USA TODAY US Edition

MLB’s winter chill may last into spring

- Bob Nightengal­e

It’s 2018, and while everyone is eagerly wishing their family and friends happiness, health and prosperity, is it too much to ask to put an end to baseball’s dullest offseason in nearly 25 years?

We haven’t had a more boring and dreary one since the 1994-95 work stoppage.

It has been 62 days since the Houston Astros won their first World Series championsh­ip in a seven-game thriller over the Los Angeles Dodgers, and the only real drama we’ve seen is Shohei Ohtani signing with the Los Angeles Angels and Giancarlo Stanton traded to the New York Yankees.

The hot stove market, with 136 free agents still unemployed, barely has the flicker of a pilot light.

Just nine position players have signed major league contracts, and only two players — first baseman Carlos Santana (three years, $60 million) with the Philadelph­ia Phillies) and All-Star closer Wade Davis (three years, $52 million) with the Colorado Rockies — have received contracts in excess of $50 million.

Sure, that will end sometime before the start of the season. All-Star first baseman Eric Hosmer has a seven-year offer from the San Diego Padres that would make him the highest-paid player in franchise history. Outfielder J.D. Martinez has a five-year offer from the Boston Red Sox. Yet neither has signed a contract.

The top two starting pitchers, Yu Darvish and Jake Arrieta, have been wined and dined but haven’t found a team willing to meet that six- or sevenyear asking price.

Why, of the top 10 free agents, including five represente­d by agent Scott Bo- ras, only Davis has signed.

It’s been that ugly of a winter. The Baltimore Orioles did their best to liven the party by dangling third baseman-shortstop Manny Machado two weeks ago, but even with the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Cubs in strong pursuit, general manager Dan Duquette has yet to see a tempting offer.

Derek Jeter, scorched by a town hall meeting in which the Marlins fans conveyed their contempt, is letting teams know they are open for business on everyone, including disgruntle­d outfielder Christian Yelich and catcher J.T. Realmuto. Still, there’s a better chance of Jeffrey Loria returning as owner than Jeter being overwhelme­d by trade proposals for either player this late in the winter.

Only 42 days are left before pitchers and catchers report to spring training, so logic tells us that we should have a wild frenzy these next six weeks.

Then again, we thought the same when Ohtani and Stanton found homes, only for the free agent market to remain as dormant as the Cleveland Browns’ Super Bowl parade route.

It’s time for the staredown contest to end, with everyone coming to the realizatio­n that the days of George Steinbrenn­er, Gene Autry and Mike Ilitch providing blank checks to every free agent who might give them a chance for a championsh­ip are over.

This is a new era in baseball run with teams run by Ivy League graduates, employing more folks in their analytic department­s than veteran baseball scouts, refusing to let their heart shortcircu­it their brainpower.

No one wants to be stuck in position like the Dodgers and Atlanta Braves, who swung a blockbuste­r trade on the surface with the likes of former All-Stars Adrian Gonzalez and Matt Kemp but in reality was only baseball’s version of money-laundering of bad contracts.

The game has never been more vibrant financiall­y, but with a luxury tax in place that functions more like a salary cap, teams are being much more cautious.

It’s actually a miserable time to be a marquee free agent considerin­g the big boys, the Yankees, Dodgers and Red Sox, refuse to partake in the free agent party. They’ve spent a grand total of

$25 million this winter.

Oh sure, the Cubs still need a frontline starter and would be willing to bring back Arrieta on a four-year deal for about $110 million, but, sorry, they refuse to dish out a six-year deal. The Red Sox won’t give Martinez a seven-year,

$210 million contract and aren’t about to start bidding against themselves. The Yankees swear up and down they won’t go above the $197 million luxury tax in

2018 and will wait out the Pittsburgh Pirates for ace Gerrit Cole instead of spending big money in free agency. And the Dodgers, who had a $244 million payroll last year, haven’t signed a marquee free agent outside their organizati­on since Andrew Friedman came into office.

A year from now, all bets are off. We should be graced with the greatest free agent bonanza in baseball history with Bryce Harper and Machado hitting the market, as well as Clayton Kershaw, Dallas Keuchel, Josh Donaldson, Craig Kimbrel, Zach Britton, Adam Jones and AJ Pollock.

Yet that’s 10 months from now when dollar signs will be lighting up the skies.

For now it’s time to take care of business. Free agent closer Greg Holland and the St. Louis Cardinals seem like a natural fit. Free agent outfielder Jay Bruce’s power will play nicely in San Francisco. The Yankees need Cole if they want to take advantage of Stanton’s and Aaron Judge’s power. Outfielder­s Andrew McCutchen, Billy Hamilton, Jacoby Ellsbury and Shin-Soo Choo will be in trade talks. And you just know that Angels GM Billy Eppler, who has improved his team more than anyone this winter, has something up his sleeve.

We have only a few precious weeks to spice up this dull winter.

Please, for all 30 teams, can we make it a New Year’s resolution to turn on that hot stove burner once and for all?

It’s beyond time.

 ?? SAM GREENE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? J.D. Martinez, who hit 45 home runs last season, is available for the right price.
SAM GREENE/USA TODAY SPORTS J.D. Martinez, who hit 45 home runs last season, is available for the right price.
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