Corbin Carroll ranked #4 in MLB Now’s “Top 10 Right Fielders Right Now”

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - SEPTEMBER 24: Corbin Carroll #7 of the Arizona Diamondbacks avoids an inside pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the third inning at Chase Field on September 24, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This position is an improvement on the 2025 rankings, in which Carroll finished sixth. He was also fourth going into 2024, coming off his unanimous selection as the NL Rookie of the Year, so this ties a career high in these rankings for Corbin. He came ninth in the network’s recent ranking of the top hundred players across all positions. There, Carroll was behind Aaron Judge and Juan Soto, but Corbin also trailed the Dodgers’ Kyle Tucker in this list.

Here is the full top ten:

Top 10 Right Fielders Right Now 

  1. Aaron Judge, New York Yankees 
  2. Juan Soto, New York Mets 
  3. Kyle Tucker, Los Angeles Dodgers 
  4. Corbin Carroll, Arizona Diamondbacks 
  5. Ronald Acuña Jr., Atlanta Braves 
  6. Fernando Tatis Jr., San Diego Padres 
  7. Seiya Suzuki, Chicago Cubs 
  8. George Springer, Toronto Blue Jays 
  9. Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels 
  10. Wilyer Abreu, Boston Red Sox 

The 16th season of each Top 10 Right Now ranking considers player performance over multiple seasons, offensive and defensive metrics, both advanced Statcast data and traditional numbers, and expert analysis by the MLB Network research team. This might be the end of D-backs getting mentioned. Tomorrow is third basemen, and I suppose it’s just about possible Nolan Arenado could get mentioned, though I would be a little surprised. The other two categories remaining are first base and relief pitchers. Much as I regard Pavin Smith as under-rated (not least by his own fanbase!), I honestly do not expect Arizona to be troubling the list in either department.

Padres Reacts Survey: Does A.J. Preller have some moves up his sleeve?

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - DECEMBER 19: San Diego Padres President of Baseball Operations and General Manager A.J. Preller speaks at Michael King's contract press conference at Petco Park on December 19, 2025 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Matt Thomas/San Diego Padres/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Padres fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

The San Diego Padres and president of baseball operations and general manager A.J. Preller have had a relatively quiet offseason. Michael King was re-signed and Sung-Mun Song was added through free agency – those were the “headline moves.” There were pitchers like Kyle Hart, Ty Adcock and Daison Acosta who were added to the major league roster as well, but all the other moves for the Padres have come in the form of minor league contracts.

The offseason started with glaring holes on the San Diego roster. The team lacked starting rotation depth and a first baseman/designated hitter. Those holes are still areas of concern at least among Padres fans, but some clarity was gained after Padres FanFest – kind of.

Manager Craig Stammen said Gavin Sheets is the de facto first baseman as the team prepares for the start of Spring Training. The designated hitter position is potentially going to be used to get regulars like Manny Machado and Xander Bogaerts off their feet for a day, meaning the team will not have a true DH.

With Preller at the helm, a signing or a move late in the offseason cannot be discounted, but with pitchers and catchers set to report Feb. 12, time is running out to made additions before camp opens. Preller signed Nick Pivetta after the start of Spring Training last year so by no means is the roster set

The later it gets, it seems the “blockbuster trade” we were teased with during the MLB Winter Meetings is not going to happen. Gaslamp Ball asks you, the Friar Faithful, do you expect Preller and the Padres to make a significant trade or signing prior to the Start of Spring Training?

Results of the Padres Reacts Survey will be revealed later in the week.

Tanner Scott’s struggles are well known, but he’s key piece in uncertain Dodgers bullpen

Impossible as it might be, imagine a world in which Tanner Scott isn’t booed-by-his-own-fans awful. 

Imagine a world in which the former Shohei Ohtani Stopper resembles the reliever he was in the two seasons before he signed with the Dodgers. Imagine a world in which the $72 million left-hander could be counted on to come out of the bullpen in the late innings of a postseason game to shut down, say, Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper.

Imagine what that would mean for the Dodgers. 

Tanner Scott #66 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches in relief during the eighth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Dodger Stadium on July 21, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images

The defending World Series champions would be transformed if they can have an All-Star version of Scott as a high-leverage option in front of new closer Edwin Díaz. Their bullpen wouldn’t be a fatal flaw requiring minor miracles to remedy. Their bullpen would be a strength.

Dodgers management can picture it.

“Our full belief is that Tanner is going to come back and have a great year for us next year and be right there in the mix to pitch at the back end of games,” general manager Brandon Gomes said.

To anyone who watched Scott pitch last season, Gomes might as well have said he believed there wouldn’t be any traffic around Dodger Stadium on game days. 


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Scott posted a 4.74 ERA. He was charged with nine blown saves. He was sidelined for a month due to elbow inflammation. He returned in time for the postseason, only to be knocked out by an abscess on his posterior that required surgery. Scott himself described his performance as “kind of awful.”

But Gomes’ faith in Scott isn’t entirely unfounded. The velocities and spin rates of his fastball and slider were more or less what they were in 2024, when he was one of the best relievers in baseball. The Dodgers thought the problem was where the pitches were thrown. 

“I threw too many balls in the zone,” Scott said, “and paid for it a lot.”

Tanner Scott #66 of the Los Angeles Dodgers walks off the field after the seventh inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on May 28, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. Diamond Images/Getty Images

A comparison of Scott’s heat maps from recent years backs this claim. When he was pitching for the Marlins and Padres in 2024, Scott often elevated his fastball and threw his slider just outside of the lower corner of the strike zone. With the Dodgers last year, he threw his fastball lower. Many of his sliders were inside the strike zone.

In the first two months of the season, close to 60 percent of his pitches were in the strike zone, well above the league average of 49 percent.

“I tried to do something I don’t normally do, and I didn’t play to my strengths like I had the past two years when I was really good,” Scott said. “I kind of got away from that.”

Throwing more strikes resulted in opponents batting .182 against him with two strikes over the entire season, up from .107 the previous year.

The changes he would have to make are small. The difference in results could be huge. But the greatest obstacle he faces could be psychological.

Asked why he strayed from a proven approach last year, Scott replied, “Expectations.”

Expectations changed for the previously anonymous Scott when he moved to the Dodgers last offseason. His four-year, $72 million deal was celebrated by a fan base that just watched him pitch for the Padres and strike out Ohtani four times in four plate appearances in the National League Division Series.

Suddenly, Scott was the closer for the defending World Series champions. The burden crushed him.

Tanner Scott #66 of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches during the ninth inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on September 26, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. Getty Images

There were times, he said, he tried to be perfect. In others, he tried to not be perfect. Nothing worked. Manager Dave Roberts said he thought Scott was dealing with physical problems before he was placed on the injured list in mid-July.

“It was mentally exhausting,” Scott said.

That showed, Scott saying at one point late in the season, “Baseball hates me right now.” About a week later, he wondered whether he was tipping his pitches.

He sounded lost.

The time he spent on the injured list, he said, offered him a chance to regroup.

“It gives you time to reflect on what happened and what you’ve got to change,” he said. “It was a blessing in disguise that it happened. It gave me time to reflect, and I was able to watch and learn.”

Díaz was signed to a three-year, $69 million deal to do the job Scott couldn’t do, but Scott said the addition of a new closer didn’t bother him.

“That was huge,” Scott said. “Anyone that we add is awesome. It’s going to be fun. Our bullpen is stacked.”

Especially if Scott rediscovers himself.

Carlos Santana signing with Diamondbacks for 17th MLB season

Carlos Santana #41 of the Cleveland Guardians doubles against the Texas Rangers during the second inning at Globe Life Field on August 22, 2025 in Arlington, Texas.
Carlos Santana #41 of the Cleveland Guardians doubles against the Texas Rangers during the second inning at Globe Life Field on August 22, 2025 in Arlington, Texas.

Carlos Santana is headed to the desert. 

The Post’s Jon Heyman reported Tuesday that the veteran slugger and the Diamondbacks were “close to a deal,” although it was “not completely done but progressing toward [a] deal.”

MLB.com reported that he agreed to a one-year, $2 million deal with the team. The Associated Press added that the deal is pending a physical.

The switch-hitter, who turns 40 in April, is expected to split time with the lefty-hitting Pavin Smith at first base with Arizona. 

First baseman Carlos Santana of the Cleveland Guardians hops into his ready stance during the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Progressive Field on August 25, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. Getty Images

Santana has spent 16 seasons in the big leagues, debuting back in 2010 with Cleveland. 

He’s built out a long MLB career with his offensive prowess, hitting 335 long balls and leading all active hitters with 1,330 walks. 

But age has appeared to start catching up with him in recent years. 

Last season, Santana struggled at the plate, hitting .219/.308/.325 with 11 home runs in 474 plate appearances during stints with the Guardians and Cubs. 

He has proven to be an excellent fielder at first base even late into his career. 

Since 2016, Santana has ranked second among all first basemen with plus-44 outs above average. 

In 2024, he won the American League Gold Glove at first during his only season with the Twins.

Carlos Santana of the Cleveland Guardians doubles against the Texas Rangers during the second inning at Globe Life Field on August 22, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. Getty Images

The Santana move continues what has been a busy offseason for Arizona. 

Earlier this month, the D-backs acquired eight-time All-Star Nolan Arenado for pitching prospect Jack Martinez.

The franchise also reunited with right-hander Merrill Kelly and signed Michael Soroka to shore up their starting rotation. 

Offseason open thread: February 3

ATLANTA - JULY 26: Scott Proctor #43 of the Atlanta Braves is mobbed by teammates after knocking in the game-winning run in the 19th inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Turner Field on July 26, 2011 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Scott Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I hope everybody’s having a good evening out there. Here’s a random clip for you as the floor is now yours:

Michael Siani finds his way back to Dodgers

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - SEPTEMBER 19: Michael Siani #63 of the St. Louis Cardinals catches a fly ball by the Pittsburgh Pirates at Busch Stadium on September 19, 2024 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Michael Siani offseason rollercoaster looped around to make a second stop in Los Angeles, as the center fielder was claimed by the Dodgers off waivers from the New York Yankees on Tuesday. This comes 11 days after the Yankees claimed him off waivers from the Dodgers.

It’s been a busy offseason for the defense-first center fielder, who ended 2025 with the St. Louis Cardinals. Since then:

Siani was available this time around because the Yankees designated the outfielder for assignment last Wednesday when New York acquired pitcher Angel Chivilli from the Angels. He was previously designated for assignment by Los Angeles when the Dodgers finalized their four-year contract for outfielder Kyle Tucker.

In parts of four seasons with the Reds and Cardinals, Siani is a .221/.277/.270 hitter in 160 games and 383 plate appearances, and 17 Outs Above Average in the outfield.

Maybe the more interesting part of this transaction is the Dodgers, to make room for Siani, designated infielder Andy Ibáñez for assignment just three weeks after signing a one-year, $1.2 million contract.

Ibáñez was thought to provide depth to an infield that includes Tommy Edman coming off right ankle surgery. As a right-handed hitter, the 33-year-old Ibáñez has a 115 career wRC+ against left-handed pitching, and could have spelled Max Muncy at third base when needed.

Now, Ibáñez is in roster limbo, as the Dodgers have a week during which they will need to place him on waivers, trade, or release him. As someone who was previously sent outright to the minors in 2023 by the Detroit Tigers, Ibáñez if he clears waivers can refuse any outright assignment to the minors.

Aroldis Chapman denied chance to play for Great Britain in WBC over ‘lineage requirements’

Boston Red Sox pitcher Aroldis Chapman (44) in the first inning of a baseball game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Sunday, Sept 7, 2025, in Phoenix.
Boston Red Sox pitcher Aroldis Chapman (44) in the first inning of a baseball game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Sunday, Sept 7, 2025, in Phoenix.

Aroldis Chapman won’t be playing in the World Baseball Classic after all. 

The Red Sox closer was left off Great Britain’s roster after it was found that he “did not meet the blood lineage requirements” to play for the team, according to MassLive

Chapman, 37, was named to the preliminary roster and expected to be eligible to play for Great Britain as his grandparents emigrated from Jamaica, which had previously been a British colony. 

The eight-time All-Star is the latest big name to be ruled out of the WBC. 

Aroldis Chapman of the Boston Red Sox closes out the ninth inning when the Boston Red Sox defeated the New York Yankees on August 22, 2025 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Team Puerto Rico has floated the idea of potentially dropping out of the tournament after several key players, including Francisco Lindor, Carlos Correa, José Berrios and Emilio Pagan, were forced to withdraw. 

Venezuela has also been hit hard by insurance issues, losing José Altuve, Miguel Rojas and Carlos Narvaez.

Chapman, 37, played for Cuba in the 2009 World Baseball Classic. 

The flame-throwing southpaw had one of the best seasons of his career in 2025, posting a 1.17 ERA across 61 ⅓ innings while saving 32 games for Boston. 

Boston Red Sox pitcher Aroldis Chapman (44) in the first inning of a baseball game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, Sunday, Sept 7, 2025, in Phoenix. AP

Chapman was dominant out of the bullpen, and he received American League Cy Young and MVP votes for just the second time in his career. 

After signing with Boston in free agency last winter, Chapman inked a one-year, $13.3 million extension with a mutual vesting option for 2027 with the Red Sox near the end of the 2025 season.

Playing in their second WBC, Great Britain is led by Yankees star Jazz Chisholm Jr., who did not play for the team last time around in 2023 due to injuries. 

The tournament will kick off in Japan on March 5.

Poison? ESPN Predicts JJ Wetherholt Will Be NL Rookie of the Year

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 28: JJ Wetherholt #87 of the St. Louis Cardinals walks to the dugout prior to the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Houston Astros at Cacti Park at the Palm Beaches on Friday, February 28, 2025 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Jared Blais/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

This might be a sign of the apocalypse. For once, I’m really hoping that ESPN is right about something. Today, they have made the bold prediction that JJ Wetherholt will be the National League Rookie of the Year-sort of.

The 2026 season predictions for MLB’s top prospects on ESPN is a fun read for St. Louis Cardinals fans. They begin by saying they believe that the Philadelphia Phillies Aidan Miller will win the third base job by Memorial Day and win the NL Rookie of the Year, but they second-guessed themselves and said that the Pittsburgh Pirates Bubba Chandler would instead hoist that trophy. Finally, they decide on the St. Louis Cardinals JJ Wetherholt as the most likely to be the National League’s top rookie specifically because of the opportunity that Brendan Donovan’s trade provides him. Kiley McDaniel believes that JJ has the most opportunity to see full-time playing time compared to other top NL rookies which leaves a more likely path to NL Rookie of the Year.

If you saw JJ Wetherholt’s interviews during the Winter Warmup a couple weeks ago, you know that he believes that this type of preseason hype is “poison”. He said that he began to deal with “bold predictions” about his future during his college time at West Virginia.

JJ Wetherholt – “Where there were articles about me…all the preseason stuff, that’s what we label it. It’s poison. It’s cool to have people talk about you, but at the end of the day, you’ve got to perform. Those guys who hiked you up will be the same ones that tear down as soon as it goes bad. You try to tune all that stuff out and just do the work you can and hopefully that comes true”.

As I shared earlier in the winter, I think there’s good reason to hop on board the JJ Wetherholt hype train, but the optimism should be measured. I have yet to see a player not have to overcome struggles when they first break into the big leagues. The only exception I can think of is Albert Pujols. Major league pitchers have a way to find holes in your swing. The good/great ones adjust and overcome and I’m hopeful that will be JJ Wetherholt’s story. If he even comes close to ESPN’s prediction, I’ll be thrilled.

Is It Time the Astros Trade Jake Meyers?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - SEPTEMBER 21: Jake Meyers #6 of the Houston Astros bats in the fourth inning against the Seattle Mariners at Daikin Park on September 21, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I believe Houston needs to move on from their CF.

Astros fans, here I am again, the voice of reason. A few weeks ago, I floated the idea that it might be time to trade Jeremy Peña. Now I’m back with another uncomfortable but necessary conversation: the Houston Astros should seriously consider trading Jake Meyers while his value still exists.

This isn’t about disliking Meyers or dismissing what he’s brought to the organization. It’s about timing, roster construction, and the reality of where this team stands as it tries to extend its championship window. If you don’t move him now, his value may plummet and you may never be able to sell at this rate again.

Why the Astros Should Explore a Jake Meyers Trade

The Astros desperately need left-handed pitching to complement a rotation overloaded with right-handers. That alone should push Dana Brown and the front office to explore every viable trade chip they have. Moving Meyers could help address that need while simultaneously opening playing time for younger talent—most notably Zach Cole.

Meyers has been an above-average defender for much of his Astros tenure, but injuries have been a recurring issue. When he’s had to return from those injuries, the defensive confidence hasn’t always followed. Fly balls become adventures, throws become liabilities, and the overall impact starts to wane.

The bigger question, however, is offensive sustainability.

Was 2025 Peak Jake Meyers?

Teams around the league still value defense, and that’s where Meyers maintains trade appeal. But can he replicate last season offensively? Was that production a stepping stone toward more growth—or a fool’s gold season that inflated expectations?

I lean toward the latter. When all is said and done, last year may very well represent the best offensive season of Jake Meyers’ career. That belief matters even more when you consider the Astros’ depleted farm system, which doesn’t provide the same luxury of trade capital that other contenders enjoy. If Houston wants to upgrade areas of need, they must be strategic with the few movable pieces they have.

If Meyers Is Gone, Who Plays Center Field?

This is the natural follow-up question, and it has a legitimate answer.

I believe the Astros traded Jacob Melton because they see a higher ceiling in Zach Cole. Cole’s first major league home run understandably grabbed headlines, but his real value lies in his complete skill set. He can play all three outfield positions, runs well, owns a solid arm, fields at a high level, and competes at the plate.

That combination makes him a legitimate candidate to take over in center field, as he can play all three outfield positions.

Cole is only going to improve, and going to spring training with the big league club for the first time represents a critical developmental step. The Astros need to start identifying long-term everyday players, and Cole has the tools to become a quality, if not cornerstone piece if given the opportunity.

An Outfield Full of Questions

While the infield is overloaded with talent, the outfield remains unsettled. It underperformed last season and enters spring training with far more uncertainty than answers. Injuries and the Kyle Tucker trade exposed just how thin this group can be when things go sideways.

Jesús Sánchez adds another layer of complexity. He has league-wide value and a team-friendly salary, but unless Houston gets a meaningful return, moving him doesn’t make much sense. He provides insurance, especially if Cam Smith continues to look more like the player we saw late last season rather than the cornerstone prospect expected in the Tucker deal. He has experience, some pop and can play everyday, so the value is there both here and possibly elsewhere.

Smith’s situation is delicate. Once a young player has tasted the major leagues, sending him back down can have developmental consequences. Dana Brown and the coaching staff will have to balance patience with production. If he starts the season on the big league roster and they plan on starting him in right field, then Sanchez is a much needed insurance policy for the team in case Smith fails.

Yordan Álvarez and the Position Shuffle

Then there’s Yordan Álvarez. The Astros must decide whether to honor his preference to play the field or keep him primarily at DH to reduce injury risk. Beyond Yordan, the remaining outfield options are largely converted infielders: Zach Dezenzo, Shay Whitcomb, Brice Matthews, and the ongoing experiment involving José Altuve.

At some point, experimentation has to give way to clarity.

The Bottom Line

The Astros need to clear the outfield logjam and define their core starting outfielders. Moving on from Jake Meyers now, while his value remains intact, makes sense to me. I believe we’ve already seen the best version of him, and if another team believes there’s more upside, Houston should capitalize.

Whether the future belongs to Zach Cole, Brice Matthews, or someone else entirely, the Astros can’t afford to stand still. The time to make a decisive, forward-thinking move is now.

So I’ll ask the question again:
Should the Astros trade Jake Myers? If the answer is yes, who would you want in center field?

Will Harry Ford be the Washington Nationals starting catcher on Opening Day?

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 11: Harry Ford #5 of the Seattle Mariners smiles after the game against the Los Angeles Angels at T-Mobile Park on September 11, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. The Seattle Mariners won 7-6 in 12 innings. (Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Nationals are going to have a number of position battles this spring. Not many spots on the pitching staff are secure, and it is anyone’s guess as to who the first baseman will be. However, the camp battle that intrigues me the most comes at the catching position. 

Keibert Ruiz has been the full time starter since 2022, and has a contract that runs through the 2030 season. However, the last two seasons have been disastrous for Ruiz. His combined OPS since the start of 2024 is only .610, which is an issue for a bat first catcher. With the trade for top catching prospect Harry Ford, Ruiz is fighting an uphill battle to be the starting catcher.

It is telling that the first major transaction Paul Toboni made in DC was trading for a catcher. When speaking to fans yesterday, Toboni said there are no limits on Ford. He said the trade was a unique opportunity for the Nats that was only possible due to the fact the Mariners have such an elite catcher.

While Toboni has said all the right things about Ruiz, his actions tell me that he is high on Ford and has questions about Keibert Ruiz. If the organization had things their way, I think they would want Ford to win the job. That does not mean the job will be handed to the youngster though.

Ford is going to have to earn the job. While he has made his MLB debut, he is not proven enough to have a job handed to him. The Nats are committed to both players, so this will be a real competition. Ownership is committed financially to Ruiz and the new front office is committed to Ford because they are the ones who traded for him.

One interesting twist in this competition is the World Baseball Classic. Harry Ford will be playing for Great Britain during the event. It is a great honor for Ford, who has British parents, but it also could cost him in this competition. This could be a major opportunity for Ruiz or even Drew Millas to impress the new staff while Ford is away.

Great Britain play their first exhibition on March 3rd, and their last group phase game is on March 9th.  That means Ford will be gone for at least a week of Spring Training. Britain is in a group with the US, Brazil, Italy and Mexico. The top two teams in the group will advance. America will be a shoe in, but the second spot will be up for grabs. With Ford and Jazz Chisholm on the team, Britain has a chance to advance. If they do, Ford will be out even longer.

Despite this, I still think Ford should be considered the favorite to be the starting catcher. He has already proven he can do it at AAA. Last season, Ford hit .283 with an .868 OPS at the highest level of the minors. If the Mariners did not have Cal Raleigh, Ford would probably have more MLB experience by now.

The Nats are a young team with low expectations. That is the perfect spot for a player like Harry Ford. He will get the chance to learn on the job and get MLB reps. Unless he struggles mightily this spring, I have a hard time believing he will not be on the roster.

Another thing to consider is how the playing time will be split. Davey Martinez really rode his starting catchers hard, especially Keibert Ruiz. The new regime is probably going to be more open to playing two catchers. It would not be surprising if we see Ford catch 60% of the games and Ruiz catch 40% of them. That timeshare will be important for Ruiz in particular, who has suffered the wear and tear of being an everyday catcher.

The Nats also have depth options behind these two. Drew Millas has never been given an extended run of playing time, but has always looked good in his chances. He is also the best defender of the group. Despite being DFA’d, Riley Adams remains in the organization and has plenty of big league experience. He also has some interesting power upside that has not quite been realized yet.

With the addition of Ford, the Nats catching situation should be much better than it was last year. To be blunt, the production the Nats got behind the plate was abysmal. Toboni saw those numbers and knew he could not roll with the status quo. He added a young hot shot in Ford, while keeping the door open for the catchers on the team last year. 

Developing catchers has become a real art, and it is something the Nats have not been good at in recent years. Hopefully the new regime can improve the Nats catchers, particularly on the defensive side of the ball. 

If I had to bet, I think Harry Ford will be the Nats starting catcher. However, he is not going to be playing every day like Keibert Ruiz was under Davey Martinez. That will keep him fresh and give Ruiz one last opportunity to try to live up to his contract and potential. This is the happiest I have been about the Nats catching situation in quite some time.

Does Paredes New Deal with Astros Make Him More Tradeable?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - SEPTEMBER 21: Isaac Paredes #15 of the Houston Astros hits a home run in the eighth inning against the Seattle Mariners at Daikin Park on September 21, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The deal now gives the Astros, or any new team, two years of cost certainty.

Earlier today, Brian McTaggart of MLB.com reported that the Houston Astros have come to a contract agreement with 3B Isaac Paredes on a 2-year, $22.7M deal.

This deal having a second season with a club option (unless he finished Top 10 MVP) give the Astros a cost certainly on Paredes for the next two seasons, taking him through his final year of arbitration.

It also gives cost certainty to any team that should trade for him.

Paredes is a player that has high value on the trade market, and having the next two years salaries established would make it easier to deal him. The Astros currently have a clear logjam at 1B with Paredes and Christian Walker.

While the club would like to keep Paredes, GM Dana Brown has pined for a reliable lefty hitting outfield bat all offseason, and Paredes may be his best chance of getting one.

The Astros have had trade discussions revolving around Paredes all offseason with various teams. With a 2-year deal now in place taking him through his arbitration years, it may make setting compensation with an interested club easier.

Adrian Rodriguez, Ethan Medoza lead reloaded Texas infield

AUSTIN, TEXAS - JANUARY 7: Adrian Rodriguez #24 of the Texas Longhorns poses for a portrait on Texas baseball media day on January 7, 2026 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by The University of Texas Athletics/University Images via Getty Images)

David Hamilton. Trey Faltine. Jalin Flores. Adrian Rodriguez?

Over the last decade, the Texas Longhorns have featured elite play at the shortstop position, a standard that former Gold Glove winner Troy Tulowitzki has helped elevate since joining the coaching staff on the Forty Acres in 2019.

After playing second base, third base, and left field last year for the Longhorns, Rodriguez takes over the position that Flores played at a high level for three seasons as he works his way back from hand surgery.

The sophomore battled through pain after missing seven games when he was hit by a pitch against Missouri that forced him to only hit left-handed for the rest of the season and made it difficult for him to play in the infield.

As Rodriguez proved his toughness in earning Perfect Game Freshman All-American honors despite the injury, he was able to reach base safely in the final 25 games of the season, ultimately slashing .313/.410/.516 with 35 runs scored, 14 doubles, seven homers, and 23 RBI and tying for the team lead with 15 stolen bases.

The expectation is for Rodriguez to take a step forward in 2026 if he can stay healthy even though his offseason development was hampered by the hand surgery — his ability as a switch hitter ensures he always has favorable matchups, and his bat-to-ball skills were impressive even when it was painful for him to swing.

“He’s on track to come back from his hand surgery. He’s not swinging the bat right now, but he should be able to do that in about a week or two,” Texas head coach Jim Schlossnagle said last week.

“The biggest thing with him was we had to hold him back. If you tell him five swings is good, he’s going to take 50. So we’ve to be careful with him that way.”

The double-play partner for Rodriguez is junior Ethan Mendoza in his second season on the Forty Acres. After gaining strength and showing early signs of a power surge after transferring from Arizona State, Mendoza was set back by a shoulder injury that forced him into a designated hitter role and seemed to sap his improved power.

Adding about 20 pounds of muscle during the offseason while focusing on making similar gains in straight-line and lateral quickness has further increased Mendoza’s pop with hopes that he can translate the four home runs he hit over a six-game stretch last season into more consistent power across the entire season. At the least, improvements in his exit velocity should translate to a higher slugging percentage thanks to better gap-to-gap power.

The Southlake Carroll product was also successful in altering his approach at the plate after arriving at Texas, showing more patience and working deeper into counts to get better pitches to hit, jumping from 13 walks in 2024 to 36 walks in 2025, although the side effect was nearly doubling his strikeout rate, a concession that Schlossnagle is willing to make.

To replace Kimble Schuessler, the former catcher who grew into one of the best defensive first baseman Schlossnagle has ever coached, the staff moved junior Casey Borba across the diamond from third base back to his primary infield position from 2024.

The focus for the California product has been improving his functional athleticism and understanding of the position because Schlossnagle wants to have a regular starter at first base.

“It takes some time to learn bunt defenses, where to play, where to position yourself, what balls to go get that are towards the second baseman, how to communicate in running away from the ball knowing that the second baseman can get the ball. And you only get those things through repetition and in the games and in practice,” Schlossnagle said on the Around the Horns podcast.

At the plate, the staff has continued to emphasize the need for an opposite-field approach. Borba hit 12 home runs in 2025 and improved his slugging percentage by 86 points, but his batting average suffered because he was hitting the ball hard into the shifts regularly employed against him, which put a hard ceiling on his ability to get base hits.

Borba did flash his upside in the Austin Regional win over Kansas State, recording the first multi-home run game of his career with a grand slam and a three-run blast on his way to a career-high eight RBI.

For Borba to have a true breakout season and capitalize on the potential that made him a near top-150 prospect nationally by Perfect Game out of Orange Lutheran in California, Borba will have to use the entire field as a hitter.

Back across the diamond at third base, Schlossnagle teased a platoon between Stanford transfer Temo Becerra, a defensive-minded former shortstop with a high contact rate and little power, and Wichita State transfer Josh Livingston, who has mostly played first base and second base.

“He worked his tail off to become a serviceable or even better than that third baseman — he’s really done a nice job,” Schlossnagle said of Livingston.

After leading the Shockers in home runs (15) and slugging percentage (.555) last season, Livingston brings a left-handed power bat to the Longhorns lineup and should receive starts against right-handed pitchers in addition to the possibility that he could see time at designated hitter.

Asked to pick a position player who could surprise, however, Mendoza nodded to Becerra.

“I think he’s a really good baseball player. Obviously, he’s been there for a really long time. He knows what the game is about, and he’s just a grindy player, too,” Mendoza said.

Sophomore Liberty transfer Callum Early provides infield depth after batting .295 for the Flames last year, as does well-regarded freshman Maddox Monsour, who has the versatility to play in the outfield, as well.

Schlossnagle would prefer to have more depth in the infield, but the starting group has plenty of experience and enough untapped potential to make the trajectories of Rodriguez, Mendoza, and Borba intriguing storylines to watch in 2026.

Could There Be An Astros and Framber Reunion?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - AUGUST 27: Framber Valdez #59 of the Houston Astros pitches during a game against the Colorado Rockies at Daikin Park on August 27, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s only a motion away.

Could there be an Astros and Framber Valdez reunion? Maybe the odds are better than we previously thought?

Monday night on AREA 45 on Sportsradio 610, I posed the idea of the Astros getting back in on Framber Valdez with a short term, high AAV type deal with opt outs that would allow Framber to pitch in Houston this season, and go back on the market next year to search for his long-term deal without being attached to a Qualifying Offer.

Framber is the highest rated free agent still on the market, and the fact he has not signed yet is puzzling. Framber was easily the best pitcher on the market, and not only the best but most durable. Framber is baseball’s biggest ground ball machine and he eats innings. Framber pitched 192 innings in 2025, and has thrown 767.2 innings the past four seasons.

Five seasons ago was the last time Framber didn’t make at least 28 starts, and that was because of a fractured finger he suffered on a comebacker in Spring Training. He made 22 starts and pitched 134.2 innings.

For his career, Framber has a 3.36 ERA and 1.20 WHIP. His career groundball rate is 61.5%, and the MLB average is 42.4%. In an era of chasing the long ball, Valdez is the antidote.

Several teams have been linked to Valdez, but as the offseason has worn on, many have gone in different directions. There is now a question as to whether the long-term deal Valdez seeks will be available to him this season. Any team signing Valdez this season will also have draft pick forfeiture as a penalty for signing a free agent who rejected the Qualifying Offer. The combination of losing draft pick(s), losing international bonus pool money and paying out a long-term high value contract seems to have weakened teams’ desires to pay Valdez.

Enter the Astros.

Valdez clearly is familiar and comfortable in Houston. The Astros know Valdez’ temperament better than anyone, and know how to get the most from him.

For a team that may be offensively challenged (Houston has several ‘good hitters’ in it’s lineup but only one great hitter in Yordan Alvarez), having an elite rotation would catapult the Astros back into the World Series conversation. Framber is that kind of a difference maker.

A contract similar to the one Blake Snell signed in 2024, two years with a high AAV and an opt out, would make sense for all parties should the long term deal Valdez wants not be available.

Earlier today, Astros GM Dana Brown addressed the media and in his comments left the door open to a possible Framber reunion (Framber question in video at 3:06)

Adding Framber Valdez to a rotation that already has Hunter Brown, Tatsuya Imai, Cristian Javier and Mike Burrows would create a lot of competition for the sixth rotation spot and also give the Astros a chance to have two righthanders in the pen who can give multiple innings. Having multi-inning relievers in a short pen due to the longer rotation would be paramount for the club to keep key arms like Josh Hader and Bryan Abreu from being overworked.

It may be a longshot, but before today it seemed like a no shot.

Brown swooped in on Imai late and stole him when few in MLB thought Houston was a real player. Could he do it again with Framber?

Cubs position player pitchers: Jon Berti

When the Cubs signed Jon Berti as a backup infielder before the 2025 season, it seemed like a reasonable thing to do.

Berti had led the National League in stolen bases in 2022 with 41, and the following year posted a .748 OPS in 133 games with the Marlins, with 16 steals and 2.2 bWAR.

Even at age 35, it seemed like Berti would be a suitable infield backup. And, indeed, he started the season pretty well. On May 1 he was batting .306/.370/.347 (15-for-49) in 20 games, with seven stolen bases.

But yikes, after that Berti just stopped hitting. He didn’t play much, either, once Matt Shaw was recalled from Triple-A Iowa. After June 1 Berti started just four times and from May 2 until he was released in August, batted just .118/.151/.118 (6-for-51) with 11 strikeouts.

And so it was that Craig Counsell started using Berti as his mop-up pitcher in blowouts. Berti pitched four times in July:

  • The ninth inning of an 11-3 win over the Cardinals July 4
  • The eighth inning of an 8-1 loss to the Twins July 8
  • The ninth inning of a 12-4 loss to the Royals July 21
  • The eighth inning of a 12-5 loss at the White Sox July 25

Overall, Berti threw 3.2 innings and allowed four hits and four walks and three runs.

The most interesting of those outings was the one in the blowout win over the Cardinals July 4, the one in which the Cubs set a franchise record with eight home runs.

They led 11-0 going into the ninth so Counsell figured maybe he’d save the bullpen by letting Berti pitch. Whoops, bad idea. Berti got hit hard, allowing two hits and three walks. As noted, the Cardinals scored three times and had two runners on base (both in scoring position) with two out and they were probably one hit away from Counsell having to warm up a real pitcher.

During that inning, though, Berti did make this acrobatic fielding play [VIDEO].

That pitch was thrown very, very slowly:

Berti appeared in just four more games for the Cubs after his July 25 pitching outing on the South Side. No one picked him up after the release. It’s safe to assume his career is over — but he’ll always have that one year where he led the NL in steals.

Oh, and he used to absolutely kill the Cubs while with the Marlins. In 15 career games vs. the Cubs, Berti batted .319/.389/.532 (15-for-47) with three home runs, by far his best OPS against any team. Maybe that’s why he couldn’t hit as a North Sider.

Expectations still heavy for Mariners, even with successful 2025 behind them

TORONTO, ONTARIO - OCTOBER 19: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners looks on after grounding into a double play during the third inning against the Toronto Blue Jays in game six of the American League Championship Series at Rogers Centre on October 19, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was very sad, he thought. The things men carried inside. The things men did or felt they had to do.
-Tim O’Brien, “The Things They Carried”

There is a powerful Tim O’Brien short story, part of a larger eponymous collection, called “The Things They Carried,” which catalogues the physical weight of the individual items a group of soldiers in Vietnam carried, as a way to interrogate the mental weight of what their assignment demanded they carry.

Baseball is a far cry from the foxholes of war—part of the reason people are consuming sports content especially fervently right now, I think, as an escape from The Horrors—but just as the soldiers in O’Brien’s short story are forever changed by the psychological weight of the things they now carry, so too are the 2025 Mariners altered by the weight of promise fallen short. I was personally taken aback, at a post-season media event held in late October, at how fresh the wounds still felt: I was expecting the team officials in attendance (Jerry Dipoto, Justin Hollander, Dan Wilson) to still be feeling the sting of disappointment but overwhelmingly proud of how far the team came, farther than any other Mariners team ever had. Instead, it was clear the bones of heartbreak hadn’t quite knitted: eyes were wet, mouths were tight, and the hurt hung over the room palpably.

Three months later, that pain hasn’t dissipated, but it has calcified, hardened into a sharp point of purpose. This past weekend, the Mariners held the first Fan Fest the team has sponsored since 2019, and while the overarching theme of the weekend was a joyous riot of excitement, from players and personnel alike there was a distinct sense of a job not done and an acute awareness of the task ahead.

Cal Raleigh, now a (mostly) year-round Seattle resident, was in attendance both days, thrilling fans wherever the should-have-been MVP showed up. He brought fans to their knees as a surprise guest in the photo opp area, oversaw a gender reveal, and generally sent whoever was in his vicinity into transports of delight. But while enjoying the outpouring of love and support, Cal was contemplative about the year that was, focused on the year that will come.

“Obviously last year was great. I’m glad we got to celebrate that, it was definitely a special season,” he said. “But at the same time, you have to be able to turn the page and look forward to a new year and understand that what we’re trying to accomplish here is win a World Series and setting the standard, the bar, the expectations super-high, because that’s where we want to be.

I think everybody’s going to be excited going into camp. It’s going to be hard work, though. It’s not going to be easy. New years bring new challenges.“

From all the Mariners in attendance this weekend, the message was clear: job not finished. But there’s also an understanding of the weight of expectations, the bar that’s now been set. George Kirby delivered his expectations for this upcoming season in typical unflinching Kirby style.

“I feel like I can speak for a lot of the guys, getting to where we did,” said Kirby. “I feel like that’s the floor for us this year. And anything else just kind of doesn’t cut it. So being able to get a taste of that, and then losing and seeing Toronto go on to celebrate all that stuff puts a fire in your stomach.”

Getting so close, but falling just short: the confusing cocktail of should-be pride mixed with with the sharp metallic tang of disappointment. Josh Naylor expressed a similar sentiment, although with a typical Naylor pragmatic twist.

“Yeah, obviously the loss was not easy to take. It sucked, especially knowing that we had them,” said Naylor. “But it is what it is, and it wasn’t meant for us to win it. God has really weird plans for people, and I trust Him. So I’m just gonna go out there every day and try to win ballgames. But having that experience and getting that close, I hope it fuels everyone in the off-season to come back stronger: a little bit bigger, a little bit better, a little bit smarter. It has for me. I’m trying to grow every single day in the off-season, trying to get 1% better in some sort of area. Obviously not every day can be sunshine and roses, but you can pick a little area to grow in.”

If the expectations are heavier than they’ve ever been, there’s a comfort in the fact that those expectations are now matched by experience. Kirby spoke about finding “learning lessons” from specific situations in postseason games and using that as a focus for training, physically and mentally, during the off-season. Emerson Hancock took a broader view on how that post-season experience might shape the course of an entire season.

“I think ultimately it makes you better, the whole experience of being in the postseason, understanding what’s at stake, the pressure, it makes you better,” said Hancock. “It stings. It’s hard. You know, you get to right there and you’re just almost—but it makes you want to get back there even more. And I think the people that were a part of that, now know that we go through the 162 game schedule like, all right: we grind through it, we know what’s at the end of this thing. We know what we want to play for and what we want to do.”

But for all the looking forward, players were also open about the fact that this is the kind of pain that doesn’t ever really go away. It becomes part of your story, part of your elemental self, something that can be managed and transformed into something productive, but can never truly be eliminated.

“That’s something that you carry with you, an experience that you had” said Julio Rodríguez, reflecting on the loss. “That’s something that I will carry with me, the experience that I had in those games, and I feel like it has helped me to become a better player. And bring a little adjusted mentality for this new year.”

The weight of the loss is still palpable when Cal Raleigh reflects on the season: despite the new heights he’s reached in his career, going from a catcher who never made a prospect top 10 list to a household name and narrowly missing out on an MVP award, all his personal accomplishments are wrapped up in a season where the team fell short.

“It was hard,” said Raleigh, sighing heavily. “Part of me is like, I don’t know if you ever really move on. You’re going to be feeling that one for a long time. And it doesn’t matter if you eventually go on to win it or not, you’re still going to look back and be like, that season, it felt like we had a real chance, a real shot. So I think part of me will always feel that.

But at the same time you can’t dwell on it. You have to understand that chapter is closed, and we’re opening a new one. It’s going to be a lot of fun this year, and also very challenging. We’re going to have to do some things and make sure that we’re improving and staying on top of things, and not just being satisfied with where we’re at.“

Maybe no Mariner knows more about closing the book on a painful chapter than skipper Dan Wilson, who understands both the disappointment that is baked into the sport of baseball and the particular experience of a Mariners team falling short. But that experience puts him in a unique position in order to be able to lead this club into a year heady with expectations.

“I think every time you’re eliminated, it’s disappointing. I mean, this one was maybe extra disappointing, because we were so close, but at the same time, I think it’s part of being an athlete, it’s part of being a baseball player. We talk about baseball being that game of failure, and you have to move on in a lot of ways. So yes, it becomes part of your story,” said Wilson. “I think our guys do a really good job of taking that and making it a motivator rather than something that slows them down. And I don’t anticipate that being any different. These guys are determined, as we all are, to get back there and get all the way to where we want to go to, which is that World Series championship.”

For Wilson and his team, the trick will be taking the things they’ve carried over the off-season – the disappointment, the hurt, the desire – and crystallizing that into purpose in 2026.

“Postseason baseball is different. When you experience it, you want to do everything you can to get back there,” said Wilson. “I think that’s where this fire came from with these guys. They want to get back there. They want to be a part of postseason baseball for the foreseeable future. And that’s what Mariner baseball is going to be about.”

“When you get a taste of it, there’s nothing like it.”