Jump to content
North Side Baseball
Posted

The early trade buzz around the Cubs took a turn for the somewhat bizarre last week, when they were tenuously connected to an All-Star-caliber American League infielder. This week, there's a more plausible candidate with very similar credentials.

Image courtesy of © Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

It remains hard to see how, given the competitive posture of the Toronto Blue Jays and the two years of team control they still hold over Bo Bichette, the Cubs could acquire the young star at a price commensurate with his value to them. They'd be paying the exorbitant price a contender ought to extract when trading a key player at a premium position with multiple years of control left, and they'd then be moving Bichette from shortstop to third base, where his replacement level is inevitably lower.

There are just enough variables moved around, though, to make rumors that Alex Bregman is available much more plausible. Under contract for just one more season, Bregman is due $28.5 million in 2024, and while he remains an incredible player, it's been four full seasons since he was a superstar and MVP candidate in 2018 and 2019. The Astros have not paid the competitive balance tax since that tax gained some real teeth, over a decade ago. The only year in which they exceeded the tax was 2020--when the league furloughed the tax to allow teams to save money during the pandemic. Without any additions or further subtractions, the team stands just a few million dollars below the first threshold for 2024; they have to move some money.

Bregman is a good candidate, in terms of striking the delicate balance between having substantial trade value, not being locked in beyond the coming season, and having a lot of real dollars attached to him. Because of the structure of his deal, trading him would only clear $20 million from Houston's books for tax purposes, but the difference between that and his real salary (so, $8.5 million) could become a cushion that Jim Crane would use to pay any bills if the team just edged over the threshold for this year. After 2024, it's not just Bregman who leaves. So, too, does Justin Verlander, for whom the Astros are on the hook for over $18 million next year. They'll have the flexibility to duck right back under the threshold, but in order to be willing to clear it even for one year, Crane might ask his front office to save him money en route.

Because the push factors making Bregman (theoretically) available are stronger than is the case with Bichette, the asking price would be lower. He's older, more expensive, and will hit free agency again sooner. He also has a lower ceiling than Bichette, who has been very good but not yet a true superstar in his time in MLB, and who will be just 26 years old in 2024. The Cubs wouldn't be getting as dynamic a player, but the certainty and the smaller transaction cost with Bregman matter. Bregman is already a third baseman, and a fine one. The Cubs wouldn't need to make a position change and hope it went well, and they wouldn't be asking for someone's house so they could use it as a car.

While his power has sagged slightly since his peak, Bregman controls the strike zone as well as any hitter in baseball. Of the 201 batters with at least 750 plate appearances since the start of 2022, Bregman has the 12th-highest walk rate and 10th-lowest strikeout rate. Arguably, there's no one in baseball who puts together tougher at-bats. Unlike many other players who are almost as good at those plate-discipline skills, he also gets the ball in the air at a high rate.

That doesn't mean he's without risk. Again, his power is diminished, relative to his best seasons, and it's fair to wonder if some of that power was more about the extremely aerodynamic ball the league used in 2018 and 2019 than about Bregman himself. He pulled the ball much less last season than in the past, which had something to do with an intentional change in approach but might also indicate that his bat is starting to decline. 

Nonetheless, the fit here is obvious. Bregman does well the things the Cubs prize most from their hitters. In the Killer Tofu lineup they keep threatening to build (lethal, but without beef), Bregman would make a lot of sense. The question is what the Astros would want in return for him, but even there, a match might be found with relative ease. Houston is suddenly in need of some upper-level pitching depth, and the Cubs have that to spare, given an opportunity like this.

What do you think of Bregman as a potential Cubs acquisition? How far should the Cubs go to make this happen? Let's chop it up.


View full article

Recommended Posts

Posted

I absolutely adore Bregman.  He's no longer a superstar without the rabbit ball, but he's got probably the best plate approach in MLB right now (as good as Soto is he's a smidge passive).   So with a wide opening at 3B and a need for some offense I'd be ecstatic to add him.

That said, going back to the other thread from today, I think adding some thump, particularly left handed thump, is a bit more pressing on the offensive side of the ball.  So I would not poo-poo Bregman, but I would prefer a Soto or Ohtani.

My perfect world is probably to add Soto or Ohtani this winter and then Bregman out of free agency next winter.  As much as I've harped on "you can't count on guys reaching FA" in this case that might be the more realistic scenario.  I understand the Astros listening, but really doubt they'll actually go through with kneecapping their team right now.  Yet Bregman has a good shot of actually reaching FA since Altuve is on the same timeline and seems higher priority for an extension.

  • Like 2
Posted
32 minutes ago, Bertz said:

I absolutely adore Bregman.  He's no longer a superstar without the rabbit ball, but he's got probably the best plate approach in MLB right now (as good as Soto is he's a smidge passive).   So with a wide opening at 3B and a need for some offense I'd be ecstatic to add him.

That said, going back to the other thread from today, I think adding some thump, particularly left handed thump, is a bit more pressing on the offensive side of the ball.  So I would not poo-poo Bregman, but I would prefer a Soto or Ohtani.

My perfect world is probably to add Soto or Ohtani this winter and then Bregman out of free agency next winter.  As much as I've harped on "you can't count on guys reaching FA" in this case that might be the more realistic scenario.  I understand the Astros listening, but really doubt they'll actually go through with kneecapping their team right now.  Yet Bregman has a good shot of actually reaching FA since Altuve is on the same timeline and seems higher priority for an extension.

I agree with everything, but Bregman fits the needs of the team better. Let's take Ohtani out of the EQ, he just costs money. If I get to pick, I'm picking Bregman. 

Posted
12 minutes ago, TomtheBombadil said:

Beautiful all around player - one of the handful most complete in the game - but if I can pick an Astro to join Future 2.0 it would be the ultra skilled, LHH, and 26 YO Kyle Tucker. 

Aha! But you can't. 😄 We do have to be careful not to make the perfect the enemy of the good here. There are a lot of tremendous fits for the Cubs who (like Tucker) are absolutely, positively unavailable, or who (like Yamamoto, to pick one) are simply gonna sign elsewhere instead of with them. I like Bregman as a (yes, certainly imperfect for this roster, but) very good answer at a position where they have the opening, at a reasonable cost.

Posted

The way this club has seemingly been linked with everyone that is good over the last few weeks, it looks like we will get multiple somethings that are good this winter. Difficult to say who these players will be but the roster will continue to shape up beautifully. 

Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, JHBulls said:

The way this club has seemingly been linked with everyone that is good over the last few weeks, it looks like we will get multiple somethings that are good this winter. Difficult to say who these players will be but the roster will continue to shape up beautifully. 

The problem with being tied to everyone is it sometimes means being tied to nobody. It’s rumor season and dream me a little dream season. Writers need to sell copy. 

i do like that there is smoke attached to the Cubs. We have to see what happens. 

Edited by CubinNY
  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

If the Astros are floating Bregman as a trade candidate, it probably just means contract talks arent going their way and they are using the threat of a trade to lower the dollars.

Hey look... we are a team competing for the WS. The 3B market is terrible. Lets trade our 5 WAR 3B and replace him with....???

Edited by Cuzi

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
The North Side Baseball Caretaker Fund
The North Side Baseball Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Cubs community on the internet. Included with caretaking is ad-free browsing of North Side Baseball.

×
×
  • Create New...