USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Questions on playoff push answered

- Bob Nightengal­e

The Major League Baseball trade deadline was absolutely breathtaki­ng with 29 teams making deals, including the seismic eight-player Juan Soto swap between the San Diego Padres and Washington Nationals.

Now that the smoke has cleared, it’s time to officially end any concerns that an expanded postseason would ruin the trade deadline.

Remember the talk during the collective bargaining agreement negotiatio­ns that if the postseason was expanded from 10 teams to 12, the best teams may not be incentiviz­ed to make improvemen­ts?

Try telling that to the New York Yankees, who, despite a slump, were sitting with the best record in the American League and went into the week with a 9 lead in the East and acquired ace Frankie Montas, outfielder Andrew Benintendi and relievers Lou Trivino and Scott Effross.

Or the Houston Astros, who picked up outfielder Trey Mancini, catcher Christian Vazquez and veteran reliever Will Smith, even with a 12 lead in the AL West.

These two powerhouse­s have got bigger things in mind for October than simply making the playoffs, knowing the importance of seeding and home-field advantage.

In fact, we also saw aggressive­ness from teams that are already all but mathematic­ally eliminated in their division races.

How else do you explain the Padres’ actions? They are 13 games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers, and no one made more improvemen­ts, acquiring Soto, AllStar closer Josh Hader, first baseman Josh Bell and third baseman Brandon Drury. You think it’s important to them to earn their first playoff berth since 2006 in a non-COVID-19 shortened season?

Or the Seattle Mariners, who are 12 games back and still sent three of their top prospects packing to the Cincinnati Reds for ace Luis Castillo, the best starter on the market. Yeah, they’re not about to let that 21-year playoff drought go one more season.

The Philadelph­ia Phillies, Toronto Blue Jays and Tampa Bay Rays, who are all out of their respective division races, were buyers, too. They may not have taken that risk under the old system. Now, with the best-of-three wild-card format, and the chance to host all three games, teams were all-in.

Sixteen teams entered the week within three games of a playoff berth.

No wonder it was the most active 48hour trade deadline in the last five years.

But while the trade deadline brought clarity in some markets, there also was plenty of confusion, with plenty of questions that still remain, and we’ve come with answers.

Did the Angels actually consider trading Shohei Ohtani?

No. No. No. No. No.

It was a joke among baseball executives and the Angels front office, too, that his name even surfaced in rumors.

The Angels never were going to trade

Ohtani and did nothing more than amuse themselves with several teams mentioning what they might be willing to give up to get the modern-day Babe Ruth.

Now, this winter could be a different story.

If Ohtani tells the Angels he won’t sign a contract extension with them, no matter how much they offer, they’ve got to strongly consider moving him knowing he can walk away as a free agent after the 2023 season.

The Angels’ most shrewd move might be sending Anthony Rendon’s atrocious contract with Ohtani.

Rendon, 32, who has not played more than 58 games in a season since signing his seven-year, $245 million contract and has missed 221 games since the 2020 shortened year, still has $152 million left on the contract.

The Angels, who have made it a tradition to release players with big money left on their deals (Albert Pujols, Justin Upton, Josh Hamilton), will make it a Mount Rushmore of contracts gone bad if they ultimate do the same with Rendon.

Is Orioles GM Mike Elias actually rooting for his team to now lose?

Absolutely. He just will never admit it. Elias gave up on his team at the trade deadline and sent outfielder Trey Mancini and All-Star closer Jorge Lopez for prospects, only to see the Orioles go 4-0 since the moves.

They have the second-best record in the AL since June 12 (30-16) and entered the week two games out of a wild-card spot.

Can you imagine the embarrassm­ent if the Orioles miss out on a playoff berth by just a couple of games?

Well, at least Elias can come back and stand on the strangest quote at the trade deadline: “We have a shot at a wild-card right now,” he said, “but it is not a probabilit­y that we’re going to win a wild card.”

Knute Rockne, he ain’t.

Is it time for Mets fans to apologize to Brodie Van Wagenen?

Well, either that, or their former GM better make sure he gets a World Series ring if the Mets win it all.

Van Wagenen was lambasted when he traded top prospect Jared Kelenic to the Mariners to get All-Star closer Edwin Diaz and second baseman Robinson Cano.

Well, take a look now.

While Cano may be gone, Diaz is the Mets’ most valuable player and in the Cy Young conversati­on while Kelenic was hitting .131 with a .477 OPS since his latest call-up.

Diaz, who has 26 saves, has been nearly unhittable. He’s a huge reason why the Mets have been alone atop the NL East since April 12.

What were the Dodgers thinking acquiring Joey Gallo?

Well, Los Angeles may be the secondlarg­est market in the country, but it pales in comparison to the media onslaught and pressure of New York.

Besides, they merely needed an up

grade over Jake Lamb, and Gallo has two Gold Gloves on his resume.

The Dodgers believe he just needed to get out of New York where his Yankee career was a .159 batting average, 25 homers, 77 walks and 194 strikeouts with a .600 OPS.

He was a colossal bust.

Gallo emptied his soul to NJ.com before his departure: “I went through a lot of adversity and I really had to question myself a lot. My confidence suffered. I would say I hit rock bottom for the big leagues. … I learned a lot about myself, I guess. Baseball is a tough game. But it definitely made me stronger because not many people have gone through what I’ve gone through.”

Will MLB’s dream Yankees vs. Dodgers World Series happen?

No. These two teams may be regularsea­son beauties, but come October, some of their blemishes could suddenly look more glaring.

The Yankees will go with ace Gerrit Cole in Game 1, Frankie Montas in Game 2, and will have to rely on an assortment of Jameson Taillon, Nestor Cortes, Domingo German and Luis Severino to round out the postseason rotation.

They tried to grab Pablo Lopez of the Marlins, Carlos Rodon of the Giants and Tarik Skubal of the Tigers, only to fall short.

Montas could be valuable in a matchup against the Astros, yielding a 2.70 ERA in his last seven starts against Houston with 42 strikeouts in 36 2⁄3 innings. In 13 starts against the Astros since 2018, he has permitted two or fewer runs in 11 of them.

The Yankees’ vaunted bullpen with All-Star closer Clay Holmes may be a bigger concern. They did pick up Trivino and Effross, but is it enough?

The Yankees were 53-0 on July 9 when having a lead in the eighth inning or later but since have gone just 7-4 with an eighth-inning lead.

The Dodgers, with Clayton Kershaw returning to the injured list with back pain, creates a lot of concern. Kershaw was on the injured list once in the first eight years but has now been on the IL 10 times since 2016.

The Dodgers have the best record in baseball and may still be the team to beat on paper, but is there any starter who is considered an ace when the postseason rolls around?

Walker Buehler is expected to return in September, but they will be careful with him. Tony Gonsolin, their No. 1 starter with a 13-1 record and 2.30 ERA, has pitched only 13 1⁄3 innings in the postseason with a 9.45 ERA.

The Padres were the runaway winners at the trade deadline. Could they scare the Dodgers?

This is a team that got Soto, Bell and Drury; the Dodgers got Gallo. The Padres got Hader; the Dodgers got middle reliever Chris Martin.

But have they closed the gap? While they are awfully dangerous with Fernando Tatis expected to return to the lineup in a couple of weeks, with Joe Musgrove, Yu Darvish and Blake Snell atop the rotation, the Dodgers still have their number.

The Dodgers are 8-2 against the Padres this season and haven’t lost a season series to them since 2011.

“I don’t like talking about the Dodgers,” Padres left fielder Jurickson Profar told reporters before their 8-1 loss Aug. 5. Can you blame him?

What in the world were the Cubs doing?

They set up the emotional farewell, with All-Star catcher Willson Contreras crying and hugging Ian Happ in the dugout after what appeared to be their final games at Wrigley Field.

Only now for the two to be welcomed back. So instead of getting top prospects, they will get only a draft pick for Contreras and will put Happ back on the trade market this winter.

Rival executives say the Cubs had far too high of a price tag on Contreras, with the Mets backing away, the Astros instead grabbing Christian Vazquez of the Red Sox and the Padres no longer interested after acquiring Soto.

Why did the Yankees trade dependable starter Jordan Montgomery for an outfielder (Harrison Bader) on the injured list?

Well, because the Yankees already have the AL East wrapped up, and this was a trade designed for October.

They came to the conclusion that Montgomery wouldn’t be needed in the playoffs and they could use the St. Louis Cardinals Gold Glove center fielder in October and beyond – even though he’s out until September with plantar fasciitis.

Come Bader’s return, the Yankees will be able to move Aaron Judge from center field back to right, Giancarlo Stanton to an everyday DH role and struggling outfielder Aaron Hicks to the bench.

At the very least, Bader will be a valuable defensive replacemen­t or pinch-runner.

 ?? BRAD PENNER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mets closer Edwin Diaz had 91 strikeouts in 45.1 innings.
BRAD PENNER/USA TODAY SPORTS Mets closer Edwin Diaz had 91 strikeouts in 45.1 innings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States