The Macomb Daily

League set for delayed openers after a long winter

- By Jake Seiner

It’ll end up being 157 days between the moment Freddie Freeman and the Atlanta Braves won last year’s World Series and the start of the 2022 baseball season. Everything in between? Tough to sum that up quickly.

A record spending spree on free agents. A bitter work stoppage that delayed opening day.

Maybe most unthinkabl­e of all: Freeman isn’t even in Atlanta anymore.

A lot to catch up on before the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers open the season at Wrigley Field on Thursday afternoon, the first of seven games that day. Certainly, the sport is ready to move forward and wash off a winter when owners and players fought — fiercely and occasional­ly publicly — over how to split the game’s billions.

Luckily, the legal work is now moved to the side, and the real fun can begin.

What can Shohei Ohtani possibly do for an encore after an unpreceden­ted year of dominance on the mound and at the plate? Will the many millions spent by Mets owner Steve Cohen bring a championsh­ip trophy to Queens? Can anyone stop the Dodgers after they lured Freeman back to his Southern California home?

Time to find out.

Before the first pitch is delivered Thursday, here’s what to know:

The new guys

Baseball’s unusual offseason was split into two segments — a flurry of action before the 99-day lockout began Dec. 2, and a scramble to get rosters set when it lifted March 10.

The Rangers were champions of Part 1. Texas signed Corey Seager and Marcus Semien for a combined $500 million, solidifyin­g their middle infield with two monster contracts.

Those deals were part of a one-day record $1.4 billion spent on free agents right before the offseason went dark. Cy Young Award winner Robbie Ray left Toronto for Seattle, and the Blue Jays replaced him with former Giant Kevin Gausman. The Tigers ponied up for shortstop Javier Báez and starter Eduardo Rodriguez. Even the Marlins tried making a splash, dropping $53 million on Avisaíl García.

Max Scherzer also signed early, joining Cohen and the Mets on a $130 million, threeyear deal. He then turned his attention to baseball’s labor fight, where he was one of the lead voices for players at the table. He’s back to his day job now — and good thing for New York, with two-time Cy Young Award-winning teammate Jacob deGrom beginning the year on the injured list.

When shops re-opened in March, the most notable drama surrounded Freeman and the Braves. Atlanta general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s appeared to end any hopes for a reunion when he traded for Oakland slugger Matt Olson and gave him a $168 million, eight-year deal.

Freeman landed with the Dodgers for $162 million over six years, then acknowledg­ed during his introducto­ry press conference that he always figured on being a lifelong Brave.

The Minnesota Twins made another huge post-lockout deal, convincing former Astros shortstop Carlos Correa to sign a $105.3 million, three-year deal with player opt outs after the first two seasons. His stay might be short, but Correa has pledged to help instill a “championsh­ip culture” in the Twin Cities, where the ball club has lost 18 straight postseason games dating to 2004.

Other notable moves: Clayton Kershaw went back to the Dodgers, the rival Giants locked up lefty Carlos Rodón, and the Rockies signed Kris Bryant.

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