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Rotoworld

  • MIN Manager
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    Twins owner Joe Pohlad said that his family will “explore selling the Twins.”
    “Our family reached a decision this summer to explore selling the Twins,” Pohlad said. “As we enter the next phase of this process, the time is right to make this decision public.” The Pohlad family has owned the Twins organization for the past 40 years, so it would be a major change for an organization that is in a bit of turmoil right now with Major League Baseball announcing that they will be broadcasting Twins’ games themselves next season. Carl Pohlad purchased the team from Calvin Griffith for $44 million back in 1984 and could be solid for over $1 billion this offseason. What that means for the team’s payroll and roster decisions is anybody’s guess.
  • INT Starting Pitcher
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    According to Tim Kawakami of the San Francisco Standard, the “Giants have been told Roki Sasaki will not sign with them.”
    Sasaki and his team have entered the final stages of their prolonged off-season schedule as the 23-year-old star can sign with a team starting on Wednesday. It wouldn’t be a surprise to hear other teams begin to be eliminated from contention, but it seems like the Dodgers, Padres, and Blue Jays are the top contenders for now.
  • PIT Center Fielder #27
    Pirates agreed to minor league contracts with OF Bryce Johnson, 1B Malcom Nuñez, and RHP Eddy Yean and invited them all to spring training.
    Johnson is the most noteworthy of the three despite posting a .177/.248/.226 slash line over 140 MLB plate appearances. In 2024, he hit hitting .288/.407/.431 with the Padres’ Triple-A affiliate in El Paso. He has always posted solid walk rates and can swipe bases, so there’s a chance he can play his way into some at-bats in Pittsburgh in 2024. Nuñez could provide organization depth at the corner infield spots, and Yean was traded with Wil Crowe from the Nationals to the Pirates for Josh Bell back in 2020. Yean had been the Nationals’ 6th-ranked prospect at the time but he hasn’t been able to match those expectations.
  • PIT Relief Pitcher #40
    Pirates signed RHP Burch Smith to a minor-league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    The Pirates will now be Smith’s eighth MLB team in a career that also included a year playing professionally in Korea. In 2024, Smith pitched in 50 games between the Marlins and Orioles’ organizations, posting a 4.95 ERA, 1.35 WHIP, and 46/12 K/BB ratio in 56 1/3 innings. He had a poor 19 percent strikeout rate but he possesses elite command with a five-percent walk rate. He has a decent shot to earn a spot in the Pirates’ bullpen.
  • TOR Relief Pitcher #23
    MLB.com’s Mark Bowman reported that Jeff Hoffman “had a potential deal that was nixed when he failed a physical with the Braves’ medical staff.”
    Hoffman also reportedly failed a physical with the Orioles’ medical staff before agreeing to a contract with the Blue Jays. Each team has its own standards when it comes to physicals, so Hoffman failing two with different teams doesn’t mean the Blue Jays overlooked anything, but it’s not a great sign. Hoffman previously had Tommy John surgery during his Junior year of college, and he also dealt with more minor shoulder injuries in 2018 and 2021, so the health of his shoulder will certainly be something to monitor this season. It adds a bit of risk to his fantasy value this season, but we wouldn’t let these reports cause you to drop him down your draft boards too much since he has no currently reported injuries.
  • CWS Starting Pitcher #48
    Jonathan Cannon has spent the off-season trying to solidify his arm slot and release point heading into 2025.
    Cannon is seemingly locked into a rotation spot with the White Sox after pitching to a 4.49 ERA and a 91/40 K/BB in 124 1/3 innings in 2024. While the results were not consistent, Cannon was working with a few new pitches, including a power curveball and a sweeper as the White Sox built a “decidedly east-west oriented arsenal” for Cannon under pitching coach Brian Bannister. This offseason, instead of adding new pitches, Cannon has been working on refining his release point to make his offerings more consistent and also have them work better off of one another. If Cannon was able to miss a few more bats while posting an ERA just over 4.00, that would give him some fantasy value in deeper formats given that he seems like a sure bet for innings this season.
  • FA Starting Pitcher
    Cubs designated RHP Michael Arias for assignment.
    The Cubs needed a spot on the 40-man roster for Colin Rea, who they signed over the weekend, so Arias was let go. The 23-year-old has yet to make his MLB debut and spent most of 2024 in Triple-A, where he had a 2.09 WHIP in 36.1 innings. Including his 24 innings at Double-A in 2024, Arias posted a 4.77 ERA and 1.86 WHIP but 72 strikeouts in 60 1/3 innings. His raw stuff is solid, and he has a career 4.25 ERA in 97 minor-league appearances (32 starts), so a few teams, including the Cubs, will likely be looking to sign him to a minor-league deal once he clears waivers.
  • BOS Catcher #12
    Mass Live’s Chris Cotillo reported that Connor Wong spent the entire offseason adding weight and working on his defense.
    Wong had a solid season offensively for Boston in 2024, hitting .280 with 13 homers, 24 doubles, and a .758 OPS while cutting his strikeout rate down from 33.3 percent in 2023 to 23.4 percent in 2024. However, he also wore down as the season went on, posting just a .696 OPS in the second half, compared to a .809 OPS in the first half. Wong believes the added weight will help him “be a little more physical, a little more durable” while still moving “the same way I have in the past.” He also worked with new Red Sox catching instructor Packer Guinn on “Receiving, blocking, the whole thing, really. We’ve changed some of the setup.” Wong graded as a poor blocker and framer in 2024, so any meaningful improvement in his defense would be huge for Boston and Wong’s playing time in 2025.
  • FA Third Baseman #2
    Red Sox manager Alex Cora said he “always envisioned Alex [Bregman] as a gold glover second baseman.”
    Speaking at Fenway Fest, Cora was quick to say that Rafael Devers “is our third baseman,” but also added that he always believed Bregman profiled well defensively at second base. Cora commented that Bregman was forced to play third base in Houston because they had Jose Altuve and Carlos Correa in the infield as well. The Red Sox seem to be circling Bregman on a potential deal, but the veteran third baseman’s asking price remains high, and there are rumors that Bregman is asking for a seven-year contract. With top prospect Kristian Campbell seemingly ready to contribute at the MLB level this season, Boston has to decide if they want to block him for several years by bringing Bregman into the fold.
  • INT Starting Pitcher
    The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal reported that the Blue Jays “last week hosted prized Japanese right-hander Roki Sasaki in Toronto.”
    Despite the rumors that they have often offered the most money, Toronto has famously come up just short on big-name free agents over the last two off-seasons like Shohei Ohtani, Juan Soto, and Corbin Burnes. Now they appear to be in the mix for the top prize remaining in this year’s free agent class. Sasaki can sign with a major-league club starting Wednesday when the international signing period opens; although, the common belief is that he will sign with either the Dodgers or Padres.
  • COL Starting Pitcher #46
    Rockies signed RHP Jake Woodford to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
    The 28-year-old hurler had a rough time in 2024 where he went 0-6 with a 7.97 ERA, 1.63 WHIP and a 26/9 K/BB ratio over 35 innings in nine appearances (seven starts) between the White Sox and Pirates. You can never have enough pitching depth — especially in Colorado — so the move makes sense from that perspective. Fantasy managers can obviously ignore this one.