Tag: Troy Tulowitzki

Troy Tulowitzki Injury: Updates on Blue Jays Star’s Ribs, Back and Return

Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Troy Tulowitzki exited the field in the first game of Saturday’s doubleheader against the New York Yankees with bruises to his upper back and a small crack in his scapula, according to Gregor Chisholm of MLB.com, who also reported X-rays on the star’s ribs and chest were negative. 

Continue for updates.


Tulowitzki’s Recovery Timeline Revealed

Sunday, Sept. 13

“Blue Jays GM Alex Anthopoulos says [there’s a] possibility Troy Tulowitzki could return in 2-3 weeks, depending on pace of healing. Guarded optimism,” relayed Shi Davidi of Sportsnet. 

“We’ll probably have a little better idea in a few days of how long they might think it would (take to heal),” Toronto manager John Gibbons said, per Davidi.

Tulowitzki has struggled to stay healthy for much of his MLB career. Though he has been relatively injury-free this season, the 30-year-old missed 107 games in 2013 and 2014. Add to that a 47-game campaign in 2012 and a 2008 season in which he missed 61 contests, and the pattern is well established. 

The Blue Jays, who acquired Tulo and LaTroy Hawkins midseason for Jose Reyes and three minor league pitchers, will move Ryan Goins to shortstop. Goins started at second base Saturday but moved to short when Cliff Pennington entered for Tulowitzki. Starting second baseman Devon Travis is already on the disabled list with a shoulder injury, so Toronto will be without its starting middle infield while Tulo is out. 

The Blue Jays and Yankees are locked in a tight race for the American League East title, and Toronto may miss Tulowitzki’s prowess at the plate and Gold Glove in the field.

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Blue Jays’ Troy Tulowitzki Perfectly Leaps over Orioles Player to Avoid Tag

Toronto Blue Jays shortstop Troy Tulowitzki has bounce.

After poking a grounder up the middle in the bottom of the sixth of a 10-2 loss to the visiting Baltimore Orioles on Friday night, the 30-year-old overran first base following an errant throw.

Backing up the bag, though, was O’s catcher Matt Wieters, so Tulo was in trouble. The Jays star sprinted back to the base, but Wieters had him beat.

So Tulowitzki, being the acrobat that he is, decided to casually leap over his diving opponent and land safely on the base.

No big deal.

[Major League Baseball]

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Inside the Blockbuster Trade That Stunned Troy Tulowitzki, Baseball World

NEW YORK — Troy Tulowitzki looks just fine in blue.

He looks comfortable. He looks happy. He looks like he really was just what the Toronto Blue Jays needed.

Two weeks on, the trade that rocked this baseball summer looks like the best thing that could have happened to him, the best thing that could have happened to the Blue Jays—maybe even the best thing that could have happened to the Colorado Rockies.

“The positive about him being traded is we don’t have to answer questions every day about whether he’ll be traded,” Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado said Tuesday.

Two weeks on, the Tulowitzki deal makes so much sense that you wonder why it didn’t happen earlier, so much sense that you wonder why it was such a big shock in the first place.

“I think at the end of the day, the switch was good,” Tulowitzki said the other day.

Two weeks on, Tulowitzki seems fine with the idea that the trade happened. But two weeks on, he’s still not at all fine with how it happened.

“It bothered me at first,” he said. “And it still bothers me.”

With the help of many who were involved on both sides, Bleacher Report set out to find out how the deal came together, learning it almost never happened at all.

In fact, on what turned out to be Tulowitzki‘s final day with the Rockies, Colorado general manager Jeff Bridich called manager Walt Weiss and told him he wasn’t close to any deals. That same day, on a conference call with his top advisors, Blue Jays general manager Alex Anthopoulos listened to a lively debate on whether the Jays should pass on Tulowitzki and focus all their resources on adding pitching instead.

“When I got off the conference call, I thought we weren’t going to do the deal,” Anthopoulos said.

Within hours, the deal was done.

Anthopoulos loved Tulowitzki since watching him at Long Beach State. He asked Bridich about him last winter and again in dozens of phone calls and text messages since then. He agreed that pitching was a bigger immediate need, but trading for Tulowitzki would make the Blue Jays better now and in the future.

He just had to convince Bridich to get a deal done. And that meant he had to agree to part with Jeff Hoffman.

Hoffman was Toronto’s first-round draft pick in 2014, a hard-throwing right-hander from East Carolina who has come back strong from Tommy John surgery. The Blue Jays didn’t want to give him up.

“We’d gone back and forth with proposals a million times,” Anthopoulos said. “Every proposal they made had [Hoffman] in it. Every proposal that we made didn’t include him.”

Other teams wanted Hoffman, too. The Blue Jays needed at least one starting pitcher and maybe two, and some of Anthopoulosadvisors worried that giving up Hoffman could cost them a chance at David Price or Johnny Cueto or any number of other pitchers Anthopoulos was pursuing.

Anthopoulos understood the concern, but in the end, he felt the risk was worth it. Because Tulowitzki was signed through 2020, this was a deal that could make the Blue Jays winners for years to come, not just in 2015.

Around the time Tulowitzki and the Rockies were taking the field that night at Wrigley, Anthopoulos called Bridich and made a proposal with Hoffman in it.

“Then things started to move,” he said.

Tulowitzki, who went 0-for-5 in a 9-8 Rockies loss to the Cubs, had no idea the movement had even begun.

By the letter of his contract, the Rockies had no obligation to tell him or to ask for his permission. When he signed his 10-year, $157.75 million contract in November 2010, the organization was determined not to give out any more no-trade clauses, still feeling stung (and hamstrung) by no-trade deals given to Larry Walker and Todd Helton.

For four years, it hardly mattered whether the clause existed or not. Tulowitzki and Dick Monfort had a close relationship, and the owner had no interest in trading a player who had become the face of his franchise.

Tulowitzki would come to believe that he had an understanding with Monfort, a gentlemen’s agreement of sorts, that the Rockies would keep him informed and even give him input into any possible trade.

While Tulowitzki would talk with teammates about the possibility he would get traded, he never worried about being surprised by a trade—because of that understanding.

Then, on that night at Wrigley, he was more than surprised. He was stunned, “blindsided,” as he put it in a conversation with Denver reporters the day after the trade.

Bridich maintains that he had several conversations with Paul Cohen, Tulowitzki‘s agent, and that he “kept him in the loop.” But the general manager also maintains that the way things went down on July 27, the day of the trade, made full disclosure impossible.

Everything just happened too fast.

Anthopoulos and Bridich had long agreed that any Tulowitzki deal would include Jose Reyes, a shortstop who had about $50 million remaining on a contract that runs through 2017. They discussed multiple combinations around those two, eventually agreeing that the Blue Jays would get LaTroy Hawkins to help their bullpen, and the Rockies would get minor league pitchers Miguel Castro and Jesus Tinoco, along with Hoffman.

All this time, no details of the talks had leaked out. None would, until Bridich made another call to Wrigley Field and sent word to Weiss to pull Tulowitzki from the game.

Anthopoulos had his own concerns. The Blue Jays had come to view Reyes as a huge liability on defense, but they loved him as a person. They wanted him to hear about the trade from them, face to face.

One problem: The Blue Jays were off that night, and Reyes was asleep in his apartment not far from the Rogers Centre. Worse yet, he didn’t have his phone with him.

They finally got in touch with him around midnight, by calling his wife. He walked over to the ballpark, saw Anthopoulos and manager John Gibbons waiting for him and had an idea of what was happening.

“They showed me a lot of respect,” Reyes said. “They treated me right.”

In the manager’s office at Wrigley, Tulowitzki wasn’t thinking the same thing.

“It was kind of surreal,” he said. “It was not how I imagined it would go down.”

He spent 45 minutes talking with Weiss, whom he had known since he was drafted by the Rockies in 2005. He spoke by phone with Bridich, Monfort and Anthopoulos, but he later left the ballpark without speaking with reporters.

The next day, before leaving to join his new team in Toronto, Tulowitzki told reporters that the trade had “blindsided” him.

Bridich and Monfort spoke to reporters in Denver, with the owner getting emotional and the GM calmly explaining that any slight toward Tulowitzki was unintended but unavoidable.

“It wasn’t an ideal situation,” Bridich said this week. “If it could have happened at home, where we could have honored him and he could have said goodbye to the fans, yeah, but that’s not how it worked. You get back to the reality of the business.

“Timelines aren’t always perfect.”

Bridich said there was never any consideration that he and/or Monfort would fly to Chicago to deliver the news in person, and there was no chance of holding up the deal so that Tulowitzki could be brought into the process before it was done. Things moved fast, and once an agreement was reached, Tulowitzki had to be pulled from the game because no one wanted to risk him getting hurt.

The next day, with Reyes traded and Tulowitzki still on the way to Toronto, the Blue Jays lost 3-2 to the Philadelphia Phillies with Ryan Goins playing shortstop.

“We looked flat,” Anthopoulos said. “We looked dead. It was like the hangover from having lost Reyes.”

If there were any regrets, they went away quickly. The Blue Jays won Tulowitzki‘s Toronto debut 8-2, with the new shortstop contributing two doubles, a home run and a big play on defense.

They would win again the next day, and the day after. Even after giving up Hoffman in the Tulowitzki deal, Anthopoulos had enough prospects remaining to make deals for Price, outfielder Ben Revere and reliever Mark Lowe.

After a three-game sweep at Yankee Stadium last weekend, the Blue Jays were 11-0 with Tulowitzki in the lineup (a record they ran to 12-0 with a win over the Oakland Athletics on Tuesday night). Gibbons made Tulowitzki the leadoff hitter, bunching Tulo, Josh Donaldson, Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion atop a power-packed lineup. Tulowitzki had scored 12 runs in his 11 starts.

Those who knew him from his Rockies days were not surprised.

“There’s a competitive fire in Troy that will be reignited by playing on the East Coast,” said Dan O’Dowd, the former Rockies GM.

“I know how he’s wired,” Weiss agreed. “I know how much he’s loving being in a pennant race now. I think he’ll rise to the occasion.”

His friends in Colorado are pulling for him to do well. They suddenly find themselves paying attention to the Blue Jays. Tulowitzki keeps track of them, too. Whatever his feelings about the way the trade went down, he left a lot of friends behind in the Rockies clubhouse.

In time, there’s a chance that any hard feelings will fade, especially if Tulowitzki‘s initial success in Toronto holds up.

Someday, he’ll go back to Colorado for an interleague game or a Rockies reunion.

“Everybody knows Troy has been a great ambassador for the game,” Bridich said. “And a great ambassador for the Rockies.”

He was there for 10 years, from his debut at age 21 through a World Series at age 23 and five All-Star appearances.

Then, on one memorable night at Wrigley Field, it all ended so abruptly.

“Change is uncomfortable,” Bridich said.

But sometimes, change is for the best.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a National Columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

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Rolling Blue Jays Looking Every Bit the Offensive Juggernaut We Expected

It has only been a week since the Toronto Blue Jays traded for Troy Tulowitzki, only a week since my colleague and close friend Scott Miller graced this very space with a column headlined, “Troy Tulowitzki Blockbuster Does Nothing to Change AL Playoff Picture.”

Oh, really?

Only a week, but Tulowitzki has started eight games in Toronto, and the Blue Jays have won all eight. Only a week, but the Blue Jays’ league-leading offense is averaging nearly a run a game more with Tulowitzki in the lineup than without him. Only a week, but the Jays have already leapfrogged the Minnesota Twins into the second wild-card spot in the American League, with the New York Yankees and the AL East lead now firmly in sight.

Small sample size, sure, but if you could declare the Tulowitzki acquisition meaningless after no games played, I sure as heck can declare it game-changing now that we’re one week in.

I know, your point was that Alex Anthopoulos needed to acquire a starting pitcher, an assignment he aced when he traded for David Price two days later. And it’s true, the Blue Jays are undefeated in games Price starts.

He’s 1-0. Tulowitzki is 8-0.

In eight games, seven of them against playoff contenders Kansas City and Minnesota, the new fearsome foursome atop the Blue Jays batting order (Tulowitzki, Josh Donaldson, Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion) have combined to score 29 runs and drive in 30.

Just look at what Twins outfielder Torii Hunter said after Thursday’s sweep-completing 9-3 Blue Jays win, via Mike Berardino of the St. Paul Pioneer Press:

Oh, and just look at this from Hunter:

The Blue Jays got the heck out of Toronto Thursday night, too, headed for Yankee Stadium and an AL East race that looks more exciting than ever. The Yankees still lead the Jays by 4.5 games, but the Blue Jays can take care of that in the 13 remaining games between the two teams.

That’s right, 13.

The Blue Jays have 52 games left on their schedule, and 13 of them are against the Yankees. One out of every four games the Jays play between now and the end of the season is against New York.

The Blue Jays arranged their rotation to make sure Price starts four of those games. You can figure that John Gibbons will design his lineup to make sure Tulowitzki starts all 13.

The Tulowitzki trade could still turn into a long-term disaster for the Jays. He hasn’t played 130 games in a season since 2011 (although he could this year), he’s signed through 2020 for big money (with an option for 2021), and now that he’s 30 years old he’s going to play more than half his games on turf.

Anthopoulos gave up big-time prospects to get him, and to get Price. We all said he went all-in, and we all know what happens if you go all-in and lose.

But we also know what has happened every season since 1993, which is the last time the Blue Jays played in the postseason. They’ve been double-digit games out of first place at the start of September each of the last 14 years, until now.

They found Bautista, and nothing changed. They traded for Jose Reyes, and nothing changed.

Then Alex Anthopoulos traded for Troy Tulowitzki and, as ESPN’s Dan Shulman noted, this happened:

I know, it’s only been a week. I know, the Jays spent that week at home in the Rogers Centre, where they had a 28-20 record and were averaging 5.5 runs a game even before the Tulowitzki trade.

Now they’ve got to go on the road, where they’re 22-31 and lost five of their last six series. They have to go to Yankee Stadium, where the Yankees are 32-18 (including 9-2 over the last month).

And it’s the Yankees, not the Blue Jays, who have been baseball’s highest-scoring team since the All-Star break.

You know what, Scott, maybe you were right.

But I doubt it.

 

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

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

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Top 5 Suitors for Potential Troy Tulowitzki Blockbuster Trade

Listening to the men in charge and the player, the easy conclusion is Troy Tulowitzki will remain the long-suffering Colorado Rockies shortstop. 

Suffering because the franchise has not had a winning season since 2010 and is nowhere close to being able to contend with National League West rivals the Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants or San Diego Padres. And Tulowitzki will remain so because he, the owner and the general manager have all come out publicly and shot down thoughts that Tulowitzki, the best shortstop in baseball, is seeking a trade or that they will even be willing to consider such a request. 

GM Jeff Bridich went so far last week as to call the topic “a media production.” Owner Dick Monfort hung up on one Fox Sports reporter (Ken Rosenthal) for even broaching the subject and made it absolutely clear to another (Jon Morosi) that no such trade is unfolding and the franchise’s biggest star has not said he wants one.

“We’re not trying to trade him,” Monfort told Morosi. “There’s no story there.” 

Behind the scenes, there have been different kinds of whispers. Jon Heyman of CBS Sports reported last week that people who “know” Tulowitzki hinted he would like to be traded to a team with a chance of winning, such as the New York Yankees, San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Dodgers or Los Angeles Angels. 

The Rockies have waited long enough for Tulowitzki to be healthy and a significant part of a winning lineup. However, he and fellow star Carlos Gonzalez have been healthy all season and the Rockies are still terrible because too many other parts of the club—mainly pitching—have never been properly addressed by the organization.

The time has come for all sides to realize and accept that the best thing for the player and the Rockies is for Tulowitzki to be traded. He can finally take his elite game to a bigger stage and the Rockies can start a rebuild they so desperately need to become relevant again.

So, based on what Tulowitzki is reported to want, other teams’ needs and resources, here is a look at the shortstop’s top five suitors for a blockbuster trade that could reshape one or more of the postseason races.

Begin Slideshow


Troy Tulowitzki Injury: Updates on Rockies Star’s Quadriceps and Return

Colorado Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki left Friday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers with a quadriceps injury.

Continue for updates.


Tulowitzki Out of Saturday’s Lineup

Saturday, May 16

Tulowitzki was not in the team’s lineup for Saturday’s game against the Dodgers, via ROOT SPORTS:

The team’s official Twitter account noted that Tulowitzki left Friday’s contest with “left quadriceps tightness.”

The fact that it was only tightness is encouraging, but Colorado will likely use plenty of caution with its superstar. The Rockies are in last place in the National League West, and the shortstop’s long-term health is more important than a couple of games in May.

Coming into play Friday, Tulowitzki was hitting .284 with two home runs and 11 RBI. While the numbers don’t jump off the page, he is a four-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glove winner and is the most feared hitter in the Colorado lineup.

It would benefit the Rockies if Tulowitzki came back and returned to normal form quickly, though, to increase his potential trade value. The team is in last place and likely headed toward a rebuild, and trading away its biggest star would net assets in the form of young players and draft picks moving forward.

Tulowitzki recently addressed trade rumors, per Thomas Harding of MLB.com: “Whatever happens on the Rockies’ end happens, but for me to sit here and try to force my way out of here, that’s not the case. I don’t think it’s fair to my teammates and the relationships I’ve built here to take that route.”

Daniel Descalso came in for Tulowitzki Friday and will likely be asked to play some shortstop if Tulowitzki misses extended time.

He certainly doesn’t have the resume of Tulowitzki or inspire much fear in opposing pitching staffs, but he is a solid contact hitter who can at least fill the role until the superstar returns.

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Troy Tulowitzki Trade Must Be Reached Before Situation Deteriorates

Things are coming to a head for the Colorado Rockies and not just because they play a mile high. Troy Tulowitzki, the longtime face of the franchise, could be on the verge of making a push to get himself removed from what has become a losing and toxic situation.

The Rockies open a four-game set against the Dodgers in Los Angeles on Thursday, at which point Tulowitzki will meet with his agent, Paul Cohen, according to Joel Sherman of the New York Post.

On the agenda? The possibility—or, more accurately, the likelihood—that the star shortstop and his representative could broach the idea of requesting a trade out of Colorado.

“To say that [asking for a trade] is not a possibility would be silly,” says Cohen, who is set to meet with his client to get a read on how things have gone at the outset of 2015.

The short answer? Uh, not good.

After a semi-surprising start that saw them get to 7-2 right out of the gate and 11-8 as recently as April 27, the Rockies predictably have fallen apart, losing nine straight since to drop to 11-17 as of Tuesday and fall into last place in the NL West.

As Sherman writes:

Tulowitzki was described as frustrated with four straight losing seasons and wants out, according to two people who know him well. Cohen would not describe Tulowitzki’s mindset, but it was clear in a 15-minute conversation Cohen clearly sees the value of his client moving to a better place for his mind and body (not playing in high altitude any longer).

Folks, this situation could get ugly—and quickly.

The season is barely six weeks old, and already Colorado, which has endured four straight losing years, appears to be in the middle of yet another sub-.500 campaign.

This time, though, it’s more than that. It’s time for the Rockies to move on from the current crop of talent centered around Tulowitzki and outfielder Carlos Gonzalez—who entered Tuesday hitting .196, by the way—and undertake a rebuild.

The fans in Denver are once again getting fed up. There’s talk once again about boycotting Coors Field to make a point to an ownership that has not only remained steadfastly (and irrationally) against trading its two big-name stars, but also has opened itself up to criticism by calling out the fanbase itself.

“It could get to the point for [owner] Dick Monfort and [general manager] Jeff [Bridich] that the storyline every day with the team is when is Tulowitzki being traded,” Cohen said, per Sherman. “That is negative for the franchise as the idea of trading the face of the franchise. They are smart enough to recognize they don’t want that going forward.”

In short, the Rockies’ awful—and already lost—season is reaggravating an already tense situation between the ownership and tired-of-losing fanbase, with new GM Bridich caught in the middle as the one person who could lose all kinds of leverage as soon as news breaks that Tulowitzki has asked for (or demanded) a trade.

In fact, Tulowitzki made noise last July when he opened up about the idea of getting out of Colorado so that he could “be somewhere where there’s a chance to be in the playoffs every single year,” as he told Mark Kiszla of the Denver Post.

Thing is, Tulowitzki is not an especially sought-after commodity at the moment. Sure, he’s one of the five or 10 best players in baseball when he’s healthy and playing well, especially considering he handles a premium up-the-middle position too.

But this also is a 30-year-old who, due to a lengthy injury history, has played more than 130 games just three times in eight would-be full seasons (and parts of 10 total seasons). Over the past three years from 2012-14, although Tulowitzki posted an average triple-slash line of .316/.399/.551, he also participated in only 264 out of a possible 486 contests—or just over 50 percent.

Oh, and he’s coming off major hip surgery that ended his 2014 in mid-July.

There’s also the ever-increasing probability that Tulowitzki will need to move off shortstop in the near future to a less demanding position like third base, which only drops his value further. And a trade would mean leaving behind the hitter haven that is Coors Field, which could negatively impact his elite offensive production.

On top of all that, Tulowitzki is owed $118 million through 2020 and has a clause in his contract that guarantees him an extra $2 million as well as full no-trade rights going forward if he’s swapped.

As is, it’s likely we have seen the best of Tulowitzki. A four-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glover who has received MVP votes in six seasons, he is hitting a very respectable .307 this year but managed only two home runs so far while striking out 23 times against only two walks in his first 28 games.

As for possible destinations, there are a handful of teams that have both an opening or need at shortstop (or third base) as well as the financial wherewithal to take on most, if not all, of Tulowitzki‘s contract.

Among them? The underachieving Seattle Mariners, the wheeling-and-dealing San Diego Padres and the win-now Los Angeles Angels (perhaps at third base), as well as both New York teams, with the Mets more desperate for a shortstop solution than the Yankees.

Much like the unrest among Rockies fans, the possibility of a Tulowitzki trade has been simmering below the surface for some time now. But there’s only so long a situation can bubble before it eventually spills over.

The Rockies and their franchise face have just about reached that boiling point.

 

Statistics are accurate as of Tuesday, May 12, and courtesy of MLB.comBaseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted.

To talk baseball or fantasy baseball, check in with me on Twitter:@JayCat11.

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Showcasing Healthy Troy Tulowitzki Should Mean Blockbuster Trade for Rockies

When Troy Tulowitzki is on the field, he is the best at what he does.

If he were on it more often, he would arguably be the game’s brightest superstar. On that, there should be no debate.

Tulowitzki is the best shortstop in baseball. He is the best all-around infielder in the game. He is one of the sport’s elite hitters as well. He is the kind of do-it-all player organizations fantasize about drafting.

When they do not, they dream about ways to trade for him, and at some point, the team that did draft him ought to seriously consider such a deal.

Tulowitzki understands that now more than ever.

“I think this offseason was the first time it really hit me, just because it was every single day and pretty hard,” he told reporters after reporting to Colorado Rockies spring training last month. “I do pay attention, and yeah, I saw my name being thrown all over.”

This is an athlete at a premium position who plays it exceedingly well—over the last eight seasons, he has been worth 84 defensive runs saved, per FanGraphs, and two Gold Gloves—and can hit like a corner infielder or outfielder. He is also signed through 2020 for $118 million, per Cot’s Baseball Contracts, which makes him something of a bargain in baseball’s current economic market.

Consider that kind of production and the fact that the Rockies appear years away from seriously contending, and it’s easy to understand why teams would be feeling out Colorado’s interest in a swap. However, Tulowitzki is the biggest trade gamble on the market.

While he is a coveted target and would be a bargain if he produces, any team dealing for him would have to cross its fingers that Tulo is able to avoid injury and stay in the lineup.

He has missed 222 games over the last three seasons, playing in just 47 games in 2012 and 91 last year. He might have been on his way to the National League MVP Award in 2014 had hip surgery in August not ended his season. He was hitting .340/.432/.603 with a 1.035 OPS, 21 home runs and a 171 OPS-plus, per Baseball-Reference.com, when the hip put him on the shelf.

For his career, Tulowitzki has missed 334 games—more than two full seasons—because of injuries, some serious and some nagging, according to Baseball Prospectus’ injury data. He has had two major season-ending surgeries—the hip last year and one to repair a groin injury in 2012.

Because of all his time sidelined, Tulowitzki’s career has become known for time missed and what he could be if healthy rather than what he has actually done while on the field. He is aware of the stigma.

“I’ve gone to lengths and lengths to try to figure this thing out,” the Rockies shortstop said of his infamous injury history. “I’m not going to quit. I’m not going to quit trying until I find that right recipe.”

The Rockies desperately need him to figure it out, because they have not finished higher than third in the NL West since 2009 and have averaged nearly 93 losses a season over the last four years.

Even with Tulowitzki present and accounted for in their lineup, the Rockies are not a contender in the NL West. That is why they need him healthy, not for their own benefit, but so they can showcase him as a healthy superstar. Only then can they get a premium return package in what would be a blockbuster trade either this season or during the next offseason.

Such a trade would allow the franchise to move forward with younger, promising players while opening up payroll.

The problem is that the Rockies believe they can compete with Tulowitzki healthy. That is why trade talks with teams like the New York Mets never went far, assuming they got off the ground at all last offseason.

Meanwhile, deals to Tulowitzki’s preferred destinations—the New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers or San Francisco Giants, per CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman—were never realistic options, as a compensatory package for the shortstop would be nearly impossible to agree upon given his injury history.

“We kept him because, one, we believe in him,” Rockies general manager Jeff Bridich told Tyler Kepner of The New York Times. “Two, he’s the best shortstop in the game, when he’s on the field. That’s pretty easy to see. There’s actually not that much competition for that moniker. There’s a couple of guys you could bring up, but it’s him, and it’s a premium position.” 

That is exactly why the Rockies should move Tulowitzki. He is a rare commodity, maybe the only one of his kind, and he could fetch a foundation for a serious rebuild—if he is healthy.

Bridich was smart not to trade him over the winter. He would have been selling too low on a player capable of being one of the top five in the game. It is better to let his best player showcase himself when he’s healthy and productive, then strike on a market absent of Tulowitzki’s kind of talent.

This coming season is critical for the Rockies and Tulowitzki. They need him on the field and performing at an elite level, not so they can win games now, but so they can build a promising future.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Troy Tulowitzki Trade Rumors: Latest Buzz, Speculation Surrounding Rockies Star

If the Colorado Rockies are going to trade star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki in 2015, it doesn’t seem like a deal will happen before the regular season starts.     

That’s the word from Rockies general manager Jeff Bridich, who spoke to Jon Morosi of Fox Sports:

Rumors of a Tulowitzki deal, or at least talks, have persisted over the last year. One potential landing spot that keeps coming up is with the New York Mets, who are flush with pitching prospects that could appeal to Colorado as well as their desperate need for a shortstop. 

Joel Sherman of the New York Post spoke to an American League West executive in December about the possibility of a Tulo-to-New York deal.

“I don’t think they have the financial flexibility to pay for him even if they could get him,” the executive said. “I think they’re laying in the weeds waiting for hopeful January free-agent bargains.”

There’s no doubt that Tulowitzki is a difference-making player when healthy. He was on his way to an MVP award last year with a .340/.432/.603 slash line but didn’t play after July 19 due to an injury. It was the third straight year he’s failed to play at least 130 games. 

For a player with that kind of injury history who is 30 years old and signed through 2020, Tulowitzki isn’t reliable. Colorado should ask for the moon in any discussions because there aren’t shortstops with his offensive and defensive capabilities, but he’s still owed a ton of money and isn’t likely to get healthier with age.

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Best Potential Trade Packages, Landing Spots for Troy Tulowitzki

Troy Tulowitzki sure draws a lot of trade interest for a player who has an extremely difficult time staying on the field. 

Over the past three seasons, the 30-year-old has missed out on 222 games due to an assortment of injuries. When he has remained on the diamond, the Colorado Rockies veteran has been one of the most dynamic players in the big leagues.

In 2014, Tulowitzki posted a 1.035 OPS and clubbed 21 home runs in just 91 contests. It’s that unreal production that has resulted in so many teams calling to check in on the availability of the four-time All-Star.

Earlier in December, Rockies manager Walt Weiss told MLB Network Radio that the club is definitely picking up the phone when other clubs call.

Let’s take a look around the league at which teams can offer the Rockies the best trade packages and which ones can provide Tulowitzki with the best landing spot.

 

New York Mets

No team in baseball has been the subject of more Tulowitzki trade rumors than the New York Mets. 

The rampant speculation makes sense considering that the shortstop position has been a black hole in Queens. The Mets have the young arms to work out a trade with the Rockies, and Noah Syndergaard is right at the top of the list. 

TBS MLB analyst Ron Darling recently suggested a trade offer on MLB Network centered on the 22-year-old right-hander, per Amazin’ Army.

That offer would look significantly more compelling to the Rockies if Zack Wheeler was also added to the mix. According to Jon Heyman of CBS Sports, the 24-year-old’s name has been brought up during trade discussions. 

While there have been plenty of links between the National League East club and the shortstop, the Mets aren’t the only New York team that could try to make a blockbuster move for Tulowitzki.

 

New York Yankees

Admittedly, the New York Yankees just can’t offer the same kind of trade chips that the Mets can. 

However, the Yankees appear to be higher up on Tulowitzki’s list of potential new employers. Last summer, while the right-handed hitter was on the disabled list, he popped up in the box seats during a game at Yankee Stadium. 

When asked about his appearance, Tulowitzki told Nick Groke of The Denver Post, “I wanted to see (Derek) Jeter play one more time.”

That cameo sparked an avalanche of trade speculation, and months later the idea of a swap isn’t entirely out of the question. 

According to Heyman, the Yankees “have checked in recently on Tulowitzki.” If New York did manage to bring him in, the team could then shift Didi Gregorius to second base, where he could battle for playing with Rob Refsnyder. 

Working out a deal between Colorado and New York would be no easy task. The Yankees’ minor league system claims the No. 21 spot in Bleacher Report’s farm system rankings. 

Per MLB.com, the club’s top two prospects are right-handed starter Luis Severino and catcher Gary Sanchez. Both players ended the 2014 season in Double-A. 

 

Seattle Mariners

It’s difficult to imagine a more dangerous middle-infield combination than Tulowitzki and Robinson Cano. 

The Seattle Mariners have the pieces to make just such a scenario a reality. In Taijuan Walker and James Paxton, the M’s have two of the most promising young starters in baseball on the club’s roster.

According to Bob Dutton of The Tacoma News Tribune, during the winter meetings, “multiple club officials flatly dismiss[ed] the idea of trading either Walker or Paxton” for a player with just one season of club control remaining. 

It’s possible that the Mariners would be more willing to part with one of those starters for a player with Tulowitzki’s contract situation. The shortstop is under team control for up to seven more seasons. 

 

Oakland Athletics

The Oakland Athletics are definitely the dark horse on this list. 

Then again, it’s never wise to rule out anything when it comes to general manager Billy Beane. After all, the executive has shipped out five All-Stars since the trade deadline. In the process, Beane has racked up a surplus of pitching—a surplus that MLB.com’s Jane Lee suggests could be used to pull off a monster move.

That tweet is right out of the pure-speculation department, but Lee isn’t the one to link Oakland with Tulowitzki, who happens to be from the Bay Area. Tracy Ringolsby of MLB.com reports that the team has “kicked the tires” on Tulowitzki. 

 

Note: All stats courtesy of MLB.com. All salary information courtesy of Cot’s Baseball Contracts on BaseballProspectus.com. 

If you want to talk baseball, find me on Twitter @KarlBuscheck. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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