Times-Herald

Premium talent still available on MLB’s free-agent market

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GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Cleveland's new manager, Stephen Vogt, isn't sure why this year's free agent market has entered a deep freeze even as temperatur­es heat up during spring training in Arizona and Florida.

He just wants to see it thaw as quickly as possible.

"Those guys should be in camp," Vogt said. "I don't know who is at fault, I don't know why, I don't need to know. But our game's at its best when the best players are on the field.

"I hope those guys sign soon." The guys Vogt is referring to are a half-dozen high-quality free agents who remain unsigned as the calendar nears March.

The resumes are impressive: two-time Cy Young Awardwinni­ng lefty Blake Snell, former MVP Cody Bellinger, six-time AllStar J.D. Martinez, four-time Gold Glove third baseman Matt Chapman, two-time All-Star shortstop Tim Anderson and lefthander Jordan Montgomery, who helped the Rangers to a World Series title last fall.

Vogt — of course — doesn't make front-office decisions. However, 15 of the 30 general managers who do were at Cactus League media day this week.

Nobody seemed particular­ly desperate to make moves.

"It ebbs and flows, but there have been years, like I remember I was in Cleveland, and we signed Nick Swisher and Michael Bourn late in camp," Cubs general manager Carter Hawkins said. "So it's not out of the ordinary."

This year's free-agent market peaked in December, when the Los Angeles Dodgers spent more than $1 billion to sign two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani and right-handed pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto. The defending

National League champion Arizona Diamondbac­ks were also among the teams active early, signing lefty Eduardo Rodriguez to an $80 million, four-year deal.

D-backs general manager Mike Hazen said he didn't want to speculate on other teams' strategies.

"I can't answer for everybody else," Hazen said. "I feel like we've made a decent amount of transactio­ns. We're looking to help build our team any way we can and we've ended up getting a couple of deals done."

The Los Angeles Angels and San Diego Padres are two teams that have spent big in the past, but seem to be taking a more cautious approach in 2024. The Boston Red Sox have been fairly quiet, too, and third baseman Rafael Devers said Tuesday his team could use some help.

"Everybody has a different perspectiv­e," Angels GM Perry Minasian said. "Every offseason is different. I don't think there's any offseason that's the same, because it's a different pool of players. For me, we're worried about what we have, not what we don't have."

The Padres had the thirdhighe­st payroll in baseball last season at $258 million, but finished 82-80 and missed the playoffs. The franchise has been in cost-cutting mode since.

San Diego still has a talented roster with a lineup that includes Fernando Tatis Jr., Manny Machado and Xander Bogaerts. General manager A.J. Preller seems content to see where that group leads the Padres this summer, even though the team hasn't ruled out adding players.

"That's a pretty good place to start," Preller said. "From our standpoint, it's a good foundation."

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