Chicago Sun-Times

There’s no pressure to move Bryant right now

- BY GORDON WITTENMYER, STAFF REPORTER gwittenmye­r@suntimes.com | @GDubCub

SAN DIEGO — The Cubs won’t “force” the action as they look at potential trades of their big-league core, team president Theo Epstein

said. And that might even mean star third baseman Kris Bryant is still with the team when they open the season on March 26.

In fact, two wouldbe trade partners, the Phillies and Nationals, are out until further notice when it comes to Bryant, according to sources. That leaves the Angels and Braves as the top landing spots in a musicalcha­irs exercise that also involves free agents Anthony Rendon and Josh Donaldson.

But even if Bryant is still in a Cubs uniform by the opener, his long-term status with the club remains in significan­t limbo.

Consider that while general manager

Jed Hoyer acknowledg­ed that the club is engaged in contract extension talks with one or more of its young core players (Javy Baez

has been talking to the club since last month, sources said), Bryant is not one of them.

“We’re always in communicat­ion with them,” Bryant’s agent, Scott Boras, said on Tuesday when asked about a possible multiyear extension for Bryant. “We’re discussing his arbitratio­n values and contract as we speak. We’ll leave it up to them whether they want to explore that.”

Boras wouldn’t say whether he expected Bryant to remain a Cub through the winter.

The budget-strained Cubs would clear perhaps $18 million or more in Bryant’s projected arbitratio­n salary for 2020 with a trade while presumably receiving a package of younger players who might help them stay competitiv­e window.

The Cubs and Bryant still are awaiting an arbitrator’s decision on Bryant’s grievance over service-time manipulati­on — when the Cubs secured a seventh year of club control by delaying his big-league debut by two weeks in 2015. Epstein echoed the widely held industry presumptio­n that the team will prevail and preserve the year of control, which means two years of remaining control instead of one as the Cubs discuss trade scenarios with other clubs.

Boras said he shared no such presumptio­n — regardless of how much of a long shot it seems that an arbitrator would essentiall­y blow up the game’s service-time system by ruling for Bryant.

“I don’t have a predictive course with that,” Boras said. “I think that anyone that would make a suggestion like that would be outside the realm of his expertise because of the fact that arbitrator­s think and operate in a realm that is unto their own.

“And so to say we’re going to predict what judges do or why they do it, I would suggest that is a bold opinion.”

Refreshed market for Russell?

Boras, who also represents former Cubs shortstop Addison Russell, suggested a firm free-agent market for Russell, who was non-tendered by the Cubs last week, seven months after he finished serving a 40-game suspension for domestic violence.

“Addison Russell is an excellent majorleagu­e player, and he’s very young,” said Boras of the 2016 All-Star, who is still just 25. “We fully anticipate he’ll be playing in the major leagues starting for somebody.”

What kind of attention has Russell received so far?

“There are different types of meetings that we go to right now,” said Boras, who represents Gerrit Cole, Anthony Rendon and several more of the top free agents on the market.

“We’re dealing with the major free agents, and we have a level of interest where teams have contacted us. They’re taking care of some multiyear contract considerat­ions in a lot of cases. Then they’re going to get to filling their spots on other levels. So we’ll see.”

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO/AP ?? The budget-strained Cubs would clear perhaps $18 million or more in Kris Bryant’s projected arbitratio­n salary for 2020 with a trade.
ALEX GALLARDO/AP The budget-strained Cubs would clear perhaps $18 million or more in Kris Bryant’s projected arbitratio­n salary for 2020 with a trade.
 ??  ?? Theo Epstein
Theo Epstein

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