BeanieAntics
Arbitration Eligible
This is the type of move that I really like. Find a player who excels at one or two things, but has a fixable problem holding him back. A smart organization identifies that, realizes other teams are undervaluing that asset, and then acquires that player with the thought of fixing him and getting a 3+ win player for cheap. Teams like the Dodgers and Red Sox do stuff like this a ton. Chris Taylor, Kike Hernandez, Max Muncy, Steve Pearce, Mitch Moreland... To one degree or another, those guys were all undervalued assets that just needed a smart organization to identify their problems and tap into their potential.
As a result, the Dodgers and the Red Sox have built incredibly deep offenses that have a lot of versatility. The Rays obviously won't be able to do it to the degree of those teams, but they can still acquire plenty of quality players for cheap like that. I kind of think that was the angle that AA was going for when he traded for Duvall and it just hasn't worked out yet. I bet he keeps working with Duvall to see if he can unlock a little extra out of him. But I expect moves similar to this from us in the future.
This is another reason why I think nsacpi is on to something when he suggests we trade for a Max Kepler type. Instead of acquiring just one more outfield bat that is really good, maybe we should look for guys who may currently be undervalued and acquire a number of them cheaply. Kepler isn't really a reclamation guy or anything, he was a 2.6 win player last year. But I do think its possible we acquire him for less than he is worth and try to tap in to 3+ win potential. The benefit of that approach is that you have a better chance of building offensive depth and you preserve more of your future flexibility.
I think that'd be a reasonable approach to the offense this offseason if you believe that Acuna/Albies/Freeman/Donaldson is a good enough core to carry you in the event that such an approach fails.