Cubs MLB Roster

Cubs Organizational Depth Chart
40-Man Roster Info

40 players are on the MLB RESERVE LIST (roster is full) 

42 players are at MLB Spring Training 

31 players on MLB RESERVE LIST are ACTIVE at MLB Spring Training, and nine players are on OPTIONAL ASSIGNMENT to minors. 
11 players are MLB Spring Training NON-ROSTER INVITEES (NRI) 

Last updated 3-17-2024
 
* bats or throws left
# bats both

PITCHERS: 17
Yency Almonte
Adbert Alzolay 
Javier Assad
Jose Cuas
Kyle Hendricks
* Shota Imanaga
Caleb Kilian
Mark Leiter Jr
* Luke Little
Julian Merryweather
Hector Neris 
Daniel Palencia
* Drew Smyly
* Justin Steele
Jameson Taillon
Hayden Wesneski 
* Jordan Wicks

NRI PITCHERS: 5 
Colten Brewer 
Carl Edwards Jr 
* Edwin Escobar 
* Richard Lovelady 
* Thomas Pannone 

CATCHERS: 2
Miguel Amaya
Yan Gomes

NRI CATCHERS: 2  
Jorge Alfaro 
Joe Hudson 

INFIELDERS: 7
* Michael Busch 
Nico Hoerner
Nick Madrigal
* Miles Mastrobuoni
Christopher Morel
Dansby Swanson
Patrick Wisdom

NRI INFIELDERS: 3 
David Bote 
Garrett Cooper
* Dominic Smith

OUTFIELDERS: 5
* Cody Bellinger 
Alexander Canario
# Ian Happ
Seiya Suzuki
* Mike Tauchman 

NRI OUTFIELDERS: 1 
* David Peralta

OPTIONED:
Kevin Alcantara, OF 
Michael Arias, P 
Ben Brown, RHP 
Pete Crow-Armstrong, OF 
Brennen Davis, OF 
Porter Hodge, RHP 
* Matt Mervis, 1B 
Keegan Thompson, P 
Luis Vazquez, INF 

 



Minor League Rosters
Rule 5 Draft 
Minor League Free-Agents

Bard to Be Non-Tendered

I don't know what's going on with the comments and sometimes it just ends up fixing itself. The site is due for a minor software upgrade that I'll try to complete tonight and I'm hoping that fixes the problem. If not, the twitter sidebar still seems to be updating as does the abilithy to write stories, so hopefully you won't be missing too much until I can fix it.

In the meantime, Daniel Bard will be non-tendered according to multiple Cubs sources. That one was a no-brainer of course. We still await the decision on the rest of the group and I'll update as the news trickles out.

UPDATE #1: Kottaras signs a $1.075M deal with incentives according to Jon Heyman.

UPDATE #2: AZ Phil's crystal ball is still working, Cubs will non-tender Mat Gamel.

UPDATE #3: The Nats trade Steve Lombardozzi, Robbie Ray and Ian Krol for Doug Fister. Fister's a year older than Samardzija but has the same amount of club control left. Samardzija may have a little more upside because of his K's, but Fister's been a lot better pitcher the last 2 years. Every situation is different of course, but imagine this will hinder Cubs trading Samardzija this offseason. That's probably not a terrible thing considering what they were still able to get for Matt Garza.

UPDATE #4: I believe the commenting issues have been fixed. In Cubs news, Donnie Murphy gets a 1/$825K contract and P Chang-yong Lim was non-tendered although he wasn't arbitration eligible. I believe he had a non-guaranteed contract for 2014, but now he's off the 40-man and free to sign with anyone while the Cubs are off the hook for his contract. Samardzija, Schierholtz, Strop, Wood, Russell, Valbuena and Barney were all tendered contracts and I'm sure most will sign before any arbitration hearings.

There were a total of 43 non-tenders according to MLB Trade Rumors and the list of interesting names is too numerous, but a few that may strike your fancy include RHP John Axford, RHP Andrew Bailey, RHP Ronald Belisario, RHP MItchell Boggs, OF Ryan Kailish, SP Daniel Hudson and RP Ryan Webb.

Comments

ESTIMATED 2014 CUBS MLB PLAYER PAYROLL

SIGNED:
Edwin Jackson - $11M
Starlin Castro - $5M
Carlos Villanueva - $5M
Kyuji Fujikawa - $4M plus $2M performance bonus based on GF
Jorge Soler - $2M
Anthony Rizzo - $1.75M salary & $1.25M second-installment of signing bonus
Ryan Sweeney - $1.5M
George Kottaras - $1.075M
Donnie Murphy - $825K
OTHER (LEGACY PAY): Alfonso Soriano ($13M) and Gerardo Concepcion ($500K)
SUB-TOTAL: $46.9M

PROJECTED/ESTIMATED SALARIES FOR ARBITRATION-ELIGIBLE:
Darwin Barney - $2.5M?
James Russell - $1.75M?
Jeff Samardzija - $6M?
Nate Schierholtz - $4.5M?
Pedro Strop - $1.25M? (“Super Two”)
Luis Valbuena - $1.5M?
Travis Wood - $3.5M?
ESTIMATED SUB-TOTAL: $21M?

TENDERED (AUTO-RENEWAL - PRE-ARBITRATION):
Arismendy Alcantara
Jake Arrieta
Dallas Beeler
Brian Bogusevic
Alberto Cabrera
Welington Castillo
Justin Grimm
Brett Jackson
Junior Lake
Mike Olt
Blake Parker
Brooks Raley
Neil Ramirez
Hector Rondon
Zac Rosscup
Chris Rusin
Matt Szczur
Christian Villanueva
Josh Vitters
Arodys Vizcaino
Logan Watkins
11 pre-arb to fill-out 25-man roster (see NOTE) - PROJECTED ESTIMATED SUB-TOTAL: $5.775M? (average $525K per player)
14 players on optional assignment - PROJECTED ESTIMATED SUB-TOTAL: $1.4M? (average $100K per player)
NOTE: Fujikawa (2013 TJS rehab) and Soler (likely to start season at AA) are signed but are not projected to be on Cubs Opening Day MLB 25-man roster

PROJECTED ESTIMATED 2014 TOTAL MLB PLAYER PAYROLL: $75M

The Cubs paid about $110M to players on their 40-man roster in 2013 (including salaries for players on optional assignment to minors, portions of signing bonuses actually paid in 2013, and "legacy pay" to players no longer on the 40), so the Cubs present (as of 12/2) estimated projected 2014 MLB payroll for players on the 40-man roster (including players on optional assignment to the minors, portions of signing bonuses actually to be paid in 2014, and "legacy pay" for players no longer on the 40-man roster) of $75M is about $35M below last season's MLB player payroll (what the Cubs actually paid out) and about $50M below what the Cubs actually paid out to MLB players (including players on optional assignment to the minors, portions of signing bonuses actually paid that season, and "legacy" pay) in both 2011 and 2012 (about $125M was spent each of those two season). .

 

[ ]

In reply to by Newport

"In addition, the Cubs have been absent from big-game hunting since Tom Ricketts bought the team in August 2009, perhaps because the front office of Theo Epstein and Jed Hoyer believe it was important to grow organically and not put expensive window dressing on a rebuilding program. But there are officials who say the sale contains provisions that financially handcuff Ricketts that would not be a factor for a posted player. For what it is worth, Epstein and Hoyer were the GM and assistant GM of the Red Sox when they gave a then-record $51.1 million posting fee to land Daisuke Matsuzaka." from http://nypost.com/2013/12/02/beware-the-cubs-challenging-the-yankees-fo…

At the prices of Doug Fister and Scott Kazmir, I wish the Cubs would have been in on both.

So as Bard, Gamel and Lim were non-tendered... the 40 man roster now at 37 going into the winter meetings. That seems appropriate. I'd like to see them sign Gamel to a minor league contract though. I wonder if Barney could have brought Jim Johnson vs J Weeks? I'm not sure Johnson would make sense for 2014 though. A closer is lower on the totem pole given all the needs at the major league level right now. http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs/ct-spt-1203-cubs-chi…

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In reply to by Cubster

j.johnson was basically given away. he's going to cost $8-10m and the O's weren't interested, evidently. supposedly the O's are expected to go out and purchase another closer rather than move one up in-house...seems they didn't want to throw that kind of loot at johnson.

ARZ gave up d.holmberg in that CIN/ARZ/TB trade...and they've already said there's no way in hell they're giving up a.bradley in any potential trade. ARZ got back a 22yo A- reliever in return...unless the PTBN due ARZ from TB is something nice i don't understand this deal from ARZ's position.

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In reply to by Rob G.

There are six "administrative" reasons why a PTBNL can't be named right away in a trade that occurs in the off-season:

1. Player was on Outright Assignment Waivers the day the trade was made (a player cannot be traded while he is on waivers). 

2. Player is on TB 40-man roster and has a "no trade" right that will expire prior to MLB Opening Day;    

3. TB is expecting to acquire the PTBNL from another club in a trade, and so AZ has to wait until this expected trade goes down. 

4. Player was signed after being selected by TB in the previous Rule 4 Draft (First-Year Player Draft) and can't be traded until the first anniversary of signing his first contract. (NOTE: Since a PTBNL must be named within six months and the first anniversary of any player selected in the 2013 Rule 4 Draft signing his first contract would necessarily have to be longer than six months from yesterday, it can't be this reaaon).   

5. Player is not on TB 40-man roster and is eligible for selection in next week's Rule 5 Draft and so he can't be traded until after the draft, (Very well could be this reason, The D'backs may like a young Rays minor league pitcher or position player eligible for the Rule 5 Draft but not yet ready for MLB--like when they selected Starling Peralta from the Cubs in last year's Rule 5 Draft--but don't want to have to waste a 40-man roster slot on him and then have to deal with Rule 5 restrictions on a player with talent but who is just not ready for MLB).  Probably this guy

6. TB will make a Rule 5 selection for the D'backs and then trade the player to AZ. (Not likely, since AZ selects before TB in the draft).

Rays get R. Hanigan, H. Bell and some cash(about half of Bell's salary) for J. Choate and PTBNL (both going to DBacks) and Reds get D. Holmberg from D'Backs.

Texas trades C. Gentry and J. Lindblom to A's for Michael Choice and Chris Bostick.

AJ Pierzynski signs 1/8.25M deal with Red Sox

J. Nathan to Tigers on a 2 year deal (in $20M range)

in rumoring

C. Beltran has a 3/48 deal on the table (allegedly)...so far Royals, Mariners, Yankees and Red Sox seem to be the most interested.

Mariners showing some serious interest in Cano

Saltalamacchia looking at 2 or 3-year deals with Marlins or Twins

B. Wilson probably going back to Dodgers as set-up man for Jansen

Blue Jays "infatuated" with Brett Anderson

 

Luke Gregerson to A's for Seth Smith. Billy Beane's genius shining through this offseason again after getting Jim Johnson from the O's

outfield rumors

Ellsbury to Yanks on a 7 year deal ($153M allegedly)

O's interested in Nelson Cruz

Choo is Tigers top target

Beltran and Royals met today and Royals are allegedly team offering 3/48

Morneau 2 year deal with Rockies

Phillies get RP Brad Lincoln from Blue Jays for C Eric Kratz & LHP Rob Rasmussen

 

Yanks to sign Kelly Johnson to 1/2.75M deal, plan to play everywhere, potential 2b if no Cano.

should do quite well at Yankee stadium

crazy 2 days of news

PS - There was a Dexter Fowler/PTBNL to Astros for J. Lyles/B. Barnes deal also today, can't remember if that was mentioned.

per Bruce Levine tweets... Former Cub manager Mike Quade accepts roving outfielder instructor job with Yankees. Hinske has been a winner everywhere he had landed. He has excellent communication skills which is congruent with the coaching group.

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In reply to by Cubster

What puts Tanaka in play for the Cubs — who often are forced into mid-market decision-making because of debt-related restrictions — is that the often-exorbitant posting-bid price isn’t subject to restrictions on player spending that have been in place since the Ricketts family’s highly leveraged purchase in 2009, a source said.

They call it the Hendry Touch @JonHeymanCBS ellsbury is to receive a no-trade clause in the $153M deal.

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In reply to by jacos

And such is the problem with complaining about the Cubs not burying themselves into the free agent market. I'm not saying complaining about it is wrong -- after all, I do it, but most of the posters here are really smart about baseball and would be all over TheoCorp for a signing like this. Even if this team finds a revenue source to help unleverage the team some, this kind of money for a player like this is insane. The reports say Ellsbury is injury prone but collisions - the basis of the two biggest injuries I remember, happen. But still, the guy plays pretty hard and would have been one ivy colored bruise from the disabled list had he signed with the Cubs. Another guy - Cano - would look good in Barney's place (but then, so would Arismendy Alcantara in comparison) but it will cost them in the $200 million range and the contract will make us long for the Soriano deal. It's really crazy. A part of me just wants to see the current free agent system dissolve from a lack of participation. In some sense that's beginning to happen as teams lock guys up. Sucks being a Cubs fan right now. Ownership is shackled by ridiculous debt (why'd they buy this team again?) and I want them to play the free agent market. Then the question is, okay, who? And I say, beats the hell out of me.

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In reply to by Old and Blue

I have to agree with you O & B. I was all giddy when the Cubs signed Soriano. Many here - "the Wise Ones" - pointed out just how asinine that decision was. But I was shell-shocked that any Cub team I followed actually signed the #1 FA of the time. It never happened before. I suppose Fred McGriff at the deadline was close - but he was WAAAYY past his prime and sucked balls for the Cubs, of course. So - as I plunk down my money once again this year, I have resigned the feeling that it will be another 90+-loss team. I don't expect them to sign anyone that is one of the top FA's this year either. The crazy thing is I keep reading Forbes account that the Cubs are one of the top - if not THE top - profitable baseball teams. If this is true, why is this payroll at $70MM or whatever?

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In reply to by Dusty Baylor

It's better to have a guy who's 23 hit 23 HRs and knock in 80 than a 38-year-old with 30 and 103, since after that season McGriff had 113 games left in the tank, with very little production. People always assume it's about money, but I really think it's about sustained excellence. From the Cubs' point of view, Ellsbury was attractive for his left-handedness; but signing him would have been Cub-career ending for Soler, Lake, Vitters, probably Vogelbach and others you could name, since Bryant and Almora are going to occupy two thirds of the outfield fairly soon. The "others you could name" might include Zeke DeVoss. The front office probably noticed that DeVoss, who played outfield last year at Daytona, had 39 SBs and 80 walks (.393 OBP). Until they figure out where Baez is going to play and where/whether Alcantara is going to play, they really have no openings in the infield. I also think they're very high on Villanueva, but that might just be my own bias toward 3Bs who fit a job description calling for "great defensive skills plus some pop." If the Cubs are going to pay big bucks for a position player any time soon, it will almost have to be at catcher.

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In reply to by Old and Blue

the debt you speak of was a demand by Zell to lower his tax burden. Any owner that bought the team would have the same issues.

I don't doubt the Ricketts are now using at as an excuse to get the Wrigley improvements they want now and TV deal they want, but I also have little doubt that if the Cubs were any good, they'd be bigger players in the free agent market.

That all being said, when Theo and Jed started in Boston they were adamant about not giving out deals over 5 years and figuring out an acceptable cost for a player regardless of public sentiment (for heaven's sake they let Pedro Martinez leave). Theo lost his way a little at the end (ownership, city pressure, etc), but I'm pretty sure he's not going to do that again. They'll strike when they see a good deal and they're not gonna do it just because people are bitchy about it.

But indeed, sucks being a Cubs fan right now...do hope we see Baez and Bryant at some point this season.

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In reply to by Old and Blue

I could be wrong but I was under the impression that the debt issue is a bit misleading since the Ricketts family essentially created a vehicle to loan themselves the money to make the purchase. So to say they can't increase the payroll because the left hand needs to re-pay the right hand is a bit disingenuous.

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In reply to by tem99

it's completely disingenuous and my point being that the Ricketts are just using it as leverage to get what they want out of a TV deal and Wrigley renovations.

Good chance anyone except maybe Cuban or the Steinbrenners would be doing the exact same thing.

Ricketts are obviously playing the long game because if they were worried about short term, they'd be freaking out about season ticket renewals right now and empty seats and probably demanding more flashy moves by Theo, even if it meant moving prospects. I'd like to believe they know that building a team for long-term success along with the TV deals and Wrigley renovations is the best long-term investment, even if they have to "suffer" for a few years.

 

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In reply to by Rob G.

you can build a team without shedding prospects. in fact, there comes a point (especially when you've shed a lot of payroll) where you invest before you become better than the bottom 10. 8 wins is all that separates this year's #4 cubs pick from the #11 pick (which means you lose that draft pick if you sign a protected player). people need to quit looking at signing FAs as something that's some awesome deal...they rarely are, and when they are it's generally for role players rather than stars. got money to spend...spend it...especially when you're in a draft pick advantage. BOS and MIA have both shown very recently that there's some very good "insurance" out there for some over-reaching contracts. i get the feeling the cubs are putting all their eggs in one basket for m.tanaka...and it's gonna be quite disappointing if they don't win the bid at the very least (even if that's a hell of a way to piss away a ton of money once bid+contract loot comes in for a team that's under no draft pick loss presure). if their interest in tanaka is overblown, they're just being cheap bastards.

Links in the sidebar, but Callis has Cubs taking RHP Tyler Beede,  says it's a deep pitching draft. Mayo has Cubs taking SS Trea Turner.

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In reply to by Old and Blue

other FA QB options are Vick, Freeman and Henne, so yeah, Bears will probably franchise if they have to.

McCown's been fantastic and all and the downfall this year has been the defensive injuries, but not sure you want to go down that road next year with McCown.

If they do franchise Cutler, then they should definitely draft a QB in the upper rounds for 2015.

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In reply to by Rob G.

yet more wrinkles, another story is that player could negotiate with any teams that posted the max bid simulatenously.

also, his current team has to agree to post him and they voted against the $20M cap, but were overuled by other Japanese owners. They could just choose not to post him now.

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In reply to by Rob G.

I tend to agree. This also hurts the Cubs a bit too as the high posting fee wasn't subject to their payroll restrictions. IMHO he's still a guy that's worth breaking the bank for. He's the right age, isn't subject to draft pick compensation, and should be around when the Cubs are ready to contend.

Theo on CSN now- Cubs he took over had tough contracts for "win now players" on a team that was not build to win now. Gordon Wittenmeyer one of the panelist can't quite grasp who would pay Cubs more money for games. Must only think WGN exists. Theo said "you would want to buy stock in Cubs Tv". Said "intrigue" with Cubs going for championship. Shark -"chances are good" he's in rotation in 2014. But said could do extension or a guy they move for young players.

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In reply to by jacos

i saw that too. Nick Friedell was my STH voice on the panel talking about jis 84 yo. grandma as a Cub fan and he is a STH, asking "why should we watch what is in Wrigley now" to which Theo stated the "ground floor" story, Castro and Rizzo.. Sure is a tough sell. Rick Telender was also on the panel and had a funny analogy of a resturant can close for remodeling, and when ready re-open to "new and improved", but the Cubs have been keeping the doors open. Wittenmeyer indeed is kinda a dick. He thinks there would only be one suitor for broadcast, and "they'll give you 10 bucks for it [the rights]. it was pretty interesting al in all. But confirmed what any of us believe nw with said "timeline".

This is funny local media idiot Jesse Rogers raises the ire former local bad ballplayer Cody Ransom- Jesse Rogers ‏@ESPNChiCubs 2h Talk about tanking in Sept when you know there is a stud Japanese player on the market..you get No . 1 pick in draft AND first dibs on Japan If the Cubs only knew this could happen. Cody Ransom would have played every day. #bettertolose Few hours later- Cody Ransom ‏@ransom_cody 2h @ESPNChiCubs funny you never said that when u were standing in the locker room Jesse Rogers ‏@ESPNChiCubs @ransom_cody wanted to make sure this was you, Cody. My apologies. Bad joke. Was looking for a random name and used you.Again, my apologies HAHAHA

"With the new posting system proposal for Nippon Professional Baseball players, the Rakuten Golden Eagles are "leaning against" posting Masahiro Tanaka this offseason, said Peter Gammons of MLB Network." sigh. whatever...etc.

[ ]

In reply to by QuietMan

rumor be that team would kick in some of posting fee to player under old system, things may reverse now.

revenues are considerably smaller over there, so tough to see them passing on $20M.

well, the cubs found their lefty pen help... "The Cubs and LHP Wesley Wright have agreed to a one-year deal believed to be worth $1.425 million, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today." not bad. wonder what he'll fetch in june/july...sigh.

“When I see a deal like that, I say: ‘Look, (who) wouldn’t rather have the first seven years of a star player’s career for $30 million versus the second seven years for $130 million or $150 million?’” Epstein said. “You want the first seven years for $30 million and hopefully you work out a deal and you can keep him. But if we have drafts like that in Boston – that same draft (produced) Clay Buchholz and Jacoby Ellsbury and Jed Lowrie – those are the type of drafts that make an organization more healthy.

 

“Jacoby Ellsbury debuted with the Red Sox in 2007, they won a World Series. His career with the Red Sox ended in 2013, they won a World Series. Seven years of club control were marked by World Series at either end. That’s the type of impact that good drafts and a good young player can make.”

http://www.csnchicago.com/cubs/theo-looks-next-ellsbury-cubs-wait-enter…

Don't know if others have seen this, but I just stumbled upon it. Great video recapping baseball in the 1980s. A couple of Cubs stuff in there (Dawson, 1984, 1989, Lights a Wrigley), but just great all around: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_KteV0HWfI Looks like there is one for the 1970s too.

Theo speaking at the moment for Renteria's intro press conference...soundbite-a-palooza in the twitter sidebar

says Vizcaino could be relief option in 2014, was throwing 98 mph with electric stuff during the fall

interesting, Phillies are gettting Cubs first pick in the Rule 5 draft this year to settle a grievance over length of Lendy Castillo's DL stint in 2012.

be surprising if Cubs grab anyone now and good to know someone was still interested in Castillo's arm.

[ ]

In reply to by Rob G.

Just because the Cubs agreed to forfeit their #4 overall 2013 Rule 5 Draft pick to the Philies to settle a grievance does not mean the Cubs cannot make a selection in the second round of the Rule 5 Draft (overall pick #34) or have another club make a selection for them in the 1st round and then acquire the selected player from that club after the draft.

BTW. MLB announced when the new CBA was signed in 2011 that (among other things) DL stints for Rule 5 draft pIcks would be scrutinized to prevent abuses. In order for LendyGate to happen the Phillies must have presented credible evidence to the Cubs and/or to MLB that either Castillo was not really hurt when he was placed on the DL with a "left groin strain" in May 2012 (in which case the Cubs would have also received a hefty fine from MLB) or that the Cubs waited an unreasonable period of time to send him on a 30-day minor league rehab assignment after he was clearly healthy enough to pitch (probably this, since the Cubs waited until July 11th to begin his minor league rehab assignment but yet he was healthy enough to throw 20 IP over the course of 14 minor league games before being reinstated from the DL on August 11th), and that the extra days spent on the DL as the result of having his rehab assignment delayed allowed him to fulfill Rule 5 obligations with a minimum of MLB Active List time. (If Castillo had fallen short of the required 90 days on an MLB Active List in 2012 to fulfill Rule 5 obligations, he would have remained a "Rule 5 Player" into the 2013 season, but only until he had accrued enough days on an MLB Active List to reach the required 90 days).    

FWIW, if the Phillies really valued Castillo and wanted him back they could have just claimed him off waivers last January when the Cubs outrighted him to Iowa to make room on the 40-man roster for free-agent Carlos Villanueva, so the whole "grievance" thing is basically B. S. Just based on that (the Phillies failure to claim Castillo off waivers when they had the chance in January) should have been reason enough to throw the grievance out. 

Plus, Lendy Castillo did not turn out to be Johan Santana. The Phillies were not victims of anything.

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In reply to by Rob Richardson

so what would be the cubs plan b? another impact player since they're in a position to pick one up longterm without losing a draft pick? ...bwhahahahah. good one. more ads on the outfield wall? a second ad bridge over waveland? Pepsi presents The Chicago Cubs? ...sounds legit. seriously, though...i hope the cubs get their japanese SP who has thrown many 130-160 pitch games throughout his career. dusty baker didn't manage him, he'll be all good.

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In reply to by Carlito

CARLITO: Among other things, the Cubs are going to have some attractive International Signing Bonus Value (SBV) slots to trade after July 1st, since they can't sign any international free-agents subject to signing bonus restrictions for more than a $250K bonus in the 2014-15 International Signing Period as the result of going 15%+ over their assigned ISBP limit in 2013. And because they had the 4th-worst record in 2013, the Cubs four SBV slots (especially their #1 slot which will be the 4th overall highest-slot) is going to have a lot of value.  

So any trade they make during the season (after July 1st) can be augmented by including some really nice SBV slots that the Cubs won't be able to use. 

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In reply to by Carlito

CARLITO: I think the MLB clubs that like to spend big internationally (like Texas, Toronto, Tampa Bay, and Boston) will be beating down the Cubs door for their SBV slots. It will be a seller's market, because the Cubs will be one of the few teams that won't be able to use their 2014-15 SBV slots to the fullest. 

The Cubs will need to keep at least one slot to cover whatever prospects they do sign (albeit no player for more than a $250K bonus), but the others should be available to be traded.

Unfortunately, SBV slots cannot be traded until after July 1st, can't be sold for cash, and cannot be used to fulfill a PTBNL owed from an earlier (pre 7/1) trade, so the slots will probably be traded in July as part of a Trade Deadline deal or deals. 

The Cubs can't include one of their 2014-15 international SBV slots in a trade right now.  

 

"David Waldstein of the New York Times was told by a source with knowledge of the Mariners' plans that the club will offer Robinson Cano a nine-year, $225 million contract." also, cano is supposedly already on a plane to SEA.

"Bruce Levine of ESPNChicago.com reports that while the Cubs "believe" in Javier Baez as a shortstop, the prospect will "move around" to different positions in spring training. Levine said of Baez that second base "could be his" by the end of June."

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In reply to by Old and Blue

Really? Haven't we covered this? Are they gonna sign a 2nd baseman to a 10 year deal in the national league (where he can't play DH in his later years) when the middle infield is potentially stacked with some of our best prospects? Also let's remember that pretty much ALL the long overpaid contracts are going to the American League (ellsbury, cano, fielder, hamilton, pujols) because of the DH on these 7-10 year deals. The Cubs would be idiots to sign these players.

[ ]

In reply to by Carlito

gotta spend the money on something. if you're waiting around for a great deal on a FA contract you're only gonna get support guys except for those rare exceptions...which doesn't happen much. FAs cost loot...it's not about getting a great deal, it's about adding a piece to your team. there are very few great deals on the FA market that are high end impact players. plus, this is the f'n cubs...in chicago...3rd largest TV market in the nation with nation-wide fan appeal. it'd be nice to see something happen to this team aside from the advertising revenue gains the ownership is working hard on.

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In reply to by crunch

"gotta spend the money on something" Ugh. Really? First, just throwing money at free agents because you have it is a stupid idea. Second, even if they did that all you would do is complain about who they got, how much they overspent, how these guys can't be traded when they are old and terrible, etc. Josh Hamilton and Albert Pujols worked out so well for the Angels last year. The Blue Jays really took with their big spending spree last year. And so on. The teams that are consistently good are doing so by developing their own young talent (Red Sox, Braves, Cardinals, A's, Rays, now the Pirates) and then supplementing that with free agents *when they are competitive.* When the Cubs young core is ready, they will certainly spend money on free agents to fill the gaps and compliment them and put forward a winning team. But it makes no sense to spend the money now to get a free agent who will give the team 3 more wins next year, cost a ton, and then be in the way and old and ineffective when the young core is ready. I think most people see that.

[ ]

In reply to by WISCGRAD

you can spend and develop. what's more, with the new system where you lose your draft pick signing guys who are protected after the 10th pick (only 8 wins separate the cubs pick 4 from pick 11 this past disaster season) it makes sense to spend when you know you're close to coming out of the basement...not when you're out of the basement. they're already pissing away $26m on e.jackson having him pitch 2 punt seasons...you gotta spend the money on something. it's just like that. yeah, really...these aren't 2-3 year deals on the line...these are 4-8+ year deals on the line. the core is close...baez is expected to get a taste this coming season...more aren't far behind. there's a #4 pick coming next season. the rookie to AA is slammed to the f'n gils with kids. it's there. not much more room left at the inn...core built and moving up...neat. RSox spent like CRAZY (don't fall for that myth that they didn't) while developing talent. it wasn't either/or...it was both.

[ ]

In reply to by crunch

Go ahead and take a look at how the Red Sox spent their money: Virtually all of their big free agent signings over the past 5 years have sucked, whereas the one-year contracts to fill gaps before youngsters emerge and players acquired in traded when they need them with little contract/money commitment have been effective. Terrible Investments: Brad Penny: $5 million for a 5.67 ERA John Lackey: paid $65 million so far for one injured season and a combined 2.7 WAR over the other three. Ryan Dempster: $13 million last year for a -0.2 WAR Mike Cameron: $14 million combined for 70 atrocious games over 2 seasons as a 37-38 year old Carl Crawford: $14 million for an OPS under .700 and then traded GREAT ONE-YEAR DEALS Adrian Beltre: $9 million for 7.8 WAR Stephen Drew: got $9.5 million for a nice 3.1 WAR season Mike Napoli: $13 million for 4.1 WAR Many of the other guys, like Victor Martinez, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Jason Bay, Jake Peavy, Andrew Miller, Adrian Gonzalez, etc. they got in trades mid-season when they knew they needed them, and for many of them they inherited very little contract commitment. They have focused on signing their young stars to long term deals, and have re-signed veterans who they know fit their philosophy.

[ ]

In reply to by WISCGRAD

I think most people see that.

...well most sane people

There's certainly something to be said that you have to build up slowly in free agency, it's tough to wait for one offseason and fill all your holes. That being said, there's no reason with the current team to overspend on anyone except pitching. You can look in the minors and see there are legitimate prospects coming up at almost every position but starting pitching. When they'll arrive, when they'll be good and if they'll be good is certainly all up in the air, and sure, it's tough to be patient. And had they decided to spend, spend, spend to try and be competitive while waiting for these kids, I certainly wouldn't have cared a whole lot...it's there money and there business. Folks like to lie to themselves and believe sports teams are some sort of public trust and that's about the biggest bullshit in the world, it's there money and they'll do as they please and they fully have that right and we fully have the right to not pay to watch them if we choose. The Ricketts aren't dumb, they know the big money is in fielding a consistent winner and if they want to pay off some of their debts until the team gets there, that's there perogative. I'm happy for once that an owner and a GM have the guts to tear down what's been a comically terrible franchise down to the foundation and start from scratch. It desperately needed it. There's no promises it'll work out, but they have the right guys in charge.

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In reply to by Rob G.

It would also be monumentally stupid to strip the franchise down and have crap performance for 2 years for a big rebuilding effort and then screw that plan up by spending a ton of money too early. Last year the free agent value was in the 2nd tier players that didn't require crazy long term deals or giving up draft picks. It didn't really work for the Cubs as did for other teams with Jackson's first year performance but that deal could still work out ok. The Cubs front office isn't stupid. I have to think they're either going all in on Tanaka or waiting to see who falls through the cracks and can be signed as a good value play.

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In reply to by tem99

I doubt they're going all in on anybody at this point. But if Tanaka is posted, they'll certainly put up the $20M bid and try hard to get them. But there will be plenty of competition and my feeling is that someone will be more willing to overpay at this point. We shall see and hope...

speaking of Tanaka, I know nothing of the guy...is he Darvish good or Dice-K good?

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In reply to by tem99

oh absolutely, they'll figure out what they think he's worth with the appropriate FA mark-up and go from there. Earlier rumors were 6/60 range, but if the posting fee is lower that may go higher, plus bidding war.

He may also want a 4 year opt out or something like Cespedes got. He's certainly the type of player they should make an effort on, just doesn't mean they should be completely dumb about it either. Finding 1-year wonders and comeback candidates on the pitching market has proven to be quite effective lately for a lot of teams.

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In reply to by Rob G.

I'd prefer that they get Tanaka and extend Samardzija, because that would suggest they might be competitive soon. Foregoing Tanaka and trading Samardzija might be aiming for an even higher level of farm system, but it puts competition in 2016 at the earliest. And I don't know if I can take 2 more years of completely irrelevant baseball.

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In reply to by Charlie

extending Samadzija is fine at a reasonable price, arm is still a lot better than his results, might be best for a change of scenery for him and get pieces to replace him with.

Don't think it would be all that hard to replace Samardzija in the open market for the next 2 seasons and still feign competitiveness, 107 and 91 ERA+ the last 2 years. 

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In reply to by Rob G.

It wouldn't be difficult to replace the results he's produced so far. But I'm still anticipating him turning a corner in terms of consistency. If he doesn't do that, and if Tanaka's arm falls off, I'll of course be complaining that the Cubs spent money stupidly and didn't get blue-chip prospects when they had the chance. But my commitment to the rebuild is waning after having all but lost interest in the games.

also, Cubs not getting burned again giving a 10 year contract. I think Cano is a great player, but let's see how this looks years 5-10. Hiya Albert Pujols!

re: Cano

that's a lot of money to spend to lose to the A's. ridiculous deal of course, Yankee Stadium is heaven for left-handed power hitters and they have a lot of offensive holes to fill in my opinion.

Makes Franklin or Miller available on a trade which certainly has some value. They'll probably do something even more stupid now and trade Walker and Hultzen for David Price.

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In reply to by Rob G.

and just to clarify my thoughts on this deal, I actually don't mind it that much for the Mariners. They've built a real nice set of prospects that are all very close or already there so it makes some sense to start spending now. Cano's certainly a very good baseball player and they needed offensive help. Now if they go all Toronto and decide to go all in this year and start trading away some of those prospects for what they deem upgrades and those prospects aren't coming from a position of serious depth, then they'll deserve the grave they dug themselves. We'll see...


Cashman, when they let him do his job, once said something to the effect, if I'm going to spend big money on a guy, I don't want to give away prospects too. That's why they rarely spent prospects and gave extensions preferring to deal in the open market where at most it cost them a draft pick in terms of young players. Chances are if they go after Price or get Kemp, then that's exactly what they'd be doing, trading away good prospects and spending big money. That's when it gets really dumb.

Arencibia to Rangers...

Bellisario got $3M from White Sox, Ryan Webb a 2 year deal from O's. Ithought those 2 could have been potential Cubs bullpen targets, but still of plenty of options out there.
 

Bartolo Colon to Mariners rumors starting to float, that would be far wiser than trading for Price.

DANIEL BARD By the way - will Daniel Bard be non-tendered?

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In reply to by Rob G.

http://www.csnchicago.com/cubs/cubs-looking-axford-search-potential-clo…

Jerome Holtzman drive-by...

“It’s always better to just find talent that hasn’t been given the opportunity yet in the ninth inning,” Epstein said, “and then give them that responsibility and let them add to their market value, whether it’s through trade or for a future contract. (But) just because a guy has saves on his resume and therefore might cost a little more, he still might be a nice option – as long as you’re making sure you’re paying for talent and not just for a stat that (Chicago baseball writer) Jerome Holtzman made up.”

Joba Chamberlain rumor out there as well...

beltran/yanks 3/45 napoli/bos 2/32 ...at this rate there's going to be no FA's left for winter meetings also, the yanks have one hell of a crowded OF situation even with the DH in play...beltran, ellsbury, a.soriano, ichiro, b.gardner, v.wells

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In reply to by Newport

the soriano trade was important. it freed up $7m so the cubs could hire lawyers to fight the neighborhood for more revenue streams and architects to design advertising bridges over the streets outside the stadium. the cubs way (tm).

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In reply to by WISCGRAD

i give humor, you only register angst. yeah, it's a bit editorial, but it's not a diatribe. enjoy. also, doesn't this work both ways in multiple threads for your expressed point of view? we don't have guns here. the first person to fire doesn't win.

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In reply to by crunch

Sorry, no worries, I will stop calling you out on that. But FYI, from someone who has been posting on here for 7+ years with you now, I don't think your comments are registering as humorously as you think they are lately. Normally you add a lot to these comments and a lot of humor, but lately you just sound like a broken, very disgruntled, record...

[ ]

In reply to by WISCGRAD

feel free to do what you want, i'm not trying to shut you up. i'm just saying some stuff like this is always gonna be lulz and "dude, really" to me. when they lower payroll, sign guys and trade them mid-season saving loot, shed vets to save loot, and the biggest news of the past couple years is all the new ad revenue streams for the ballpark + neighborhood fights over those revenue streams while the teams end up with george katarras and wesley wright as off-season pieces...well...lulz/sigh/c'mon. i do seriously believe the cubs are going to be in heavy on m.tanaka...but i also wonder if my belief is misplaced and/or if they have a "plan b" for that unspent loot if he's not posted or they lose out. they get the 4th pick next year. RK to AA is fillled and there's a nice trickle going into AAA next season. there's money freed up. new TV money is coming. it's time to start getting ready to get back into action rather than sitting on the sideline...8 wins is all that separated the trainwreck of a cubs team last year from a team who can't sign a protected player without losing a valuable draft pick.

[ ]

In reply to by crunch

Crunch I believe they are 100% not shedding salaries and saving 'loot'. It's VERY clear that every move is motivated by the desire to acquire talent. That seems pretty obvious. Characterizing it as a money saving move doesn't even make sense. They would make more money probably by half assing the lineup with crap expensive mediocre players and filling the seats winning 84 games a year.

[ ]

In reply to by Carlito

the byproduct of this is saved loot, though. they have a lot of loot freed up, RK-AA are stacked, some kids are going to trickle in next year and a lot more expected in 2015...and we're not hearing about ubaldo or choo or etc... it would be not-so-awesome if they have the 11+th draft pick next year and have to weigh getting in on it vs pissing away a high draft pick...especially since they've freed up enough loot to invest in the future.

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In reply to by crunch

I'm somewhat with you at this point, crunch. I sincerely hope that they plan to pick up Tanaka or an equivalent investment towards being competitive in a year or so and maybe pick up one more player as well, though I'm more doubtful of the latter. My hope is that by next offseason they have Baez, Bryant, Soler, Alcantara, Hendricks, Strop, Vizcaino, and maybe even Edwards all established or knocking on the door, Tanaka (or equivalent investment) entrenched alongside Samardzija, Rizzo, Castro, and Arrieta, and are ready to add the remaining couple of pieces to the rotation, bullpen, and bench to push them into contention. If they don't get a starter and maybe another substantial piece this offseason, though, and if they end up trading off Samardzija and maybe others, then it seems like they are putting off the end-date of the rebuild even farther, and I will start to wonder what the plan is for the payroll. All this depends upon there being smart investments to make, of course. I was a little surprised we didn't hear many rumors of them pursuing other young-ish players, like Phil Hughes. At the same time, I'm critical of a team like the Houston Astros, who seem to be jumping the gun on their rebuild. Dexter Fowler, Chad Qualls, and Scott Feldman don't make much sense to me at all for a team that has been incredibly bad of late. It's not like they dropped Cano money or anything, but I don't see Fowler or the 3-year contract to Feldman moving them in the right direction. This is a round-about way of saying that they are an example of why it doesn't necessarily make sense to spend money just to spend money.

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In reply to by crunch

But I don't think any of the strategies employed have been motivated by the bottom line. Everyone they have dumped have been to acquire new talent and free space for championship caliber players ... Usually by dumping players who will be past their prime when we can contend. Theo didn't sign on with financial handcuffs - they've been incredibly transparent about the plan ... And it makes perfect sense in every way if you think of it that way. My point you didn't address is wouldn't they just throw a halfway competitive team on the field and act like contenders if they were motivated entirely by the bottom line. Fill the seats, big market, sign a name once in a while etc.? That's what we all watched our whole lives. This is the real deal, there's been no surprises, they said it would he slow and painful. Why would they tank so obviously if it wasn't about one thing: building a real contender and revamping the org. The penny pinching way would be to milk out wins etc, this owner / gm have done the opposite, done it honestly, and are taking a hit in the attendance. The ONLY possible motivation is to become consistent a real champion as soon as possible. There's no other reason a team does this. None. And it certainly ain't to save money.

[ ]

In reply to by Carlito

"My point you didn't address is wouldn't they just throw a halfway competitive team on the field and act like contenders if they were motivated entirely by the bottom line." + most all of the stuff following that line... i'm not addressing it because i don't think they should either. this isn't where i'm coming from. i'm not saying buy-for-the-sake-of-buying. i'm saying cash is there, invest in the future...it's time and the money is available. this is chicago, not TB...not OAK...this is a $130-$150m market team without over-reaching. this is also a team that's supposedly going to have a flood of kids coming in not costing jack. there is also no such thing as spending loot suddenly meaning you're incapable of developing a team. theo inherited a 93 win BOS team that spent a ton of money and managed to spend money + draft...i think he can handle it without shitting himself...i hope. i also don't think moves have been motivated by the bottom line, but i also think now is an advantageous time to start investing back into the product before it costs high draft picks. e.jackson was signed to a 4-year deal, not a 2-year deal for a reason... "The penny pinching way would be to milk out wins etc, this owner / gm have done the opposite, done it honestly, and are taking a hit in the attendance. The ONLY possible motivation is to become consistent a real champion as soon as possible. There's no other reason a team does this. None. And it certainly ain't to save money." ...we are talking about ricketts here. i wouldn't be so quit to lay noble intentions on their money management and main focus for the team given what we've been reading in the papers the past 3 years.

per Roto...
Andy McCullough of the Newark Star-Ledger reports that the Yankees are willing to listen to trade offers on Brett Gardner. They have already received significant interest in Gardner since Friday's signing of Carlos Beltran, and though they aren't actively shopping him, the Yankees outfield is extremely crowded and he could net a useful return. The Bombers currently boast an outfield contingent of Gardner, Jacoby Ellsbury, Beltran, Alfonso Soriano, Ichiro Suzuki and Vernon Wells.

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In reply to by crunch

Brett Gardner will be a FA after the 2014 season, so I doubt that the Cubs would give up players with more years of club control than Gardner just to get a one-year (or even half-year) rental... unless the plan is to try and sign him to a multi-year contract (which they have already done with LH OF Ryan Sweeney) or else flip him to a third team at the July Trade Deadline for prospects. 

"Ben Badler of Baseball America reports that the Rakuten Golden Eagles will speak with Masahiro Tanaka about his desire to move to the MLB, and if he truly wants to do so they are expected to let him leave."

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In reply to by crunch

Remember, the player has to request to be posted, then it's up to the NPB club to agree to post the player (which they do not have to do).

However, if Rakuten refuses to post Tanaka this off-season simply because they don't think $20M is a sufficient posting fee for a pitcher of Tanaka's talent, and decide to keep him for one more season and then post him and get their $20M post-2014 (Tanaka will become an unrestricted FA post-2015), Tanaka could spoil the club's plan simply by telling the Eagles that if they don't post him this off-season he will not request to be posted post-2014, and if that happens Rakuten won't get the $20M posting fee at all and they'll lose Tanaka after the 2015 season for nothing (although of course they would benefit from having him pitch for them in 2014 & 2015). 

So it's understandable why Rakuten would have to get Tanaka on board first before they proceed with a plan to delay his posting until post-2014, unless they think it's worth sacrificing $20M to have him remain a Rakuten Golden Eagle for two more seasons.

 

"Astros signed RHP Chad Qualls to a two-year, $9.5 million contract." dude wut?

Chad Qualls... The Cubs should see if Ted Abernathy wants a 2 year deal?

Recent comments

  • Dolorous Jon Lester (view)

    That’s a fantastic deal for SF

  • crunch (view)

    SF snags b.snell...2/62m

  • Cubster (view)

    AZ Phil: THAT is an awesome report worth multiple thanks. I’m sure it will be worth reposting in an “I told you so” in about 2-3 years.

  • Arizona Phil (view)

    The actual deadline to select a post-2023 Article XX-B MLB free agent signed to 2024 minor league contract (Cooper, Edwards, and Peralta) to the MLB 40-man roster is not MLB Opening Day, it is 12 PM (Eastern) this coming Sunday (3/24). 

    However, the Cubs could notify the player prior to the deadline that the player is not going to get added to the 40 on Sunday, which would allow the player to opt out early. Otherwise the player can opt out anytime after the Sunday deadline (if he was not added to the 40 by that time). 

  • Arizona Phil (view)

    Today is an off day for both the Cubs MLB players and the Cubs minor league players.  

  • Arizona Phil (view)

    For those of you keeping track, so far nine players have been called up to Mesa from the Cubs Dominican Academy for Minor League Camp and they will be playing in the ACL in 2024: 

    * bats or throws left 

    Angel Cepeda, INF 
    * Miguel Cruz, P
    Yidel Diaz, C 
    * Albert Gutierrez, 1B
    Fraiman Marte, P  
    Francis Reynoso, P (ex-1B) 
    Derniche Valdez, INF 
    Edward Vargas, OF 
    Jeral Vizcaino, P 

    And once again, despite what you might read at Baseball Reference and at milb.com, Albert Gutierrez is absolutely positively a left-handed hitter (only), NOT a right-handed hitter.

    Probably not too surprisingly, D. Valdez was the Cubs #1 prospect in the DSL last season, Cepeda was the DSL Cubs best all-around SS prospect not named Derniche Valdez, Gutierrez was the DSL Cubs top power hitting prospect not named Derniche Valdez, E. Vargas was the DSL Cubs top outfield prospect (and Cepeda and E. Vargas were also the DSL Cubs top two hitting prospects), Y. Diaz was the DSL Cubs top catching prospect, and M. Cruz was the DSL Cubs top pitching prospect. 

    F. Marte (ex-STL) and J. Vizcaino (ex-MIL) are older pitchers (both are 22) who were signed by the Cubs after being released by other organizations and then had really good years working out of the bullpen for the Cubs in the DSL last season. 

    The elephant in the room is 21-year old Francis Reynoso, a big dude (6'5) who was a position player (1B) at the Cardinals Dominican Academy for a couple of years, then was released by STL in 2022, and then signed by the Cubs and converted to a RHP at the Cubs Dominican Academy (and he projects as a high-velo "high-leverage" RP in the states). He had a monster year for the DSL Cubs last season (his first year as a pitcher). 

  • Arizona Phil (view)

    DJL: The only players who definitely have opt outs are Cooper, Edwards, and Peralta (Opening Day, 5/1, and 6/1), and that's because they are post-2023 Article XX-B MLB free agents who signed 2024 minor league contracts and (by rule) they get those opt outs automatically. 

    Otherwise, any player signed to a 2024 minor league contract - MIGHT or - MIGHT NOT - have an opt out in their contract, but it is an individual thing, and if there are contractual opt outs the opt out(s) might not necessarily be Opening Day. It could be 5/1, or 6/1, or 7/1 (TBD).

    Because of their extensive pro experience, the players who most-likely have contractual opt outs are Alfaro, Escobar, and D. Smith, but (again), not necessarily Opening Day. 

    Also, just because a player has the right to opt out doesn't mean he will. 

  • Dolorous Jon Lester (view)

    I love the idea that Madrigal heads to Iowa in case Morel can’t handle third.

    The one point that intrigues me here is Cooper over Smith. I feel like the Cubs really like Smith and don’t want to lose him. Could be wrong. He def seems like an opt out if he misses the opening day roster

  • Arizona Phil (view)

    Childersb3: Both Madrigal and Wisdom can be optioned without any restriction. Their consent is not required. 

    They both can be outrighted without restriction, too (presuming the player is not claimed off waivers), but if outrighted they can choose to elect free agency (immediately, or deferred until after the end of the MLB season).

    If the player is outrighted and elects free-agency immediately he forfeits what remains of his salary.

    If he accepts the assignment and defers free agency until after the conclusion of the season, he continues to get his salary, and he could be added back to the 40 anytime prior to becoming a free-agent (club option). 

  • Childersb3 (view)

    Phil, 
    Madrigal and Wisdom can or cannot refuse being optioned to the Minors?
    If they can refuse it, wouldn't they elect to leave the Cubs org?