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White Sox
Worst. Fire sale. Ever.
Quote:White Sox Reportedly Open To Dealing Veteran Bats, Relievers


MLB Trade Rumors / by Steve Adams / 33min ago


The White Sox appear to have reversed course in the midst of a significant slump, as Bob Nightengale of USA Today reports that the club is now open to selling off veteran pieces this summer (Twitter link). The Sox intend to keep their rotation intact taking Chris Sale, Jose Quintana and presumably Carson Fulmer and Carlos Rodon off the table, much to the chagrin of interested parties and are intent on holding onto top shortstop prospect Tim Anderson as well. Other than that, however, Nightengale suggests that the rest of the roster is in play.


Optimistic fans will likely take the report and try to come up with ways in which the potentially selling Sox could be overwhelmed to part with Sale or Quintana, but FOXs Ken Rosenthal emphasizes (via Twitter) that Sale won't be moved, reporting that an unnamed team is said to have offered Chicago a kings ransom for its ace within the past 48 hours, only to be met with a flat no. Another rival executive tells Rosenthal that teams have been asking for Quintana in trades for years, and the Sox have steadfastly refused (Twitter link).


Nightengale's report is fairly surprising in that it suggests that Sox will at least entertain the notion of trading outfielder Adam Eaton, who has become one of baseball's biggest bargains thanks to his elite all-around play and affordable contract. (Id have pegged him to be among the untouchable group.) Eaton is hitting .271/.353/.393 with five homers, 11 steals and exceptional defense in right field, and hes guaranteed just $21MM through the 2019 season (plus two options valued at $9.5MM and $10.5MM for the 2020 and 2021 campaigns). FanRag's Jon Heyman reported earlier this morning that the Sox have already been receiving calls on Eaton, although I have to imagine that the asking price on him would be exorbitant.


Slugging first baseman Jose Abreu, too, would be a consideration under such criteria. He's had a bit of a down season overall, slashing .266/.323/.423 but has turned things around at the plate dating back to June 1 (.299/.349/.478). He's owed $38.04MM through the end of the 2019 season, including the remainder of this years salary, though his contract allows him to opt into arbitration following the 2016 season if he wishes.


Heyman also reported this morning that closer David Robertson is receiving quite a bit of attention on the trade market as clubs look to acquire impact relievers. While Robertsons 4.03 ERA on this season is a departure from his normal excellence, he's been clobbered for 10 of his 17 earned runs in just two of his 37 appearances this season but has been largely effective outside of those hiccups. He's owed $29.45MM through the end of the 2018 season and is still averaging 10.7 strikeouts per nine innings, though he's also averaging 4.9 walks in that same stretch as well. Both Nate Jones and Dan Jennings are having strong seasons and come with three-plus years affordable control (Jones via a three-year, $8MM extension with a pair of club options and Jennings via arbitration). Jones strong season and considerable control could make him tough to surrender, though.


Beyond those long-term assets, the South Siders have several other short-term and mid-term assets that are controllable through the end of the 2017 campaign as well as a few rentals. Todd Frazier, Brett Lawrie, Melky Cabrera and Zach Duke are each free agents at the end of the 2017 season, while Dioner Navarro, Alex Avila and Justin Morneau are free agents following the current season. Frazier is tied for the Major League lead with 28 homers and is due an arbitration raise on his $8.25MM salary, while Lawrie has been about league-average at the plate and will get a bump from his $4.125MM salary. Cabrera has quietly been quite solid at the plate dating back to June 1 of last season, hitting .294/.338/.456 with 20 homers in 827 plate appearances, but the remaining $20.66MM on his deal is fairly steep. Duke is owed about $7.52MM from now through the end of his own contract and has logged a 2.97 ERA with 10.5 K/9, 3.8 BB/9 and a 58.1 percent ground-ball rate this year.


The change in course is a fairly surprising turn of events for a White Sox team that just last month proactively sprung to add James Shields in a trade with the Padres (Shields has righted the ship after a pair of early implosions with Chicago) and also added Justin Morneau while shedding Jimmy Rollins to open shortstop for Anderson. That series of win-now moves hasn't changed the club's fortunes, though, leading to a potentially uncharacteristic sell-off from a Sox club that is typically loath to do so. Owner Jerry Reinsdorf has long been said to be against such sales, and indeed, the Sox chose to hold onto the majority of their pieces last summer in spite of an opportunity to ship out veteran pieces, most notably Jeff Samardzija.


It remains, of course, far from clear that the Sox will clean house in any way. The very fact that theyre insistent in holding onto Sale, Quintana, etc. suggests they intend to aim for better results as soon as the 2017 season. As such, major dealings shouldnt necessarily be the expectation, but the very fact that the Sox are open to the idea represents a rather significant philosophical change from where the team stood four to six weeks ago.
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No one's going to give them shit for those position players.  They'll never get it.

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I hope they keep everyone. They're destined for mediocrity for quite a while, it seems...

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I wouldn't be sad to see Quintana or Sale in our rotation.

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As a Cub fan expecting Sale and Frazier to be traded to the Cardinals for a bucket of water-logged, batting practice balls. Yeah, I realize that Sox have stated that Sale is untouchable
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I shouldn't be listening to sports radio, but getting a little tired of hearing about the Cubs & Sox matching up on a trade for either Sale or Quintana. Yes, we have the prospects to get any deal done, but 1) the Cubs aren't as desperate for SP as other contenders (Rangers, Red Sox, even Dodgers), and 2) not only would we need to outbid those other teams, but also pay a ridiculous crosstown premium to acquire any of their top talent. As long as Reinsdorf is around, can't imagine any fair deal being consummated.
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Chicago sports radio attempting to throw some meat to the meatheads. Gin up the rumor mill so both the Sox and Cub audiences tune into the "rumors".
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Hell, Ivy is still hoping the rumor that signing Pujols is coming true.

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http://twitter.com/jonmorosi/status/756980280078897152

This is not some silly theory that's unsupported and deserves being mocked by photos of Xena.  [Image: ITgoyeg.png]
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They do rarely disappoint.

 

https://twitter.com/whitesox/status/756983172089384960

This is not some silly theory that's unsupported and deserves being mocked by photos of Xena.  [Image: ITgoyeg.png]
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Quote:The incident, which was non-physical in nature
 

Name calling? Telepathic shaming? Spiritual crisis? Canvassing for Trump? The mind reels with possibilities.

One dick can poke an eye out. A hundred dicks can move mountains.
--Veryzer

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What the hell is going on?
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Adam LaRoche's kid was back.
Wang.
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https://twitter.com/StokkeTommy/status/7...3731037184

This is not some silly theory that's unsupported and deserves being mocked by photos of Xena.  [Image: ITgoyeg.png]
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♫ Someone's angling for a traaaaa-aaade! ♪


One dick can poke an eye out. A hundred dicks can move mountains.
--Veryzer

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