On deadline day for doing arbitration contracts, MLB beat reporter Jamal Collier did a mailbag. Its been a notable week with more Bryce Harper rumors and the Nats running their payroll right up to the limits of the Luxury tax cap with the Brian Dozier signing.
Here’s the questions he took:
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Q: Harper is on my mind. Spring Training is days away. Aren’t the guys worried about will happen? No way they can be just “whatever,” right? Especially if he ends up in Philly?
A: If they can’t figure out from the slew of Mike Rizzo moves what the team’s intention is with Bryce Harper by now … well maybe a sledgehammer would be more subtle. Its mid January and Rizzo has made 8 moves that should impact the opening day 25-man roster and another 2-3 that may be impactful down the road. He’s now got the payroll north of $190M.
So what if he goes to Philly? I think the whole “don’t trade within the division” is nonsense. Yeah we’ll see him a lot. But its a closed loop; he has to go to one of the 30 teams in the league, and we are bound to see him no matter who he plays for. There’s 30 teams, and only half of them are even frigging trying to win right now, and then halve that again for those who even have payroll room to compete for Harper (or Machado). And Philly is one of them.
As far as “the guys” … are you talking about his team-mates? Well one of two things would be true about his teammates:
- They hate his guts and are like, “good riddance.”
- They are his fellow union members and want him to get every dollar possible because their union so royally screwed them selves in the last couple of CBA negotiations.
Collier notes that his fellow players know this is “part of the business” that Harper may eventually leave, and that he’s been a national figure since he was 16.
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Q: If Harper re-signed with the Nationals, how would they work the outfield? Would Victor Robles start the season in Minors? Or would they trade Eaton?
A: You’d have to trade Adam Eaton. And you’d be trading low. You can’t move Juan Soto … he’s making MLB Min and could be an MVP candidate. You really shouldn’t move Victor Robles; he’s supposed to be a *better* prospect than Soto, so you’re hoping for 4-5 win performance for (again) MLB min salary. These are the kinds of players you keep when you’re trying to win. Putting Robles in the minors would be an absolute waste, and if that was their plan then i’d advocate attempting to flip him as a centerpiece for a top 20 player in the league (like a Corey Kluber or something).
Collier agrees.
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Q: If Harper returns, how does it change how the team will handle Anthony Rendon negotiations?
A: Hmm. That’s a good question, because despite the fact that Anthony Rendon dropped in the draft over injury questions he’s actually been pretty solid as a pro. I liken Rendon’s reputation and capabilities to Adrian Beltre; fantastic defender, sneaky good at the plate, and suddenly you look up and he’s put up a hall of fame career.
Will that translate into a $200m salary? Probably not. But Rendon is no dummy, and neither is his agent Scott Boras.
That being said … can the Nats do this whole “stars and scrubs” thing for ever? If you have 5-6 guys on high 8-figure salaries (Scherzer, Strasburg, Corbin, Harper, Rendon) can you put a good enough team behind them?
I personally think Rendon is an incredibly important player for this team, even if he isn’t that high a profile. And because he’s not high profile, I think you can get him for $20M/year or something like that on a longer term deal, which would be a steal value-wise. I hope committing money to Harper doesn’t close the door on a Rendon negotiation.
Collier says …. he has no idea, nor does Rizzo.
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Q: How should we look at 2019 Dozier replacing ’18 Daniel Murphy? Both are above-average offensive second baseman with liability at fielding. Is this an upgrade, downgrade or equal move?
A: Absolutely an upgrade; Daniel Murphy had negative bWAR last year while even playing through injury Brian Dozier contributed. If Dozier is healthy and performs at his 2015-2016 level again … watch out this is one of the steal signings of the off-season.
Collier basically agrees and gives good contextual numbers.
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Q: Do you think Washington will add a starter? If it does, I think Wade Miley is fine.
A: I think they will … but not a guy to replace Joe Ross in the rotation. I think they’ll be looking for MLFAs with 5/1 or 6/1 buy-outs, like Edwin Jackson or Tommy Milone signings last year. I can’t see them breaking the luxury tax for a 5th starter.
Collier agrees, remembering that the team has already signed Henderson Alvarez for just such reasons.