Twins Video
The 2024 MLB trade deadline was high in sound and low in fury. What was once a time for splashy deals and headline-grabbing has morphed into an improve-on-the-margins bonanza, with the designations between “buyers” and “sellers” melting together into a homogeneous pot. The era of Zack Greinke moving at the last second is over, and the shape of the trade deadline is far different than it once was.
I think there are a few trends fueling this phenomenon. The most obvious is the new playoff structure: two more teams making the postseason tilts the balance of power toward sellers. Those few extra squads in the middle, potentially sellers in a separate time, live in a far less clear-cut world than they once did.
The mediocre franchises that were once dead in the water can fantasize about catching fire late to squeak into a final playoff spot. They become buyers as well, or, at least, no longer extreme sellers. Maybe they do a little of both. That’s how the 53-56 and dreadfully boring San Francisco Giants hold onto Taylor Rogers, Matt Chapman, and Blake Snell, while dealing away Jorge Soler, Alex Cobb, and Luke Jackson just to bring in… Mark Canha? It’s just weird.
That’s how the game is played these days. You’ll hear lawyer talk from executives like Jerry Dipoto about how the “seller” and “buyer” binary doesn’t really work anymore, and they’ll be correct; quite a few teams operate in both worlds.
Take the Cubs: they took a big swing to acquire Isaac Paredes, but dealt Mark Leiter Jr. to the Yankees. Hypocrisy? Not really. They identified that Leiter, a reliever—the standard currency of the trade deadline—doesn’t affect their future that much, while Paredes—an All-Star slugger three and a half years away from free agency—does. They aren’t going to make the postseason this year, but teams aren’t so narrow-minded as to think only about that. A deal is a deal, no matter if it comes in July or December.
There are two edges to this blade, but they both cut in the same direction. See, there are more playoff spots, which means more buyers and fewer sellers. However, that same playoff expansion means that the value of making the playoffs is lower, as is the quality threshold one needs to exceed to do it. The market is, sadly, being perfectly rational. With supply constricted, prices are high, but demand really doesn't rise to meet them, because many of the buyers can tell themselves they're already good enough, and because the value they derive from getting better once they're above that threshold is diminished.
You can see the way this all interweaves by looking at one of the trades made this week. Did you see the return Yusei Kikuchi commanded? A 4.72 career ERA! Half a season before he's a free agent! And he netted Toronto a new number-3 prospect, a potential starting outfielder, and a depth middle infielder. Holy crap. That makes Tarik Skubal worth a young Kirby Puckett and an old Nelson Cruz--but, like, a not-too-old one. Even a decade ago, we routinely saw teams give up way more than that at the deadline, but it was for better players, and the teams acquiring them felt both greater urgency and a greater confidence in being rewarded for aggressiveness than anyone feels these days.
Those players are so expensive because there’s an ever-dwindling pool of them available at the deadline. Remember the Giants and Cubs from earlier? Well, when they decide to hang onto their veterans, suddenly, the Skubals and Garrett Grochets of the world become ridiculously valuable. Cartoonishly so. Asking prices rise well above the comfort level of your average prospect-hugging executive, because there’s no real alternative to which to pivot. That causes everyone not ready to run as wild as AJ Preller in San Diego to balk.
The Twins find themselves in a tough place in this context. Their typical calculated, methodical team-building is harder to pull off with the new trade deadline ethos. You can wait all offseason for a trade to manifest, but when your options are limited in July, uhhh, it’s called a deadline for a reason; you have to pull the trigger eventually. They were slow to react as buyers before the expanded playoffs, and they’ve almost entirely punted the last two years, despite being solid contenders both seasons (although after the disastrous 2022 deadline, maybe that’s not a terrible thing).
In order to avoid another groan-inducing dud of a deadline, they’ll either have to find the chutzpah to hand over serious prospect talent for a stud or two, or build such a damn solid team in the offseason that the trade deadline becomes moot. Those are the only real options. Walking this narrow, lukewarm path will only keep them squarely in the middle—good enough to compete, but needing a lot of luck to make a deep playoff run. Let’s hope they decide well.
Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis
- tarheeltwinsfan, Parfigliano, Dman and 6 others
-
8
-
1







Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now