Archive for November, 2008

L.A. offers Manny 2nd-highest salary ever

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Even if the Dodgers are unable to re-sign Manny Ramirez, no one will be able to accuse GM Ned Colletti of not trying. The Dodgers on Tuesday night offered Ramirez a contract with the highest average salary in Dodgers history, and the second-highest average salary among current players, Colletti told reporters Wednesday.

Alex Rodriguez owns the highest average salary in major league history. His current deal with the Yankees, signed last offseason, is a 10-year, $275 milllion pact, putting the average salary at $27.5 million. The Mets’ Johan Santana has a six-year, $137.5 million contract, an average of just over $22.9 million. That means that the average salary offered to Ramirez was somewhere between $22.9 million and $27.5 million per year.

Most likely, the Dodgers offered Ramirez a two-year contract worth just over $50 million. Colletti said the Dodgers also offered an option year, but declined to specify the exact length of contract.

In his two months with L.A., Ramirez hit .396 with 17 home runs and 53 RBIs. He was even better in the postseason, batting .520 with four home runs and 10 RBIs in eight games.

Cubs, Braves in running to get Peavy

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

In the first big showdown of the offseason, it’s the Braves vs. the Cubs for Padres right-hander Jake Peavy. Both teams continued to target Peavy as the general managers’ meetings concluded Thursday, and the Padres’ discussions with the Cubs could be expanded to include a third team, according to major-league sources.

The Braves’ package includes shortstop Yunel Escobar, either left-hander Jo-Jo Reyes or right-hander Charlie Morton and a third player, believed to be a top prospect, sources said.

The details of the Cubs’ proposal are not known and likely are fluid. The Padres could spin one or more of the players they would receive from the Cubs to get additional pieces from another team, sources said.

The Braves’ edge over the Cubs is that Escobar already is an established major leaguer, while Reyes or Morton also could help the Padres next season. The Cubs’ better young players are in the lower minors.

If the Cubs acquired Peavy, their rotation immediately would be considered one of the game’s best, particularly if they also re-signed free-agent right-hander Ryan Dempster to go with righties Carlos Zambrano and Rich Harden and left-hander Ted Lilly.

The team is willing to give Dempster a four-year contract, sources say, a decision that improves their chances of retaining the pitcher, who was 17-6 with a 2.96 ERA in his return to the rotation last season. Dempster, 31, almost certainly will want a deal in excess of the four-year, $48 million contract that the Mariners awarded free-agent right-hander Carlos Silva last winter. In a thin market for starting pitching, another club likely would be agreeable to such terms.

The Cubs are for sale, but team officials apparently believe that they can absorb the four years and $63 million remaining on Peavy’s contract while committing perhaps $50 million to Dempster over the same term.

If the Cubs acquired both pitchers, they might need to part with free-agent closer Kerry Wood, reduce their payroll by trading right-hander Jason Marquis and pursue a more inexpensive left-handed hitting outfielder than they previously planned.

The Padres are seeking young pitching in any deal for Peavy, who has a full no-trade clause but has informed the club that he is willing to go one of five National League teams. The Yankees and Angels will become viable options only if the Padres fail to reach agreement with one of Peavy’s preferred clubs, but such a scenario appears unlikely.

Peavy almost certainly would require some type of inducement to approve any deal. At minimum, he probably would ask for a full no-trade clause for the rest of his contract. He also could ask for a team to guarantee his $22 million option for 2013, or provide some other type of compensation. Padres general manager Kevin Towers said Wednesday that Peavy has established different criteria for different teams.

Free-Agent Rumors

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

The Yankees have been very aggressive in calling teams to see who might be available. They called the Astros about Roy Oswalt and Lance Berkman and were told they were not going to be dealt — Boston Globe

Kansas City, the New York Yankees, Chicago White Sox and Atlanta have indicated interest in Rockies CF Willy Taveras. — Rocky Mountain News

Interest exists in returning Edgar Renteria after the Detroit Tigers last week declined to pick up his option for 2009, making Renteria a free agent. The Cardinals would probably have interest in a short-term deal worth considerably less than the $10 million-a-year deal Renteria signed with the Boston Red Sox in December 2004. — St. Louis Post-Dispatch

The Phillies should be cautious going longer than two years, because Pat Burrell is 32 and his athleticism has declined. Jose Guillen got three years and $36 million from Kansas City last winter. Burrell certainly could seek a similar deal, but he might have to go to the American League, where he could be a designated hitter, to get it. Baltimore and Tampa Bay could be fits for him. — Philadelphia Inquirer

The Mets are still eyeing Mariners free agent Raul Ibanez. They need a consistent hitter in the outfield, and Ibanez seems to fit what GM Omar Minaya is looking for. — Boston Globe

Peavy to Braves, Cubs, or Dodgers?

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

According to Jake Peavy’s agent Barry Axelrod, the Braves, Cubs and Dodgers were among the five clubs that Peavy said he would consider after GM Kevin Towers asked last month for a “Top Five” to take into the marketplace. The other two clubs are the Cardinals and Astros; Towers probably isn’t focusing on those two, though, because the Cardinals reportedly aren’t interested and Towers has said the Astros aren’t a personnel match. Towers said he and Axelrod have discussed other teams as well. Teams that may not fit directly in a Peavy trade but have enticing young talent could play a role as a third trade partner, but that would be a new approach for Towers, who has never worked a three-team trade. “I’m not opposed to doing a three-way deal if necessary,” he said, “but dealing directly is definitely my preference.” Towers has made several trades with Cubs GM Jim Hendry and in August he and Dodgers GM Ned Colletti arranged a swap that sent Greg Maddux to the Dodgers and two minor league pitchers to the Padres. Towers and Braves GM Frank Wren have yet to make a deal with one another, but the clubs have discussed talent relating to a Peavy swap. — San Diego Union-Tribune