Thursday, January 2, 2020

Luis Robert, White Sox agree on six-year contract

Luis Robert
The White Sox on Thursday agreed to terms with top prospect Luis Robert on a six-year, $50 million contract. The deal includes two club options that could extend Robert's tenure with the team through 2027 season.

Robert, 22, is the No. 3 prospect in baseball. He played at three levels during the 2019 season -- Class-A Winston-Salem, Double-A Birmingham and Triple-A Charlotte.

He batted .328/.376/.624 with 31 doubles, 11 triples, 32 home runs, 92 RBIs, 108 runs scored, 36 stolen bases and a 1.001 OPS over 122 games.

He became the first minor-league player since at least 1988 to hit .325 with 30 doubles, 10 triples, 30 homers, 90 RBIs, 100 runs scored, 300 total bases and 35 steals in a single season.

What does this mean? It means that Robert will be in center field for the Sox on Opening Day. Frankly, he should have been in center field for the Sox last season, if merit were the only consideration.

Alas, service time is a thing, and Robert was being kept in the minor leagues in order to delay his free agency years down the line. However, with this contract, he's under team control for the next eight years, so that is no longer a concern. Look for Robert to be wearing his No. 88 at Guaranteed Rate Field on March 26.

Here's how the contract breaks down by year:

2020: $1.5 million
2021: $3.5 million
2022: $6 million
2023: $9.5 million
2024: $12.5 million
2025: $15 million
2026: $20 million club option ($2 million buyout)
2027: $20 million club option ($2 million buyout)

In order to make room for Robert on the 40-man roster, right-handed pitcher Tayron Guerrero was designated for assignment.

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Minnesota Twins add Homer Bailey, Rich Hill to fill out starting rotation

Homer Bailey
The Minnesota Twins needed two starting pitchers to fill out their 2020 rotation, but they failed to sign any of the high-profile names on the market.

On Tuesday, the Twins picked up two veterans to fill those gaps, signing right-hander Homer Bailey and left-hander Rich Hill to one-year contracts.

Bailey, 33, won a total of eight games in four seasons from 2015-18, but he bounced back to respectability in 2019. He went 13-9 with a 4.57 ERA in 31 starts and 163.1 innings pitched.

Eighteen of those starts came with the Kansas City Royals, 13 with the Oakland Athletics after a midseason trade.

Bailey's deal is for $7 million, and he will earn performance bonuses if he reaches 180 innings, something he has not done since the 2013 season.

Hill, 39, will be 40 years old by the time the season starts, and he's still good when he's healthy, but he's on the injured list a lot. He was limited to 13 starts in 2019 with the Los Angeles Dodgers, but he did go 4-1 with a 2.45 ERA in 58.2 innings.

Over the past five seasons, Hill has made 86 starts, or about 17 per season. That's why his contract contains only $3 million in guarantees. The contract escalates to $9.5 million if he hits 15 starts or 75 innings. Hill had surgery on his elbow in October, and he won't return until at least June.

I wouldn't expect either of these two guys to provide a major impact for the Twins, but they had to do something. They still have their ace, Jose Berrios, and two middle-of-the-rotation pitchers in Jake Odorizzi and Michael Pineda.

However, the other members of their 2019 rotation signed elsewhere. Kyle Gibson is with the Texas Rangers. Martin Perez has moved on to the Boston Red Sox.

Of course, the Twins won 101 games and the AL Central title last summer on the strength of their excellent offense, not their pitching. They smashed a MLB record 307 home runs, and no matter what, they are going to have to hit their way back to the playoffs.

Rumor has it Minnesota "has room to go big" for third baseman Josh Donaldson. That would add to an already good lineup, and it also would improve the Twins' infield defense -- a must behind a starting staff that is likely to be considered suspect going into the season.

Monday, December 30, 2019

White Sox left-hander Dallas Keuchel: 'You win or lose with catchers'

Dallas Keuchel
The White Sox on Monday formally announced their agreement with veteran left-handed pitcher Dallas Keuchel on a three-year, $55 million contract.

This signing surprised many of us, because Keuchel is a Scott Boras client, and the Sox don't have a history of doing business with Boras clients. Hopefully, this move is a sign that times are changing, and naturally, Keuchel was asked why he chose to come to the South Side.

You can listen to his full remarks on that topic here.

Keuchel cited the opportunity to win in the AL Central over the next three to five years and the leadership that already exists in the Sox's clubhouse. But most notably, Keuchel mentioned that the catching situation on the South Side is "rock solid," adding that "you win or lose with catchers."

He said the previous free agent signing of Yasmani Grandal was critical in his decision to join the Sox, and it's also true that Keuchel played college baseball with James McCann at Arkansas.

The pundits in Chicago tend to define the Sox in terms of the Cubs, which is irritating but a fact of life around here. And some talking heads have asked, "Is Dallas Keuchel the Sox's version of Jon Lester?" When Lester signed with the Cubs before the start of the 2015 season, that signaled that the Cubs were done rebuilding and ready to contend.

While it is true that Lester and Keuchel are both accomplished veteran lefties, I actually think the Grandal signing is the one that signaled the end of the Sox's rebuild. Based on Keuchel's comments Monday, it's my belief that he isn't here without the earlier addition of Grandal.

Some have said the Sox should trade McCann because they don't need him anymore. I disagree. I like the combination of Grandal and McCann behind the plate.

Why?

Well, Keuchel said it in the linked audio clip: "You win or lose with catchers." Isn't it about time the Sox had depth and strength behind the plate? It's been a long time since we've been able to say that was the case.

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Will Edwin Encarnacion solve the home run problem for the White Sox?

Edwin Encarnacion
The White Sox finished 13th out of 15 teams in the American League with 182 home runs in 2019. The only two teams behind them were the Kansas City Royals and the Detroit Tigers, who combined to lose 217 games.

By way of comparison, the AL Central-winning Minnesota Twins smashed a league-leading 307 home runs, and the league average was 232 homers. Indeed, the Sox were well behind the curve in hitting the ball out of the ballpark last season.

Perhaps that's why the Sox agreed to terms on Christmas Day with veteran slugger Edwin Encarnacion. It's a one-year deal worth $12 million, and it includes a club option for 2021 that also is worth $12 million.

In 3-up, 3-down format, let's take a look at why this deal may work for the Sox, and why it may not.

3 up

1. Encarnacion has been of the game's most prolific sluggers since 2012. The soon-to-be-37-year-old has hit between 32 and 42 home runs in each of the past eight seasons. That's a model of consistency. Even in 2019, his age-36 season, Encarnacion clubbed 34 home runs and drove in 86 runs in only 109 games.

2. Encarnacion has proven to be successful in the DH role. In the past, we've seen the Sox try to force career National League players (Adam Dunn, Adam LaRoche) into the DH spot with little or no success. They also tried Yonder Alonso, which was a disaster, in part because Alonso had always been a regular first baseman and couldn't adjust to the particulars of the role. Encarnacion has played 723 career games as a DH and posted a .268/.365/.518 batting line with 175 homers and 530 RBIs. That's what you're looking for at the position. He will accept the job and won't moan about the mental challenges it presents.

3. The 2019 Sox got poor production out of their DHs. Sox DHs posted a .205/.285/.356 batting line with 17 home runs and 75 RBIs in 2019. That is pathetic from a bat-only position. A .641 OPS is entirely unacceptable at a lot of positions, most of all DH. Encarnacion's line last season was .244/.344/.531. That's an .875 OPS, a massive upgrade, and even if Encarnacion's production drops some, it's still an improvement for the Sox.

3 down

1. Encarnacion is going to be 37 years old next month. He did only play in 109 games last season, and he dealt with wrist, oblique and ankle injuries at different points during 2019. There's always the chance that once a guy starts getting hurt, he keeps getting hurt. That's a risk for the Sox here, and that's likely among the reasons Encarnacion only commanded one year guaranteed on the open market.

2. This signing limits lineup flexibility. One of the negatives to signing Encarnacion is he's somewhat redundant on the roster with Jose Abreu, who also is a right-handed slugger who needs to play first base or DH. Encarnacion can probably provide a few games at first to get Abreu off his feet here and there, but there's nothing else he can do other than DH. My preference had been to get a right-handed bat that could both DH and play the outfield. Obviously, Encarnacion is not that. There's no way he can be used in platoon situation with, say, Nomar Mazara.

3. Encarnacion struggled with high-velocity pitchers in the playoffs. Encarnacion started the 2019 season with the Seattle Mariners, before being traded June 12 to the eventual AL East champion New York Yankees. His playoff at-bats were, umm, not so great. He went 5 for 31 with three doubles, no home runs and 13 strikeouts in eight games. In particular, he struggled in the AL Championship Series against the Houston Astros, going 1 for 18 with 11 strikeouts. From my layman's perspective, the Astros just went after him with fastballs, and they threw pitches right by him. Something to watch for once the season starts.

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Merry Christmas from The Baseball Kid


Hyun-Jin Ryu agrees to four-year deal with Toronto Blue Jays

Hyun-Jin Ryu
Left-handed pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu has agreed to a four-year, $80 million contract with the Toronto Blue Jays, according to reports.

Ryu, 32, finished second in the National League Cy Young Award voting in 2019, when he went 14-5 with a league-leading 2.32 ERA in 29 starts for the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The Blue Jays are looking to reconfigure their starting rotation this offseason -- they've also added right-handers Tanner Roark and Chase Anderson.

I think this is an overpay, but hey, Toronto is coming off a 95-loss season, and it was going to have to significantly outbid the competition in order to sign a pitcher of Ryu's caliber.

There's no doubt Ryu has quality stuff, but if you look at his injury history, and you wonder if he's going to be productive all four years of the deal. Here are the number of starts he's made in each season of his career:

2013: 30
2014: 26
2015: 0
2016: 1
2017: 25
2018: 15
2019: 29

Last season was the first time Ryu had thrown more than 180 innings in a season since his rookie year in 2013. I'm not sure if he'll hold up, but as a White Sox fan, I am glad he signed somewhere outside of the American League Central Division. I was concerned Ryu would sign with the Minnesota Twins, who still need help for their rotation.

At this point, all the high-end starting pitchers are off the free agent market. The top two remaining guys are Homer Bailey and Ivan Nova, so we'll see if Minnesota moves to address its pitching weaknesses via trade.