The Rundown: Potential Bellinger Suitors Emerging, Cubs Among Sasaki’s Top Suitors, Phillies Entertain Soto
We are 16 days shy of the Winter Meetings, which probably used to be a lot more fun when deals were done under the influence of tall bourbon pours and cigar smoke in the seedy recesses of a hotel bar. I’m not sure how the following 1977 trade went down, but I like to think a few rounds of drinks were involved.
- The Pirates needed pitching and outfield help but needed to get creative to do so. They knew the Mets were willing partners because New York had traded Tom Seaver to the Reds four months earlier for Doug Flynn, Steve Henderson, Dan Norman, and Pat Zachry. So Pittsburgh acquired outfielder John Milner from New York to start the festivities.
- The Braves then sent Willie Montañez to the Mets.
- Both teams needed an assist from the Rangers, so Texas sent Adrian Devine, Tommy Boggs, and Eddie Miller to Atlanta, then packaged Tom Grieve and a PTBNL (Ken Henderson) to New York with Bert Blyleven going to Pittsburgh.
- In return, the Pirates sent Al Oliver and Nelson Norman to the Rangers. Texas also acquired Jon Matlack from the Mets.
That’s four teams and 10 players, plus one expensive bar tab for some lucky GM. Ironically, the Mets traded Montañez to the Rangers the following winter for Ed Lynch and Mike Jorgensen. The Pirates were the big winners because they won the 1979 World Series.
The best trade that never happened died on the vine in 1947 because the executives got a little too inebriated. According to baseball historian Glenn Stout, Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey and Yankees owner Dan Topping agreed to trade Ted Williams for Joe DiMaggio while drinking and dining at Toots Shor’s in Manhattan. New York sports writer Dave Anderson claimed a lot of scotch was involved, and the deal ultimately failed because Topping refused to include Yogi Berra.
Could you imagine the impact if the Winter Meetings were covered then the way they are today? With that in mind, I give you “Chet Baker Sings” while you peruse the rest of today’s Rundown.
Cubs News & Notes
- Cubs Cactus League tickets go on sale December 6, just ahead of this year’s Winter Meetings.
- An intriguing situation in right field is developing, and it will get more complicated if Cody Bellinger is traded.
- The Yankees are emerging as a top destination for Bellinger if the Cubs decide to trade him, but the $32.5 million Bellinger is guaranteed would mitigate the return in some fashion. Jed Hoyer might need to take back an inflated contract or accept marginal prospects in a deal.
- I don’t see the Cubs dumping Bellinger just to free up money and/or a spot for a new right fielder.
- The Phillies and Blue Jays could be interested in Bellinger as well, depending on what Juan Soto does, of course.
- Mike Tauchman could be a popular free agent if he is non-tendered by the Cubs. If that happens, I’d say the Cubs are intent on keeping Bellinger.
- The Cubs are expected to be among the top suitors for Rōki Sasaki once he’s posted.
- Jeff Passan of ESPN believes signing Sasaki ($) would be Chicago’s best offseason acquisition.
- The MLB YouTube channel has a new video series, but Cubs fans aren’t going to like the channel’s inaugural entry.
Odds & Sods
I suppose Stan Musial is a big deal but that Rheingold Beer sign caught my attention. Someone needs to bring Falstaff back to Chicago.
St. Louis Cardinals legend Stan Musial waits on-deck vs. the New York #Mets at the Polo Grounds! (1962) #STLCards #MLB #Baseball #History pic.twitter.com/3AZsqFPIr7
— Baseball by BSmile (@BSmile) November 21, 2024
Central Intelligence
- Milwaukee: The Brewers prefer to keep Devin Williams and try to extend him or trade him at the 2025 deadline.
- St. Louis: Like I said yesterday, pass the popcorn. The Cardinals’ scorched-earth rebuild is going to be more fun than watching Animal House.
- Cincinnati: Elly De La Cruz led MLB with 29 errors in 2024, but Reds manager Terry Francona has no plans to move the young shortstop to the outfield.
- Pittsburgh: the Pirates attempted to trade for Yandy Díaz at the deadline and may pursue the Rays first baseman again this winter.
Friday Stove
Shohei Ohtani was named NL MVP, making him and Frank Robinson the only players to win the award in both leagues.
Aaron Judge was selected for the honor in the American League.
Phillies leadership met with Soto and his reps, and the two entities could be a perfect match.
Big Papi David Ortíz believes Soto will sign with the Red Sox. That would be tremendous for baseball.
MLB execs expect the Reds to be among the busiest teams this winter.
The Angels seem intent on adding players with local ties. Kyle Hendricks, Travis d’Arnaud, and Kevin Newman all have SoCal roots. Maybe it’s just a coincidence.
Ichiro Suzuki has the best chance to be the next Hall of Famer elected by unanimous decision.
Mayor-elect Keith Wilson believes Portland is one of the finalists for MLB expansion to 32 teams.
SoxFest is returning for White Sox fans, but with a new name, format, and, unfortunately, a non-discreet location.
MLB is eyeing long-term media rights plans for all 30 teams.
Extra Innings
I love the Cubs’ Monday Mix Tape Series.
Mind if we drop Michael Busch highlights here? #MixtapeMondays pic.twitter.com/Ao2k34v4C3
— Chicago Cubs (@Cubs) November 18, 2024
They Said It
- “We talk to Tom [Ricketts] all the time, he asks us questions and pushes us, we do research and all those different things, but ultimately those are our decisions and we own them. That’s the best thing you could ask for is that he respects our experience and intellect to make those decisions and he considers us the experts. That’s the best kind of ownership.” – Hoyer
- “I honestly feel like if you get too involved, you’re probably not adding much value. And also, if you’re making the personnel decisions and the team doesn’t do well, what happens next? There’s no accountability. Going back to Jim [Hendry], Theo [Epstein], and Jed, I’ve always stayed out of the player decisions. Not only are they better equipped to make those decisions, it’s their reputation, it’s their careers. They want to be responsible for them and accountable for them.” – Ricketts
Friday Walk-Up Song
I prefer this version to the one by the Isley Brothers.