Toronto Star

Greinke to Astros creates shock waves

It was a hard deadline, but it’s easy to conclude that Houston won it Jesus Aguilar, an all-star in Milwaukee last season, has joined the Tampa Bay Rays.

- BEN WALKER

Out of nowhere, the Houston Astros got a huge head start on October.

On a dizzying day that featured two dozen trades, the Astros pulled off the biggest and most startling deal, adding ace Zack Greinke to an imposing rotation already loaded with all-stars Justin Verlander and Gerrit Cole.

Plenty of familiar names were on the go Wednesday — Shane Greene and Mark Melancon boosted Atlanta’s bullpen, with Scooter Gennett, Jesus Aguilar and Mike Leake among those also moving.

But it was the Astros’ acquisitio­n of Greinke from Arizona for four minor leaguers that quickly became the talk of baseball. The deal came right before the deadline for swapping players to still have them eligible for the post-season.

“We had him high on our list and we didn’t know this was even remotely possible and it really wasn’t until the last 48 hours and really the last 24 hours that we started to get traction on something,” Houston general manager Jeff Luhnow said.

The AL West leaders and 2017 World Series champions added two other pitchers, too, getting starter Aaron Sanchez and reliever Joe Biagini from Toronto. “Houston made some big deals. They’re really good. They were good before,” Red Sox president Dave Dombrowski said. A lot of contenders were busy. The Chicago Cubs added Detroit’s Nicholas Castellano­s to their lineup, the Phillies got outfielder Corey Dickerson from Pittsburgh and the Washington Nationals added relievers Daniel Hudson, Roenis Elias and Hunter Strickland.

“When it comes to trades, one thing I’ve learned is, just wait,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “You’ve got to wait until the very end and it plays itself out. The eleventh hour is the most powerful hour there is. To get things done before that, it normally doesn’t work to get what you want. There’s the eleventh hour at work.”

Several players whose named swirled in the tradewinds stayed put.

Giants ace Madison Bumgarner, Mets starters Noah Syndergaar­d and Zack Wheeler, and Pirates closer Felipe Vazquez remained in place.

“Nothing changed for me. I never expected to be somewhere else until that happened,” Bumgarner said. “I just have a job to do and I’m going to do it. We’re going to miss a few guys we got rid of. That’s going to be tough.”

Major League Baseball made July 31 a hard deadline this year for trades. Now, no deals can be made until after the World Series.

“This was a unique deadline, it felt,” said Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, whose AL East-leading team didn’t make any significan­t moves.

Pitchers Marcus Stroman, Andrew Cashner, Homer Bailey and Jason Vargas were among the players who were traded in recent weeks.

And on Tuesday night, Cleveland agreed to send pitcher Trevor Bauer to Cincinnati in a three-team swap that brought back outfielder Yasiel Puig. That trade became official Wednesday, setting off a full morning and afternoon of swaps.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Six-time all-star pitcher Zack Greinke was the biggest name to move at the MLB trade deadline on Wednesday, going to the AL West-leading Houston Astros.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Six-time all-star pitcher Zack Greinke was the biggest name to move at the MLB trade deadline on Wednesday, going to the AL West-leading Houston Astros.
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