Category Archives: Trades

July 30, 2022

Castillo to the Mariners

The Mariners traded their two top prospects to the Reds for pitcher Luis Castillo:

The Reds traded Castillo to the Seattle Mariners on Friday night for four minor leaguers, including the Mariners’ top two prospects, according to Baseball America’s rankings. Castillo isn’t a free agent until the end of the 2023 season, but the Reds hoped to maximize the return of a Castillo trade by dealing him with a year-and-a-half of team control left. 

MSN.com

That includes two shortstops and two right-handed pitchers. It’s a good idea to stock up on shortstop prospects. If they hit, they can often move to other skill positions if there is a log jam at short, or they become trade bait to fill in holes.

USS Mariner analyzes the trade from the Seattle side of things:

While Fangraphs likes the M’s offense due to their home park, they don’t score a lot of runs. Again, the park is part of that, but so is their nature as something of a low-average, boom or bust operation especially after Ty France. So why upgrade the rotation?

Three reasons. First, it lets them stick around in games when the offense isn’t scoring. Think of yesterday’s game, when Logan Gilbert kept the M’s in it, leaving with a tie game. They’re going to need a lot of such games to go their way, and as good as the staff’s been since June, they just acquired a pitcher with a better track record than Robbie Ray.

Second, pitchers like Gilbert and George Kirby are getting very close to innings limits.

USSMariner.com

In an earlier discussion of a potential trade for Juan Soto, USS Mariner noted that a big trade has to hurt, and the trade for Castillo fulfills that criteria as well. Given the prospects moved, a trade for Soto would appear to be off the table.

July 28, 2022

The Anti Gallo

The Yankees traded with the Royals for outfielder Andrew Benintendi:

The AL East leaders sent right-handers Chandler Champlain and Beck Way to the Royals along with left-hander T.J. Sikkema.

Chron.com

The trade appears to be in response to the Giancarlo Stanton injury, and the continued poor performance of Joey Gallo. With home runs less of a threat this season, pitchers are no longer as willing to pitch around Gallo, and his OBP dropped about 65 points from 2021 with his BA dropping about 30 points. His slugging is down well over 100 points.

Benintendi, on the other hand, hit for some power last season, but saw his OBP down compared to his career average. He abandoned power in 2022, putting the ball in play more and raising his BA 45 points and his OBP 60 points. When Stanton returns, Benintendi gives the Yankees a chance use a different type of hitter when the situation warrants.

Sikkema is old for A ball and blows away batters there. Way is a high K, high walk pitcher who improved his walk rate this season. At age 22 he’s still at high A ball. Champlain is in his first year of pro ball, and his stats are more like Sikkema, but Champlain gives up lots of home runs.

The Royals did not get a haul for a player who looks like a rental. It will be a while before any of the three emerge as MLB pitchers. If one of them turns out to be good, that’s a win for KC.

July 27, 2022

Low Volume

I was just thinking about the dearth of trades so far this July when I saw this headline, Hey, Where Are My Trades?

But it HAS been tremendously inactive around baseball this week, the final week before the August 2 Trade Deadline. What’s the deal? Where are the trades? There are rumors, aplenty, yes, but where are the actual deals? Is this normal? This feels abnormal!

BleacherNation.com

The two theories the post posits are teams waiting for Juan Soto to move and the extra-wild card putting more teams into contention. We saw that yesterday when the Red Sox front office was still committed to getting the team to the playoffs. All those teams on the edge means the sellers can wait for the best deal.

July 22, 2022

DH Deal

The Mets acquired Daniel Vogelbach from the Pirates for reliever Colin Holderman. New York made the deal to upgrade the DH position:

The burly Vogelbach, a left-handed hitter and an All-Star in 2019 with Seattle, was batting .228 with 12 home runs, 34 RBIs and a .769 OPS in 75 games with the struggling Pirates.

ESPN.com

Vogelbach is about walks and power, with a .338 OBP and a .430 slugging percentage. Mets designated hitters are at .216/.300/.362. They were also about walks and power, but not as much as Vogelbach.

Holderman is an old rookie, seasonal age 26, but he’s pitching well, 4-0 with a 2.04 ERA in 17 2/3 innings. He has yet to allow a home run. He’ll be a good value for the Pirates through his prime.

July 21, 2022

Best Worst Case

Here’s U.S.S. Mariner on a potential trade of Juan Soto to Seattle:

To me, this is a nearly unthinkable alignment. The Nats going cheap (yes I KNOW they offered him a lot of money) right as the M’s emerge *despite* a so-so offense. I’d argue there is no team that Soto changes more than the Seattle Mariners. You cannot allow him to go to an AL Wild Card team, either. The Tampa Bay Rays match up really well here, and might be 2nd to Seattle in terms of a team whose playoff outlook would change with Soto in the fold. The price is eye-wateringly high, so just buy it down and take Corbin. Some will say that this could impact a potential Julioooo extension, and while the club might claim that, it just doesn’t work. The M’s could extend Juliooo after the Soto deal is off the books. They could say the M’s would be forced to choose between the two. That’s…that’s the best “worst case scenario” I have ever heard of, and like all of these supposed dilemmas and riddles, it is *easily solvable* with US currency. The M’s fought so hard to be in a position to spend. They’re in it. Now you’ve got to do it.

USSMariner.com

I agree with all of that. We’ll see what happens.

July 19, 2022

The Mariners and Soto

Larry Stone discusses how painful it will be for the Mariners to trade for Juan Soto, and how the pain may very well be worth it:

Now, before you scream that the Mariners would never swim in those financial waters, consider that the ability (or even the desire) to sign Soto is not necessarily a condition for making this trade. Here’s the lure: Soto does not become a free agent until after the 2024 season. The team that acquires the left-handed outfielder, universally regarded as one of the top three players in baseball and still ascending at — it bears repeating — age 23, gets him for three pennant races. And, presumably, three postseasons.

SeattleTimes.com

Stone notes that the Mariners could blunt the cost in prospects by taking on Stephen Strasburg’s contract as well. It strikes me that a team like the Mariners, Indians, or Padres is the right place for Soto to land.

Here are the current odds of teams landing Soto from www.BetOnline.ag:

St. Louis Cardinals	7/1
Seattle Mariners	15/2
Boston Red Sox	9/1
Houston Astros	10/1
Atlanta Braves	12/1
Philadelphia Phillies	12/1
San Diego Padres	12/1
Chicago White Sox	14/1
Los Angeles Angels	14/1
July 11, 2022

Trading Picks

The Royals and Braves make a deal involving a competitive balance pick. The Royals receive three minor leagues, including the Braves top prospect, and Atlanta gets a pick between their 20th and 57th slots. The Braves top prospect does not rank highly among all minor leaguers, so Atlanta might do better with the higher pick. The Royals get some depth for their minor league system.

I hope MLB gets around to allowing all picks to be traded.

July 9, 2022

Rays A’s Trade

The Tampa Bay Rays acquired catching help from the Oakland Athletics. Oakland sends Christian Bethancourt to Tampa Bay for two minor leaguers:

Two years ago, Bethancourt and his brother purchased 17 acres in his native Panama and planned to become farmers before giving baseball one more shot.

MSN.com

Bethancourt hasn’t exactly lit up pitchers with a .249/.298/.385 slash line. He is the kind of player the Rays like, however, as they can plug him into multiple positions.

The Athletics get outfielder Cal Stevenson and pitcher Christian Fernandez. Stevenson does an excellent job of getting on base. Fernandez came into the Rays system at a very young age, and just reached A ball this season at 22. His strength is blowing away batters. It strikes me that Oakland turned Bethancourt into two useful players.

June 27, 2022

Making Room for Youth

The Royal traded Carlos Santana to the Mariners for two minor league pitchers. The Mariners need to replace Ty France due to an elbow injury, while the Royals are ready to bring up a prospect, Vinnie Pasquantino.

“When I was growing up, I had a dream of playing professional baseball. But I just enjoy playing the game,” said Pasquantino, who was doing his laundry when he learned of his big league call-up. “I still do now, and I’m going to continue to try to do that as we move forward. I just love playing the game.”

ESPN.com

Pasquantino was hitting .280/.372/.576 at AAA this season, and for his career hit .293/.382/.574 in the minors. At seasonal age 24, he should be ready for the majors. The lost 2020 season for minor leaguers likely held him back a year. Neither pitcher received looks like a great prospect.

Update: Here’s a Kansas City perspective on Pasquantino.

April 7, 2022

Last Minute Deal

The Twins and Padres agree to swap pitchers:

The Minnesota Twins have agreed to acquire right-hander Chris Paddack in a trade with the San Diego Padres, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan on Thursday.

The Twins are sending left-hander Taylor Rogers to the Padres as part of the deal, sources said.

ESPN.com

The Padres did not have a place for Paddack in the rotation. With the Twins very weak three through five in the rotation, Paddack improves the Twins by about four games over Chris Archer. The Padres get an excellent reliever in Rogers. I’m liking the Twins chances of a good season even more this morning.

April 5, 2022

Meadows to the Tigers

The Rays sent outfielder Austin Meadows to the Tigers for a much younger infielder, Isaac Paredes and a compensation round draft pick. Meadows is a good player under team control for a few more years, and right at his peak seasonal age of 27. The Rays, however, use the trade to get younger and maybe better as they bring up Josh Lowe to replace Meadows. Lowe had a breakout season at AAA in 2021. Padredes overall minor league numbers are not that impressive, but at AA and AAA he found the ability to get on base, and plays all three infield skill positions. We know how much the Rays love that kind of player.

Meanwhile, Meadows projects better than each of the three outfielders, and it looks like he’ll be replacing Victor Reyes, the weakest of the three. Here’s the chance for the Tigers to move Miguel Cabrera out of the lineup.

It’s a good trade for both teams. The Tigers get a little better as they make a playoff push, and the Rays lose nothing, save money, and now have two good youngsters for the price of one.

April 4, 2022

On the Manaea Trade

Yesterday the Athletics continued their tear down as they traded Sean Manaea to the Padres for prospects.

I don’t think this trade makes much of an impact for either club this season. Oakland looked to be a terrible team with or without Manaea. Manaea replaces Mike Clevinger in the Padres rotation. Clevinger developed a bad knee as he works back from Tommy John surgery. Clevinger healthy is a better pitcher than Manaea.

This trade helps the Padres down the road, maybe as early as the second half of the 2022 season. If Clevinger comes back healthy along with the return of Fernando Tatis, Jr, the Padres could have a strong second half. The trick will be to stay close enough in the first half for a big surge to bring them to the playoffs. Manaea keeps the rotation in the same spot as before so they can hold that line.

April 2, 2022

Down Two Relievers

The White Sox traded reliever Craig Kimbrel to the Dodgers for outfielder AJ Pollock, but then lost an excellent reliever in Garrett Crochet, as he is likely headed to Tommy John surgery.

That leaves the White Sox bullpen a little on the thin side. Chicago’s rotation, however, features pitchers with the ability to go deep in games. Modern strategy goes against that, but with the current bullpen, it in fact may be best for the team to allow their starters to go into the seventh inning.

March 14, 2022

Olson to the Braves

The Braves acquired first baseman Matt Olson from the Athletics for four players. Fangraphs has the Atlanta side of the deal here. The Oakland side of the is described here as a prospect snowball.

The A’s seems to have a penchant for adding near-ready prospects via trade. That may be because they have more info on those players and feel better about what the hit rate on those prospects will be, which would make sense because the intense budgetary restrictions put on the front office by the team’s ownership gives them less margin for error around prospects. That the A’s seem intent on rebuilding this way likely means they’ll return to respectability, if not contention, pretty quickly relative to teams like Baltimore and Pittsburg, which have tended to target prospects who are further away from the big leagues.

FanGraphs.com

It also helps to prevent being labeled as a tanking team.

The big news on the Atlanta side, of course, is that the team is out of the Freddie Freeman bidding. Olson posted a 5.0 fWAR in 2021, Freeman 4.5 fWAR, so the Braves might have helped themselves a bit.

March 14, 2022

Red Sky at Night

The Mariners get two big bats from the Reds:

The Mariners acquired All-Star outfielder Jesse Winker and slugging third baseman Eugenio Suarez from the Reds in exchange for outfielder Jake Fraley, right-handed pitcher Justin Dunn, left-handed pitching prospect Brandon Williamson, who is rated as the No. 5 prospect in the Mariners organization by Baseball America and a player to be named later.

“We’re incredibly excited at the chance to acquire two All-Star caliber players,” Dipoto said. “Jesse has been one of the premier offensive players in the league over the past two seasons, while Suárez brings a long track record as a power hitter. Our goal is to reach the postseason this year, and we feel that these additions give us the depth and impact in our lineup necessary to compete for one of those spots.”

SeattleTimes.com

Both Winker and Suarez had their down moments in 2021. Suarez’s batting average collapsed, as he hit just .198 for the season with a .286 OBP. Winker played just 130 games due to injury, but managed to post a 3.2 fWAR. Most of the projections for Suarez have him bouncing back to a two WAR player.

In return, the Reds get Fraley, whose main offensive strength is drawing walks, Dunn who allows a ton of walks, and Williamson. Williamson is the jewel of this deal for the Reds, a high-K pitcher who at seasonal age 24 is close to being big league ready.

It’s a good trade for the Mariners, as all three of their outfield positions were weak in 2021, as was third base. They should be a better team because of this deal.

March 14, 2022

Wheeling and Dealing

The Yankees and Twins make a trade:

Isiah Kiner-Falefa thought he had found a new home with the Minnesota Twins. Less than 24 hours later, he was traded to the New York Yankees alongside former American League MVP Josh Donaldson and catcher Ben Rortvedt in exchange for catcher Gary Sanchez and infielder Gio Urshela.

ESPN.com

So the Gary Sanchez distraction is gone, and the Yankees shore of the defense on the left side of the infield, something that hurt them last season. Donaldson is no longer an MVP caliber player, but is still productive. DJ LeMahieu will likely fight Luke Voit for the first base role. Given Giancarlo Stanton‘s injury history, LeMeahieu may get plenty of time at DH.

The Twins get a solid player in Urshela, save some money on Donaldson. Sanchez is a project. He’s in his last year of his prime, and now out of sight of the negativity of the New York press. We will how he does.

The Twins also acquired Sonny Gray from the Reds on Sunday, trading away their first round draft choice:

The Twins took their first significant step toward restocking their rotation on Sunday, acquiring the right-hander Gray on Sunday in a trade that sent pitching prospect Chase Petty to the Reds. The Reds included minor league right-hander Francis Peguero in the deal for Petty, who was the 26th overall selection as a high-schooler last summer.

AlbertaTribune.com

This is a bit of a rental for Minnesota, as Gray’s contract is up at the end of the season, although the Twins an option on him. Peguero shows great control in the minors, although his progress up the ranks has been very slow.

March 12, 2022

All About the Bassitt

The Mets acquired Chris Bassitt from the Athletics:

Bassitt is a fascinating pitcher as his ERA (3.47 career) constantly outperforms his FIP (3.86) and really out performs his xFIP (4.40). He showed a big improvement in 2021, with his highest season K per 9 IP and his lowest season BB per 9 IP. Part of that might be a great defense behind him, as his career BABIP stands at .281. The Mets did well with a .287 BABIP allowed in 2021, so this may very well continue for Bassitt.

On the downside, he will play 2022 as a 33-year-old, so I would expect a bit of a decline.

Ginn pitched well as a 22-year-old at single A, in fact very Bassitt like. He did not produce a high K rate, but he did allow few hits and few walks. Oller can strike out batters while limiting home runs. Looks to me like the A’s get two decent arms and the Mets get Bassitt trying to impress going into free agency at the end of the season.

March 12, 2022

Texas and Twins

The Rangers and Twins consumated a trade:

Garver hits well for a catcher, although he came to the majors late at seasonal age 26. Even though he is in his 30s, he has not had the major league wear and tear on his legs. Kiner-Falefa should replace the defense of Andrelton Simmons, while Ronny Henriquez pitched well last season in his time at AA. He’ll play this year as a 22-year-old, so he may be close to the majors. Texas catchers hit poorly in 2021, so it looks like both sides did a nice job of filling holes.

November 30, 2021

Peninsula Trade

The Marlins acquire Joey Wendle from the Rays for minor league player Kameron Misner.

He primarily plays third base but has started at second base and shortstop as well in addition to nine career starts in left field, setting himself up for a super-utility role with the Marlins who have Brian Anderson as their primary third baseman, Miguel Rojas at shortstop and Jazz Chisholm Jr. at second base.

MiamiHerald.com

The Marlins get a decent utility player for an outfielder who gets on base. Misner plays 2022 as a 24 year-old, and it seems losing a minor league season to the pandemic kept him in the low minors too long. He hasn’t shown much power yet, but I suspect the Rays see him as a good table setter. He is 37 for 41 stealing bases.

November 28, 2021

North Goes Fazier

The Mariners trade two minor leaguers to the Padres for second baseman Adam Frazier. The Mariners like his ability to put the ball in play:

But Frazier puts the ball in play, having never struck out more than 75 times in a season. The Mariners had eight players appear in more than 90 games last season and all struck out at least 99 times.

“Adam, to me, is one of the better strike-zone managers in baseball,” Dipoto said. “He’s got great contact skills. In an era where strikeouts are prevalent, he doesn’t strike out. His strikeout rates would be good in any era, really.”

SeattlePI.com

Frazier’s strength as a hitter is getting on base, the last three seasons improving his walk rate to go along with a good batting average. He’s one season away from free agency. The Mariners with Frazier a potential short term player, did not give up too much. Ray Kerr is a high strikeout reliever who is already well into his prime, useable but certainly not a prospect. Corey Rosier raked in his first season at A ball in 2021, seasonal age 21. He is a nice prospect.

The Mariners add a good offensive and defensive player who doesn’t cost that much gives then an element they lacked in 2021. The Padres get a pitcher they can use now, and an outfielder who might be very good in a year or two. Both teams win.

November 15, 2021

Marlins Get Head

The Rays traded relief pitcher Louis Head to the Marlins for future considerations:

The 31-year-old was drafted in the 18th round by Cleveland in 2012.

ESPN.com

Head pitched very well in his 35 innings of work. The trade shows just how the Rays work, however. They get 35 innings out of a pitcher past his prime, possibly what was the best work of Head’s career. Now they’ve flipped him to another team for value, either a player or cash. They gamble, they win, they quite while they’re ahead.

July 30, 2021

Best Deal?

The Cubs get two good players from the White Sox for Craig Kimbrel. Kimbrel showed wildness problems in recent seasons, but this year he’s nearly unhittable and the walks improved. Still, he’s a closer who is used in limited situations. Nick Madrigal, despite his injury, is a good, young hitter. Codi Heuer is a seasonal age 24 reliever who showed great control and power in the minors and the majors.

The White Sox, of course, are trying to win now, and Kimbrel should help. Long term, however, I suspect the Cubs will win this trade.

Update: The Cubs also get rid of the left side of the infield, trading Javier Baez to the Mets for a young prospect, and Kris Bryant to the Giants for two prospects. Alexander Canario looks like he can hit, while Caleb Kilian averaged just one walk per nine innings in the minors. Like the Nationals, the Cubs seem to have acquired some good talent for the near future.

July 30, 2021

Trading for the Future

The Twins traded Jose Berrios to the Blue Jays, and get a nice prospect as part of the deal. Simeon Woods Richardson is only twenty years old, and posted very good strikeout and walk numbers in the minor leagues. He’s proving to be a bit wild at AA this season, but he is young for that level. The Twins also received Austin Martin, who is just starting out in professional baseball, but is already doing a great job of getting on base.

Berrios is an excellent pitcher who helps the Blue Jays right now. It’s not quite a John Smoltz for Doyle Alexander, as Berrios still has a lot of years left.

July 30, 2021

Washington Cleans House

This turned out to be one of the more active trading periods in recent memory, with the Nationals relieving themselves of many of their players, including two stars. Gone are Max Scherzer, Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, Daniel Hudson, Josh Harrison, Yan Gomes, Brad Hand, and Jon Lester. Without Scherzer, Turner, and Schwarber, the Nationals don’t have much of a chance of winning the division. In fact, it was likely the injury to Schwarber that sealed the fate of the team, as his hot streak came to an end, so did the chances of the Nationals making the playoffs.

What did they get in return? The deal with the Dodgers that involved the two stars yielded four players.  Gerardo Carrillo and Josiah Gray are right-handed pitchers. Carrillo is a high K, high BB pitcher working at AA at age 22. Gray made his major league debut this season but has not pitched much. In the minors he posted outstanding three-true outcomes in 198 innings, with a 2.41 ERA. Donovan Casey plays the outfield. His seasonal age is 25 and he never played above AA. His stats are fine, but he doesn’t seem like a prospect to me. Keibert Ruiz catches. He played in eight major league games, and two of his three hits were home runs. He is seasonal age 22 and hit .300/.355/.447 in six minor league seasons, and lit up AAA in 271 PA. Ruiz and Gray, the batter, is the haul from this deal.

Others of interest:

That’s six good players that the Nationals should control a long time. With a number of good shortstops hitting the free agent market this winter, the supply should keep the price down. This could turn out to be a very quick rebuild for Washington.

On the other side, Scherzer and Turner are basically replacements for the likely soon to be suspended Trevor Bauer and the soon to be a free agent Corey Seager. Turner will play second base until Seager leaves, or gets injured again. Oakland gets some depth, the Red Sox get a slugger to match the Yankees acquisitions, and other teams fill some holes. The Nationals helped themselves and everyone else.

July 29, 2021 July 29, 2021

Duffy to the Dodgers

Duffy owns a 2.51 in sixty one innings this season. His overall numbers don’t look like a 2.51 ERA, and FanGraphs has him with a 3.39 FIP. Even if his ERA goes up a run with the Dodgers, that offense is good enough to with with that.

July 29, 2021

Lurching Left

The Yankees completed the trade for left-handed hitting outfielder Joey Gallo on Thursday:

The Yankees officially acquired the Rangers slugger on Thursday for a haul of prospects: 2B Ezequiel Duran, 2B/OF Trevor Hauver, SS Josh Smith and RHP Glen Otto. Texas is also parting with reliever Joely Rodríguez and cash considerations.

SI.com

Gallo is one of those hitters with a rather meaningless batting average, since he gets on base so much and hits for so much power that the lack of other hits doesn’t hurt that much. If he’s not hitting home runs, he’s extending the offensive context in other ways.

For Texas, Duran and Hauver are having a great years at high A, but each is 22 years old, a bit on the high side of age for that level. Smith is 23 and hitting well at A Ball, while the palindromic Otto consistently has been a high K starter throughout his career. If they all prove to be this good, they could make a very nice core for the Rangers in a year or so.

The Yankees were not done, however, as they also made a deal for Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo:

A picture of durability and consistency, the 31-year-old Rizzo has played at least 140 games in every full season since 2013 (and only missed two team games in the shortened 2020 season). He’s hit 25 or more homers six times and stands a good chance at reaching that again in 2021, plus he’s a four-time Gold Glove winner at first base.

MSN.com

That’s too big left-handed bats for New York, something they lacked. The moves did not help today, however, as the Yankees lost to the Rays 14-0.

July 28, 2021

Mariners Disappointed

The Mariners teammates of traded closer Kendall Graveman did not like the deal:

The real question is if there is a magnitude of “win-now” additions in the next two days that will make the players and fans re-evaluate their bitterness over the shockingly mistimed Graveman trade. You can say the players need to let it go; as Servais said, they will move past it. But you simply can’t underestimate the human element. Mariners players not only watched a beloved teammate leave, to augment an opponent they were starting to believe they could catch for the division title; they also had to absorb what they perceived (correctly) as a trade designed more to help them in future years, at the precise moment they were looking for, and deserved, a boost now.

SeattleTimes.com

The deal does make sense for the long-term. When a team that hasn’t been to the playoffs forever sends a player to help a division opponent win now, however, the players have to wonder if the GM wants to win as much as they do.

July 28, 2021

Escobar to the Brewers

The seasonal age 32 Escobar is having one of his better power years, with a .478 slugging percentage. He hit 22 home runs so far, his third highest single season total. His high stands at 35. Brewers third basemen own a .231/.308/.395 slash line.

Hummel, at seasonal age 26, is hardly a prospect. He’s listed as a catcher, leftfielder, and designated hitter, which tells me that he’s probably not a great defensive catcher. His strength in the minors is drawing enough walks to have a very high OBP. Ciprian is the main reason for the trade. He’s just 18 years old, and hitting .378/.465/.514 in a handful of plate appearances. The sky’s the limit for the youngster.

July 28, 2021

Where Did Jesus Go

The Athletics trade a good, young pitcher for Starling Marte‘s bat:

Craig Mish was first to report that the A’s were close to acquiring Marte. Then, MLB Network’s Jon Heyman reported the return: 23-year-old pitching prospect Jesus Luzardo will be going to Miami in exchange for Marte.

SportingNews.com

Marte, at seasonal age 32, is posting the best OBP of his career, .405, 60 points over his career average. That number might show some regression. Luzardo, age 23, has 109 MLB innings under his belt with good strike out and walk numbers. He gives up a lot of home runs, but the Miami ballpark could help there. Marte should improve the power in centerfield, where the A’s hitters have combined for a .354 slugging percentage.

The A’s address a weakness, and the Marlins get another good arm.