I can see one but not both of the Bonifacio/Beckham tandem.
Doesn't Swisher's money count if we DFA him or not? We still have to pay him.
I think we'll keep both Swisher and Bourn in hopes they establish some value before the trade deadline. This would imply Adonis Garcia starts the year in AAA if everyone is healthy. He'll probably be the first guy up if there is an injury to a position player. Unless the injury is to Aybar, in which case Castro would be called up.
Spring training will wash someone out.. Adonis might surprise some folks this next year. Defensively, he won't be great.. but I think he will be better than last year offensively.
but yes, I hope they keep both Bourn and Swisher.. Andrew McCrappy would be my DFA..
I'd keep Turdo on the 40-man and DFA Burawa.
Yikes, taking another look at this, it seems I've got this a bit mixed up. My numbers have Swisher getting paid double in 2016. Sorry for the confusion. The trade was consummated on the afternoon of 8/7. So the Braves paid Bourn and Swisher for 59 days of the 183 day league year in 2015. That amounts to $9.2m in 2015. The $15m sent by CLE covers Swisher for 2016, so the Braves effectively just pay for Bourn at $14m. So the Braves total outlay is then $23.2m. Will update above . . . thanks.
MLBTR: "The opportunity to trade both Michael Bourn and Nick Swisher in a single trade was a one-time opportunity that the Indians had to seize, the Plain Dealer’s Paul Hoynes writes. Even though the Indians only acquired infielder Chris Johnson, who was later released, they saved a bit of money and cleared the roster spots of two players who merely would have been very expensive bench options."
The article states that Cleveland "came out 4 million ahead in the deal", so it looks like your original 3.8 million difference in Cleveland's favor was correct.
MLBTR: "The opportunity to trade both Michael Bourn and Nick Swisher in a single trade was a one-time opportunity that the Indians had to seize, the Plain Dealer’s Paul Hoynes writes. Even though the Indians only acquired infielder Chris Johnson, who was later released, they saved a bit of money and cleared the roster spots of two players who merely would have been very expensive bench options."
The article states that Cleveland "came out 4 million ahead in the deal", so it looks like your original 3.8 million difference in Cleveland's favor was correct.
The basic takeaway from that deal remains pretty much the same. It was a clear signal that we were sacrificing competitiveness in 2016 to have a bit more financial flexibility in 2017. Even if it meant that net we were coming out 4M or so short. We also took a hit in the Kimbrel trade (absorbing Quentin's salary) so we could move BJ and have more flexibility in 2017.