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Manny Parra to Cubs: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

Manny Parra signed a minor league deal with the Chicago Cubs on Monday, according to Carrie Muskat of MLB.com. The left-handed relief pitcher will have an invite to the team’s big league camp, per JW Gravley of 27 Outs Baseball.     

Bruce Miles of the Daily Herald shared that Parra has already reported to the Cubs:

Parra, 33, spent three of his first four seasons as a starter with the Milwaukee Brewers, but he struggled mightily with a 5.13 ERA over 454.1 innings, which forced him to the minors in 2011 and a role in the bullpen upon his return the following year. 

He spent the past three seasons with the Cincinnati Reds, making 40 appearances with a 3.90 ERA in 2015. Over the course of his eight-year career, Parra has been lit up by right-handed batters, which has been a huge pitfall:

Parra has also struggled with wild pitches, leading the league with 17 in 2008. Here is a look at one during the opening series at Busch Stadium against the St. Louis Cardinals in 2013:

The Cubs already have a slew of left-handed relievers competing in camp, slimming Parra’s chances of making the big league team. In addition to those already on the 40-man roster—Travis Wood, Clayton Richard and Rex Brothers—the Cubs also have Jack Leathersich and Edgar Olmos competing this spring, according to Steve Adams of MLB Trade Rumors.

Parra’s signing is a win for the Cubs, who at the very worst get an inexpensive option who adds depth to their relief corps as a minor league option. 

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Jake Arrieta Comments on Workload, Innings Limit, More

Fresh off one of the most remarkable pitching campaigns in recent memory, the Chicago Cubs announced Saturday they’ll be placing an innings limit on Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta in 2016. 

Including the playoffs, Arrieta last year pitched an MLB-high 248.2 innings—92 more than his previous career mark in 2014—and the Cubs want to carefully watch his output this year given how significant a jump he made. 

Arrieta, however, is content with the strategy, per Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune, and instead of viewing it as a limitation, the righty believes it will create more opportunities for the bullpen, which last year ranked eighth with a collective 3.38 ERA:

Even if it means going six or seven innings through a certain amount of starts to let our big arms in the bullpen come in and do their thing and hand the ball to [closer Hector] Rondon or whoever is there to finish games, those games are much more important than for me to get eight or nine innings. 

Arrieta had the best second half in baseball history, compiling a 0.75 ERA that catapulted him past favorite Zack Greinke for the National League Cy Young Award. 

But Arrieta’s workload caught up with him in the playoffs, where he posted a ballooned ERA of 3.66 and allowed four earned runs each in consecutive games after going 21 straight starts without allowing that many. 

The 29-year-old standout is arguably the most athletic pitcher in the game, but his previous injury history that kept him from eclipsing 200 innings for five seasons until breaking through last year gives the Cubs warranted concerns. 

Arrieta was a dark horse for the Cy Young for most of last season, as not many outside Chicago knew of the hard-hurling right-hander compared to Greinke and Clayton Kershaw.

But the Cubs’ emerging ace began his march to elite during the 2014 campaign—albeit at a slow start. 

Arrieta opened the first month of that season on the disabled list with shoulder stiffness, but he quietly anchored an impressive season for the last-place Cubs, taking a no-hitter into the seventh inning three times. 

He finally got over the mark and threw his first career no-no last August, as shown by MLB:

Last year Chicago won 97 games, third best in the majors, with what is supposed to be their worst team over the next three- to five-year stretch with the remarkably talented—but more chiefly, young—corps assembled by general manager Theo Epstein. 

By placing an innings limit on their best player, who is signed only through this season but remains under club control through 2017, the Cubs are ensuring their top arm will be fresh come October. 

And that’s perfectly fine with Arrieta. 

“It looks good on paper, but a ring looks a little bit better at the end of November,” Arrieta said, per Gonzales.

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Andrew McCutchen Comments on 2016 Season, Future with Pirates

Andrew McCutchen doesn’t care if spring training is still a week away—he’s already in Florida, lifting, swinging and preparing to push the Pittsburgh Pirates even further than the 98 wins they posted last season. 

The 2013 National League MVP is embarking on his eighth season in the majors and leading one of the best teams in baseball. But Pittsburgh’s pitfall has been its inability to win the NL Central and being forced into the uncoveted Wild Card Game each of the last three seasons. It lost the last two, both at home.   

The Pirates’ grasp on McCutchen is only for two seasons, and he’ll be worth heaps more than the team-friendly six-year, $51.5 million extension he signed in 2012. 

The star center fielder has said multiple times throughout his career he’d like to remain a career-long Pirate, and he reiterated those intentions in a Monday interview with Rob Biertempfel of the Pittsburgh Tribune:

I’m not too focused on it, but definitely I’ve mentioned it before. I’ve said it plenty times: this is a place that I’d love to be, a place that I’d love to spend my whole career, win championships and just be here. It doesn’t happen a whole lot in this game. But if the opportunity presents itself, that would be great for me, for my wife and, hopefully, one day, God willing, we have a family of our own. So, that would be really cool.

At 29 years old and fully in his prime, McCutchen’s average annual salary of $8.58 million is roughly a third of what he’s worth when comparing contracts of other players of his caliber. 

Bryce Harper, the most recent NL MVP, is expected to command a $400 million deal—if not more—when he hits free agency in 2018, telling 106.7 FM The Fan in Washington, D.C., “Don’t sell me short,” when asked how much he could command (h/t Jamal Collier of MLB.com). 

McCutchen is six years older than the 23-year-old Harper, but when healthy, he is just as gifted as the Washington Nationals star. However, he doesn’t correlate player value with financial figures:

People define us—baseball players, athletes—by our contracts. I think I’m worth more than some numbers that you throw up on a board. Anybody can get paid millions of dollars, but it’s what you do with who you are that matters. You may not make that much money, but you can still bring so much to a team, on the field and off the field. My teammates don’t define me by how much I sign for. They define me by who I am. They define me by my character. That’s worth way more than whatever the dollar sign is or however much you sign for. That’s what I feel is most important, as a player and as a person. What am I worth? I’m worth more than just a contract. I’m worth more than just money. That’s how I look at myself, and I hope my teammates and the coaching staff look at me like that as well.

McCutchen battled knee injuries last year but still played in all but five games and made his fifth straight All-Star Game. 

He said he’s entering spring training this year healthy and, as such, with a renewed sense of youth, per Biertempfel:

“I’m ready to go, as opposed to last year. That’s why I’ve been here [working out]. I’m going to be right and ready to go from spring training into the season. I’m looking forward to getting started. I feel like this offseason flew by. Baseball’s back, and I’m looking forward to it. My knee’s great, my body’s great. I won’t have to worry about that at all.”

The Pirates should once again be in the thick of the NL Central race, but the division will be just as competitive as it was a year ago, when for the first time in MLB history, it housed the three best records in baseball. 

In most years, the Pirates’ 98 wins would’ve far and away won any division. But with the young Chicago Cubs only getting better with experience and the St. Louis Cardinals retaining a chunk of their championship-caliber core, McCutchen and the Pirates might need to win 100 games to ensure they don’t play in the single-elimination Wild Card Game again. 

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Ike Davis to Rangers: Latest Contract Details, Comments, Reaction

The Texas Rangers plan to sign left-handed slugger Ike Davis to a minor league contract, according to Jon Heyman of MLB Network.

Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News confirmed the deal Sunday, noting it will include an invitation to spring training.

The six-year veteran first baseman played 74 games for the Oakland Athletics last year, batting .229/.301/.350 with three home runs, 20 RBI and 19 runs scored.

If he makes the major league roster, the 28-year-old will have a chance to rejoin Rangers manager Jeff Banister, who was the bench coach of the Pittsburgh Pirates when Davis played there in 2014. 

A 2008 first-round pick of the New York Mets, Davis spent his first four-plus seasons in Queens, where he hit a career-high 32 home runs in a career-high 156 games in 2012.

The team sent him to the minors in 2013, and he battled hip and quadriceps injuries through most of the 2014 season. Last year, he underwent season-ending surgery to repair a torn hip labrum in August. 

He’ll provide the Rangers with another left-handed option at first alongside Prince Fielder and Mitch Moreland. Citing a team source, Grant noted that “Davis will simply give the Rangers more insurance in the event of an injury to Fielder or Moreland.”

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Jose Fernandez Contract: Latest News and Rumors on Negotiations with Marlins

Jose Fernandez and the Miami Marlins appear to be destined for a divorce by the time the hard-hurling right-hander hits free agency in 2018.

Continue for updates.


Fernandez Expected to Command $30 Million Per Year

Sunday, Feb. 14

The Marlins believe Fernandez and agent Scott Boras will seek a deal worth $30 million per year when the ace becomes a free agent in 2018, according to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald.

The team has “no plans to meet” the hefty figure, per Jackson.

Fernandez has twice turned down extension offers since undergoing Tommy John surgery in May 2014. The first was a six-year, $40 million offer, according to MLB Network’s Jon Heyman, then working for CBS Sports.

Adam Klug of CBS Sports Radio thought there was no chance that Hernandez and Boras would accept such an offer:

Fernandez turned down another a multiyear offer for an undisclosed amount in November, less than four months removed from his return, according to Jackson.

The Marlins then shopped Fernandez at the winter meetings in December, but their asking price was reportedly too high, per Joe Frisaro of MLB.com (via Chris Cwik of Yahoo Sports). 

Less than a week later, Fernandez declined to comment when asked if he thought the Marlins could compete in 2016 and if he wanted to remain in Miami. 

Fernandez is reportedly upset with the slew of trades the team made in the summer—notably dealing starting pitchers Dan Haren and Mat Latos—as well as the firing of pitching coach Chuck Hernandez, per Jackson, who elaborated on the situation:

If the Marlins are winning a lot and in serious contention the next two seasons, they could hold onto him through at least the midpoint of 2018. Otherwise, they figure to trade him within a year of free agency, perhaps after 2016 if this upcoming season is an unmitigated disaster. At $2.8 million, he remains a bargain for 2016.

Fernandez still has three full seasons of club control remaining. But $30 million per year is a steep price for any player—particularly for a club with the third-lowest payroll in MLB.

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Jacob Nottingham to Brewers: Latest Trade Details and Scouting Report

On Friday, the Milwaukee Brewers announced they acquired catcher Jacob Nottingham in a trade with the Oakland Athletics.

The Brewers also received minor league pitcher Bubba Derby in a deal that sent outfielder Khris Davis to Oakland.

While a Friday evening trade involving a trio of players with limited MLB experience doesn’t seem to be a headliner at face value, Nottingham’s addition could be big for the Brewers.

As Tom Haudricourt of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel indicated, Nottingham will likely be the long-term replacement for Jonathan Lucroy when the team eventually deals the former All-Star:

Lucroy will likely be the next prominent chip the Brewers deal as part of their massive rebuild that’s seen the team trade staples Francisco Rodriguez and Adam Lind in an effort to get younger and more affordable. 

The move comes on the heels of a 68-94 campaign that came a season after the team sat in first place all year until a September meltdown.

The Brewers have made nine trades since hiring new general manager David Stearns in September, and Nottingham has ties to Stearns dating back to their tenures with the Houston Astros.

A 6’3”, 250-pound brute, Nottingham turned down a baseball scholarship to play football at Arizona, per Haudricourt, and will give the Brewers power at a position where strength is scarce. 

Nottingham, who will turn 21 in April, will be a non-roster invite to the Brewers’ big league spring training camp, according to Adam McCalvy of MLB.com.

The Brewers’ next few seasons could be ugly, as they’ve dealt a slew of their core talent in exchange for prospects, but Nottingham’s addition gives them something to look forward to in the future.

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Jacob deGrom Comments on Potential Contract Extension with Mets

Hard-hurling ace Jacob deGrom said he’d be willing to discuss a long-term deal with the New York Mets well before he becomes a free agent in 2020, according to Kevin Kernan of the New York Post.

The 27-year-old is one of five All-Star-caliber starters who make the Mets rotation arguably the best in baseball. Add their affordable contracts and club control for at least the next three seasons, and the Mets are getting the best bang for their buck among any club in the big leagues.

And deGrom, the 2014 National League Rookie of the Year, made a rare public comment regarding contract negotiations, indicating he’d like to stay in Queens.

“I’m a little bit older, so I might be more willing to do something like that,’’ deGrom said Wednesday at the team’s pre-camp in Florida, per Kernan. “You just have to look at what is fair so both sides get a decent deal. It’s something I’d have to look into and make sure I agree with it.’’

DeGrom could become arbitration-eligible after next season or in 2017, depending on his Super Two status, but even then, the Mets could still have him at an affordable rate. 

“I haven’t thought that much about it, and I have to talk to my agents and stuff and look at the numbers and decide what was favorable,’’ deGrom said.

NL Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta agreed to a one-year, $10.7 million contract to avoid arbitration last week—less than a third of the $34.4 million-per-year deal the award’s runner-up, Zack Greinke, hauled in from the Arizona Diamondbacks.

DeGrom seems to be open to the prospect of remaining with the defending NL champs, who expect to contend again for the pennant in 2016.

Adam Rubin of ESPN.com outlined what a fair agreement might look like: “A deal covering at least six years would make sense, since it would buy at least one year of deGrom’s free agency while giving him a nice security blanket should an injury occur or his career otherwise gets sidetracked.”

Along with Matt Harvey and deGrom, the Mets have Zack Wheeler under club control through 2020 and Noah Syndergaard and Steven Matz locked up through 2021. And with an offense that surged in the second half and through the playoffs last season, they’ll contend for titles with the starting quintet intact. 

The Mets may not break the bank on deGrom this early, but by locking him in at an affordable rate, they can create financial flexibility to slowly start locking up their other starters.

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Mariano Rivera to Receive Dedicated Plaque in Yankee Stadium’s Monument Park

Mariano Rivera helped the New York Yankees win five World Series, and many consider him to be the game’s greatest closer. As such, he’ll become the 37th Bronx Bomber to receive a plaque in Yankee Stadium’s Monument Park this summer, according to the Associated Press.

Rivera is Major League Baseball’s all-time leader with 652 regular-season saves, but his dominance in the postseason, where he holds career bests in both ERA (0.70 over 141 innings) and saves (42), was even more impressive.

Rivera closed out three of the Yankees’ five World Series-clinching wins (1998, 1999 and 2000).

Mike Foss of USA Today put Rivera’s dominance into context:

More people have walked on the moon (12) than men who have scored against Mariano Rivera in the postseason (11). … Mariano Rivera has been pitching in the postseason since [1995]. The Apollo Program launched in 1963 and concluded in 1972.

In other words, Rivera has been clutch in the postseason for [eight] years longer than NASA was clutch at sending Astronauts to the moon.

The Yankees retired Rivera’s No. 42 during his final season in 2013, marking the last time it would ever be used. MLB retired the number throughout the big leagues in 1997 to honor Jackie Robinson, though all players who were already wearing it at the time were allowed to keep it, and none lasted as long as Rivera.

The Yankees will hold the sure-fire Hall of Famer’s plaque ceremony Sunday, Aug. 14, before their game against the Tampa Bay Rays and celebrate their 1996 team, with whom Rivera won his first ring, a day earlier.

Rivera, 46, will be eligible for the Hall of Fame in 2017.

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Gavin Floyd to Blue Jays: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

Veteran right-hander Gavin Floyd has found a home for 2016, as the Toronto Blue Jays announced they signed him to a one-year, $1 million contract. 

Chris Cotillo of MLB Daily Dish initially announced the news.

It’s likely a minor league deal, according to Max Wildstein of Scout.com.

The 12-year veteran Floyd hasn’t been a full-time starter since undergoing Tommy John surgery in 2012 but has been throwing off a mound the last two weeks and appears fully healthy, per Roch Kubatko of MASNsports.com. 

Should he reach the majors, Floyd will likely be eased into a reliever role and join a bullpen that last year held hitters to a .231 batting average, third-best in the majors. 

Floyd was expected to land nothing more than a minor league deal, but the interest figured to come from the Baltimore Orioles, per Kubatko.

The fourth overall pick in the 2001 draft, Floyd debuted in 2004 with the Philadelphia Phillies then was traded to the Chicago White Sox in 2006, where he burgeoned into an everyday starter from 2008-2012 before undergoing elbow surgery.    

After recovering, Floyd signed with the Atlanta Braves in 2014 then with the Cleveland Indians last March. But he suffered another elbow injury that kept him out until rosters expanded in September.

In a generous seven appearances, he allowed 11 hits and four earned runs in 13.1 innings. 

While he is an injury risk, bringing in Floyd at a reduced rate doesn’t present much of an opportunity cost—particularly given the Blue Jays have a slew of impending free agents to address next offseason, headlined by sluggers Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion. And if the 33-year-old can rekindle some of his old form, even in the bullpen, he’ll be a cost-effective contributor. 

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Dainer Moreira to Mariners: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

The Seattle Mariners have dipped into the Cuban talent pool, signing utility man Dainer Moreira to a minor league contract just three weeks before the team’s minor league minicamp in Peoria, Arizonaper Bob Dutton of the News Tribune.

Mariners vice president of player personnel Tom Allison hasn’t determined where Moreira will fit, but the new signee’s versatility intrigues him, per Dutton.

“What you have is a 32-year-old who can really, really run. He’s got multipositional flexibility,” he said. “He can play short. He can play third. We’ve never seen him in the outfield. Maybe he can run out to left field. Maybe he can be another depth option.”

Moreira defected from Cuba in February 2015 after competing in the Caribbean World Series, hoping to enjoy the same success many of his countrymen such as Yasiel Puig, Jose Abreu and Yoenis Cespedes have seen in the majors. 

Moreira isn’t at their level yet and will likely need extended time in the minors to adjust—particularly since he hasn’t played in a game since leaving the Cuban national team. 

“That’s why we’re going to bring him in early [to minicamp],” Allison said. “We’re trying to add depth and flexibility. That’s one thing he can do.”

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