Tigers 6, Yankees 5: Miguel Cabrera homered for the third straight game. The dude is good. The Tigers have won six straight and, with the White Sox loss, pull to within a half game. Speaking of the Tigers, I found out last night that one of the people I hung out with at Comerica Park [...]
Tag Archives: carlos quentin
Padres sign Huston Street to two-year, $14 million extension
Carlos Quentin was handed a three-year, $30 million deal last week. And now the San Diego front office has locked up another potential trade chip. From Corey Brock of MLB.com comes word that the Padres reached agreement Sunday on a two-year, $14 million contract extension with closer Huston Street. The deal also carries a $7 million [...]
Padres sign Huston Street to two-year, $14 million extension
Carlos Quentin was handed a three-year, $30 million deal last week. And now the San Diego front office has locked up another potential trade chip. From Corey Brock of MLB.com comes word that the Padres reached agreement Sunday on a two-year, $14 million contract extension with closer Huston Street. The deal also carries a $7 million [...]
Angel Pagan makes his ‘play of the year’ bid
Examining The Carlos Quentin Extension
We won’t know the results of Carlos Quentin’s extension with the Padres until after the 2015 season, when the contract expires. But the deal’s consequences are already apparent for the 29 other MLB teams: there’s one less bat on the trade market, one less player headed for free agency, and one more clue that teams are hesitant to surrender top prospects for short-term acquisitions.
The trade market, light on power bats to begin with, will be affected. There’s now one less option out there for GMs seeking right-handed power, so the few teams that do have a power-hitting trade candidate might now enjoy additional leverage in trade discussions. The Cubs, for example, might have more success peddling Alfonso Soriano to contenders (though they’ll presumably absorb the majority of his contract if they complete a trade). Josh Willingham of the Twins, who’s signed to a reasonable three-year, $21MM contract, could also draw additional interest following the Padres’ deal with Quentin.
The Padres and Quentin agreed to a three-year, $30MM extension that values the right fielder at the level of Michael Cuddyer (three years, $31.5MM) and Edwin Encarnacion (three years, $29MM). Players such as Nick Swisher, Melky Cabrera and Cody Ross could benefit this offseason when they hit free agency. Quentin, Encarnacion and Andre Ethier are now unavailable after signing extensions, so the few remaining free agent bats can expect to be pursued aggressively this coming offseason. It sure beats hitting free agency in a market saturated with star-caliber players.
Quentin’s extension provides evidence for a widely-held suspicion about the midseason trade market. Teams have seemed hesitant to trade top prospects for players on the brink of free agency now that baseball’s collective bargaining agreement prevents clubs from obtaining draft pick compensation for players acquired midway through the final year of a contract. The recent deal between the Padres and the CAA Sports client appears to be further evidence that teams are unwilling to trade their best prospects for players nearing free agency.
Instead of trading Quentin for a middling prospect or two and, perhaps, some salary relief, general manager Josh Byrnes offered the San Diego native a contract that buys out three free agent years. While some will criticize the decision by a small-market team to commit a significant percentage of payroll to a defensively-limited player with a history of injury issues, there’s no doubt Quentin would have been of interest to contending teams this summer. The Indians, Pirates and Dodgers are among the clubs that could use an offensive upgrade in the outfield. But teams around the league didn’t tempt Padres executives with overwhelming trade offers. Instead, those teams will hold onto their prospects or trade them for players who will remain under team control beyond 2012. It’s possible that Quentin and other players headed for free agency no longer seem valuable enough to justify parting with highly-regarded prospects.
I wonder if the Padres would have made Quentin a qualifying offer following the season had he stayed in San Diego without signing a long-term deal (teams must extend qualifying offers to free agents to be eligible to obtain draft pick compensation). The qualifying offers are expected to fall in the $12.5MM range, and the Padres apparently value Quentin as a $10MM player on a multiyear deal, so $12.5MM for one year doesn’t sound unreasonable given the possibility of draft pick compensation. If nothing else, additional picks provide teams with a larger budget and more flexibility for the draft, which remains the most efficient way for organizations to obtain impact talent.
Photo courtesy of US Presswire.
More on Quentin
Carlos Quentin did get a no-trade clause, so the Padres intend on keeping him.
The contract also includes a no-trade clause, which was key for Quentin, who expressed a desire to remain in his hometown. The clause, as well as the 320 games played buyout trigger, represents a break from the Jeff Moorad mold, as the former super-agent had enacted a no NTC or incentives policy in San Diego. This isn’t to say that the Padres and Josh Byrnes will throw around clauses and incentives with reckless abandon, but it’s certainly notable that Quentin’s deal is inclusive of both.
I remember when Bronson Arroyo signed a team-friendly deal with the Red Sox and was promptly traded. I thought something like that might happen with Quentin, but the no-trade clause kills that possibility.
And That Happened: Sunday’s scores and highlights
Pardon me if I seem discombobulated, but I’m suffering from weekend movie whiplash. On Friday night I saw “The Dark Knight Rises.” Yesterday I saw “Safety Not Guaranteed.” If you can find me two movies out right now that are more dissimilar in terms of tone, themes, budget and every other single other relevant measure,…![]()
West Notes: Rangers, Padres, Giants
The Rangers head into their Sunday night matchup against the Angels with an ailing starting rotation. The Rangers have scratched Roy Oswalt from his start tomorrow and Colby Lewis is scheduled to have his forearm examined tomorrow before he’s given the green light to make his scheduled start on Tuesday. The Rangers don’t believe Oswalt’s injury is serious, but he and Lewis can both wind up on the disabled list, according to Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Elsewhere from the AL and NL West:
Despite their rotation woes, the Rangers‘ chief trade deadline goal is to add bench depth, tweets Scott Miller of CBSSports.com.
With the signing of Carlos Quentin completed earlier today, the Padres are now turning their attention to closer Huston Street. Miller tweets talks are ongoing, but nothing is close right now.
The Giants are not considering Rick Ankiel to fill their need for a power bat off the bench, tweets Andrew Baggarly of CSNBayArea.com. Baggarly says the Giants crave a right-handed bat at both corner infield spots and the outfield.
Add the A’s to the list of team interested in the Padres‘ Chase Headley, tweets ESPN’s Buster Olney.
Extending Quentin
The Padres extended the contract of Carlos Quentin three years, and I agree with Getting Blanked:
The deal comes at a curious time for San Diego who were reportedly fielding trade offers for the outfielder who turns 30 next month and has a long history of getting injured. At the same time, the Padres have difficulty acquiring and developing productive hitters–something Quentin undoubtedly is when healthy. The deal compares favorably to ones recently handed to Twins outfielder Josh Willingham, Blue Jays designated hitter Edwin Encarnacion, and Colorado Rockies outfielder Michael Cuddyer and shouldn’t be too much of an albatross for San Diego if Quentin can’t stay on the field.
I don’t know if this deal kills the trade offers, however. If Quentin didn’t get a no-trade clause, then this deal might make him easier to trade. He would be a free agent at the end of the season, and now he’s locked up. Since teams no longer get draft picks when acquired players leave at the end of the season, the Padres might be able to get more for Carlos if the other team has a fixed cost in acquiring him.
Extending Quentin
The Padres extended the contract of Carlos Quentin three years, and I agree with Getting Blanked:
The deal comes at a curious time for San Diego who were reportedly fielding trade offers for the outfielder who turns 30 next month and has a long history of getting injured. At the same time, the Padres have difficulty acquiring and developing productive hitters–something Quentin undoubtedly is when healthy. The deal compares favorably to ones recently handed to Twins outfielder Josh Willingham, Blue Jays designated hitter Edwin Encarnacion, and Colorado Rockies outfielder Michael Cuddyer and shouldn’t be too much of an albatross for San Diego if Quentin can’t stay on the field.
I don’t know if this deal kills the trade offers, however. If Quentin didn’t get a no-trade clause, then this deal might make him easier to trade. He would be a free agent at the end of the season, and now he’s locked up. Since teams no longer get draft picks when acquired players leave at the end of the season, the Padres might be able to get more for Carlos if the other team has a fixed cost in acquiring him.
Extending Quentin
The Padres extended the contract of Carlos Quentin three years, and I agree with Getting Blanked:
The deal comes at a curious time for San Diego who were reportedly fielding trade offers for the outfielder who turns 30 next month and has a long history of getting injured. At the same time, the Padres have difficulty acquiring and developing productive hitters–something Quentin undoubtedly is when healthy. The deal compares favorably to ones recently handed to Twins outfielder Josh Willingham, Blue Jays designated hitter Edwin Encarnacion, and Colorado Rockies outfielder Michael Cuddyer and shouldn’t be too much of an albatross for San Diego if Quentin can’t stay on the field.
I don’t know if this deal kills the trade offers, however. If Quentin didn’t get a no-trade clause, then this deal might make him easier to trade. He would be a free agent at the end of the season, and now he’s locked up. Since teams no longer get draft picks when acquired players leave at the end of the season, the Padres might be able to get more for Carlos if the other team has a fixed cost in acquiring him.
Padres, Carlos Quentin agree to three-year, $27M extension
One of the top available bats is now off the market. According to CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman, Padres outfielder Carlos Quentin — who had been drawing trade interest from a number of teams — agreed to a three-year, $27 million contract extension on Sunday morning with San Diego. The deal could carry a total value…![]()
Padres, Carlos Quentin Nearing Extension
Carlos Quentin and the Padres are on the verge of agreeing on a contract extension, people familiar with the talks told Jon Heyman of CBSSports.com. The deal is believed to be for about $27MM over three years and with a very reachable bonus that could boost the total to $30MM. Quentin’s deal includes a full no-trade clause, according to Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports (via Twitter).
Quentin’s name has popped up quite a bit in trade rumors with the outfielder drawing interest from several clubs including the Pirates, Giants, Indians, and Reds. The outfielder has looked strong this season since returning from knee surgery, hitting .273/.389/.525 with nine homers in 40 games.
Heyman notes that the club viewed Michael Cuddyer, Edwin Encarnacion, and Josh Willingham – who all received three-year deals – as fair comps for the 29-year-old. Of the three, Quentin’s deal is most similar to Cuddyer’s, whose contract is worth $31.5MM over that span.
In years past, the Padres’ financial situation has hampered them from keeping some of their biggest stars, but San Diego was able to retain the outfielder thanks in large part to their new ownership. Both the current group and the incoming group signed off on the deal to keep Quentin in San Diego.
Heyman notes (via Twitter) that the extension hurts the corner outfield/hitter market and identfies Corey Hart and Hunter Pence as two options who could have increased value.
The Padres want to sign Carlos Quentin and Huston Street, not trade them
Carlos Quentin and Huston Street are two of the most popular trade chips around, so the assumption has been that the Padres will deal them before the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline. Not so, reports Jon Heyman of CBSSports.com. According to Heyman, the Padres now want to sign both Quentin and Street to multi-year deals.…![]()
Padres Planning Extension Offers For Quentin, Street
The Padres are planning to offer multiyear contract extensions to Carlos Quentin and Huston Street and will likely make such proposals before the trade deadline, reports Jon Heyman of CBS Sports. Sources say that current owner John Moores and incoming owner Ron Fowler have both “given the go-ahead” to GM Josh Byrnes to try and keep the two players, who have both been frequently mentioned as trade candidates.
The sale of the team is “close” to being approved by Major League Baseball, which is perhaps why the Padres are comfortable in committing millions to the duo. Quentin can be a free agent this winter, while Street is in the last guaranteed season of a three-year, $22.5MM extension he signed with the Rockies before the 2010 season. Street’s deal carries a $9MM mutual option for 2013 that will pay him a $500K buyout if the Padres decline.
It would be somewhat of a surprise if the Padres lock up either man since, as Heyman notes, the Padres have traditionally had problems in keeping their stars on long-term contracts and it’s “a major step” that the club seems willing to commit to Quentin and Street. Both players have expressed an interest in remaining with the team and Quentin is a San Diego native, though it’s a risky move for a small-market team to spend big on a closer (especially given the Padres’ deep bullpen) and an outfielder with Quentin’s injury history. The team could, of course, still explore trades if they are unable to come to agreements with Quentin or Street before July 31.
West Links: Angels, Schierholtz, Rangers, Quentin
Here is the latest from baseball’s two West divisions…
“We have nothing significant or imminent at this time. We’re just doing our due diligence,” said Angels GM Jerry Dipoto to reporters (including Mike DiGiovanna of The Los Angeles Times) today (Twitter link). Check out today’s Angels rumors right here.
Although he has not officially requested a trade, Nate Schierholtz indicated to Hank Schulman of The San Francisco Chronicle that he is ready to move on to a team with that can offer a greater opportunity. “There’s not one thing I can’t say I love about this place, but I think I’ve come to the realization that maybe I’m not their guy. I’m not in the cards having a future here,” said the Giants outfielder.
The Rangers are focused on Cole Hamels and Zack Greinke, but Danny Knobler of CBSSports.com hears that the team’s long-shot backup plan involves trading for Cliff Lee again. Lee’s contract is an obstacle, plus the Phillies indicated that they’re not looking to move their veteran lefty ace.
Scott Miller of CBSSports.com hears that the Padres may keep Carlos Quentin and try to re-sign him after the season. The Reds, Indians, Pirates, and Marlins have all inquired about his availabilty.
West Links: Angels, Schierholtz, Rangers, Quentin
Here is the latest from baseball’s two West divisions…
“We have nothing significant or imminent at this time. We’re just doing our due diligence,” said Angels GM Jerry Dipoto to reporters (including Mike DiGiovanna of The Los Angeles Times) today (Twitter link). Check out today’s Angels rumors right here.
Although he has not officially requested a trade, Nate Schierholtz indicated to Hank Schulman of The San Francisco Chronicle that he is ready to move on to a team with that can offer a greater opportunity. “There’s not one thing I can’t say I love about this place, but I think I’ve come to the realization that maybe I’m not their guy. I’m not in the cards having a future here,” said the Giants outfielder.
The Rangers are focused on Cole Hamels and Zack Greinke, but Danny Knobler of CBSSports.com hears that the team’s long-shot backup plan involves trading for Cliff Lee again. Lee’s contract is an obstacle, plus the Phillies indicated that they’re not looking to move their veteran lefty ace.
Scott Miller of CBSSports.com hears that the Padres may keep Carlos Quentin and try to re-sign him after the season. The Reds, Indians, Pirates, and Marlins have all inquired about his availabilty.
NL West Notes: Headley, Quentin, Cuddyer
The Giants lead the NL West with a 49-40 record, but it doesn’t sound as though they’ll be particularly aggressive in trade talks this year (it won’t be surprising if they trade for bullpen help). Still, there’s plenty of activity throughout the rest of the division with two weeks remaining in July. Here’s the latest…
Six teams are discussing Chase Headley with the Padres, Jim Bowden of ESPN.com and MLB Network Radio reports (on Twitter). The Dodgers, Pirates, Indians, Orioles and Diamondbacks are all believed to have some interest in Headley, who’s under team control through 2014.
Though there’s lots of interest in Padres outfielder Carlos Quentin, nothing seems close yet, Jon Heyman of CBSSports.com reports (on Twitter).
Michael Cuddyer has drawn trade interest from other teams, Troy Renck of the Denver Post writes. But the Rockies like Cuddyer and would have to eat a chunk of money to get the kind of players they’d want in return. A trade doesn’t seem likely this summer.
Here are the latest Justin Upton rumors.
Brett Gardner suffers yet another setback
Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner looks to have suffered yet another setback in his rehab as he experienced soreness in his elbow after playing in a simulated game on Sunday.
“It’s a concern because it’s happened before,” Joe Girardi told Bryan Hoch of MLB.com. “Hopefully he can get through this and continue to play, but we’ll have to wait and see. We expected that he would get through this, and our hope is still that he’ll get through this, but today he was a little sore. I can’t tell you what’s going to happen. I can’t tell you what’s next. We’ll have to see what tomorrow brings.”
The Yankees didn’t initially think that Gardner’s sore elbow was bad, however it appears that his season may be in jeopardy as this is his third rehab that is not going well now. The Yankees will of course try to downplay this as there is still technically time left for him to give rehab another shot and they don’t want to lose all leverage during trade talks. But if this latest rehab doesn’t take, Gardner may need more than two to four weeks off.
Brian Cashman told reporters on Sunday that even if the Yankees didn’t get Gardner back that he would bite the bullet with Raul Ibanez and Andruw Jones. However, saying that hypothetically and actually being faced with the possibility that Gardner might not return are two totally different things and he may look a little more closely at the trade market now.
The only two names that have been connected to the Yankees so far are Justin Upton (loosely, they were scouting the Diamondbacks game this week) and Shane Victorino.
Upton, 24, might be a good fit for the Yankees. He is young, talented, and on a relatively cheap contract. He could not only replace Gardner this season, but Nick Swisher next year as well. The biggest obstacle would be his price tag which will be cheap. The D-Backs are also looking for prospects that are close to Major League ready which is something the Yankees are lacking a bit.
Victorino, 31, seems like a much more likely fit. He is in the final year of his three-year deal with the Phillies, who have no hope of making the playoffs this year. Victorino can fill in in left this season and won’t create nearly as big a logjam if Gardner could actually manage to return at some point.
Another big name outfielder expected to be traded this year is Carlos Quentin, but early reports said the Yankees would prefer somebody more like Gardner who can provide them with speed and defense in left aside from the bat.
So who’s available at the trade deadline?
The non-waiver trade deadline is coming. July 31, as usual. After a slow beginning to crazy season due to so many teams being in contention or erroneously believing so, the rumblings are getting louder. It’s great fun, yes? Over the next couple of weeks, we will obviously be writing individual posts for each of the…![]()