Albuquerque Journal

The dealing could really heat up in Las Vegas

Kluber, Bauer, Greinke may be dangled this week

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Corey Kluber, Trevor Bauer, Zack Greinke and Madison Bumgarner appear to be available for teams looking to bolster starting rotations.

Hometown star Bryce Harper and Manny Machado, the two top free agents, remain unsigned heading into the traditiona­l highpoint of the offseason.

Catcher J.T. Realmuto and third baseman Kyle Seager could be among the position players dangled as trade bait in the suites of Las Vegas’ Mandalay Bay, where executives and agents gather next week for the annual swap session, which in an age of complicate­d finances and medical records serves as a midpoint for talks as much as a place to finish deals.

Chicago Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein predicted the week will be “really active.”

“It seems like there is plenty of trade talk, and there are still a lot of good free agents out there,” he said. “A couple of moves have already occurred that sort of always set the stage for increased activity in the next week or so.”

First baseman Paul Goldschmid­t (Arizona to St. Louis) and second baseman Robinson Cano (Seattle to New York Mets) are among the All-Stars already traded since the end of the World Series.

Pitchers Patrick Corbin ($140 million for six years with Washington) and Nathan Eovaldi ($68 million for four years with Boston) already struck big deals in a free-agent market moving more swiftly than last offseason’s, and third baseman Josh Donaldson took a $23 million, one-year agreement with Atlanta.

Nineteen of 164 players who exercised major league free agent rights have announced deals, up from eight heading into the meetings last year.

And with A.J. Pollock, Dallas Keuchel and Craig Kimbrel still unsigned, there’s plenty more holiday shopping. For the bottom of the market, there is sale time in January, February and even March. It’s not like the old days when teams made deals as soon as the market opened and tried to fill all their needs by the end of the winter meetings.

“Things are slow,” Oakland general manager Dave Forst said. “I don’t think it’s that different from last year. Maybe the winter meetings will kind of jumpstart things.” Also on-deck at the meetings:

HALL OR NOTHING: Orel Hershiser, Albert Belle and George Steinbrenn­er will be considered for the Hall of Fame when a 16-member panel votes this weekend.

Harold Baines, Joe Carter, Will Clark, Lee Smith, Davey Johnson, Charlie Manuel and Lou Piniella are included on the ballot.

PICK-N-PACK: The Rule 5 draft is the last item of business at the winter meetings, held Thursday morning before clubs clear out of town. Teams scour each other’s 40-man rosters, looking for players left off.

HEAR THIS: Eight announcers who called games in the early days of radio are candidates for the Hall’s Ford C. Frick Award that honors broadcasti­ng excellence. Waite Hoyt, Harry Heilmann, Connie Desmond, Pat Flanagan, Jack Graney, Al Helfer, Rosey Rowswell and Ty Tyson are all deceased.

Hoyt and Heilmann already are in the Hall as players — Hoyt was the top pitcher on the famed 1927 Yankees, Heilmann played alongside Ty Cobb in the Detroit outfield and hit .403 in 1923.

ISOTOPES: The Albuquerqu­e Isotopes accept the Johnson Award for Minor League Baseball’s “most complete” franchise tonight in Las Vegas. On Monday, they will learn if they win the inaugural Copa de la Diverisión (Fun Cup) award for their Mariachis de Nuevo Mexico promotion in 2018.

NAPOLI: Mike Napoli has announced his retirement after 12 years in the majors that included three trips to the World Series. Napoli batted .246 with 267 homers and 744 RBIs over 1,392 games with the Los Angeles Angels, Texas, Boston and Cleveland.

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