Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

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  • artoodeetoo
    MVP
    • Dec 2015
    • 3696

    #121
    Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

    CHAMPIONSHIP ROUND


    10/13/2018: Atlanta 2, LA Dodgers 5
    10/14/2018: Atlanta 1, LA Dodgers 6
    10/16/2018: LA Dodgers 1, Atlanta 0
    10/17/2018: LA Dodgers 6, Atlanta 1

    10/14/2018: Boston 5, Houston 16
    10/15/2018: Boston 10, Houston 2
    10/17/2018: Houston 3, Boston 11
    10/18/2018: Houston 1, Boston 7
    10/19/2018: Houston 2, Boston 4


    Attached Files

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    • artoodeetoo
      MVP
      • Dec 2015
      • 3696

      #122
      Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

      2018 WORLD SERIES


      10/23/2018: LA Dodgers 8, Boston 3
      10/24/2018: LA Dodgers 1, Boston 3
      10/26/2018: Boston 7, LA Dodgers 3
      10/27/2018: Boston 3, LA Dodgers 4
      10/28/2018: Boston 0, LA Dodgers 3
      10/30/2018: LA Dodgers 3, Boston 8
      10/31/2018: LA Dodgers 3, Boston 14


      Attached Files

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      • artoodeetoo
        MVP
        • Dec 2015
        • 3696

        #123
        Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

        PRE-FREE AGENCY RECAP
        By artoodeetoo
        11/24/2018


        TEAM OPTIONS DENIED

        RHP Jason Hammel ($12M)
        RHP Wily Peralta ($3M)

        OFFERED ARBITRATION

        LHP Brian Flynn -- Signed $835K offer
        RHP Jesse Hahn -- Awarded $775K in favor of team
        RHP Nathan Karns -- Signed $1.525M offer
        3B Cheslor Cuthbert -- Signed $825K offer

        NOT OFFERED ARBITRATION

        RHP Brandon Maurer
        RHP Wily Peralta
        OF Paulo Orlando

        FREE AGENTS NOT OFFERED QUALIFYING OFFER

        RHP Jason Hammel
        SS Alcides Escobar

        MINOR LEAGUE COACHES HIRED

        HC Ramon Nivar (Idaho Falls)
        MA Sandy Martinez (Royals DSL 1)
        MA Justin Atchley (Idaho Falls)
        HC Jose Guillen (Lexington)
        HC Roy Gomez (Royals AZL)
        PC Alvin Alcantara (Lexington)
        MA Gerald Perry (NW Arkansas)
        PC Matt Turner (Royals AZL)
        PC German Gonzalez (Burlington)
        HC Francisco Contreras (Wilmington)
        MA Renan Sato (Wilmington)
        MA Bip Roberts (Omaha)
        PC Ted Power (Idaho Falls)
        Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-09-2018, 02:07 PM.

        Comment

        • artoodeetoo
          MVP
          • Dec 2015
          • 3696

          #124
          Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

          FRONT OFFICE CHANGES RECAP
          By artoodeetoo
          11/24/2018


          MANAGERIAL CHANGES

          Baltimore: Buck Showalter fired, John Russell hired
          San Francisco: Bruce Bochy retires, Chris Woodward hired
          Detroit: Ron Gardenhire retires, Carlos Beltran hired
          Cincinnati: Bryan Price fired, Sandy Alomar Jr. hired
          Chi. White Sox: Rick Renteria fired, Joe Girardi hired

          GENERAL MANAGER CHANGES

          Miami: Michael Hill out, Ben Cherington hired
          Baltimore: Dan Duquette out, Kevin Nicholson hired; Theo Epstein hired as VP of Baseball Operations

          MANAGER OF THE YEAR

          National League: Dave Roberts, Los Angeles
          American League: Alex Cora, Boston
          Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-09-2018, 08:53 PM.

          Comment

          • artoodeetoo
            MVP
            • Dec 2015
            • 3696

            #125
            Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

            2018 MLB Award Winners
            AwardPlayerPosTeam
            AL Cy Young AwardMasahiro TanakaRHPNew York Yankees
            AL Hank Aaron AwardGiancarlo StantonOFNew York Yankees
            AL Most Valuable PlayerGiancarlo StantonOFNew York Yankees
            AL Playoff MVPIan Kinsler2BBoston Red Sox
            AL Rolaids Relief AwardAndrew MillerLHPCleveland Indians
            AL Rookie of the YearShohei OhtaniP/OFLos Angeles Angels
            NL Cy Young AwardNoah SyndergaardRHPNew York Mets
            NL Hank Aaron AwardJoey Votto1BCincinnati Reds
            NL Most Valuable PlayerFreddie Freeman1BAtlanta Braves
            NL Rolaids Relief AwardMark MelanconRHPSan Francisco Giants
            NL Rookie of the YearRyan McMahon1BColorado Rockies
            2018 MLB Rawlings Gold Glove Award Winners
            American LeaguePosNational League
            Salvador Perez, Kansas CityCAustin Hedges, San Diego
            Marwin Gonzalez, Houston1BBrandon Belt, San Francisco
            Ian Kinsler, Boston2BOzzie Albies, Atlanta
            Adrian Beltre, Texas3BJohan Camargo, Atlanta
            Andrelton Simmons, Los AngelesSSBrandon Crawford, San Francisco
            Alex Gordon, Kansas CityOFRonald Acuna, Jr., Atlanta
            Kevin Pillar, TorontoOFManny Margot, San Diego
            Stephen Piscotty, OaklandOFJuan Lagares, New York
            Mike Leake, SeattlePTyson Ross, San Diego
            2018 MLB Silver Slugger Award Winners
            American LeaguePosNational League
            Gary Sanchez, New YorkCBuster Posey, San Francisco
            Yonder Alonso, Cleveland1BJoey Votto, Cincinnati
            Jose Altuve, Houston2BOzzie Albies, Atlanta
            Miguel Sano, Minnesota3BKris Bryant, Chicago
            Carlos Correa, HoustonSSTrea Turner, Washington
            Andrew Benintendi, BostonOFMarcell Ozuna, St. Louis
            Adam Jones, BostonOFOdubel Herrera, Philadelphia
            Nomar Mazara, TexasOFBryce Harper, Washington
            Giancarlo Stanton, New YorkDH/PDinelson Lamet, San Diego

            Comment

            • artoodeetoo
              MVP
              • Dec 2015
              • 3696

              #126
              Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

              ROYALS OFFSEASON BLOG
              By artoodeetoo

              This is a blog that chronicles the Royals' offseason moves, and other major events of the offseason.

              12/13/2018: ROYALS DEAL MERRIFIELD

              The Royals had multiple teams with "significant" interest at the trade deadline for Whit Merrifield, but opted not to deal. A few months later at the Winter Meetings, the Royals have decided to part ways with the fan-favorite, trading him to the Mets for three upper-level prospects. Below is an anonymous MLB scout's analysis of the deal:

              Royals acquire: 1B Peter Alonso, RHP Drew Smith, C Patrick Mazeika
              Mets acquire: 2B Whit Merrifield

              Analysis: Alonso is a league-average defender, but is a legitimate .300/.375/30/100 guy that can anchor a lineup a few years down the road. With Dominic Smith firmly entrenched as the team's first baseman of now and the future, it made Alonso expendable as Smith is under the Mets' control through 2023. Mazeika might seem like a throw-in, but is a league-average left-handed bat behind the plate, and could be a replacement for Salvador Perez in the coming years. However, the real prize might be Smith. He has three plus-pitches, including a fastball that reaches 97-98, and sits in the mid 90's. His other offerings are a plus-curveball (that could end up being a plus-plus pitch), a plus-changeup, and a cut fastball that's average, but still coming along. The downside is that he's still recovering from shoulder surgery to repair a torn rotator cuff, and it remains to be seen whether he'll get back to a point where he can go deep into games. If so, he has number-one or two potential. If not, he has All-Star potential as a closer or set-up guy with his stuff and velocity. Before his injury, he had eleven starts with a 2.09 ERA and fifty-three strikeouts over 47 2/3 Triple-A innings.

              From the Mets' perspective, Merrifield is a heck of a consolation prize after losing out on the top three second basemen on the open market. He'll be thirty on Opening Day 2019, which presents a little bit of risk; but he's younger than Logan Forsythe (32) or Ian Kinsler (36), and is just as productive, if not more. The cost to get him was also quite steep -- Ranking-wise, Alonso (11th) and Smith (17th) were in the Mets' top thirty according to Baseball America, and Mazeika was ranked as recently as early 2017.

              12/17/2018: FLYNN TRADED TO MILWAUKEE

              Brian Flynn is no stranger to being traded. Acquired by Kansas City from the Marlins in 2014 along with Reid Redman for Aaron Crow, before that he was part of the deal that sent former Royal second baseman Omar Infante and Anibal Sanchez to the Tigers in 2012. He's on the move again, this time as a veteran piece for a prospect. The Royals will get the Brewers sixth-ranked prospect in Cody Ponce, a six-foot-five, 265-pound right-hander. That seems a little steep from the Brewers' perspective, but they have a pretty weak farm system, and Ponce has dealt with conditioning issues that, if you read Brewers' blogs and sites that cover their minor leagues, has hindered his development some. He features mid-90's heat with a solid cut fastball, but doesn't have an offspeed pitch to write home about, which limits him potentially as a starter.

              For the Royals, this helps to get rid of a logjam of southpaws in the bullpen, as that leaves Tim Hill, Eric Stout, Jerry Vasto, Richard Lovelady, and Eric Skoglund all vying for two spots, maybe three at most on the big-league roster.

              12/18/2018: ROYALS TAKE, THEN TRADE RULE 5 PICK

              Soon after the conclusion of the Rule 5 Draft yesterday, Oakland and Kansas City swapped relief pitchers with the A's taking Kaleb Fleck; who the Royals had just taken the day before in the second round, and 2018 All-Star Blake Treinen going to Kansas City. This deal doesn't make a ton of sense on the surface for Oakland, but Treinen struggled down the stretch with four earned runs allowed in his last five appearances; and he signed a $7M contract to beat arbitration, which beat his Fangraphs estimate by nearly $1.5M. He's under team control through next season, which is nice, but there will be pressure to perform with that potential price tag. This was a classic A's cost-cutting move by Billy Beane and David Forst; one that could pay dividends if Fleck, who has never seen a big-league mound at 29, is even half the pitcher Treinen was in 2018.

              12/24/2018: ROYALS LAND SPEEDSTER HAMILTON

              Despite not having anyone ready to step in from the minors, the Reds did not offer centerfielder Billy Hamilton arbitration this past November, and became a free agent. The Royals had apparently targeted him pretty early, and that pursuit has come to fruition as they've signed him to a two-year deal, with the second year being a $3.25M team option that has a buyout of just $350,000. He'll make $2M this season, and has a yearly bonus of $250,000 that pays out once 450 plate appearances are reached, which I think is a pretty reasonable expectation. With Alex Gordon in left, Hamilton in center, and Brett Phillips in right, this is a devastatingly good outfield, perhaps the best in all of baseball. Although, I do wonder where this leaves guys like Jorge Bonifacio and Brian Goodwin in the team's future plans. Along with Jorge Soler, the aforementioned six are the only outfielders on the 40-man currently (Hamilton hasn't quite been added as of yet, though). Soler is likely the team's full-time DH, which could free up a spot to carry both Bonifacio and Goodwin on the 25-man, but who are they going to sacrifice elsewhere?

              01/03/2019: MOOSE LANDS IN BALTIMORE

              Baltimore may have pulled off the best signing so far, inking former Royal third baseman Mike Moustakas to a six-year, $42M contract. He hit forty-one homeruns with 102 RBI last season between the Royals and Brewers, and it was mildly surprising that the Brewers didn't try to re-sign him. It's still strange to talk about him in a different uniform, but he'll do well as a veteran leader on a team that will likely need as much veteran leadership as it can get. It's the first big move of the Theo Epstein era, and I can't imagine he's going to stop there.

              01/06/2019: THERE'S A PLAN IN PLACE

              Well, it's finally happened -- hometown boy is coming home. Trevor Rosenthal signed a one-year, $4M contract with the Royals late last night, and is going to get a chance to prove himself all over again in Royal blue. His deal also includes a $480K bonus for hitting 60 IP, and a $120K All-Star bonus. He signed with the Yankees as a free agent two weeks prior to the beginning of last season; but suffered a torn labrum a few days after signing in Spring Training, had surgery, and sat out the entire year. He had an off-year in 2016, but if he can recapture his pre-2016 form, this bullpen went from a minor weakness to a solid strength in just one offseason.

              To me, it's looking like they're trying to go back to what made them successful from 2013 through 2015 -- great pitching (especially out of the pen), and defense, with decent hitting sprinkled in. A lot of that depends on how far along that Richard Lovelady develops in his first full year, but potentially Kansas City now has three guys they could count on to close games. That's a pretty nice luxury to have. Throw in Tim Hill, Burch Smith, and Nathan Karns (if healthy), dare I say on paper this group could be, I stress could, be as good as those units.

              01/22/2019: PITCHERS, CATCHERS REPORT

              Pitchers and catchers on the 40-man roster began to make their way towards Surprise, Ariz., early this morning, a few days behind the equipment trucks that departed the stadium on the morning of the 20th. A few non-pitchers/catchers also decided to cut their winter vacations short as well, including outfielders Brian Goodwin and Brett Phillips, and infielders Adalberto Mondesi and Cheslor Cuthbert. It is also the first time that the new minor-league staff for the 2019 season will meet each other in person.

              01/23/2019: WELCOME BACK, KELVIN

              Fresh off a disastrous run with the Nationals, the Royals have re-signed former bullpen ace Kelvin Herrera to a one-year deal worth $1.5M. It's difficult to see where he fits in with the new-look bullpen, but he may shine without having to worry about closing out games, or even handling eighth-inning duties. Before the trade in late June, Herrera had a 2.70 ERA with the Royals, but ballooned to 7.04 with the Nats. He never seemed to find a foothold in his new city, or really settle on a role. This move makes me wonder if the Royals might be considering Nathan Karns for the rotation again, now that he's back and supposedly healthy. A fan favorite, Herrera being back in Royal blue may put a few more butts in the seats at the stadium this summer. To make room for Herrera, the Royals designated Jesse Hahn for assignment.

              01/26/2019: SHORTSTOP SURPRISE

              In a curious move, the Royals have signed former long-time Detroit shortstop Jose Iglesias to a one-year, $1M contract. On its face, it seems like a good deal for a guy who ranked in the AL top ten in hits, doubles, and batting average, but he hasn't played anywhere other than short since 2013, so I don't think he's being brought in to play a utility role. This move is probably not good news if you're Nicky Lopez, as it appears the Royals may not be as inclined to call him up as some close to the franchise originally thought. Adalberto Mondesi has played some second base in the past; and if it weren't for Andrelton Simmons, Iglesias probably wins the Gold Glove at short last year. He was second to Simmons in most major defensive categories, including Defensive Runs Saved (+9.0), and efficiency (1.047). The Royals weren't terrible defensively as a team last year, but they were pretty weak up the middle on the infield. Iglesias at short and Mondesi at second fixes that, so it makes a lot of sense from a defensive standpoint. Also, $1M is fantastic value, especially for a guy who racked up a 3.6 WAR number in 2018.

              01/28/2019: COLOME CAN'T FIND A HOME

              Man, Alex Colome can't catch a break. He's been traded three times in the past six months, first from Tampa Bay to Seattle close to the deadline. He was then acquired by St. Louis in exchange for Jose Martinez a little over five weeks ago. Now, he's on the move again, this time to the Bronx as part of a package to get Aroldis Chapman. The signing of Craig Kimbrel seemed to be the writing on the wall for Chapman, as he's making $15M each year through 2021, and became the subject of trade talks soon after Kimbrel came on board. The Yanks also have other options to close games, including Colome, Chad Green, Tommy Kahnle, and Dellin Betances, so losing Chapman probably doesn't hurt too much, and they pick up a couple of B-level prospects.-

              02/07/2019: WHEELIN' AND DEALIN'

              Travis Greenleaf continues to be aggressive in the trade market, making his fourth swap of the offseason. However, this one doesn't even net any benefit for the 2019 season, as the return for righty Burch Smith will miss the entire 2019 season after a Tommy John procedure. Southpaw Tyler Skaggs was acquired from the Angels for Smith, as the Royals continue to shed bullpen arms from last year's team. That said, one big benefit is that Skaggs won't take up a 40-man roster spot, as he was immediately placed on the 60-day disabled list along with righty Drew Smith, who is expected to be out through May. Skaggs has another year of control after this year, so it's clear the Royals are anticipating him being ready for the 2020 season.

              02/20/2019: REFLECTING ON LERNER AND ANGELOS

              The baseball world has lost not one, but two titans in the baseball ownership world this offseason in Ted Lerner and Peter Angelos. Last year, Mike Ilitch passed away as the owner of the Detroit Tigers. David Glass is 83, folks. I'm sure that his son, Dan, has a contingency plan when this event inevitably happens (hopefully not for a long while), but there are signs that he may not be as amenable to keeping the team as his son is.

              02/25/2019: SPRING TRAINING REPORT #1

              It's pretty early to draw many conclusions, but there are a few observations that I have from being in camp for a few days:

              --Losing Whit Merrifield was difficult, but I think Nicky Lopez is going to make a lot of fans forget about him eventually when he hits the bigs. His power potential isn't very good (he's pretty lithe, and at his age is largely done developing physically); but all four of his hits this week went for extra bases with three doubles and a triple, and his quick hands at least give some future hope in that regard. Some thought Whit would never hit for much power, and he went for twenty homeruns and 40+ doubles last year. He's also a max-effort player, diving for grounders in the field, and hustling out grounders at the plate.

              --He made just one appearance, but I'll be damned if Josh Staumont doesn't end up on the Opening Day roster, even if in a low-leverage role. Ned Yost has said they're going to be cautious with him this spring, as he's dealing with a minor knee issue from a non-baseball incident prior to the beginning of spring, but looked extremely impressive in his only outing of the week on Friday. Staumont flashed upper 90's heat with solid command of his curveball, fanning three with one walk in 2 2/3 innings. His one walk was the only at-bat where he went past a 2-2 count.

              --In a league where first basemen are usually big, lumbering oafs, Peter Alonso is an exception. He's listed at six-foot-three and 245 pounds, but he doesn't look it. He made a pretty incredible impression in his first at-bat Thursday, banging a 450-foot homerun to left; and making a diving stop on a hot smash down the right-field line in the second inning, where he scrambled quickly to his knees to make a 'shovel pass' of sorts to Eric Skoglund covering first.

              03/05/2019: SPRING TRAINING REPORT #2

              Kansas City had a rough week, going 2-4 in their last six games. While it's still too early to take away a lot from the action so far, the pitching is a bit of a concern. Generally, the starters go three to four innings, but the starters are struggling to reach even the third inning in most starts, forcing Ned Yost to go deeper into his bullpen than he would like in the spring. There have been some nice individual performances out of the pitchers, namely Corey Ray and Jared Ruxer out of the pen. Danny Duffy has also been sharp in his limited time to this point, which is nice to see, but you'd like to see the starters get a little deeper into games.

              On a more positive note, the young hitters continue to show promise. Khalil Lee has shown pretty surprising discipline at the plate, drawing more walks than strikeouts, and hitting .462 (6-for-13). Nicky Lopez didn't hit the ball as hard as he did last week, but still managed to rack up four more hits in the week. I still maintain that Lee has a great chance to be a real impact bat for the Royals in the coming few years, possibly as early as next season. If I'm Omaha manager Bip Roberts, I'm salivating right now at the talent I'm going to have on that roster to begin the year. At least for the first few months of the season, most likely.

              Also, in personnel signing matters, the Royals signed Francisco Liriano to a minor-league deal, but is not going to be in big-league camp. At this point, the chances are pretty low that he'll be on the 40-man anytime soon, but he's nice organizational depth for now.

              03/12/2019: SPRING TRAINING REPORT #3

              The Royals finally began to make some cuts off the spring roster, trimming from sixty in camp to fifty. Pitchers Jake Kalish, Foster Griffin, Walker Sheller, Glenn Sparkman, and Eric Stout were sent down; along with position players in catcher Nick Dini, infielders Samir Duenez and Jack Lopez, and outfielders Donnie Dewees and Elier Hernandez. If you're a younger player at this point, and you're not getting a ton of at-bats, chances are you're likely one of the first few cuts of camp. All will be reporting to Triple-A camp in Omaha.

              Manager Ned Yost also mentioned that they're going to make their next roster trim a week from now, likely going from fifty to thirty-five; which at that point, you'll see the wheels turning to get ready for Opening Day, which is on March 28th and begins with a dynamite opening series against the Cardinals.

              Sheller was a mildly surprising cut since he's been one of the more impressive relievers in camp, but there are others that are going to contribute this year and will need the additional work. At any rate, it's unlikely anyway we see Sheller until 2021 at the earliest, depending on who you talk to.

              He's not on the 40-man roster, but Drew Smith made his first appearance at camp earlier this week. Just about two months out from returning to live game action, Smith participated in his first bullpen session since his labrum surgery, throwing roughly twenty pitches at about 80%, according to Yost. Smith was one of the three players acquired in the Whit Merrifield deal back in December.

              03/18/2019: SPRING TRAINING REPORT #4

              The Royals got down to thirty-five in major league camp as of this posting, with a few surprises still around. Kyle Zimmer hasn't looked sharp at all, and continues to remain with the big club. Kansas City also continues to carry four first basemen, which is awkward because three of them are 1B/DH types (Hunter Dozier being the exception). A notable cut was catcher Meibrys Viloria, who was optioned to Double-A. He hadn't played above High-A Wilmington before getting called up last September, but he had a great spring up to this point, hitting a remarkable .308/.400/.423 with one homerun and five RBI.

              It also appears that they are only going to keep two lefties in the bullpen for the time being. Jerry Vasto, who was signed late last season as a minor-league free agent, has thrown seven scoreless innings this spring only to be optioned down to Omaha. He had all three options remaining, so it makes sense, but it leaves just Richard Lovelady and Tim Hill, who is most likely going to handle LHB-only duties, leaving just one southpaw for the middle innings. Lefty Eric Skoglund has one more spring start to make, but it's unlikely he'll go to the bullpen. It's the Royals rotation or Omaha for him it seems, from speaking with people around the team.

              Lastly, could Bubba Starling be on the cusp of finally making an Opening Day roster? He's hit in eight of his last ten games (10-for-23), with two doubles, a triple, and an RBI. One thing is in his favor -- the Royals are loaded with left-handed bats in Alex Gordon, Brett Phillips, and Brian Goodwin. He's also out of options, which means that they might want to get an extended look at him before deciding to cut bait or not. Goodwin has hit .314 this spring, but is also out of options. The outfield roster jockey-ing is going to be interesting as the Royals trim to 25 in a little over a week.

              03/26/2019: SPRING TRAINING REPORT #5

              Well, the 25-man roster is set. Josh Staumont was placed on the disabled list with a sore shoulder, paving the way for Jorge Lopez to remain with the club as the team's 12th pitcher. It's good for him, too, as he's out of options and would have to clear waivers to be sent to Omaha. They also sent both Frank Schwindel and Peter Alonso to Omaha, which makes little sense as both play 1B/DH only, and Samir Duenez is already with the club. And even despite a pretty solid last few weeks of spring, Bubba Starling was designated for assignment, which removes him from the roster. It's doubtful anyone picks him up, so the Royals likely felt comfortable doing so. Brian Goodwin is a bit more of a known commodity, can play all three outfield spots, and who doesn't have big platoon splits between LHP and RHP over his professional career.

              Trevor Oaks looked sharp in the spring finale, throwing six solid innings of one-run ball as the Royals capped off Spring Training with a victory over Oakland. A slew of minor league relievers were also given their walking papers, as lefties Jake Kalish and Jonathan Dziedzic were jettisoned; and Jared Ruxer, Glenn Sparkman, and Kevin McCarthy were sent down to Double-A to begin the season, which shows the increased depth they have in their top two minor league affiliates.

              Look for a season preview in the coming days, as the minor league rosters are finalized for the upcoming seasons for those affiliates. The Royals' top four affiliates (Omaha, NW Arkansas, Wilmington, and Lexington) all begin play on April 11th.
              Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-22-2018, 07:36 PM.

              Comment

              • artoodeetoo
                MVP
                • Dec 2015
                • 3696

                #127
                Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                MAJOR OFFSEASON TRANSACTIONS

                NOVEMBER FREE AGENT SIGNINGS
                11/28/2018: Toronto signs LHP Andrew Barbosa on one-year, $680K deal

                DECEMBER FREE AGENT SIGNINGS
                12/04/2018: Arizona signs RHP Zach Petrick to one-year, $730K deal
                12/06/2018: St. Louis signs 3B Chase Headley to one-year, $1.82M deal
                12/07/2018: New York (N) signs LHP Clayton Richard to one-year, $1.5M deal
                12/10/2018: CF A.J. Pollock signs six-year, $91.2M contract with Cleveland
                12/10/2018: Mets, LHP Dallas Keuchel agree on four-year, $73M pact
                12/10/2018: 2B Brian Dozier signs four-year, $34.4M contract with Tampa Bay
                12/12/2018: Toronto, Josh Donaldson reach agreement on five-year, $89M deal to reunite
                12/13/2018: Angels sign RHP Charlie Morton to one-year, $7.7M contract with $480K of incentives
                12/13/2018: Angels sign IF Daniel Murphy to four-year, $47.5M deal; fourth year an $11.5M vest option
                12/13/2018: D.J. LeMahieu back with the Rockies on six-year, $84.2M contract with up to $900K in bonuses in all
                12/15/2018: Nats sign C Cameron Rupp to one-year, $960K deal
                12/23/2018: Twins ink All-Star 2B Jed Lowrie to one-year, $6.6M contract
                12/24/2018: Royals sign speedster OF Billy Hamilton to two-year deal worth up to $5.75M, incl. incentives; second year team option has $350K buyout
                12/25/2018: DH Nelson Cruz, Rays agree to $5.6M for one year
                12/26/2018: RHP Sergio Romo signs with San Diego for one-year, $2.16M deal
                12/26/2018: Yankees, RHP Craig Kimbrel agree to one-year, $7M contract
                12/26/2018: RHP Nathan Eovaldi, Dodgers agree to two-year contract, with second year vesting for $4.72M after 180 IP
                12/27/2018: Nationals ink LF Michael Brantley to five-year, $59M pact
                12/28/2018: Beantown Bryce: Harper, Red Sox agree to seven-year, approx. $200M contract with additional $4.2M in incentives
                12/28/2018: Astros agree to four-year contract with C Wilson Ramos that will pay out $33.15M
                12/29/2018: Cutch signs five-year contract with Atlanta worth $62.5M

                JANUARY FREE AGENT SIGNINGS
                01/02/2019: Jonathan Lucroy, Angels agree to four-year, $48.9M deal; fourth year team option worth $12M
                01/02/2019: Giants sign former M's, Reds OF Wladimir Balentien to four-year, $14.84M deal; played in Japan since since 2011
                01/03/2019: Orioles sign 3B Mike Moustakas to six-year, $42M deal
                01/04/2019: Dodgers, LHP Drew Pomeranz agree to five-year, $43M deal
                01/06/2019: Yankees agree to three-year, $25.1M deal with RHP Jeurys Familia
                01/06/2019: Royals, RHP Trevor Rosenthal agree to one-year deal worth $4M, incentives up to $600K
                01/07/2019: Nationals, 2B Kelly Johnson agree to one-year, $1.14M deal
                01/11/2019: Rays, RHP Ervin Santana agree to one-year, $5.5M deal
                01/12/2019: RHP David Robertson signs one-year contract with San Francisco, worth $2.52M
                01/14/2019: Mets sign IF Asdrubal Cabrera to two-year, $4.8M deal; second year a $2.4M team option with $1M buyout
                01/14/2019: Rays sign C Jesus Sucre to one-year, $860K contract
                01/14/2019: IF Luis Valbuena agrees to three-year, $13.56M deal, third year is a $4.52M team option with $900K buyout
                01/15/2019: RHP Brandon McCarthy, Minnesota agree to one-year, $5.8M contract
                01/16/2019: Texas agrees to two-year, $26.1M contract with LHP J.A. Happ
                01/16/2019: Houston to bring back 1B Marwin Gonzalez on three-year pact worth nearly $14M
                01/17/2019: Yankees sign 3B David Freese to one-year, $2.2M deal
                01/18/2019: Astros sign RHP Zach Putnam to one-year, $1.06M contract
                01/19/2019: LHP Scott Diamond, Cubs agree to one-year, $3.2 deal
                01/20/2019: LHP Cole Hamels, Cubs agree on three-year pact worth $9.6M
                01/22/2019: Kershaw to return to the Dodgers on six-year, $168M deal; sixth year a $25M team option and $5M buyout
                01/22/2019: Royals reunite with RHP Kelvin Herrera on one-year deal worth $1.5M
                01/24/2019: RHP Brandon Kintzler agrees to one-year contract with San Diego worth $2.2M
                01/24/2019: Texas, RHP Bud Norris ink $2.52M pact for one year
                01/25/2019: LHP Justin Wilson returns to New York; signs with the Yankees for $12M over two years
                01/26/2019: Nationals, 2B Logan Forsythe agree to four-year, $35M pact
                01/27/2019: Blue Jays bring back OF Curtis Granderson on three-year, $27.3M deal
                01/27/2019: 2B Ian Kinsler, Giants agree to two-year $8.4M deal
                01/27/2019: Royals sign SS Jose Iglesias to one-year, $1M contract
                01/28/2019: 1B Joe Mauer signs $1.38M contract with Washington for one year
                01/28/2019: Cardinals, LHP Patrick Corbin agree to three-year, $39.3M deal
                01/29/2019: Yankees sign former Cardinals standout RHP Adam Wainwright to one-year, $3.2M deal

                FEBRUARY FREE AGENT SIGNINGS
                02/02/2019: 1B Hanley Ramirez signs with Oakland for one-year, $1.04M
                02/04/2019: Baltimore signs Taiwanese RHP Hiang-ta Zhang to three-year, $5M deal
                02/04/2019: 3B Adrian Beltre agrees to one-year, $10M deal with Pittsburgh
                02/05/2019: Orioles ink SS Adeiny Hechavarria to three-year, $9.6M contract
                02/07/2019: Rangers sign C Yasmani Grandal to one-year, $8.3M deal
                02/15/2019: Angels, OF Adam Jones signs two-year deal worth $12M; second year a $5M team option
                02/16/2019: White Sox sign 3B Eduardo Nunez to one-year, $1.92M deal
                02/17/2019: D-Backs, RHP Joakim Soria reach agreement on two-year, $11m contract
                02/19/2019: Rangers sign 1B Lucas Duda to one-year, $3.76M contract
                02/19/2019: Braves agree to two-year, $13M pack with LHP Zach Britton
                02/19/2019: The Cubs land LHP Andrew Miller for three years and $25M; last year a team option worth $7.5M
                02/22/2019: RHP Ryan Madson signs one-year, $1.24M deal with Boston
                02/22/2019: OF Carlos Gonzalez, Indians sign one-year, $2.24M pact

                MARCH FREE AGENT SIGNINGS
                03/10/2019: Rockies agree to terms with LHP Boone Logan on one-year, $1.22M deal
                03/15/2019: Angels sign southpaw Jerry Blevins to $2.6M for one season

                DECEMBER TRADES
                12/12/2018: Texas trades LHP Mike Minor to Toronto for LHP Ryan Borucki, RHP Maverik Buffo, and RHP Tom Robson
                12/13/2018: White Sox ship 1B Jose Abreu to St. Louis for RHP Ryan Helsley, OF Jose Adolis Garcia, and 3B Yairo Munoz
                12/14/2018: Royals, Mets strike deal to send 2B Whit Merrifield to New York for 1B Peter Alonso, RHP Drew Smith, and C Patrick Mazeika
                12/14/2018: Phillies send 1B Justin Bour to Minnesota for LHP Tyler Duffey
                12/15/2018: White Sox, Cubs swap pitchers; LHP Xavier Cedeno to the Northsiders for RHP Thomas Hatch
                12/15/2018: M's deal 1B Ryon Healy and RHP Nick Vincent to the Cubs for C/1B Victor Caratini and LHP/OF Karlos Morales
                12/16/2018: Royals trade LHP Brian Flynn to Milwaukee for RHP Cody Ponce
                12/17/2018: Cardinals acquire RHP Alex Colome from Seattle for 1B/OF Jose Martinez
                12/17/2018: Royals trade RHP Kaleb Fleck to Oakland for RHP Blake Treinen
                12/18/2018: Red Sox trade OF LaMonte Wade to St. Louis for LHP Tyler Lyons

                JANUARY TRADES
                01/08/2019: Red Sox trade OF Jackie Bradley, Jr., to Arizona for RHP Brad Boxberger and RHP Archie Bradley
                01/28/2019: Yankees trade LHP Aroldis Chapman to St. Louis for RHP Alex Colome, 3B Elehuris Montero, and OF Dylan Carlson

                FEBRUARY TRADES
                02/06/2019: Royals trade RHP Burch Smith to the Angels for LHP Tyler Skaggs (out for 2019, UCL)

                RULE 5 DRAFT RESULTS (12/17/2018)
                Round 1, Pick 2: 1B Mike Ford, Chi. Sox (from NY Yankees)
                Round 1, Pick 5: C Wynston Sawyer, Texas (from Minnesota)
                Round 1, Pick 9: RHP Adrian Houser, Toronto (from Boston)
                Round 1, Pick 12: RHP JC Ramirez, Seattle (from Atlanta)
                Round 1, Pick 16: C Anthony Bemboom, LA Angels (from Colorado)
                Round 1, Pick 20: OF Hernan Perez, Pittsburgh (from LA Dodgers)
                Round 1, Pick 21: OF Erik Gonzalez, San Francisco (from Tampa Bay)
                Round 1, Pick 22: C Dom Nunez, Atlanta (from Colorado)
                Round 1, Pick 23: IF Jack Reinheimer, Milwaukee (from Arizona)
                Round 1, Pick 27: OF LaMonte Wade, Boston (from Minnesota)
                Round 1, Pick 28: UT Rob Segedin, Cleveland (from LA Dodgers)
                Round 1, Pick 30: OF Rey Fuentes, NY Yankees (from Arizona)
                Round 2, Pick 7: RHP Kaleb Fleck, Kansas City (from Houston)
                Round 2, Pick 12: 1B Edwin Rios, Seattle (from LA Dodgers)
                Round 2, Pick 21: OF Jacob Hannemann, San Francisco (from Chi. Cubs)
                Round 2, Pick 27: OF Jose Cardona, Boston (from Texas)
                Round 2, Pick 28: OF Nick Schulz, Cleveland (from San Diego)
                Round 3, Pick 27: OF Luis Alexander Basabe, Boston (from Chi. Sox)
                Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-22-2018, 07:37 PM.

                Comment

                • artoodeetoo
                  MVP
                  • Dec 2015
                  • 3696

                  #128
                  Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                  TOP REMAINING FREE AGENTS BY POSITION (SORTED BY WAR)


                  CATCHER
                  Rene Rivera (1.7)

                  FIRST BASE
                  Logan Morrison (-0.4)

                  SECOND BASE
                  Cliff Pennington (-0.1)

                  THIRD BASE
                  Jeong Choi (0.0)%,

                  SHORTSTOP

                  OUTFIELDERS
                  Nick Markakis (0.5), Brandon Moss (0.4), Gerardo Parra (-0.3)

                  STARTING PITCHER
                  Chris Tillman (1.0), Jeremy Hellickson (0.2)

                  RELIEVER/CLOSER
                  Cody Allen (0.8), Jake Diekman (0.8)

                  Asterisk denotes 2019 draft pick compensation attached
                  % denotes international free agent
                  # denotes 2017 WAR (missed all of 2018 due to injury)


                  SIGNED PLAYERS (SALARIES BASE)
                  Brian Dozier -- 4 YR/$34.4M (Tampa Bay)
                  Dallas Keuchel* -- 4 YR/$73M (NY Mets)
                  A.J. Pollock* -- 6 YR/$91.2M (Cleveland)
                  Josh Donaldson* -- 5 YR/$89M (Toronto, no draft pick loss)
                  Charlie Morton -- 1 YR/$7.7M (LA Angels)
                  Daniel Murphy -- 4 YR/$47M (LA Angels)
                  D.J. LeMahieu* -- 6 YR/$84.2M (Colorado, no draft pick loss)
                  Cameron Rupp -- 1 YR/$960K (Washington)
                  Jed Lowrie -- 1 YR/$6.6M (Minnesota)
                  Billy Hamilton -- 2 YR/$5.25M (Kansas City)
                  Nelson Cruz -- 1 YR/$5.6M (Tampa Bay)
                  Sergio Romo -- 1 YR/$2.16M (San Diego)
                  Craig Kimbrel -- 1 YR/$7M (NY Yankees)
                  Nathan Eovaldi -- 2 YR/$9.44M (LA Dodgers)
                  Michael Brantley* -- 5 YR/$59M (Washington)
                  Wilson Ramos -- 4 YR/$33.15M (Houston)
                  Bryce Harper* -- 7 YR/$199.6M (Boston)
                  Andrew McCutchen* -- 5 YR/$62.5M (Atlanta)
                  Gio Gonzalez -- 2 YR/$12M (Texas)
                  Jonathan Lucroy* -- 4 YR/$48.9M (LA Angels)
                  Wladimir Balentien% -- 4 YR/$14.84M (San Francisco)
                  Mike Moustakas -- 6 YR/$42M (Baltimore)
                  Drew Pomeranz -- 5 YR/$43M (LA Dodgers)
                  Jeurys Familia -- 3 YR/$25.1M (NY Yankees)
                  Trevor Rosenthal# -- 1 YR/$4M (Kansas City)
                  Ervin Santana -- 1 YR/$5.5M (Tampa Bay)
                  David Robertson -- 1 YR/$2.52M (San Francisco)
                  Brandon McCarthy -- 1 YR/$5.8M (Minnesota)
                  J.A. Happ -- 2 YR/$26.1M (Texas)
                  Marwin Gonzalez -- 3 YR/$13.98M (Houston)
                  David Freese -- 1 YR/$2.2M (NY Yankees)
                  Zach Putnam -- 1 YR/$1.06M (Houston)
                  Scott Diamond -- 1 YR/$3.2M (Chi. Cubs)
                  Wade Miley -- 2 YR/$10.2M (Minnesota)
                  Clayton Kershaw* -- 6 YR/$168.4M (LA Dodgers, no draft pick loss)
                  Cole Hamels -- 3 YR/$9.6M (Chi. Cubs)
                  Kelvin Herrera -- 1 YR/$1.5M (Kansas City)
                  Bud Norris -- 1 YR/$2.52M (Texas)
                  Brandon Kintzler -- 1 YR/$2.2M (San Diego)
                  Logan Forsythe -- 4 YR/$35M (Washington)
                  Curtis Granderson* -- 3 YR/$27.3M (Toronto, no draft pick loss)
                  Ian Kinsler -- 2 YR/$8.4M (San Francisco)
                  Jose Iglesias -- 1 YR/$1M (Kansas City)
                  Joe Mauer -- 1 YR/$1.38M (Washington)
                  Patrick Corbin -- 3 YR/$39.3M (St. Louis)
                  Adam Wainwright -- 1 YR/$3.2M (NY Yankees)
                  Hanley Ramirez -- 1 YR/$1.04M (Oakland)
                  Hiang-ta Zhang -- 3 YR/$5M (Baltimore)
                  Adrian Beltre* -- 1 YR/$10M (Pittsburgh)
                  Adeiny Hechavarria -- 3 YR/$9.6M (Baltimore)
                  Yasmani Grandal* -- 1 YR/$8.3M (Texas)
                  Adam Jones -- 2 YR/$12M (LA Angels)
                  Eduardo Nunez -- 1 YR/$1.92M (Chi. Sox)
                  Joakim Soria -- 2 YR/$11M (Arizona)
                  Lucas Duda -- 1 YR/$3.76M (Texas)
                  Zach Britton -- 2 YR/$13M (Atlanta)
                  Andrew Miller -- 3 YR/$25M (Chi. Cubs)
                  Carlos Gonzalez -- 1 YR/$2.24M (Cleveland)
                  Ryan Madson -- 1 YR/$1.24M (Boston)
                  Carlos Gomez -- 1 YR/$950K (Tampa Bay)
                  Jose Reyes -- 1 YR/$930K (Detroit)
                  Boone Logan -- 1 YR/$1.22M (Colorado)
                  Jerry Blevins -- 1 YR/$2.6M (LA Angels)
                  Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-22-2018, 07:37 PM.

                  Comment

                  • artoodeetoo
                    MVP
                    • Dec 2015
                    • 3696

                    #129
                    Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                    2019 SPRING OUTLOOK
                    By artoodeetoo
                    02/20/2019


                    As the Royals embark on season two of the Travis Greenleaf era, the team has undergone a pretty significant makeover in one year -- whether or not they'll be better remains to be seen, but at least they appear to be better on paper. Aside from trading away Whit Merrifield, the headlining move was signing former Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal, a Kansas City native that finds himself with his favorite team from his childhood. After the Royals traded Kelvin Herrera away (more on him later), they went with a closer-by-committee setup, which had mixed results. Rookie southpaw Richard Lovelady went 4-for-4 in save opportunities in September, but the organization doesn't appear to be ready to hand him the job just yet.

                    They also made a couple of other big moves in the bullpen, trading for 2018 All-Star Blake Treinen from Oakland, and bringing Herrera back on a one-year, $1.5M deal. It's a far cry from what he made his first handful of years with the Royals, but he really struggled with the Nationals after being dealt, pitching to a 7.09 ERA in 39 1/3 innings of work for Washington with just one save, which really hurt his value. It got to the point where they considered dealing him at the deadline, and left them probably wishing they had. But he's back in Kansas City, and noted at the beginning of camp that he's "never felt better". A big year from him will go a pretty long way towards a successful year, even if it's not in the back end of the bullpen.

                    As I wrote over the offseason, there appears to be a clear plan in place -- fortify the defense and bullpen, and hope you get enough hitting from the young guys on the roster to get you over the hump. The starting rotation has question marks. Danny Duffy and Jake Junis are proven arms, but they are what they are at this point, solid number-three, maybe number-two guys masquerading as aces. Trevor Oaks is likely in the same boat, although his command is otherworldly for such a young guy. I worry that the league now has a dossier on Brad Keller, but we'll see what kinds of adjustments he's made over the offseason. Ian Kennedy is Ian Kennedy, except Kennedy makes $16.5M to be a fourth or fifth starter.

                    STARTING ROTATION

                    There are four shoo-ins here -- Duffy, Junis, Oaks for sure. Kennedy with his gargantuan contract will be slotted somewhere from three to five; although his performance late last season after returning from the disabled list was very encouraging, albeit mostly against Triple-A talent. That leaves Keller, Eric Skoglund, Nathan Karns, and other more fringy candidates like Heath Fillmyer, Foster Griffin, Jorge Lopez, and Jake Kalish to battle it out for one spot. Had Jesse Hahn not been claimed off waivers by Toronto, he'd likely be in this boat, too.

                    Keller has to be the front-runner for that last spot, but for a guy that sports mid-90's heat, he misses too few bats; and had an FIP of 4.75 (3.87 ERA) last year, suggesting luck was a considerable factor in his numbers last year. It's easy to forget that Keller completely skipped Triple-A after the Royals acquired him following the Rule 5 Draft last year, so he'll have all his options available in case the league has a book on him now, and he struggles out of the gate and needs some more seasoning at Omaha.

                    MIDDLE INNINGS

                    What a difference a year makes. Gone are 2018 standouts Burch Smith and Brian Flynn in trades, and enter Rosenthal and Herrera, along with Treinen and Lovelady. Brandon Maurer is also gone, which is a year too late, I'm afraid. Tim Hill is also back after a great rookie campaign, and if he doesn't win a starting role, Nathan Karns could fill a swing-man position. If Karns wins a starting role, the chances that guys like Herrera, Lopez, or the newly-added-to-the-40-man Josh Staumont wins a spot go up.

                    A guy the Royals really like here, but probably is at least a year or two away, is right-hander Walker Sheller. Sheller served as the Double-A closer in 2018, and will likely open the season as the Omaha closer. Another one who is a more realistic option is Kyle Zimmer. Zimmer, who fashioned a 1.26 ERA over sixty-four innings for the Storm Chasers last year, seems to have dropped his four-pitch mix for three, and saw much more success out of the bullpen. Again, if Karns wins a rotation spot, Zimmer is one of those who could stand to benefit.

                    FIRST BASE

                    This positional race just got a lot more interesting after Peter Alonso was added to the 40-man roster. I thought before that they were going to go into the spring with Ryan O'Hearn and Frank Schwindel platooning at first, but Alonso has much better knowledge of the strike zone than does Schwindel. Schwindel's hack-and-slash approach worked throughout the minors, but his anemic walk rate (4.8% career) is a big negative. O'Hearn struggled in his first 200 or so plate appearances BA-wise, but still has a pretty good approach at the plate, even if he strikes out a little too much at this point.

                    LIST OF NON-ROSTER INVITEES

                    PITCHERS: RHP Scott Barlow, LHP Jonathan Dziedzic, LHP Jake Kalish, LHP Foster Griffin, RHP Corey Ray, RHP Jared Ruxer, RHP Glenn Sparkman, RHP Chasen Bradford, RHP Kevin McCarthy, LHP Sam Selman, RHP Walker Sheller, LHP Eric Stout

                    CATCHERS/INFIELDERS: C Nick Dini, 1B Samir Duenez, 2B Jack Lopez, 2B Nicky Lopez

                    OUTFIELDERS: CF Billy Burns, CF Donnie Dewees, RF Elier Hernandez, LF Khalil Lee

                    In addition to the entire 40-man roster, these are players not on that roster that are not expected to compete for roles right away, but usually one or two end up surprising anyway, and making an impact later in the year, or the following year, for the parent club. Obviously, out of this group Nicky Lopez is the one that most eyes will be on. I still think it was a curious, if not unnecessary, move to get Jose Iglesias, but I'll trust the front office here in lieu of Lopez. Khalil Lee is another one I'm interested in watching. He'll likely start the year in Double-A, but if he gets to Omaha by mid-season and rakes, he has a shot to make the Opening Day roster in 2020. He's that good, folks.

                    I mentioned Sheller earlier, but another pitcher I like out of this group is Ruxer. Signed prior to 2017 after being in the Angels' system, Ruxer fanned eighty-four in 109 innings for Wilmington. This past season, he started twenty-eight games for the Naturals, posting a 3.47 ERA with 124 strikeouts and just thirty-five walks in 141 innings. There are questions about his durability, as that's barely five innings per start; but the command is there so far, and out of the bullpen, could see a spike in missed bats if he goes that route.

                    Comment

                    • artoodeetoo
                      MVP
                      • Dec 2015
                      • 3696

                      #130
                      Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                      2019 SPRING OUTLOOK
                      By MLB.com Staff
                      02/20/2019


                      TOP REMAINING FREE AGENTS (PRE-SPRING TRAINING)

                      1. CODY ALLEN, RHP
                      With apologies to Joakim Soria, Andrew Miller, and Zach Britton (who all signed after originally writing this piece a few days ago), the best remaining free agent available is now reliever Cody Allen. Allen has closed games before in his career with the Indians, but is better suited as a seventh or eighth-inning set-up pitcher with his propensity for allowing the long-ball. Last year, he posted his first ERA above 3.00 since his rookie season back in 2012 (thanks to ten HR allowed in 63 1/3 IP), but still fashioned a 12.2 K/9 rate, and kept his walks in line with his career mark of 3.6 BB/9. Allen is young enough to get a two, maybe even a three-year deal as a stopper if the right team is interested.

                      2. CARLOS GONZALEZ, OF
                      CarGo became more of a platoon player in 2018, but still hit a respectable .270/.330/.524 in 367 plate appearances, belting twenty homeruns and twenty-two doubles. Injuries and age have taken their toll on his defensive abilities, as he cost his team 5.4 runs in 2018. The idea that he's probably going to be a DH or a fourth outfielder at this point hurts his value, but being left-handed could make him a sought-after piece as the offseason winds down.

                      3. JERRY BLEVINS, LHP
                      The 35-year-old Blevins was ultra-tough on LHB for the Mets in 2018, holding them to a .125 BA in eighty-four plate appearances, striking them out thirty-three times. What set him apart though, was his work against RHB, allowing just a .176 BAA against the opposite-handed hitters; making him an attractive option that is not a lefty-only guy. Despite not having overpowering velocity, Blevins is a master at changing speeds with his sidearm angle and three plus-pitch arsenal. He had a career-year in 2018, fanning seventy-four hitters in just 58 1/3 IP. However, a deep relief pitching market has hindered his ability to make a roster at this point.

                      4. EVAN GATTIS, DH/1B
                      He's probably limited to DH duty from here on out, which shrinks the pool of teams that would be interested. However, despite missing nearly two-thirds of the 2018 season, Gattis still has some pop with seven homeruns and five doubles in 185 plate appearances in 2018. He could be a good fit in Detroit, where they could use a right-handed power bat to serve as a DH, and spell the aging Miguel Cabrera at first a few days a week. That said, he might want to play for a team that is closer to competing. Oakland signed Hanley Ramirez in the past week, so the pool of teams is shrinking ever further.

                      5. MATT HARVEY, RHP
                      Harvey went 13-8 with a 3.44 ERA in 2018, but there are still questions about his ability to miss bats (127 K in 165 2/3 IP), and work ethic to this day. He should end up with a team, but I think he's probably going to have to accept a one-year "prove-it" deal. A strong season without any incidents or mishaps should get him a multi-year payday for 2020 and beyond.

                      6. JAKE DIEKMAN, LHP
                      If Diekman had stayed with Texas for the whole season, he may have been number-two on this list. But he struggled badly for the Diamondbacks, allowing a whopping .400 BAA to LHB (12-for-30). In a twist, he was stingy to right-handed hitters for the D-Backs, holding them to .106 (5-for-47), so his platoon splits were wonky and out of line with his career arc. With his velocity, he'll struggle with walks at times, but he's still a great option for a team looking for a guy that's strong against LHB.

                      7. BOONE LOGAN, LHP
                      A 2018 All-Star, Logan threw a career-high 62 1/3 innings in 2018, and made seventy-six appearances, the second-most in his career. He's been one of the most durable relievers of the past near-decade, having just one major stint on the disabled list since 2009. He held LHB to a .137 BAA in 2018, but allowed six homeruns (all to RHB), and was hit to the tune of a .781 OPS by righties. He'll likely come a little cheaper than the other two on this list, thanks to that.

                      8. EDUARDO NUNEZ, IF
                      Nunie's value comes in his versatility, as he can play all over the infield and in the corner outfield spots in a pinch. He OPS'ed .780 last season for the Red Sox; but in just 269 plate appearances thanks to injury, and the emergence of Rafael Devers as a borderline star in Boston.

                      9. FRANCISCO LIRIANO, LHP
                      Liriano is arguably the top starting pitcher yet to go off the board, other than Harvey. He can still make people miss (8.2 K/9), but walked fifty-six in just 127 innings of work, and there are a ton of talented RHB that will feast on his diminished velocity. That said, he can help a club out in the bullpen if the rotation doesn't work out.

                      10. MATT WIETERS, C
                      His main value, defense, is not what it used to be, but Wieters can still provide a solid bat going into his age-32 season. He hit sixteen homeruns in 396 plate appearances last season, so the power is still there. Coaches and executives around the league also rave about his leadership qualities and work ethic, so he could be a good fit for a young team lacking a leader. It's why many feel he's ticketed for the dugout after he hangs up the cleats.

                      HONORABLE MENTION
                      Chris Carter, 1B
                      Robinson Chirinos, C
                      Brett Gardner, OF
                      Carlos Gomez, OF
                      Miguel Gonzalez, RHP
                      Brandon Guyer, OF
                      Ryan Madson, RHP
                      Martin Maldonado, C
                      Nick Markakis, OF
                      Brian McCann, C
                      Devin Mesoraco, C
                      Logan Morrison, 1B
                      Jose Reyes, 2B
                      Chris Tillman, RHP

                      Comment

                      • artoodeetoo
                        MVP
                        • Dec 2015
                        • 3696

                        #131
                        Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                        Spring Training Standings (Games through Feb 24th, 2019)
                        GRAPEFRUIT LEAGUEWLGB
                        Boston Red Sox40-
                        Minnesota Twins300.5
                        Atlanta Braves311
                        Philadelphia Phillies311
                        Houston Astros211.5
                        New York Yankees222
                        Tampa Bay Rays222
                        Pittsburgh Pirates222
                        Washington Nationals222
                        Detroit Tigers133
                        Baltimore Orioles133
                        St. Louis Cardinals133
                        Miami Marlins133
                        Toronto Blue Jays033.5
                        New York Mets044
                        CACTUS LEAGUEWLGB
                        Milwaukee Brewers40-
                        Los Angeles Angels311
                        Arizona Diamondbacks311
                        San Diego Padres311
                        Kansas City Royals311
                        Chicago Cubs211.5
                        San Francisco Giants211.5
                        Oakland Athletics211.5
                        Seattle Mariners222
                        Cleveland Indians222
                        Los Angeles Dodgers122.5
                        Colorado Rockies133
                        Texas Rangers133
                        Cincinnati Reds033.5
                        Chicago White Sox044


                        ROYALS SPRING TRAINING SCORES
                        02/21/2019: Kansas City 7, NY Yankees 9
                        02/22/2019: Detroit 6, Kansas City 7
                        02/23/2019: Kansas City 7, Chi. Sox 4
                        02/24/2019: Kansas City 7, Baltimore 3

                        Royals Offseason Blog
                        Major MLB Transactions
                        Remaining Free Agents


                        Attached Files
                        Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-20-2018, 01:06 PM.

                        Comment

                        • artoodeetoo
                          MVP
                          • Dec 2015
                          • 3696

                          #132
                          Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                          Spring Training Standings (Games through March 4th, 2019)
                          GRAPEFRUIT LEAGUEWLGB
                          Minnesota Twins82-
                          Philadelphia Phillies830.5
                          Boston Red Sox731
                          Washington Nationals731
                          New York Yankees731
                          Houston Astros642
                          Atlanta Braves553
                          Pittsburgh Pirates553
                          Toronto Blue Jays553
                          Tampa Bay Rays563.5
                          Detroit Tigers464
                          Miami Marlins464
                          New York Mets375
                          St. Louis Cardinals385.5
                          Baltimore Orioles296.5
                          CACTUS LEAGUEWLGB
                          Cleveland Indians83-
                          Arizona Diamondbacks83-
                          San Diego Padres741
                          Milwaukee Brewers552.5
                          Los Angeles Angels552.5
                          Chicago Cubs552.5
                          Texas Rangers552.5
                          Los Angeles Dodgers552.5
                          Kansas City Royals552.5
                          Seattle Mariners563
                          Oakland Athletics463.5
                          San Francisco Giants463.5
                          Colorado Rockies463.5
                          Cincinnati Reds463.5
                          Chicago White Sox196.5


                          ROYALS SPRING TRAINING SCORES
                          02/25/2019: Seattle 3, Kansas City 4
                          02/26/2019: Kansas City 0, Toronto 4
                          02/27/2019: Minnesota 6, Kansas City 3
                          02/28/2019: Kansas City 1, Texas 4
                          03/01/2019: Boston 4, Kansas City 2
                          03/02/2019: Kansas City 11, LA Angels 3

                          Royals Offseason Blog
                          Major MLB Transactions
                          Remaining Free Agents


                          Attached Files
                          Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-21-2018, 10:15 AM.

                          Comment

                          • artoodeetoo
                            MVP
                            • Dec 2015
                            • 3696

                            #133
                            Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                            Spring Training Standings (Games through March 11th, 2019)
                            GRAPEFRUIT LEAGUEWLGB
                            Washington Nationals124-
                            Philadelphia Phillies124-
                            Boston Red Sox1151
                            Minnesota Twins1151
                            Atlanta Braves1151
                            New York Yankees1062
                            Houston Astros962.5
                            Tampa Bay Rays973
                            Pittsburgh Pirates973
                            Toronto Blue Jays784.5
                            Detroit Tigers795
                            Miami Marlins795
                            New York Mets5117
                            St. Louis Cardinals5117
                            Baltimore Orioles5117
                            CACTUS LEAGUEWLGB
                            San Diego Padres106-
                            Texas Rangers106-
                            Arizona Diamondbacks971
                            Seattle Mariners971
                            Cleveland Indians971
                            Chicago Cubs971
                            Los Angeles Angels793
                            Los Angeles Dodgers793
                            Kansas City Royals793
                            Milwaukee Brewers793
                            Cincinnati Reds693.5
                            San Francisco Giants693.5
                            Oakland Athletics6104
                            Colorado Rockies4126
                            Chicago White Sox2148


                            ROYALS SPRING TRAINING SCORES
                            03/04/2019: Tampa Bay 13, Kansas City 6
                            03/06/2019: Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2
                            03/07/2019: Houston 5, Kansas City 4
                            03/08/2019: Kansas City 1, Oakland 8
                            03/09/2019: NY Yankees 3, Kansas City 4
                            03/10/2019: Kansas City 2, Detroit 3

                            Royals Offseason Blog
                            Major MLB Transactions
                            Remaining Free Agents


                            Attached Files

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                            • artoodeetoo
                              MVP
                              • Dec 2015
                              • 3696

                              #134
                              Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                              Spring Training Standings (Games through March 17th)
                              GRAPEFRUIT LEAGUEWLGB
                              Minnesota Twins166-
                              Washington Nationals1670.5
                              Philadelphia Phillies1581.5
                              Atlanta Braves1482
                              Pittsburgh Pirates1393
                              New York Yankees1393
                              Tampa Bay Rays13103.5
                              Boston Red Sox12104
                              Houston Astros12104
                              Toronto Blue Jays10126
                              Detroit Tigers10126
                              Miami Marlins9137
                              Baltimore Orioles9147.5
                              New York Mets8148
                              St. Louis Cardinals8158.5
                              CACTUS LEAGUEWLGB
                              Seattle Mariners149-
                              Chicago Cubs1390.5
                              Texas Rangers1390.5
                              Los Angeles Dodgers12101.5
                              Arizona Diamondbacks12112
                              San Diego Padres12112
                              Los Angeles Angels11112.5
                              Cleveland Indians11123
                              Cincinnati Reds10123.5
                              Milwaukee Brewers10123.5
                              Oakland Athletics8145.5
                              San Francisco Giants8145.5
                              Kansas City Royals8156
                              Colorado Rockies8156
                              Chicago White Sox8156


                              ROYALS SPRING TRAINING SCORES
                              03/11/2019: Chi. Sox 2, Kansas City 0
                              03/12/2019: Baltimore 5, Kansas City 1
                              03/13/2019: Kansas City 2, Seattle 9
                              03/14/2019: Toronto 13, Kansas City 3
                              03/15/2019: Kansas City 3, Minnesota 6
                              03/16/2019: Texas 3, Kansas City 4
                              03/17/2019: Kansas City 0, Boston 3

                              Royals Offseason Blog
                              Major MLB Transactions
                              Remaining Free Agents


                              Attached Files

                              Comment

                              • artoodeetoo
                                MVP
                                • Dec 2015
                                • 3696

                                #135
                                Re: Royal Rebuild [OOTP 19]

                                Final Spring Training Standings (Games Through March 24th)
                                GRAPEFRUIT LEAGUEWLGB
                                Minnesota Twins217-
                                Washington Nationals18103
                                Boston Red Sox17114
                                Atlanta Braves16125
                                Philadelphia Phillies16125
                                New York Yankees16125
                                Tampa Bay Rays15136
                                Pittsburgh Pirates15136
                                Houston Astros14147
                                Toronto Blue Jays12169
                                Detroit Tigers12169
                                Miami Marlins12169
                                New York Mets12169
                                Baltimore Orioles111710
                                St. Louis Cardinals91912
                                CACTUS LEAGUEWLGB
                                Chicago Cubs1810-
                                Seattle Mariners17111
                                Texas Rangers16122
                                Los Angeles Dodgers16122
                                Los Angeles Angels15133
                                San Diego Padres14144
                                Arizona Diamondbacks14144
                                Cleveland Indians14144
                                Cincinnati Reds13155
                                Milwaukee Brewers13155
                                San Francisco Giants13155
                                Colorado Rockies11177
                                Oakland Athletics10188
                                Kansas City Royals10188
                                Chicago White Sox10188


                                ROYALS SPRING TRAINING SCORES
                                03/19/2019: LA Angels 4, Kansas City 1
                                03/21/2019: Kansas City 2, Tampa Bay 3
                                03/22/2019: Cleveland 1, Kansas City 5
                                03/23/2019: Kansas City 2, Houston 5
                                03/24/2019: Oakland 1, Kansas City 3

                                Royals Offseason Blog
                                Major MLB Transactions
                                Remaining Free Agents


                                Attached Files
                                Last edited by artoodeetoo; 09-22-2018, 07:35 PM.

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