Los Angeles Times

Acquisitiv­e nature

Major league leaders acquire closer Chapman in trade with the Yankees.

- BILL SHAIKIN ON BASEBALL bill.shaikin@latimes.com Twitter: @BillShaiki­n

Cubs’ Chapman deal may turn up heat on Dodgers to make a move, Bill Shaikin writes.

With one week to go until baseball’s trade deadline, Dodgers fans wait to see if their team will do what the Chicago Cubs just did.

On Monday, the Cubs paid a seemingly astonishin­g price to rent Aroldis Chapman, who is eligible for free agency at the end of the season.

For Chapman, perhaps baseball’s most dominating closer, the Cubs surrendere­d four players to the New York Yankees — including an elite prospect, shortstop Gleyber Torres.

The Dodgers last year declined to trade any top prospects when they needed to acquire starting pitching, resulting in a deal for Alex Wood and Mat Latos rather than one for David Price, Cole Hamels or Johnny Cueto.

The Dodgers had two aces this time last year: Clayton Kershaw, currently on the disabled list with no timetable to return; and Zack Greinke, who signed with the Arizona Diamondbac­ks when the Dodgers would not match the Diamondbac­ks’ $206.5-million contract offer. (Greinke also is currently on the disabled list.)

Andrew Friedman, the Dodgers’ president of baseball operations, now says the team is engaged in the pursuit of highlevel talent, which would require a package of high-level talent in return.

Targets among starting pitchers include Chris Archer of the Tampa Bay Rays, who is scheduled to start Tuesday against the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium, and Chris Sale of the Chicago White Sox.

For two months of Chapman, the Cubs traded two of their best prospects. Baseball America ranked Torres, 19, as the Cubs’ top prospect and among the top 30 in the minor leagues. The Cubs also traded outfielder Billy McKinney, 21, who ranked among baseball’s top 30 prospects last summer and still ranked among the Cubs’ top 10. The Cubs also traded major league swingman Adam Warren and minor league outfielder Rashad Crawford.

The trade afforded the Cubs an opportunit­y to reap the benefits of flexing their financial might in Latin America, where prospects are not subject to the draft. In 2013, when the Cubs signed Torres out of Venezuela for $1.75 million, they spent roughly twice as much on bonuses for internatio­nal prospects as any other National League team. The Dodgers recently have employed a similar approach, and some of their internatio­nal prospects could become trade chips.

Chapman rebuilt his trade value after serving a 30-game suspension for violating baseball’s domestic violence policy. The Dodgers had a deal in place last winter to acquire Chapman from the Cincinnati Reds but backed off after learning that Chapman was the subject of a domestic violence investigat­ion. He was alleged to have choked his girlfriend during a dispute at their Florida home and firing eight shots from a gun in the garage, according to a police report. Chapman acknowledg­ed shooting the gun but said he never hurt anyone.

In a statement Monday, Cubs Chairman Tom Ricketts said the team takes the issue of domestic violence “very seriously” and that he had spoken with Chapman.

“I shared with him the high expectatio­ns we set for our players and staff both on and off the field,” Ricketts said. “Aroldis indicated he is comfortabl­e with meeting those expectatio­ns.”

Said Chapman in a statement: “I regret that I did not exercise better judgment and for that I am truly sorry. … My girlfriend and I have worked hard to strengthen our relationsh­ip, to raise our daughter together, and would appreciate the opportunit­y to move forward without revisiting an event we consider part of our past.”

 ?? Elsa Garrison Getty Images ?? THE STEEP PRICE PAID by the Chicago Cubs to pry closer Aroldis Chapman, above, from the New York Yankees: four players, including an elite prospect, 19-year-old shortstop Gleyber Torres.
Elsa Garrison Getty Images THE STEEP PRICE PAID by the Chicago Cubs to pry closer Aroldis Chapman, above, from the New York Yankees: four players, including an elite prospect, 19-year-old shortstop Gleyber Torres.

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