Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hoyer says Cubs not entering rebuild

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CHICAGO — Jed Hoyer insists this time won’t be like 2011 for the Chicago Cubs.

The team’s new president of baseball operations said Wednesday that Chicago plans to retool rather than bring out the wrecking ball the way it did nine years ago.

Still, this one will leave a mark.

In his first major deal since replacing friend Theo Epstein, Hoyer sent National League Cy Young Award runner-up Yu Darvish and catcher Victor Caratini to the San Diego Padres for pitcher Zach Davies and four young minor-leaguers Tuesday night.

On deck: Willson Contreras? Maybe Kris Bryant, Javier Baez or Anthony Rizzo?

Nothing is off the table, though Hoyer was adamant: The Cubs aren’t following the 2011 plan. That was the year they hired Epstein and Hoyer, and the pair set the long- suffering franchise on a championsh­ip course by overhaulin­g the farm system and revamping the front office. Along the way, Cubs fans endured a painful rebuild that included a 101- loss 2012 season.

“I’m not going to run the same playbook that we ran in 2011 and 2012,” said Hoyer, who was promoted from general manager when Epstein resigned in November. “I think that would be foolish. That playbook’s been copied so many times, it doesn’t work anymore.”

He said he’s trying to keep “one eye on the future” while remaining competitiv­e in the NL Central. The Cubs won the World Series in 2016, ending a drought that dated to 1908, but they haven’t advanced in the postseason since the 2017 team lost in the NL Championsh­ip Series.

Still led by the 2016 core of Rizzo, Bryant, Baez and others, Chicago won the division in a pandemic-shortened 2020 season but was swept by Miami in the first round of the playoffs.

“We know that we’re coming to the end of this group of players — a wildly successful, franchise-changing run with this group of players,” Hoyer said. “As we come to the end of that, it’s really important to think about the future.”

He cited the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox as teams that benefited recently from “a small reset.” And he said the Cubs don’t want to fall off the way the San Francisco Giants, Philadelph­ia Phillies and Detroit Tigers have over the past decade.

The Cubs also wanted to add to their minor-league system, and the trade with San Diego was a beginning.

Davies, who was 7-4 with a 2.73 ERA in 12 starts, somewhat offsets the loss of Darvish. The 27-yearold right-hander can become a free agent after next season.

The four prospects the Cubs acquired — infielders Reginald Preciado, 17, and Yeison Santana, 20; and outfielder­s Owen Caissie, 18, and Ismael Mena, 18 — are likely years away from the majors. None were among the most prized in San Diego’s deep system, but Hoyer said they will boost Chicago’s.

“In a contractin­g financial market … I do feel like by definition people are going to hold on tighter to those close-to-the-big-leagues prospects because those are cheap, they’re talented,” Hoyer said. “As you cut back money, those guys become more important.”

The Cubs declined veteran left- hander Jon Lester’s option for 2021 in October, allowing the five-time All-Star to become a free agent, and they let outfielder­s Kyle Schwarber and Albert Almora go Dec. 2.

Bryant, Baez and Rizzo can become free agents after next season. Hoyer said the Cubs have made “incredibly aggressive” offers for contract extensions and will continue to try to reach agreements with them.

“We haven’t gotten extensions, and as a result, there are contractua­l realities to how long we control some of these players,” Hoyer said. “I think we’d be foolish not to keep that in mind as we move forward.”

Another potential trade target could be Contreras. Hoyer called reports that the Cubs are shopping the two-time All-Star catcher “fictional.”

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