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Nationals Feeling Pressure to Make Big Move Before Trade Deadline

There’s nothing wrong with protecting your prospects. If the Washington Nationals hadn’t held on to Trea Turner, they wouldn’t have beaten the Cleveland Indians on Wednesday.

The Nationals have Turner, Lucas Giolito and a whole bunch of other guys they wouldn’t trade for Aroldis Chapman.

They also have enough needs that they’re going to have to trade for someone before August 1’s non-waiver deadline. If not Chapman, then someone else.

If not now, when?

Heard that before? Maybe so, because Cubs president Theo Epstein used exactly those words in explaining why he traded big prospects for Chapman this week.

“We feel like we have a chance to do something special, but there’s a lot of work ahead,” Epstein told reporters, including Carrie Muskat of MLB.com. “It was tough to give up what we gave up, but if not now, when?”

The Nationals may not have 107 years of failure, the way the Cubs do, but the Cubs came closer to the World Series last year than the Nationals ever have. The Nats have had a 96-win season and a 98-win season, and they have a team that can win 95-plus games again, but one of these years, they need to turn talent into October success.

If not now, when?

The Nationals can be creative. They turned Turner into an outfielder because their infield was full and they needed another way to fit his speed and ability into the lineup.

On Wednesday, in his second day as a center fielder and still in his first month as the Nationals’ leadoff hitter, he drove in three runs in their 4-1 win in Cleveland.

He gave the Nationals a lead their bullpen could hold, and that’s not a simple task. This is a team that gave up six runs in the final two innings of a 10-6 loss to the San Diego Padres on Sunday, and three runs in the ninth inning of a 7-6 loss to the Indians on Tuesday night.

The Nationals didn’t absolutely have to get Chapman, but they do need to be creative enough to get someone.

Maybe that means coming up with the package that tempts the Kansas City Royals to part with Wade Davis, or one that could tempt the New York Yankees to deal Andrew Miller. Maybe it’s David Robertson, although he has four blown saves and a 4.35 ERA with the Chicago White Sox.

Maybe it’s even something different, like what Barry Svrluga of the Washington Post tweeted Wednesday night:

That is crazy, and it seems highly unlikely, but what would be crazier and probably even unlikelier would be to do nothing between now and Monday.

The Nationals weren’t comfortable with Drew Storen as their closer last year, so they traded for Jonathan Papelbon. There was no chance they were going feel comfortable with Papelbon, even before his four-run ninth inning on Sunday or his collapse Tuesday night.

Stats can be deceiving with relievers, but Papelbon’s 4.18 ERA and 1.423 WHIP aren’t. It’s time to go find something else.

Remember this past winter when the Nationals lost out to the Cubs for Ben Zobrist, they reacted by signing Daniel Murphy to play second base. Murphy hit his 20th home run of the season Wednesday, and in a season when Ryan Zimmerman and Jayson Werth have struggled and Bryce Harper has hit .222 since April, Murphy has kept the Nationals on top in the National League East.

With Stephen Strasburg (who won again Wednesday) and Max Scherzer, the Nationals have a rotation built for October. They have a four-game lead over the Miami Marlins and a 5.5-game lead over the New York Mets, and according to the playoff odds on Baseball Prospectus, they have a 94.8 percent chance of making it to October.

Unlike last year, they have a manager who can get them there and win once he’s there. True, Dusty Baker doesn’t yet own a World Series ring as manager, but he’s taken seven teams into the postseason.

He took the San Francisco Giants to the World Series in 2002, and a year later, he brought the Cubs as close to the World Series as anyone else has since 1945.

For the record, you have to go 12 years further back to find the last time a Washington team made it to the World Series.

It’s been a long, long time, and it’s about time the Nationals did something to end that drought.

If not now, when?

            

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Chris Sale Is Landscape-Altering Possibility on MLB Trade Market

For weeks, we’ve all been asking whether the New York Yankees would sell.

Turns out the Sale we should have been focused on is Chris, as in Chris Sale of the Chicago White Sox, as in the pitcher who could energize this July trade market.

If a team gets (or misses out on) Aroldis Chapman, it could be season-changing.

If a team gets Sale, it could change this season, next season and maybe every season left in this decade.

Too dramatic? Not really, given Sale’s age (27), stats (71-43 in his career, with a 2.95 ERA and sabermetric numbers to match) and contract (under control through 2019 with a salary that rises from $9.15 million to just $15 million). He’s also reliable (on track to top 200 innings for the third time in four years), he’s made five straight All-Star teams (he started the game this year), and he has received Cy Young votes every year since he became a starter in 2012.

He’s so good and so valuable you can ask why the White Sox would ever want to trade him. The answer is they don’t really want to, which is another reason this is so fascinating.

To get him, it’s going to take a massive trade, with huge names going back the other way. After Jon Heyman reported on Today’s Knuckleball that the White Sox are taking phone calls and at least listening on Sale and fellow top starter Jose Quintana, T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com tweeted this:

That’s Joey Gallo, the power-hitting third baseman ranked by MLB.com as the seventh-best prospect in all of baseball, and Jurickson Profar, who was once the top prospect in the game and now plays all over the infield for the Rangers.

You can bet the asking price will be similar for any other interested team. Perhaps that means Yoan Moncada from the Boston Red Sox or Julio Urias from the Los Angeles Dodgers or Alex Bregman from the Houston Astros.

The Astros haven’t yet been mentioned as a Sale suitor, but given their depth of talent and their need for a top starter, it’s hard to believe they wouldn’t be interested.

Any of those teams could put together a tempting offer, now that the White Sox have said they’re prepared to make moves. As general manager Rick Hahn told reporters, including Brian Hedger of MLB.com, the White Sox are “mired in mediocrity,” even with Sale and Quintana atop the rotation.

One baseball official with White Sox connections expressed doubt Friday evening that owner Jerry Reinsdorf would ultimately approve of trading Sale. But if the return is good enough, especially if it includes players who are big league-ready, it’s hard to believe he wouldn’t be tempted.

The White Sox have other players they could deal, and adding closer David Robertson could make it easier for a team to justify losing top prospects. Almost every team looking for a starter could use a back-end reliever, as well.

Here’s a look at what seem to be the three best fits:

   

Boston Red Sox

Heyman reported Friday they’ve already checked in with the White Sox, which is hardly a surprise. General manager Dave Dombrowski is well-known for his talent-for-talent philosophy, meaning he won’t hesitate to trade top prospects if the return is good enough.

The Red Sox have scored the most runs in the majors, and they’re extremely deep in young talent. But even after trades this month for starter Drew Pomeranz and reliever Brad Ziegler, they still could use another top-line starter.

With their young lineup, and with Sale and David Price atop the rotation, they might be in position to dominate the American League East—or the entire American League—for years.

   

Texas Rangers

Like Dombrowski, Rangers general manager Jon Daniels has shown willingness to pull the trigger on big deals. The Rangers added Cliff Lee in 2010 and Cole Hamels last year, and Daniels told reporters, including Sullivan of MLB.com, he’s focused on pitching again.

Yu Darvish has come back from Tommy John surgery and then from a month on the disabled list with shoulder trouble, but he showed again Friday night that his command isn’t back yet.

The Rangers lost 3-1 to the Kansas City Royals—their 15th loss in the last 19 games. Once 10 games up in the American League West, they now lead the Astros by just 2.5 games.

Put Sale with Hamels atop the rotation, and they could be the team that dominates. Put Sale with Hamels and Darvish atop next year’s rotation, and they might be the World Series favorite.

   

Los Angeles Dodgers

Are they really ready to make the type of big trade they stayed away from last July? We’ll see, but Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com tweeted earlier in the week that they’re “Big Game Hunting” this month.

Jayson Stark of ESPN.com connected them to Chris Archer—a natural fit given Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman’s history with the Tampa Bay Rays. But as good as Archer could be, he hasn’t accomplished nearly what Sale has (and is actually older than Sale).

The Dodgers had big uncertainty in their rotation even before Clayton Kershaw went on the disabled list with back trouble. Sale would give them a true ace while Kershaw is out, and a great one-two with Kershaw going forward.

There are other teams looking for starting pitching, including the Astros, Miami Marlins, Toronto Blue Jays and Detroit Tigers. The Astros probably have enough available talent to make a play, while the other three may not.

Just remember, we’ve already seen how quickly things can change in July. The Yankees have won five of their last six games, throwing more doubt on whether they’ll trade Chapman, Andrew Miller or others.

Who knows? If they win a few more games, maybe instead of selling, they’ll be the team trying to trade for Chris Sale.

   

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Ken Griffey Jr.: MLB Relying on ‘The Kid’ to Make Baseball Cool for Kids Again

They sit across the negotiating table as adversaries, but Rob Manfred and Tony Clark are also partners.

As the commissioner of Major League Baseball and the head of its players union, respectively, Manfred and Clark have significant differences, but also common goals. There’s little they agree on more than the need to bring the game to younger audiences, to increase baseball’s appeal to the next generation.

They need to get through to the kids, which is why eight months ago they got together on a conference call and appealed to The Kid for help.

Ken Griffey Jr. goes by many names. He’ll always be Junior to many, and he’ll always be Uncle Griffey to some.

But he’s also The Kid, a nickname that made sense when he was a 19-year-old rookie with the Seattle Mariners and still makes sense now as he closes in on 50 and heads into the Hall of Fame.

“We’re trying to engage young people,” Clark said. “Having my face on it isn’t going to do it. No disrespect to the commissioner, but his face isn’t going to do it, either. Who can do that?”

Who else but The Kid? Who else but the guy who managed to stay young through a 22-year career in the major leagues, the guy kids were always drawn to, the guy whose many charitable ventures always involved reaching out to children?

“It was too natural a fit,” Clark said. “To me, it was the perfect marriage.”

From Griffey, there was a simple answer.

“I was like, let’s do it,” he said.

So even as he prepared for this weekend in Cooperstown, and the ceremony that will make him a Hall of Famer, Griffey made plans for the next stage of his baseball life, the one that will see him serve the game as Major League Baseball’s first “youth ambassador.”

The job seems open-ended, which suits Griffey well. He’ll make videos and appearances, and if all goes well, he’ll encourage a new generation of kids to choose baseball.

“He is the magnet,” Clark said. “He’s going to open doors—or kick some doors down.”

But more than that, he’ll be in charge of proving to another generation that baseball is for them, that baseball can be cool.

“Before it was cool to be cool, Junior was cool,” Clark said.

He still is.


Griffey has been a magnet for years, without even trying to be one.

Andrew McCutchen grew up in Fort Meade, Florida, all the way across the country from Seattle. But it was Griffey who drew him to baseball, making such an impression that the young McCutchen wore a Mariners jersey he still has to this day.

“He was one of the main reasons I played baseball,” said McCutchen, the 2013 National League MVP with the Pittsburgh Pirates. “When the TV was on and he was playing, I was watching. I didn’t care what he did, I just wanted to watch him.”

McCutchen wasn’t alone. Players all over baseball speak of Griffey in glowing terms.

“That was my idol growing up,” Kansas City Royals outfielder Jarrod Dyson said. “Just a special player.”

Griffey played the game well, but he also played it with flair. He’d wear his cap backward at a time when no one else did, and he had a constant smile on his face at a time when so many thought it was more important to look serious.

He was fun to watch, but more than that, he would make baseball look like fun.

“I wouldn’t be a baseball player if I didn’t think it was fun,” McCutchen said.

The Kid made it look fun.


Griffey’s connection to kids goes far beyond how he played the game. From his early years with the Mariners, his charity of choice was the Boys & Girls Clubs, and his contributions went far beyond handing out money.

He was Uncle Griffey to the kids there, and he made a real impact.

“There’s one athlete that really made a difference for the kids in our area, and that was Ken Griffey Jr.,” said Bill Burton, who was executive director of the Rainier Vista Boys & Girls Club, where Griffey was most involved.

Burton fondly remembers the Christmas dinners Griffey hosted and how Griffey got Nike involved, too. Griffey spent time at the club himself and challenged the kids to improve their grades and get involved in community service work.

Those who succeeded were taken on trips Griffey sponsored and arranged himself. He brought some of the Seattle kids to Cincinnati after he was traded to the Reds, and he brought kids from both Seattle and Cincinnati to his home outside Orlando, Florida.

“It was incredible,” Burton said.

On the Orlando trip, the kids first went to Disney World. Then they got on the bus and went back to the hotel, where they were told to get their swimsuits for a trip to the pool.

What they weren’t told was the pool was at Griffey’s house.

“The kids got off the bus, and they went into this big house,” Burton said. “They went to change into the swimsuits, and then when they got to the pool, Ken came back there and jumped in the pool himself.”

“The kids were so excited,” Burton said.

Griffey’s involvement continues to this day. He still sits on the Boys & Girls Club’s national board of directors, the one former professional athlete on a board dominated by corporate executives.


Griffey’s task is to get kids excited about baseball, because for all its continuing popularity, the sport does have a demographics problem. A 2014 study by Derek Thompson in the Atlantic showed 50 percent of baseball’s television audience consisted of people 55 and over, as opposed to just 25 percent of those who watch the NBA.

Even kids who show interest in playing the game don’t always watch.

“I did a camp wearing my full Mets uniform,” outfielder Curtis Granderson said. “A kid came up and asked, ‘What team do you play for?'”

Griffey, for all his possible appeal, hasn’t been in uniform since May 2010. The Kid will be 47 this November. 

But Nike still sells Air Griffey shoes, even in grade school sizes, as well as Griffey Swingman caps and T-shirts.

Griffey knows the challenge of getting kids to baseball. His older son, Trey, is a wide receiver at the University of Arizona, and his younger son, Tevin, gave up baseball for three years before recently coming back to it at age 14.

“In practice, he made one of the greatest catches I’ve ever seen,” Griffey said. “You know my catch at Yankee Stadium and my dad’s catch at Yankee Stadium? It was better than that.”

Griffey goes to watch Tevin and goes to watch two nephews who play youth baseball.

“People see me and ask, ‘What are you doing here?'” he said.


Griffey has always been at ease around kids, and they have always been drawn to him.

Rusty Kuntz was the Mariners first base coach in 1989, when Griffey debuted as a 19-year-old outfielder.

“When older players brought their sons into the clubhouse, everyone just gravitated towards Junior,” said Kuntz, now the first base coach with the Kansas City Royals. “Four years old or 14 years old, they were always so comfortable around Junior.”

In his recent profile of Griffey for Sports Illustrated, Ben Reiter tells the story of Griffey and his wife, Melissa, walking through a shopping mall in Bellevue, Washington, early in Griffey’s career. Upset about something, Melissa yelled “I’m with Ken Griffey Jr.!” only to have every kid in the mall come running after them.

Don Wakamatsu was the Mariners manager when Griffey returned to Seattle in 2009. The two got along great the first year and not so well the second, when Griffey retired midseason, but Wakamatsu still speaks highly of him.

“He played the game as a kid,” said Wakamatsu, now the bench coach with the Royals. “What I loved about Griffey is he was a kid. A wonderful guy with a big heart.”


The question, and the challenge, is whether Griffey can have the same impact on kids who may have never seen him play. Griffey was last an All-Star in 2007; his MVP season of 1997 was 19 years ago.

Thomas Truncale doesn’t think it will be a problem.

Truncale is 18 years old and just started school at the University of South Florida. He became a Griffey fan from watching highlights on ESPN, but he became a Griffey believer one special day in September 2009.

Truncale suffers from severe hemophilia, a disease that made his young life difficult and kept him from playing baseball. The Make-A-Wish Foundation, another favored Griffey charity, arranged for Truncale, his parents and his three siblings to fly to Seattle, where Griffey was in his final full season with the Mariners.

Griffey did many of these Make-A-Wish visits, dating back to his early years with the Mariners. But as Truncale described it, this wasn’t a simple meet-and-greet.

“I remember it like it was yesterday,” Truncale said. “It’s one of those things where you felt like there was nothing else in the world that mattered to him at the time. I hadn’t ever had another experience like that, and I can’t imagine I ever will.”

The experience, Truncale said, ensures he will be a baseball fan for life.

“I’m always going to love baseball,” he said.

He’s certain Griffey can have that same impact on others.

“He’s a kid at heart,” Truncale said. “When I met him, I felt he could see what it means for kids to meet their heroes. With his ability to connect to kids, I think even if you took away all his accolades, he could still do it.

“He’s the exact type of person who can fulfill that job.”

Besides, while reaching kids is a big part of Griffey’s challenge, reaching their parents and those who can support youth baseball will be just as important.

“A lot of it is the equipment,” Griffey said. “The kids will come if they have equipment.”

Studies show that young kids are still playing baseball. Manfred cited figures showing baseball is the most played game in the country for kids 12 and under. The concern is that when those kids grow up and go to high school and college, many of the best athletes are still lost to basketball, football and even soccer.

The greater concern is that kids are being pushed to specialize at younger ages.

“If somebody had forced me to make a decision at 12 or 14, I don’t know if I would have chosen baseball,” said Clark, the players association head. “I tell kids, I understand you may have another sport you like, but don’t give up on baseball.”

Clark was a first-round draft choice of the Detroit Tigers in 1990, but he also played basketball at the University of Arizona and San Diego State. He ended up a 15-year major leaguer and a one-time All-Star with career earnings of $22 million, according to Baseball-Reference.com.

“I’m the poster boy for [not choosing too early],” he said.

But when it comes to reaching the next generation, Clark understood he would need help.

He understood he needed Griffey.


The timing was good, too.

In the six years since he retired, Griffey has done work for the Mariners as a special consultant, has been honored by both the Mariners and Reds in their franchise Halls of Fame and has spent lots of time with his family.

In January, he was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, getting a record 99.3 percent of the vote in his first time on the ballot.

Sunday, Griffey and Mike Piazza will be the 311th and 312th members of baseball’s most elite club.

“My schedule dramatically frees up after July 24,” Griffey said.

Clark, Manfred and others in baseball will be ready to help fill that schedule, believing Griffey can be the key to attracting the next generation of kids. And why not? With a father who played in the major leagues and sons who have played the game, Griffey already spans generations.

“I was the bridge between old school and new school,” he said. “You can express yourself without being disrespectful.”

You can understand kids, even if you’re almost 50 years old yourself. You can flash that smile, turn that hat around and it’s almost as if you’re 19 years old again.

You can still be The Kid, and you can still talk to kids. Hopefully, those kids will listen.

Baseball is counting on it.

   

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Astros Keep Loading Up for AL West Run with $47.5M Cuban Star Yulieski Gurriel

It’s not about the fit. It’s about the talent.

Don’t worry about how the Houston Astros will fit all of their good infielders into the lineup. Worry about the fact they have so many good players in the first place.

I’m not going to use the “TeamoftheFuture” hashtag MLB Network’s Brian Kenny uses for his favorite franchise, but I do love the week the Astros are having.

You couldn’t watch Alex Bregman in Sunday’s All-Star Futures Game without thinking Bregman’s future is coming fast. And you couldn’t look at Friday’s signing of Cuban star Yulieski Gurriel, first reported by Jesse Sanchez of MLB.com, without thinking the Astros are serious.

They’re serious about the future, for sure, but Gurriel is 32 years old. Signing him for $47.5 million over five years, and beating out big-market teams like the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers, strongly suggests the Astros aim to become the Team of the Near Future too.

Remember, they made the playoffs a year ago and came within a blown lead in Game 4 of eliminating the Kansas City Royals in the American League Division Series.

The first month of this season wasn’t good, with the Astros going 7-17. They were 10 games out of first place in the AL West by May 22, a season-worst 11 games under .500.

Then they started winning. In the final 44 games before the All-Star break, the Astros went 31-13, the best record in baseball in that time. The first-place Texas Rangers slumped before the break and when they lost again Friday and the Astros won Friday night in Seattle, the gap in the West was down to just 4.5 games.

They keep winning, on the field and off.

On July 2, the first day of the international free-agent signing period, MLB.com’s Sanchez tweeted:

Then came Gurriel. The Astros were never discussed as one of the favorites when he became a free agent, because he plays second base and third base, and the Astros have Jose Altuve at second and Bregman ready to take over at third.

One day in late June, Gurriel posted a picture of himself in an Astros uniform, as tweeted by @NicoRafa54:

It wasn’t yet a sign of a done deal, because Gurriel also posted pictures of himself working out in New York Mets, Yankees, San Diego Padres, Dodgers and San Francisco Giants gear. It was a sign the Astros were serious.

The $47.5 million they committed Friday showed it even more.

But why not? It’s only money, and Gurriel costs them nothing else. His contract didn’t count against the international signing limit, and signing him didn’t cost the Astros a prospect.

If anything, it allows them the option of trading one of their other infield prospects. It won’t be Bregman, who should be called up soon, but the Astros could justify dealing Colin Moran, another former first-rounder who also plays third base.

As for Gurriel, no one really knows how much of an impact he’ll make, and how soon. He’s been training in Miami (with his brother Lourdes Gurriel Jr., an outfielder who was also a free agent), but he hasn’t played in an actual game since defecting from Cuba in February.

He’ll need time in the minor leagues, at least for a few weeks. He may need time to adjust.

But if he’s as good as advertised, he could make an impact, and he could do it as soon as this September’s pennant race—and perhaps this October’s postseason.

As far as where he plays, these things often take care of themselves. Maybe he can play the outfield. Maybe Bregman, who will need to move off shortstop because Carlos Correa is there, could play the outfield or first base.

Don’t worry about it. The key to winning is accumulating talent, and by signing Gurriel, the Astros seem to be doing just that.

They kept at it Friday, which pleased Kenny, the top Astros fan (or at least the most prominent media fan). Check out his first tweet after Sanchez reported the signing:

Forgive the spelling of Gurriel’s name. It was Gourriel, until the family changed it less than two years ago.

The Astros have changed their look in the last couple of years too. They’re full of talent now.

They’ve had a nice month and a great week. And they might just be setting themselves up for a great second half.

             

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Are We Watching the End of Alex Rodriguez’s Checkered MLB Career?

There are some skills Alex Rodriguez will never lose. He’ll always be able to tell us how good he is, how hard he works, how great he can be.

“I’ve been working really hard, tweaking, running and training,” he told reporters, including Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News. “My time will come.”

Sorry, Alex. Your time has come…and gone.

I know, it’s dangerous to call time on fading stars. David Ortiz was done in April and May 2009, except that he’s made five more All-Star teams since then, was a World Series MVP in 2013 and is now a 40-year-old marvel. Ichiro Suzuki was on the slow road to 3,000 hits until this year’s revival at age 42.

A-Rod himself was done three years ago because of injuries and issues, body parts that wouldn’t work and a baseball legal system that did. Then came last year, with 33 home runs and even a mention on one MVP ballot.

I try never to forget the words of Sparky Anderson, who liked to say “quality can always return, but mediocracy [his word!] never was.”

Rodriguez was quality, even if it was medically enhanced quality. He can always return, and a contract that guarantees him another $21 million next year suggests he will return, at least in body.

But why? To chase home run numbers that will forever be tainted? To prove he can still be a difference-maker for a team that wants to move past him?

He’ll be 41 later this month, and he looks every day of it.

“Me being productive in the middle of the lineup is going to help us get to the postseason,” Rodriguez told Feinsand in one of a few “exclusive” interviews during his midsummer media campaign.

It’s nice he still believes that (if he really does). Yankees management obviously isn’t buying in, at least not to the part about him being productive.

The Yankees have played 10 games this month, and Rodriguez started just one of them. Three were in San Diego, where the Yankees had no need for a designated hitter, but that leaves seven other games he could have played.

It’s true that part of the reason was Carlos Beltran’s sore hamstring, which pushed Beltran to the DH spot. But as Yankees general manager Brian Cashman admitted when the month began, the bigger issue was A-Rod’s OPS against right-handed pitchers.

“We’ve got to get this 2016 going,” Cashman told reporters, including Anthony Rieber of Newsday. “We’re struggling. It’s almost July. So we had a meeting the other day, and one of the things we came up with was obviously Alex, I think, is a .580 OPS against right-handed pitching this year.”

It was actually .584 at the time, and it’s .570 now, and while that’s not the worst in the major leagues, it’s down there in Erick Aybar country. It’s lower than the .598 Omar Infante had when the Kansas City Royals released him on June 21.

Infante is a light-hitting second baseman. A-Rod is a full-time designated hitter (or designated sitter), a guy who doesn’t even carry a glove.

But wait! Feinsand reported in the Daily News that A-Rod took a first baseman’s glove with him when he left for the All-Star break.

Asked by George A. King III of the New York Post whether Rodriguez will ever actually play first base, Cashman responded, “I don’t think anybody knows.”

The Yankees don’t need an aging, slow first baseman with a .570 OPS against right-handers any more than they need a DH with a .570 OPS against right-handers.

“Everybody slows down with age,” said one American League scout who saw the Yankees recently. “And he’s slowed down. Is there hope? I think there’s a chance. It’s a slim chance, but I don’t think anybody expected him to do what he did last year.”

The $21 million he’s due next year probably guarantees Rodriguez won’t leave on his own, no matter how bad it gets. He no doubt dreams of a revival that will see him go out next year the way his rival (and onetime friend) Ortiz is going out this season, or at least the way his other rival (and perhaps onetime friend) Derek Jeter did in 2014.

The tougher question is whether it could get bad enough that the Yankees swallow that sunk money and release A-Rod before his contract runs out. He probably would be done then, because even with the Yankees paying the freight, it’s hard to see another team taking him.

Even the chase for some kind of home run history—he’s stuck on 695 home runs, with none in his last 41 plate appearances—hardly seems to matter.

Rodriguez remains in pinstripes for now, battling for at-bats with Aaron Hicks and Rob Refsnyder, two guys with just a small fraction of the ability A-Rod once displayed.

Even Hicks, a career .220 hitter with a lower OPS (.562) than Rodriguez has this season, has seemed like a better option to the Yankees.

As the scout said, everybody slows down with age. In the case of Alex Rodriguez, his time has come.

   

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Matt Harvey’s Latest Season-Ending Surgery Puts Bright Career at Crossroads

NEW YORK — On the day the New York Mets announced Matt Harvey will have his second major surgery in four years, Ron Darling brought up Tim Leary’s name.

“He had some of the best stuff I’ve seen,” said Darling, who joined the Mets in 1983, Leary’s second big league season.

Leary had great stuff. In part because of injuries, he didn’t have a great career.

Harvey still could.

What happened this week was another tough break, with Harvey learning he has thoracic outlet syndrome and will need surgery that will cost him the rest of this season. But season-ending is a long way from career-ending.

When I relayed what we know about Harvey’s condition to a friend who once worked as a major league athletic trainer, my friend predicted a strong recovery.

“I’d still draft him on my fantasy team for next year,” he said.

Harvey’s agent, Scott Boras, said by phone that he regards this week’s developments as “positive” news.

“We finally know why Matt’s command has been off,” Boras said.

Thoracic outlet syndrome may not be that well known by average fans, but plenty of pitchers have had it, and plenty have come back from it. Boras said Harvey was diagnosed with the neurogenic form of the ailment, meaning the impingement in his shoulder affects the nerves rather than the blood flow.

That helps explain why Harvey can still throw a baseball 98 mph, as he did Monday against the Miami Marlins. It also explains why he often hasn’t been able to throw it where he wants, with a walk rate (2.4 per nine innings) that is up considerably from last season (1.8).

The nerve impingement made it hard for Harvey to find a consistent arm slot. By removing the rib that has pushed against the nerve, doctors will create more space for the nerve, and theoretically allow Harvey to get back to having a consistent delivery.

There are plenty of examples of pitchers who have come back strong from similar surgeries, starting with Kenny Rogers, who had it done at age 36 and made three more All-Star teams. Josh Beckett threw a no-hitter the year after he had the surgery.

But surgery is surgery, and this will be two big ones for Harvey, before he ever throws 200 innings in a major league season (he had Tommy John surgery in 2013). Any team looking to commit money to Harvey will know that. Clubs will also know the biggest risk factor for any pitcher is a history of getting hurt.

That’s all hugely significant for the Mets, because they won’t have Harvey for the rest of 2016 and probably don’t have him as a possible trade chip this coming winter. It’s hugely significant for Harvey, because he has less time to establish himself as dependable before free agency arrives after the 2018 season.

Back in July 2013, around the time Harvey was starting the All-Star Game and before the Tommy John surgery, he did an interview with David Amsden of Men’s Journal in which he talked about how big a star he was and wanted to be in New York.

“I could buy a place now, but I’ve gotta wait for that $200 million contract,” Harvey said then. “If I’m going to buy an apartment, it has to be the best apartment in the city.”

He didn’t get that $200 million contract then, and he’s not getting it right now, either. He could still get it in 2018, but teams don’t give deals like that to pitchers who can’t get through a season.

Forget the money for now, though, because this is about a lot more than money. This is about a pitcher who even opponents enjoy watching—a pitcher whose body once again has gotten in the way of him getting to the mound.

“It’s just not a good feeling,” said Max Scherzer, the Washington Nationals right-hander who would have pitched against Harvey on Saturday night (and will now face Logan Verrett instead). “I want to beat the Mets and Matt Harvey. I want him out there.”

Scherzer said his heart aches for Harvey—a sentiment similar to the one Darling expressed Friday. Any of us can feel for a player who gets hurt, but those who have pitched in the big leagues understand the emotions better than we ever can.

“Matt has been to heights few have been,” Darling said. “But the only way to have a great career is to be able to sustain it. I have great compassion for him. I just hope he has better luck.

“He’s young, he loves to do something and he can’t do it.”

And that’s why when Mets manager Terry Collins described Harvey’s mood Friday as both disappointed and optimistic, I totally got it.

Based on what we know about his condition, he should be optimistic about a successful return. Based on two major surgeries in four years, he should be extremely disappointed and cautious as he views the future.

What happened this week doesn’t necessarily threaten what still could be a great career. But it sure does burden Harvey with another big obstacle to overcome.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Will Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo Spoil Each Other’s NL MVP Hopes?

Twenty years ago, there was a team with two young stars batting in the middle of the lineup. The way Baseball-Reference.com calculates wins above replacement, Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez of the 1996 Seattle Mariners finished first and second in the American League, and nobody else was close.

Either one of them could have been the AL’s Most Valuable Player that year. Neither of them won it.

Rodriguez finished second. Griffey finished fourth.

Nothing against Juan Gonzalez, the Texas Rangers outfielder who won the MVP that year, but it’s easy to believe some voters picked between Griffey and Rodriguez and ended up costing both of them the award.

Had Griffey’s four first-place votes gone to Rodriguez, A-Rod would have won. Instead, he finished second in one of the closest MVP votes ever.

So yes, if you’re wondering whether Chicago Cubs friends and teammates Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo could cost each other the MVP this year, it is possible. History and logic say it’s highly unlikely, but it is possible.

It happened before, and it seems A-Rod never forgot it.

“To this day, he’s never really forgiven me,” said Jim Street, who covered the A-Rod/Junior Mariners for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and put Griffey ahead of Rodriguez on his ballot (but voted Gonzalez ahead of both of them). “Five years later, he saw me in the Texas Rangers clubhouse and introduced me to Michael Young and Ivan Rodriguez as ‘the guy who cost me the MVP in ’96.'”

It’s hard to imagine either Bryant or Rizzo doing that. It may never come to it, anyway, because there’s half a season to go and there’s every chance that by the end of September their numbers won’t be similar. There’s every chance that one of them, or someone else entirely, will be an obvious MVP choice.

For now, they both should be near the top of the list. Bryant has a few more home runs (25-20), a few more RBI (64-61) and a slightly higher slugging percentage (.574-.560). Rizzo leads in batting average (.282-.278) and on-base percentage (.402-.369).

Cubs players and staff say Rizzo is more of a team leader, but Bryant gets credit for starting games at four different positions.

“One guy drives the bus one day, the other guy drives the bus the other,” catcher David Ross said. “I can’t choose. It’s a good problem to have.”

It’s good for the Cubs—potentially bad for the writers who follow them and may need to choose. The consensus among Cubs beat writers seems to be Bryant would be the pick right now, but obviously that could change.

“It’s a great debate,” said Jim Deshaies, the Cubs television analyst. “You can make a compelling argument for both of them. I might go 51-49 for Bryant right now.”

There’s no guarantee that either of them will win, or even that either should win.

Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports put Clayton Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Matt Carpenter of the St. Louis Cardinals ahead of both Cubs candidates on his hypothetical midseason ballot (although both are now on the disabled list). Joel Sherman of the New York Post picked Bryant, but with Kershaw, Nolan Arenado of the Colorado Rockies, Carpenter and Daniel Murphy of the Washington Nationals behind him.

The ultimate choice won’t be announced until November, and it will belong to 30 writers selected by the Baseball Writers Association of America, which gives out the MVP, Cy Young, Rookie of the Year and Manager of the Year. In theory, that means two writers from every National League city, although with newspaper consolidation and restrictions on voting, it doesn’t always work that way.

Even so, the MVP panel has enough balance to overcome regional biases that can affect awards like the Heisman Trophy. History shows that in most cases, teammates don’t take votes from each other, or if they do, it doesn’t swing the election.

Over the last 50 years, 50 teams have had multiple players receive first-place votes in the same year. In 25 of those cases, one of those multiple players receiving votes won the award. In six, players from the same team finished first and second.

In almost all the other cases, even adding all the first-place votes for players from one team together wouldn’t have changed the outcome.

The ’96 Mariners were the exception, but there were also exceptional circumstances that season. Significantly, the Mariners didn’t make the playoffs, finishing 4.5 games behind Gonzalez’s Rangers.

Street, who had one of the votes assigned to Seattle (Bob Finnigan of the Seattle Times had the other), said he would have voted Griffey first had the Mariners won, but switched to Gonzalez when the Rangers held on.

Street said he voted Griffey second and Rodriguez fourth because he believed Griffey had a bigger impact on the team, and because others were telling him the same thing.

“We had a three-city trip in September, and I went to each opposing manager and asked, ‘Who do you most fear in this lineup?'” Street said. “I talked to Mike Hargrove in Cleveland, Bob Boone in Kansas City and Tom Kelly in Minnesota. They all said Griffey was the MVP on that team.”

In a 2013 retrospective for the Times, Finnigan wrote that he went to Mariners manager Lou Piniella with the same question. Piniella, he said, chose Griffey.

“I’m not going to say Lou swayed me,” Finnigan wrote. “He only confirmed what I thought I saw, what I truly believed: When it came to most valuable, Griffey was the only choice.”

Finnigan also went to A-Rod, who told him Griffey was the Mariners’ MVP.

Rodriguez, though, had slightly better numbers. Outside Seattle, most writers voted him ahead of Griffey. An exception was John Hickey of the Oakland Tribune, who voted Alex Rodriguez seventh and Ivan Rodriguez of the Rangers third.

Had Hickey reversed those votes, A-Rod would have been the MVP. But he didn’t, and it was Street and Finnigan who felt the most heat.

“The columnist at my own paper [Laura Vecsey] came out and said the Seattle writers didn’t have the guts to vote against Griffey,” Street said. “Our newspaper had a Star of the Year banquet, and when Alex won, he said, ‘It’s a good thing Street and Finnigan didn’t vote for this.'”

Twenty years later, the arguments go on. Gonzalez often makes lists of the most undeserving MVPs (including this 2011 Bleacher Report list by Arad Markowitz). A-Rod should have won, Markowitz wrote.

Twenty years from now, you wonder if someone will say the same about Kris Bryant or Anthony Rizzo.

   

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Clayton Kershaw’s Back Injury Casts Huge Question Mark over Dodgers’ Season

The hottest team in baseball is spending less than $14 million on a starting rotation that might turn Cleveland into the city of champions. The richest team in baseball has more than $36 million tied up in starting pitchers who aren’t healthy enough to pitch.

Uh, make that more than $70 million, because the Los Angeles Dodgers added Clayton Kershaw to their hefty disabled list Thursday.

Remember when the Dodgers’ problem was they didn’t have a good enough rotation behind Kershaw? Well, now they don’t have a good enough rotation at all, at least until Kershaw returns from the back injury that has sent him to the 15-day DL.

The Dodgers can’t, or won’t, say when that will be. As a result, we can’t, or won’t, say whether the Dodgers have any chance to keep this season from falling apart.

Los Angeles did get a good start from Kenta Maeda on Thursday afternoon in Milwaukee, and it got an 8-1 win over the Brewers that gave it a 44-37 record. If the season ended now, the Dodgers would be in the playoffs as a wild-card team.

Good thing for them the season doesn’t end now, because if the National League Wild Card Game were Friday night, they wouldn’t have Kershaw to pitch in it.

They’d have Bud Norris, the 31-year-old right-hander they announced they acquired Thursday from the Atlanta Braves, where he was in and out and back in the rotation. Norris has a 2.15 ERA in five starts this month, with wins over both the Chicago Cubs and New York Mets, but it’s hard to forget his 8.74 ERA in five starts in April.

He’s no Kershaw, but who is? Not Maeda, although Orel Hershiser said on Dodgers television that the Japanese rookie has been “impersonating an ace” lately. Not anyone in the rest of the pieced-together Dodgers rotation, which for now includes Scott Kazmir, Julio Urias and Brock Stewart after Maeda and Norris.

The “for now” is key, because both Brandon McCarthy (coming back from Tommy John surgery) and Hyun-Jin Ryu (coming back from shoulder surgery) are pitching on minor league rehabilitation assignments. Neither of them is Kershaw, either, but at least they’ve pitched in the big leagues before.

Counting Norris, the Dodgers have had 10 starting pitchers this season—only the Cincinnati Reds and Oakland A’s have used more—and four of them made their major league debut in 2016.

That’s part of the reason that while the Dodgers are 14-2 when Kershaw starts, they’re 30-35 when he doesn’t.

The without-Kershaw record was a problem before Thursday, when we were all thinking Kershaw was going to keep starting every fifth day. Besides being the best pitcher in baseball, the Dodger ace has been remarkably durable, averaging 32 starts and 215 innings in the seven seasons before this one.

He leads the major leagues this year with 121 innings, including six on Sunday in Pittsburgh. He apparently complained of discomfort Monday, flew home Wednesday and was diagnosed with what the Dodgers called a “mild disc herniation” in his lower back, per Andy McCullough of the Los Angeles Times. The team said Kershaw received an epidural injection for pain relief.

What it didn’t say was when he’ll pitch again. Perhaps it honestly doesn’t know. Perhaps it’d rather not even think about it.

“How his body responds to the epidural, that’s the most telling,” manager Dave Roberts told reporters, including McCullough. “I don’t know how it’s going to be. I don’t know. I’m hopeful. But I can’t say either way [whether this will be 15 days or longer].”

The Dodgers, for all their money, wouldn’t spend enough of it to keep Zack Greinke from leaving for the Arizona Diamondbacks last winter. For all their prospects, they wouldn’t part with enough of them to add Cole Hamels (or any of the top rental pitchers) last July.

They have what they have, and if they make it through whatever time Kershaw misses without sinking in the standings, it would be a major accomplishment—and something of a surprise.

As catcher A.J. Ellis told McCullough after the Kershaw news came out, “That’s probably why he hurt his back, he’s been carrying us so long.”

Kershaw was always the Dodgers’ guarantee against a long losing streak. Streaks are usually built on starting pitching, although few teams have ever done that as successfully as the Indians have over the last two weeks.

According to a stat cited on the Indians’ TV broadcast Thursday night, they were the first team since the 1916 New York Giants to win 12 straight games while never allowing more than three earned runs. They did it again for number 13 Thursday, with Carlos Carrasco striking out 14 in a 4-1 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.

The Indians have a five-man rotation that right now qualifies as baseball’s best, but they don’t have a Kershaw.

For at least the next two weeks, the Dodgers don’t have one, either.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Yankees’ Lack of Star Power a Big Concern Both on Field and off It

NEW YORK — In the seats behind home plate, scouts from rival teams ogle the relief pitchers the New York Yankees haven’t yet decided to sell. Just the other day, the Chicago Cubs had three scouts at Yankee Stadium, enough so each could have focused in on just one of the late-inning relievers who could change the trade market and perhaps Cubs history.

On the concourses behind the seats, racks full of T-shirts with the “No Runs DMC” logo the Yankees created to market those relievers sit waiting for customers. But instead of buying shirts honoring Aroldis Chapman, Andrew Miller and Dellin Betances, the few fans who are shopping seem content with their aging Derek Jeter jerseys.

This is where the Yankees stand at midseason 2016, with players more marketable to other teams than to their own fans. This is what the Yankees have become, a tradition-rich franchise stuck with too few current stars their fans are drawn to.

All-Star voting isn’t always the best indicator of stardom, but it’s worth noting that in 21 of the 22 seasons between 1993 and 2014, the Yankees had at least one player in the American League starting lineup. In 10 of the 11 years between 2002 and 2012, they had two or more starters.

Last year, they had none. That’s almost certain to be the case again this season, with only Brian McCann (a distant fourth among catchers) and Carlos Beltran (10th among outfielders) even making it onto MLB‘s latest voting update.

Just five years ago, four of the nine players voted in for the AL played for the Yankees. Jeter and Alex Rodriguez missed the game because of injuries, but Curtis Granderson and Robinson Cano both started.

Five years later, only A-Rod remains, and he can barely make the Yankees lineup. The others have gone. Only their replica jerseys remain.

Walk around Yankee Stadium, and you’re just as likely to see a Cano jersey as one honoring any current Yankee.

No current Yankee made the list of the top 20 baseball jerseys sold last year. Just four years ago, Jeter topped the list, and fellow Yankees Ichiro Suzuki and Cano made the top 10.

You can argue it doesn’t matter. You can argue that the standard of stardom the Yankees set through the first decade of this century was a real anomaly, never possible to match.

Teams go through cycles, and the Yankees themselves have been through them before. They didn’t have an All-Star starter from 1989-92, the only other time in the last 45 years they went consecutive seasons without one.

All-Stars and attendance and jersey sales are byproducts of success, and this year’s Yankees team remains below .500 as the midpoint of the season approaches. The Yankees have played just well enough to stay on the fringes of the race—they began play Wednesday 3.5 games out of a wild-card spot—but they’ve been bad enough that a midseason sell-off remains possible.

Chapman, Miller and Beltran could all be traded if the Yankees determine they’re better off trying to retool for the future. They do have players of value.

“We have stars,” said Betances, who has become one of them.

If fans could vote for All-Star pitchers (who are chosen instead through player vote and managerial selections), the Yankees’ late-inning trio would no doubt get big support. But as the Cincinnati Reds found out when they had Chapman, it’s tough when your biggest star only pitches in the ninth inning when you have a lead.

Now that’s true for the Yankees.

Their drop-off in star power has been drastic, and as much as the Yankees need wins to stay in the pennant race, they need stars to stay in the race for relevancy.

It’s not just about jerseys and All-Star votes. The Yankees need to sell tickets, and they need to attract eyeballs to television sets so the team-owned YES network can sell advertising.

This year, for the first time in the decade both teams have had their own networks, the New York Mets are topping the Yankees in local ratings, according to Bob Raissman of the New York Daily News. The New York Post‘s Richard Morgan reported YES ratings are down 10 percent from last year and nearly 50 percent from their peak.

From 2002-11, Morgan noted, the Yankees regularly averaged 400,000 viewers per game. This season, they were down to 233,403.

Through Tuesday, the Yankees’ average home attendance was 38,022. That’s tied with the Los Angeles Angels atop the American League and sixth-best in baseball. But as Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports pointed out, the Yankees are down 1,800 a game from last year and 8,000 a game from 2010.

Some of those drops are to be expected. The Yankees were coming off their 27th World Series title in 2010; this year, they were coming off two straight seasons missing the playoffs followed by 2015’s one-game playoff cameo.

It’s not just at home. From 2001-15, the Yankees ranked first or second in the American League in road attendance. So far this year, they’re fifth, behind the Boston Red Sox, Baltimore Orioles, Toronto Blue Jays and (most surprisingly) the Oakland A’s.

The Yankees were first in the majors in road attendance (35,512 average) in 2014, helped by the Jeter farewell tour. They’re 16th in the majors (29,383) so far this season.

Meanwhile, the Mets made the World Series for the first time in 15 years, grabbing much of New York’s baseball spotlight. With their attractive young rotation and with Yoenis Cespedes in the lineup, the Mets have the type of stars the Yankees normally feature.

Go to a Mets game at Citi Field, and you’ll see fans wearing Cespedes jerseys and Matt Harvey jerseys and Noah Syndergaard jerseys.

Go to a Yankees game, and you still see plenty of people wearing shirts from the past.

“Am I drawn to any of the current players? No,” said Jed Dietrich, a fan looking over the items at one of Yankee Stadium’s souvenir stands. “I grew up on [Don] Mattingly. I understand what they’re trying to do—get rid of the bad contracts and get younger. I think eventually guys like Aaron Judge and Greg Bird will be part of the future.”

For now, Judge remains at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, while Bird is injured and out for the season. For now, Dietrich still wears Mariano Rivera’s No. 42, and his five-year-old son Sean wears Jeter’s No. 2.

Oh, and he didn’t buy that No Runs DMC shirt, either. Seems the Yankees will have a lot easier time selling Chapman, Miller and/or Betances than they will convincing fans to buy their shirt.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Jose Reyes-Mets Reunion Would Be Low-Risk Gamble on Past Glory

Back when Jose Reyes was an All-Star, the New York Mets didn’t even offer him a contract. Now that he’s absolutely not an All-Star, the Mets want him back.

UPDATE (2:45 PM ET, Saturday, June 25): the deal is now official, per Anthony DiComo of MLB.com—who has been on the story from the start:

/End of update

The crazy part about all that is the Mets were right then and they’re also right now.

They avoided disaster when they didn’t try to counter the six-year, $106 million contract offer Reyes eventually signed with the Miami Marlins back in December 2011. And Reyes might just help them avoid disaster by signing a no-risk deal with them Saturday, as multiple reports Friday night (including this one from Anthony DiComo of MLB.com) said he likely will.

Because the Colorado Rockies released Reyes in the fifth year of that six-year deal he signed with the Marlins, the Rox remain responsible for paying him the bulk of the $40-plus million he has coming. The Mets would pay just the prorated major league minimum, and they only pay that for as long as Reyes remains on their big league roster.

Given that someone has to take that roster spot for at least the big league minimum, Reyes costs the Mets nothing. Given the struggle the Mets have had finding major league-caliber players to fill out their bench, he doesn’t block anyone of importance, either.

He doesn’t keep them from signing Yulieski Gourriel, if the Mets can find a way to get the Cuban free agent. He doesn’t take at-bats away from Asdrubal Cabrera, except when he gives manager Terry Collins a chance to give his starting shortstop a needed break.

As Collins made clear to reporters, including Fred Kerber of the New York Post, the plan would be to play Reyes a little bit of everywherearound the infield and perhaps even in the outfield. The idea would be to find out if he can provide a boost to a Mets team that has little speed and has struggled to score runs with anything but home runs.

To find out if he can do that, the Mets would first send Reyes to the minor leagues. He hasn’t played anywhere but shortstop in more than a decade and has never played anywhere but middle infield as a professional. He’d need a few games to get ready.

With any other team in any other situation, Reyes might mope if presented with all that. The difference here is he never wanted to leave the Mets and always wanted to return. He never gave up his house on Long Island.

Besides, it’s not like other teams have been lining up to give him a chance. Between his greatly diminished abilities on the field and his problems off it, Reyes’ value dropped to near zero this season.

The Rockies didn’t want him when his domestic violence suspension ended on June 1. They obviously couldn’t find any team to take on even a small part of his salary in a trade, or they wouldn’t have released him.

Back when baseball announced Reyes’ suspension in the middle of May, I wrote about how little value he had and wondered if any team would take him. Back then, it didn’t seem the Mets would want or need him.

The domestic violence incident was part of it, to be sure, but only a part. Aroldis Chapman served a domestic violence suspension, too, and not only is he closing without controversy for the New York Yankees, but plenty of other teams want to trade for him in July or sign him as a free agent this winter as well.

As for Reyes, things have changed since last month, more for the Mets than for him. Reyes’ old buddy David Wright had neck surgery and may not play again this season. The Mets have fallen behind the Washington Nationals in the National League East, although a Mets win and a Nationals loss Friday cut the deficit to three games.

Already, the Mets have added James Loney (who had a big night in Friday’s win in Atlanta) and Kelly Johnson. Even with that, it was just five days ago that a frustrated Collins told reporters “we may shake some things up.”

Since then, the Mets have won three of four, but they’ve also watched their best hitter (Yoenis Cespedes) deal with a wrist problem and an ankle problem and their best pitcher (Noah Syndergaard) go off to get his elbow examined. Another rotation staple, Steven Matz, has admitted to elbow tightness after each of his last two starts.

All those guys mean more to the Mets’ chances of going back to the playoffs than Reyes does. But that doesn’t mean he can’t help.

I’m not sure he can. No one can be sure of that.

But now that he costs a lot closer to $100,000 than to $100 million, Reyes is worth a shot.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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