I am warming on Kyle Seagar IF they take Ender to help even out the money for 2021. I know his 2022 option becomes guaranteed in a trade, but I'm comfortable with a 2 year commitment.
What would a trade for Seagar look like if it included Ender you might ask. Well, it shouldn't be that much. Seagar barely has any positive trade value once you factor in the 2022 option is guaranteed. Ender has negative value, adding him to the deal improves the return for Seattle. Riley still has positive value, but it's hard to know exactly what that is. I assume it isn't enough in a return for Seagar. So likely have to add a decent arm to sweeten the deal. Maybe Weigel.
The thing that worries me about including Riley in a Seager deal - EVEN if they take Ender's money back - is that you're going to have to play Duvall against RHPs more than you want AND it pretty severely limits any amount of money AA will have left to spend (assuming he has any).
For *hits and giggles, lets assume adding Seager minus Ender and Riley's 2021 salaries adds $9.2 million to the payroll. If our guess that AA is probably working with ~ $25 million to spend (at best), that leaves you ~ $16 million. One way to pinch a few pennies would obviously be to have A-Jax or Contreras as d'Arnaud's backup while having Travis play more than every-other day. Now you're down to $15 million. Another $1 million for the backup SS knocks that down to $14 million. Maybe you pinch a few more pennies there and have Delgado as the backup infielder since he has to be added to the 40-Man Roster. If you can get Reddick to platoon with Duvall, you're left with $10-$11 million to spend on a veteran SP and another pen arm - with nothing left to spend at the deadline.
I'm all for that personally - as Enscheff mentions, I think there are going to be some incredible bargains out there - particularly on the pitching side. The lineup would be balanced, and you'd have Waters and Shewmake not that far away in the event of an injury. The question - from a typical fan's standpoint - is going to be just how unhappy is the general fanbase going to be if you replace Ozuna and Riley with Seager and a platoon AND you wait really late to add whatever pitching slips through the cracks? Pitching ALWAYS seems to cost more than we think it should, so AA would have to stay incredibly disciplined and not jump too soon. The thing he'd have working in his favor is that he'd only be looking for an innings-eater and a 6th/7th inning guy - he won't need a big piece for either of those roles (unless one falls into his lap), and with most free-agents probably being offered 1 year deals he'll have the fact that we're a legitimate contender with all the important pieces in place as an additional selling point.
Last edited: