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MLB offseason grades

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MLB offseason grades

Colorado has not had a winning season since 2018, yet they’ve had the same manager since then and the same GM since 2021. They are rarely involved in rumors for free agents or trades; it’s just a weird situation over there.Strangely enough, the team’s first two additions cost the same: 1 year, M to Torres […]

Colorado has not had a winning season since 2018, yet they’ve had the same manager since then and the same GM since 2021. They are rarely involved in rumors for free agents or trades; it’s just a weird situation over there.Strangely enough, the team’s first two additions cost the same: 1 year, M to Torres and Cobb. Torres should provide much-needed reliable production to a troublingly thin lineup. I quite like his addition, even if it prompts some uncomfortable questions about the future of former No. 1 pick Spencer Torkelson, with Colt Keith expected to move to first in deference to Torres.Adding Naylor as a replacement for Christian Walker, who departed to Houston in free agency, was a solid move. Naylor doesn’t have Walker’s track record of consistency or his defensive chops, but he’s a more than sufficient fill-in. The departures of Joc Pederson, Kevin Newman and Randall Grichuk are a sneaky big deal; that trio was critical to the D-backs’ league-leading offense last season. Adding another reliable bench piece or two would be a smart play.

The defending champions earn the only A+ in our grades. Meanwhile, the Mariners and Padres came away with failing marks.

So far this MLB offseason, the reigning champion Dodgers have signed as many free agents as the rest of their division combined. But it’s the Mets who signed the most expensive free agent ever. The Yankees pivoted admirably after losing a generational star, while the Blue Jays came in second multiple times. The Diamondbacks managed to surprise just about everyone as the Padres and Mariners did almost nothing. The Guardians made a flurry of trades, and the Astros dealt away a superstar. The A’s have spent more than anyone expected, and the Cardinals … well, they announced their intention to make a trade.

  • Acquired RP Eli Morgan via trade from Cleveland
  • Acquired OF Kyle Tucker via trade from Houston
  • Signed SP Martin Perez to a 1-year deal
  • San Francisco’s other significant offseason move, signing future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander to a one-year deal, plays into that cultural reshaping under Posey. Verlander will pitch this season at age 42 and finally showed significant signs of decline in 2024. The Giants are not expecting dominance from the three-time Cy Young winner. They’re hoping he can supply guidance, professionalism and dependability.
Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Free agent Alex Bregman looms as the most obvious opportunity remaining for Detroit to make a big splash, given his relationship with manager AJ Hinch and clear positional fit on a Tigers roster that has a lot of intriguing young infielders but nothing resembling a cornerstone. Bregman would seem to check a lot of boxes for the kind of veteran star a team in Detroit’s position could build around, but the Tigers have thus far been unwilling to meet his hefty contract demands. If that changes and they spend big to land him, the whole narrative about their winter will shift. If not, this offseason could end up feeling like a fairly big missed opportunity.

Acquired IF Austin Shenton from Tampa Bay for cash

Acquired 2B Andrés Giménez via trade from the Cleveland GuardiansFrom the earliest days of this offseason, president of baseball operations John Mozeliak has been adamant and tremendously transparent about the club’s desire to trade third baseman Nolan Arenado. With the Cardinals in something of a transitional state as a franchise, both player and team thought it best to find a new home for Arenado and clear the way for some younger players on the St. Louis roster.The only reason this grade isn’t a flat-out F is because even with the lack of activity, the current Twins roster, if healthy, might be good enough to compete in this division in 2025. But for a club that would seemingly be motivated to be active in order to flush its disappointing 2024 and show that 2023 is a better reflection of the team’s potential — like what the Texas Rangers have done this winter — Minnesota has been maddeningly quiet. While there’s still time for a trade that could bump this grade up a bit before Opening Day, it’s tough to be too charitable at this stage.

Then there’s the question of Pete Alonso. The Polar Bear, who has spent the entirety of his six-year MLB career in Queens, remains a free agent. The Mets are the most obvious and likely landing spot for him, but it’s far from a given. A short-term deal for a higher average annual figure with opt-outs could be the path to a reunion. Retaining Alonso would make the already formidable Mets lineup into a real force and could turn their offseason from an A- into an A.Grades by division: NL East | NL Central | NL West | AL East | AL Central | AL WestTraded SP Jesús Luzardo to PhiladelphiaSigned OF Max Kepler to a 1-year dealIn an alternate timeline, an offseason existed that would’ve sprung the Nationals into genuine wild-card contention. Washington, buoyed by Patrick Corbin’s massive contract coming off the books, could’ve been active at the top of the free-agent market. But while Alex Bregman and Pete Alonso are still available, the Nationals appear likely to enter spring training without a truly significant addition.It’s not that St. Louis’ roster looks particularly poor as currently constructed. It’s that all the Cardinals talk this winter has been about subtracting rather than adding, not just in regard to Arenado but also with trade rumors involving closer Ryan Helsley and starters Sonny Gray, Erick Fedde and Steven Matz. However, all of that talk has amounted to nothing so far, leaving St. Louis with one of the least active offseasons of any team in MLB — and a grade that reflects it.The rest of the offseason, though, had shades of previous cautious winters. Despite jettisoning Cody Bellinger’s contract to the Bronx and remaining more than million below the first luxury tax line, the Cubs have remained reluctant to spend big in free agency. While Boyd is a nice pickup to shore up the back end of the rotation, there were several more impactful arms on the market that the Cubs showed little interest in pursuing. The additions of Pressly and Morgan will help a bullpen that was a clear weak spot in 2024, but that unit still looks a bit thin with spring training approaching.Signed 1B Paul Goldschmidt to a 1-year dealAcquired RP Robert Garcia from Washington for 1B Nathaniel LoweSigned SP Mike Soroka to a 1-year dealAcquired RP Grant Anderson via trade from TexasTerry Francona wasn’t going to come out of retirement to manage a team he didn’t believe could be a winner. And based on the flurry of moves executed by the Cincinnati front office since Francona’s surprise hiring in October, it seems the franchise is rightfully committed to assembling a roster worthy of being led by a future Hall of Famer. Retaining an underrated rotation anchor in Martinez via the qualifying offer was a strong start, and that looks especially savvy in tandem with the acquisition of Singer to reinforce the staff further. Hays and Lux should bolster a lineup that badly needed a boost, and Rogers was a nice late-January addition to strengthen the bullpen.It’s difficult to evaluate the Angels, an organization whose owner refuses to embark upon a much-needed rebuild. It is both commendable and irritating that Anaheim seems to think it can compete in 2025, but if that’s the mandate, then GM Perry Minasian did a capable job this winter.O’Neill, who cranked 31 taters last year, is a nice upside play, especially with Camden Yards’ left-field fence moving in to a reasonable distance in 2025. That he was the first free agent to receive a multi-year commitment from the current front office is news in and of itself. But he also comes with risk; the injury-plagued muscleman has played more than 113 games only once in his seven-year career and struggled enough against right-handed pitching last year (.693 OPS) that it’s fair to worry he might settle into being an expensive platoon option by season’s end.Selected RP Connor Thomas from St. Louis in Rule 5 DraftThis has been a transactional avalanche so overwhelming, so intimidating that people feel moved to clamor for fundamental changes to the structure of Major League Baseball. The Dodgers, however, have no time for your gripes.Morton, 41 years old, and Sugano, 35, are high-floor, low-ceiling acquisitions. Despite his advanced age, Morton is still a league-average hurler, while Sugano comes over from Japan having just won the NPB’s MVP award. Still, he’s no Roki Sasaki; the right-hander is more of a crafty soft-tosser than a flame-throwing strikeout monster. Kittredge and Sanchez are fine depth pieces who likely won’t swing the needle much in either direction.

Last year, Arizona missed the playoffs by a single game, in large part because their bullpen was unreliable. So far this winter, they’ve done absolutely nothing to remedy that problem. That’s the only thing keeping them from an A- grade.Signed SP Max Scherzer to a 1-year dealOffensively, the Yanks sought to replace Soto in the aggregate, which … duh. Adding the endearingly aloof Cody Bellinger in a swap with Chicago and veteran Paul Goldschmidt on a one-year pact gives the lineup some much-needed depth. Still, one of Bellinger, Goldschmidt, Anthony Volpe, Jazz Chisholm Jr. or Giancarlo Stanton will need to deliver an All-Star season to provide Aaron Judge an impactful sidekick. And don’t overlook the loss of Gleyber Torres. His frustrating mental lapses on the bases shouldn’t overshadow the fact that he was New York’s third-best hitter last season.

All of these players were on the move this winter, with Alex Bregman and Pete Alonso still unsigned.

It is, once again, rebuild time in Miami. And so the Fish, under new president of baseball operations Peter Bendix, are trading away any veteran player worth his salt. First baseman Jake Burger and starting pitcher Jesús Luzardo were both shipped off this winter in deals for prospects. Acquiring 1B Matt Mervis from the Cubs is a nice buy-low add, but for the most part, Miami’s moves are focused on being good about four years from now. — Mintz

Signed 1B Carlos Santana to a 1-year dealAs far as baseball operations goes, it has been a boring offseason in Tampa. That’s probably a good thing, considering all the turmoil swirling around their stadium plans.If ditching the city of Oakland weren’t brutal enough, the Athletics’ spending spree ahead of season one in Sacramento has been a jug of lime juice in an open wound.But all together, it’s actually a pretty solid offseason. The Jays needed power, so they signed Santander, one of the game’s top tater-makers. They needed lineup depth and infield defense, so they traded for Giménez, an all-time-great second-base glove. They needed bullpen upgrades, so they brought in Hoffman, arguably the second-best reliever on the market. They took a flier on a bounce-back year from a future Hall of Famer in Scherzer.If you’re scratching your head at some of those names being designated as “major moves,” don’t blame me; it’s slim pickings when looking at Minnesota’s transaction log. Since committing significant dollars to shortstop Carlos Correa a couple of years ago, the Twins have been a complete nonfactor in free agency. Their willingness to stretch the budget to accommodate a superstar in Correa was admirable at the time, but Minnesota’s reluctance to push further to complement the roster has been frustrating to watch. The Twins are one of just four teams (along with the Brewers, Cardinals and Marlins) that haven’t signed a free agent to a major-league deal this offseason, and they’ve yet to make a consequential trade (though they are reportedly exploring deals).

Signed SP Yusei Kikuchi to a 3-year dealBeyond the Crochet blockbuster, the White Sox have acted roughly as you’d expect a team in their position to act. They’ve held on to their higher-profile trade candidate in Luis Robert Jr., hoping he can reestablish his value in 2025 and eventually net a Crochet-esque return in the not-so-distant future. They’ve signed a handful of veterans on one-year deals, players who could be flipped in July to contenders seeking reinforcements. Their payroll has plummeted to one of the lowest marks in the league.This historic spending spree started less than a month after the triumphant championship parade, with the signing of 2023 NL Cy Young winner Blake Snell on a five-year, 2 million deal. That addition, alongside the arrival of Japanese phenom Roki Sasaki, gives the Dodgers a starting rotation that should steal souls and crush dreams all season long.Signed OF Austin Hays to a 1-year deal

ADVERTISEMENTAs such, it’s no surprise that the Rox have made just a handful of moves this winter. Estrada and Farmer are nice pieces, but neither will turn Colorado into a contender. Such is life in the isolated hall of mirrors that is Coors Field. — MintzIt’s also a lot to ask the rotation to repeat the sensationally high level of effectiveness it demonstrated in its collective breakout last year, which could leave less margin for error for the offense. While adding India and retaining Wacha — before he entered an open market that has proven to be quite lucrative for starting pitchers — were a strong start to the winter, the Royals’ lack of additions since then has resulted in something of an incomplete effort, particularly if K.C. wants to feel confident about returning to October in 2025.Signed RF Kirby Yates to a 1-year deal

Traded Josh Naylor to TorontoSigned OF Mike Tauchman to a 1-year dealOver the past three months, the famously frugal A’s have committed million to free agents, given DH Brent Rooker a million extension and acquired starting pitcher Jeffrey Springs and his not-insubstantial .5 million salary. For a club with a lengthy track-record of penny-pinching, this behavior is the equivalent of Preston Waters from “Blank Check.” But while the spending — which, by the way, is heavily motivated by the possibility of a union grievance — has grabbed headlines, it hasn’t transformed this club into an immediate contender.

Signed RP Chris Martin to a 1-year dealADVERTISEMENTBut preposterous as it might sound, there is more to life, and roster construction, than Soto.But that’s not to say that owner Hal Steinbrenner spent the winter penny-pinching. In the immediate wake of Soto’s departure, GM Brian Cashman and Co. initiated Plan B. Before the Mets could even introduce their new superstar, the Yankees agreed to an eight-year deal with lefty starter Max Fried, one of the game’s most consistent starting pitchers. A trade with Milwaukee to acquire all-world closer Devin Williams further solidified the Yankees’ run-prevention unit as the strength of the ballclub.Acquired DH/OF Jorge Soler from Atlanta via trade

AdvertisementAcquired SP Jeffrey Springs and RP Jacob Lopez from Tampa Bay via tradePerhaps there is one more major move left this offseason for Chicago to raise this grade into A-range — Alex Bregman? Dylan Cease? — but until then, an awful lot is riding on Tucker to deliver on the massive hype surrounding his acquisition, especially with him under contract for just this upcoming season.

Juan Soto is a Met now, the importance of which cannot be overstated. His crosstown leap for a mountain of moola represents a new era in New York baseball and makes the Mets contenders for the foreseeable future. Owner Steve Cohen — who also had a strong year off the diamond — is a man who can afford such luxuries as a 5 million ballplayer. The price is eye-popping. It also doesn’t really matter.Signed OF Anthony Santander to a 5-year dealSigned C Gary Sanchez to a 1-year dealSigned RP Jorge Lopez to a 1-year deal

Extended SP Michael Wacha on a 3-year dealWith a new ballpark name, new faces and, potentially, the departure of a franchise icon, times most certainly seem to be changing in H-Town. This winter felt like a watershed moment for the most successful organization of the past decade, a turning point in the crumbling of a once-mighty empire.Signed SP Trevor Williams to a 2-year deal

Signed 2B Thairo Estrada to a 1-year dealSigned RP Jeff Hoffman to a 3-year dealBehind the scenes, the Astros organization has been falling off in slow motion for some time. Internal strife between owner Jim Crane and former GM James Click led to Click’s firing just days after the 2022 championship parade. In the wake of Click’s departure, Crane oversaw a number of regrettable free-agent signings before finding a replacement in new head honcho Dana Brown. Those expensive moves — namely José Abreu and Rafael Montero — restricted the appetite for a Tucker extension and have limited the likelihood of a Bregman deal.Acquired OF Myles Straw via trade from the Cleveland Guardians

Acquired INF Spencer Horwitz via trade from Toronto (via Cleveland)New York responded accordingly, signing a quartet of starting pitchers. That included the re-signing of Manaea, who blossomed into a front-line contributor for the Mets in 2024. Holmes and Montas are both interesting, albeit very different, acquisitions for a pitching development group with an impressive track record. That group will try to make Holmes, who was a linchpin in the back of the Yankees’ bullpen, into a starting pitcher while hoping to unlock another level from Montas, who was a below-average hurler last season.Acquired C Mickey Gasper via trade from BostonSigned INF Josh Rojas to a 1-year dealSigned RP Paul Sewald to a 1-year dealSigned RP Andrew Kittredge to a 1-year deal

Unlike in the Burnes trade, which netted two young, cost-contollable pieces plus a draft pick, in exchange for Williams, the Brewers received only one long-term piece in Caleb Durbin while adding another player entering the final year of his contract in Cortes, whose 2025 salary is nearly identical to Williams’. Trading from the bullpen to address the rotation makes sense on the surface considering Milwaukee’s needs, but this was a far more short-term-oriented move than we’re used to seeing the Brewers make. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, though.For Milwaukee, it has been another offseason of familiar faces finding homes elsewhere, as star shortstop Willy Adames secured a massive free-agent deal with San Francisco and closer Devin Williams was shipped to the Bronx entering the final year of his contract. Adames’ departure was hardly a shock considering the price, but the trade of Williams was a more intriguing organizational decision. The move had similar vibes to the trade of ace Corbin Burnes to Baltimore a year ago — but with some key differences.Adames is a really good hitter but not necessarily a fearsome one. That player remains elusive for the Giants, who are seeking to reorient their ethos on the fly.Acquired OF Jose Sirí via trade from the Tampa Bay Rays

Acquired RP Ryan Pressly via trade from HoustonHopefully the White Sox can avoid being historically awful again in 2025, but there is still a lot more losing to come for this team. That’s by design, though, and the focus must remain on building an infrastructure at all levels of the organization that can better support a winning team at some point down the line. By those standards, this winter has generally gone according to plan. — ShustermanSigned SP Patrick Sandoval to a 2-year dealSoler will add pop to a lineup desperately in need of impact bats, but the 2025 Angels’ season will, as it always does, live and die with the health of Mike Trout and Anthony Rendon. If the future Hall of Famer and former all-world third baseman can stay healthy, this team has a chance. If they can’t, the Angels are cooked. The rest is just noise. — Mintz

The successful courting of Sasaki showed a different side of the Dodgers’ juggernaut, as the club could not simply bestow the young hurler with a massive contract, given that his earnings were limited by his status as an international amateur. Yes, the gobs of money spent on the rest of the roster surely played a factor in bringing Sasaki to town, but so did the club’s culture and vaunted player development apparatus.Even with their inaction this winter, the Padres should be in the playoff mix, but it’s difficult to envision this team, as currently constructed, outracing the Dodgers in the division.The failure to retain Soto means the Yanks cannot get anything higher than a B here, even if the aggressiveness of their backup plan was commendable.

Acquired SP Brady Singer via trade from Kansas CitySigned SP Jack Flaherty to a 2-year dealSigned IF Gio Urshela to a 1-year dealSigned IF Kevin Newman to a 1-year deal

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