn’t messing around this offseason.

2:39
Jon Becker: And even if this is the outfielders they’ve got going into the season, I don’t think one’s going to play way more than the other. Siri hit fastballs better than Taylor, Taylor hit everything else better, Marte will need days off, etc. If/when they do add, there are still going to be plenty of PAs to go around, too.

2:39
Rywe: What do you think the Giants plan to do this offseason considering they’ve publicly said they’re cutting payroll for 2025? I doubt Buster is gonna break the bank for a high-tier free agent and the Giants have so many holes to fill (SP, SS, 2B)

2:41
Jon Becker: The payroll cutting takes them out of the running for Soto, with whom they didn’t even meet, but it won’t prevent them from much else. They’ve still got about $50M to spend before hitting 2024’s payroll, and there’s a lot you can do with that (Adames + Fried are probably somewhere around there in combined AAV, for example, not that I expect them to do that). They could trade Yaz to clear up some outfield playing time (and cash) or trade Wade and go bigger for Alonso or Walker with plenty of room to still say they cut payroll.

2:41
Rywe: What role does Tyler Fitzgerald have this year? He was subpar at SS last season but passable at 2B. Utility guy that fills in on off days for Jung-Hoo Lee?

2:42
Avatar Jason Martinez: Seems like the most logical spot is 2B. Maybe 1B if they trade LaMonte Wade Jr. He could also be a Zobrist-type utilityman that plays everyday at 4-5 different spots. But if they don’t get Adames or Kim, they might have to stick with him at SS.

2:44
Doc Estes: Do you have a few favorite post-hype prospects that may make a significant impact in 2025?

2:45
Jon Becker: Does Jackson Holliday count as post-hype yet? Things couldn’t have gone much worse for him at the plate, and he looked pretty rough at second base, too, but the toe tap he worked in during the last week of the season seemed to work out well. I don’t think the O’s are going to acquire anyone to block him, either.

2:45
Jonathan: Where will Juan Soto be playing in 2025?

2:48
Avatar Jason Martinez: As I mentioned a few questions ago, Jon and I both predicted NYM in last week’s chat. But, realistically, why would he sign with any team other than the Dodgers, Mets, or Yankees? Phillies probably belong in that group, as well. He’s going to sign a 15-year deal and he knows that those teams are going to try to win every year. Red Sox could convince him that they will do the same. Maybe the Blue Jays. Could the Nats convince him that they plan to spend $ and be competitive for the next 15 years? Maybe. But he’s Juan Soto. He doesn’t have to go with “maybe”. He knows the Dodgers, Mets, and Yankees are going to spend every offseason to build around him.

2:49
Jon Becker: That’s a big part of why I don’t think the Blue Jays have much of a shot unless they blow all the other offers out of the water, which I don’t think is going to happen, either. The selling point is… the last year of Vlad Jr. and a potentially-closing window without much in the way of prospects on the way?

2:49
Coach73: Could You speculate on the teams that could use Gleyber torres?

2:50
Jon Becker: I think there’ll be pretty widespread interest in him as a bounce back option, even though he’s limited to 2B and isn’t particularly good at playing there, either. I mentioned the Mariners earlier but the Red Sox also make a lot of sense, and the Blue Jays are reportedly interested, too. Maybe someone like the Marlins jumps in for a one-year offer if the multi-year contract offers aren’t looking great.

2:50
Blair: What SP will the Mets try to acquire via trade? Is Luis Castillo a realistic option?

2:53
Avatar Jason Martinez: The Mariners are one of the few teams that can afford to trade one of their best starting pitchers so I think it’s realistic. But, even then, starting rotation is the reason they’re a legitimate contender every season so maybe they just don’t want to subtract from that. One potential very interesting trade option, in my opinion, could be Dylan Cease if the Padres are handcuffed financially this offseason. The price for starting pitchers is crazy high and Cease would be affordable at around $13-14MM for one season.

2:54
Jon Becker: I neglected to mention Cease earlier when I said they don’t have a Soto-level contract/player to trade, and Cease certainly isn’t that, but he would bring back quite the return. They could then turn around and sign a decent starter for half as much. Martín Pérez pitched well there after the trade, for example.

2:54
Matt: Which of Cubs ready or near-ready prospects deserve a legit shot this year?

2:56
Jon Becker: Assuming health I think we’ll see Matt Shaw at some point this year, maybe early on Hoerner has a setback or the offense isn’t clicking. Ballesteros is another one who could get the call if Amaya/Thaiss are the two catchers and aren’t hitting. On the pitching side, a healthy Cade Horton probably debuts at some point, too.

2:57
Ben: I’ve wondered this for so long but how are the power rankings measured on RR? I could never find an accurate correlation with WAR so I never knew.

2:59
Avatar Jason Martinez: For batters, it’s probably closer to wRC+ because there is no defense included in the formula. And then the challenging part is to balance out counting stats and rate stats so small-sample size doesn’t get weighted too heavily. When I created it a long time ago, the goal was so that a reader could just get a general idea of whether a player was having a good season (overall or last 7/14 days) or not and then research further if necessary. I think it works well for that.

3:00
Eric: If the Mets sign Juan Soto, do you expect them to match their 2024 payroll in 2025 by continually adding?

3:01
Jon Becker: Even if you figure Soto’s at $50M/year, spending another ~$125M on top of that feels really, really hard, but not impossible. Going aggressive on the rotation (Burnes + Manaea + Flaherty, or something like that) is still only $75M or so.

3:01
Coach73: Do you see jonathan aranda making an impact this year?

3:03
Avatar Jason Martinez: Yes, I do. This is his make-or-break season, in my opinion. He’s out of options and the Rays haven’t really given him much of an opportunity. And injuries haven’t helped. As of now, I have him penciled in to the starting lineup … https://www.fangraphs.com/roster-resource/depth-charts/rays

I would love for the Padres to acquire him, which is possible if the Rays don’t really believe in him as an everyday guy. Of course, I think the Padres are obligated to have a few players from Tijuana on their roster. Tirso Ornelas, Alejandro Kirk, and Aranda would fit that goal for me.

3:05
Avatar Jason Martinez: Gonna wrap it up now. We’ll be back for another chat next Friday at the same time. Have a great weekend!

3:05
Jon Becker: Thanks for stopping by, everyone!





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montrealMember since 2022
14 days ago

Regarding the Twins they need to trade one of Buxton, Lewis or Correa (if possible) You just can’t have 3 of your top players as huge injury risks. The pitching is excellent but they need more hitters who can stay in the lineup.

I Like Big BuxtonMember since 2024
12 days ago
Reply to  montreal

I don’t buy Correa being a “huge” injury risk. He missed a bunch of games in 2024, but played in 86% of his teams’ games the previous three seasons (plus 58/60 in 2020). He returned fine from his 2023 plantar faciitis until he got it in the other foot in 2024, so I guess the question is mostly how much risk that condition actually adds.

Correa and Buxton would likely not bring much in return, so the team would be going backwards unless they are able to smartly reallocate that money elsewhere. Lewis would bring a good return, but again, it would be difficult to find a trade that doesn’t make the team worse in the short term and there is the possibility that he stays healthy and the Twins regret it.

It’s a high-risk, high-reward roster. I say just roll with it and hope for the best!