Los Angeles Times

Trade raises more questions about L.A.’s offseason odyssey, but it’s too soon to judge

- ANDY McCULLOUGH ON BASEBALL

In December 2016, as Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman doled out nearly $200 million in free-agent contracts, he crystalliz­ed the occasional need for baseball executives to eschew logic in the winter.

“If you’re always rational on every free agent,” he said, “you will finish third on every free agent.”

The quote was worth reconsider­ing Friday afternoon — in wake of a trade which sent Yasiel Puig, Matt Kemp, Alex Wood and Kyle Farmer to Cincinnati in exchange for pitcher Homer Bailey, a pair of prospects and some financial flexibilit­y — only viewed in a new context: Are the Dodgers willing to be irrational about free-agent outfielder Bryce Harper?

Because in a vacuum, this trade does not make the Dodgers better in 2019. Puig irritated his teammates and superiors, but he still has hit 51 homers with an .827 on-base plus slugging percentage since 2017. Wood regressed in 2018, but still posted a 3.68 earned-run average. The production of Kemp evaporated after the season’s first two months, but he still offered competence on the bench. The return will not sell tickets. Bailey has been one of the least effective, least reliable and most

expensive pitchers in baseball for several seasons. He will soon be released. Both shortstop Jeter Downs and pitcher Josiah Gray have promise, but neither one is close to the majors. The Dodgers are a worse team on Dec. 21 than they were on Dec. 20.

Yet the meaning of this move cannot be judged in December. What matters is what comes next. What matters is how the Dodgers utilize the roughly $14 million they’ve freed up on their luxury-tax payroll. It could be for Harper. It could be in swinging a trade for Miami Marlins catcher J.T. Realmuto or Cleveland Indians pitcher Corey Kluber. Or it could be signing one of the volatile but talented relievers available.

“We are in a position right now, where we still feel like we have a really good team,” Friedman said Friday, “but feel like we want to continue to add to it before we get to spring training. What exactly that looks like, I’m not sure yet. But I do think we’ve gained some flexibilit­y.”

The Dodgers made a similarly complicate­d deal last winter, shipping the contracts of Adrian Gonzalez, Scott Kazmir and Brandon McCarthy to Atlanta in exchange for Kemp. The deal was designed to avoid being penalized by the competitiv­e-balance tax for a sixth straight season. By staying under the $197million threshold in 2018, the Dodgers were theoretica­lly prepared to blow past the $206-million threshold in 2019. And their fans, starved of a championsh­ip since 1988, await to see if the Dodgers will.

The trade leaves the Dodgers’ big-league outfield stockpile effectivel­y at six: Joc Pederson, Cody Bellinger, Chris Taylor, Enrique Hernandez, Andrew Toles and Alex Verdugo. Bellinger, Taylor and Hernandez also play the infield regularly. Neither Toles nor Verdugo has extensive big-league experience. The need for an additional outfielder appears legitimate.

Could that player be Harper? The Dodgers have shown no indication they are willing to offer a decadelong contract. The longest free-agent deal Friedman has given out with the Dodgers is the five-year pact handed to Kenley Jansen after 2016. The team would likely engage with Harper on a shorter-term deal, but it is unclear if Harper would agree to such a contract this early in the winter.

Reached for comment Friday, Harper’s representa­tive Scott Boras declined to comment on the status of any discussion­s with the Dodgers. He reiterated his case for his client, who at 26 has already made six All-Star teams and won the National League MVP award.

“There have been so few players who were free agents at 25, 26, who were iconic and who paid for themselves independen­t of performanc­e,” Boras said. “It’s a rare business opportunit­y. You hear from people and they understand this type of situation doesn’t come often.”

The other outfielder­s on the market offer intrigue, if little certainty. A.J. Pollock has posted an .801 on-base plus slugging percentage as a center fielder the last two seasons but has struggled with injuries. Marwin Gonzalez can play all three outfield spots but hit .247 with a .733 OPS in 2018. Adam Jones is a five-time All-Star but is fading as a hitter and a fielder. Carlos Gonzalez has been a belowavera­ge hitter since 2017.

The connection between Harper and the Dodgers will not fade in the immediate future, not unless a team like the Philadelph­ia Phillies bowls Harper over with an offer. But Philadelph­ia hosted infielder Manny Machado this week, and may prefer him to Harper. Until Harper signs elsewhere, the Dodgers will at least lurk on the margins.

Could the Dodgers use their flexibilit­y on one of Cleveland’s star pitchers? The Indians have entertaine­d offers for Kluber and Trevor Bauer this winter. But after shedding the contracts of Edwin Encarnacio­n, Yonder Alonso and Yan Gomes, Cleveland has less pressure to cut salary. The Dodgers will still likely need to use significan­t prospect capital to pry away either pitcher.

And those prospects may be best served in a deal for Realmuto. The Marlins opened negotiatio­ns with a sky-high asking price — they reportedly requested Bellinger in talks with L.A. — but have yet to find a match. With Yasmani Grandal on the free-agent market, the most glaring weakness on the Dodgers’ roster is the lack of a starting catcher. They have watched as potential stopgaps Wilson Ramos (New York Mets), Kurt Suzuki (Washington Nationals) and Brian McCann (Atlanta Braves) came off the market.

“The catcher spot is still something we have to address,” Friedman said.

The team also needs to upholster its bullpen. Still available are seven-time All-Star closer Craig Kimbrel and two-time All-Star closer Zach Britton. The prices for each pitcher figure to exceed the Dodgers’ comfort level. But the Dodgers will require more than the addition of Joe Kelly to prop up Jansen, who struggled for sizable portions of last season. And it was Friedman himself who two winters ago explained how the open market works. After sending Puig, Wood and Kemp to Cincinnati, Friedman doesn’t just have the opportunit­y to act irrational­ly. It might be better described as a need.

“I do think we have some added flexibilit­y,” Friedman said. “And we’ll figure out what makes the most sense for us as we move forward.”

 ?? David Zalubowski Associated Press ?? MIAMI OPENED trade negotiatio­ns for catcher J.T. Realmuto with a sky-high asking price and have yet to find a match. The Marlins reportedly requested outfielder Cody Bellinger in talks with the Dodgers.
David Zalubowski Associated Press MIAMI OPENED trade negotiatio­ns for catcher J.T. Realmuto with a sky-high asking price and have yet to find a match. The Marlins reportedly requested outfielder Cody Bellinger in talks with the Dodgers.

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