Tag Archives: Padres

MLB trends: Padres’ clutch problems, Nationals’ defensive work and Carlos Correa’s double play disasters – CBS Sports

  1. MLB trends: Padres’ clutch problems, Nationals’ defensive work and Carlos Correa’s double play disasters CBS Sports
  2. San Diego Padres Do Something That Hasn’t Happened in More Than 50 Years on Tuesday Sports Illustrated
  3. Padres Reacts Survey: Are you going to attend another game this season? Gaslamp Ball
  4. San Diego Padres news: Cardinals push Padres to edge of history, Fernando Tatis Jr. fashion statement, more Friars on Base
  5. Padres’ projected losing season raises more questions about front office’s capabilities Sports Business Journal
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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San Diego Padres rumors: Houston Astros tried to make blockbuster deal at MLB trade deadline – Friars on Base

  1. San Diego Padres rumors: Houston Astros tried to make blockbuster deal at MLB trade deadline Friars on Base
  2. Ohtani remains w/ Angels, Astros acquire Verlander, Dodgers & Yankees add pitching | MLB | THE HERD The Herd with Colin Cowherd
  3. Astros owner Jim Crane has never ‘seen anything like this’ Justin Verlander trade New York Post
  4. 2 former Mets they just traded bound for a deep playoff run, 2 who won’t even make the postseason Rising Apple
  5. Checkout what Astros owner Jim Crane had to say about the Mets trading Justin Verlander | SNY SNY
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Looking At The Padres’ Rotation Options

The Padres have been quite aggressive in recent years on all fronts, from signing free agents to trading for stars and extending their own players. That has shot their budget up to record heights, with Roster Resource currently estimating their payroll at $250MM. Up until a few years ago, they had only barely nudged past the $100MM mark, jumping to $174MM in 2021 and $211MM last year, per Cot’s Baseball Contracts.

Despite all that aggression, they’re going into the season with uncertainty in their rotation, both in the short-term and long-term. They should have a strong front three this year in Joe Musgrove, Yu Darvish and Blake Snell. That leaves two question marks at the back, since Mike Clevinger and Sean Manaea reached free agency and signed elsewhere. Darvish and Snell are both slated to reach free agency after this year, opening up more holes in the future. MacKenzie Gore’s inclusion in the Juan Soto trade also weakened the future outlook. So, who do they have on hand to step up and take these jobs? Let’s take a look at the candidates.

Nick Martinez

Martinez, 32, spent four seasons in Japan and parlayed that into a four-year deal with the Padres going into 2022, a deal that allowed him to opt out after each season. Last year was a mixed bag for Martinez, as he logged 106 1/3 innings with a 3.47 ERA. That’s solid production overall but it came in the form of a 4.30 ERA over 52 1/3 innings as a starter and a 2.67 mark in 54 innings as a reliever.

Martinez opted out and re-signed with the club on another deal, this time on a three-year pact. The details are unusually complex as there are plenty of incentives, as well as a dual club/player option structure. Whether he can find better results as a starter this time around remains to be seen. It’s certainly a risk for the Friars but at least it seems he comes with the floor of helping out the bullpen.

Should Martinez truly establish himself as a starter, the club will be able to keep him around. Martinez will get paid a $10MM base salary this year and the team will then have to decide whether or not to trigger two $16MM club options for 2024 and 2025, essentially a two-year, $32MM extension. That affords them a bit more control over his future than his previous opt-out laden deal. However, if Martinez does not have a successful campaign and they turn down that option, he will get to decide whether or not to trigger two player options valued at $8MM each, essentially a two-year, $16MM extension. That gives the Friars upside and downside potential in the pact. Those dollar figures can also reportedly change based on incentives, though the exact details aren’t known.

Seth Lugo

Lugo, 33, is a somewhat similar situation to Martinez, as he could potentially wind up in the rotation or in the bullpen. He made 23 starts in 2017-18 but only seven since, largely working as a reliever. That move was at least partially motivated by a “slight” tear that was discovered in his right ulnar collateral ligament in 2017.

Regardless, Lugo has served as an effective reliever since then, posting a 3.56 ERA over the past two years, and there’s some hope that his five-pitch mix can help him transition back into a rotation. It’s another risky move that the Padres were willing to take, giving Lugo two years and $15MM, with Lugo able to opt-out after the first. He hasn’t topped 80 innings in a season since 2018 and it’s hard to know how smooth this switch will be.

If it goes well, there won’t be any long-term upside for the club, since Lugo will make a $7.5MM salary but can opt out of the same figure for 2024. If the experiment works, he’s likely to return to free agency and find a larger guarantee. If it fails, the Padres will still be on the hook for another season.

Adrián Morejón

Morejón, 24 in February, has long been one of the most exciting pitching prospects in the league. Baseball America placed him on their top 100 list for five straight years beginning in 2017. Various injuries slowed him during his ascent to the majors and he’s yet to even pitch 70 official innings in any season of his career, majors or minors or combined.

Tommy John surgery in April of 2021 wiped out most of that season. He returned to health in 2022 but pitched in relief. The club reportedly still views him as a starter but he will likely have workload concerns this year. Between the majors and the minors last year, he logged 47 1/3 frames. He should be able to push that up now that he’s further removed from the surgery, but getting to a full starter’s workload would be a lot to ask. He has just over three years of MLB service time now, giving him the ability to provide some long-term help to the club’s rotation if he stays healthy and makes good on his prospect pedigree in 2023.

Jay Groome

Groome, 24, was a 12th overall pick of the Red Sox in 2016. He was once a highly-touted prospect but has hit various speed bumps. Tommy John surgery wiped out his 2018 and most of his 2019, which was followed by the minors being canceled by the pandemic in 2020. He has since returned to health and posted decent results but with some of the prospect shine having worn off.

In 2022, which included a trade to the Padres in the Eric Hosmer deal, he pitched 144 innings between Double-A and Triple-A. The 3.44 ERA is nice, but his 22.8% strikeout rate is right around average and his 10.4% walk rate was on the concerning side. He’s yet to reach the majors and arguably has the greatest chance to provide future value to the club with his six seasons of control and one remaining option year.

Brent Honeywell Jr.

Honeywell, 28 in March, is also a former top prospect. A Rays draftee, he was on BA’s top 100 in five straight seasons from 2016-20. Similar to Morejón and Groome, injuries have prevented him from reaching his potential thus far. Tommy John surgery in 2018 put him on the shelf and he has dealt with various setbacks since then. He was healthy enough to toss 86 innings in 2021 between Tampa Bay and Triple-A Durham, with the club then dealing him to Oakland. However, more injury setbacks resulted in just 20 1/3 minor league innings for the A’s last year.

Honeywell seems to be healthy again at the moment, as he’s tossed 28 innings in the Dominican Winter League. His 0.96 ERA in that time seems to have been enough to impress the Padres, as they signed him to their 40-man roster last week. It would make for a terrific bounceback story if he were to finally put it all together, but it’s hard to bank on him after hardly pitching in the past five years. He still has less than a year of service time, giving the Padres plenty of upside if it all clicks, but Honeywell is also out of options and will have to produce in the big leagues right away to hang onto his roster spot.

Reiss Knehr/Pedro Avila/Ryan Weathers

These three are all on the 40-man roster and warrant a mention, though they are unlikely to be called upon except in an emergency. All three of them have gotten some big league time in recent seasons, getting fairly brief showings in swing roles. Weathers probably has the most upside of the trio since he’s just 23 whereas the others are going into their respective age-26 seasons. Weathers was considered a top 100 prospect going into 2021 but he has a 5.49 ERA in the big leagues so far and posted a 6.73 ERA in 123 Triple-A innings last year, getting bumped to the bullpen as the season wore on.

Wilmer Font

Font, 33 in May, is a real wild card. He was a journeyman in the majors for many years but went to Korea to play in the KBO in 2021. Over the last two years, he’s been pitching at an ace level for the SSG Landers. He made 25 starts in 2021 with a 3.46 ERA and then 28 starts last year with a 2.69 mark. In that latter season, he got strikeouts at a 23.3% rate, walking only 4.7% of batters faced and he got ground balls on 51.6% of balls in play.

Success overseas doesn’t always translate to success in the majors, but Font wouldn’t be the first pitcher to underwhelm in North America but then return after a breakout elsewhere, with Miles Mikolas and Merrill Kelly some of the recent examples. Font isn’t currently on the 40-man and will have to earn his way back into the mix but he will be an interesting one to watch.

Julio Teheran/Aaron Brooks

These two veterans have also been brought aboard on minor league deals. Teheran spent 2022 in Indy ball and the Mexican League, posting some decent numbers in 13 starts between various clubs. He then went to the Dominican for winter ball and has posted a 3.49 ERA through eight starts there. He had a solid run with the Braves earlier in his career but got lit up in 2020 with a 10.05 ERA and then was injured for most of 2021.

Brooks was great in the KBO in 2020 and 2021, posting a 2.79 ERA over 36 starts in that time. However, his attempted return to the majors didn’t go well. He made five relief appearances for the Cardinals with a 7.71 ERA and got outrighted to the minors. In 15 Triple-A appearances, 13 starts, his ERA was 5.56.

All told, the Padres have lots of options here but all of them have question marks. There’s a handful of faded prospects who still need to put injury concerns in the rearview mirror and another handful of veteran swingmen who still might end up better suited to the bullpen than the rotation. Musgrove-Darvish-Snell gives them a strong front three, meaning the Padres only really need a couple of these guys to step up. On the other hand, they are one injury away from someone in this group suddenly being in the #3 slot.

The Padres could always supplement their staff between now and Opening Day, but recent reporting has suggested they don’t have much more payroll space to work with. If they want to go the trade route, there are certainly options, such as the Marlins having plenty of arms available and the Brewers perhaps in a similar boat.

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Padres, Pedro Severino Agree To Minor League Deal

The Padres are in agreement on a split contract with catcher Pedro Severino, reports Robert Murray of FanSided (Twitter link). The deal will pay him $1.95MM if he’s in the majors and contains an additional $550K in performance bonuses, according to Murray. Severino will not secure an immediate spot on the 40-man roster, according to Jeff Sanders of the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Severino, 29, has appeared in the majors in each of the past eight seasons. He broke in as a depth player with the Nationals, suiting up in 35 combined games between 2015-17. The backstop got a fair amount of action over the next four seasons, which he split between the Nats and Orioles. While he struggled mightily during his final season in Washington, he posted respectable offensive numbers for a catcher during his three years in Baltimore.

From 2019-21, Severino hit .249/.315/.397 through 938 plate appearances. He connected on 29 home runs with roughly league average strikeout and walk numbers. Nevertheless, the Orioles non-tendered him in lieu of a projected $3.1MM arbitration salary last offseason.

While partially motivated by the forthcoming arrival of Adley Rutschman, the O’s decision also reflected Severino’s defensive shortcomings. Public metrics have pegged him as a well below-average defender behind the dish. He routinely rates as a worse than average pitch framer, per Statcast, which pegged him as 10 runs below par in that regard in 2021. Severino was behind the plate for 10 passed balls and 66 wild pitches in 883 innings during his final season with the Orioles. That was the second-highest total in MLB in both categories, and while the pitching staff surely shoulders some of the responsibility, it didn’t reflect especially well on his work as a receiver.

After being cut loose by Baltimore, he caught on with the Brewers on a $1.9MM free agent deal. Before the season started, Severino tested positive for the performance-enhancing drug Clomiphene. He attributed the result to an unintentional byproduct of fertility treatments he’d undergone in the Dominican Republic.

Severino was suspended 80 games. In the immediate aftermath of that ban, Milwaukee acquired Víctor Caratini from the Padres to pair with  Omar Narváez. The Brewers reinstated Severino in July, but he appeared in just eight games as the team’s #3 catcher before being designated him for assignment. He went unclaimed on waivers and played out the season at Triple-A Nashville, where he hit .308/.349/.496 with four homers over 126 plate appearances.

The right-handed hitter qualified for minor league free agency at year’s end. He finds a new landing spot in San Diego, the fourth organization of his career. The Friars presently have Austin NolaLuis Campusano and Brett Sullivan (coincidentally part of the trade package for Caratini) as backstops on the 40-man roster. Severino slides in behind that group as a depth option.



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Padres, SS Xander Bogaerts agree to 11-year, $280M contract: Sources

The San Diego Padres and free-agent shortstop Xander Bogaerts have agreed to an 11-year, $280 million contract, major-league sources confirmed to The Athletic. MLB Network’s Jon Heyman was first to report the news. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Bogaerts slashed .307/.377/.456 with 73 RBIs and 15 home runs in 150 games last season.
  • He ranked No. 5 on The Athletic’s Keith Law’s list of top free agents of 2022-23.
  • Bogaerts opted out of the final three years and $60 million of his Red Sox contract on Nov. 7 to become a free agent.

Scouting report

With the signing, Bogaerts is expected to continue playing shortstop while Ha-Seong Kim plays second base, Jake Croneworth plays first base and Fernando Tatis Jr. moves to the outfield.

Bogaerts is coming off a platform year that’s a bit different from his norms, as he failed to hit 20 homers for the first time in a full season since 2017 but played his best-ever defense at shortstop. Bogaerts, who turned 30 on Oct. 1, had his best defensive season by advanced metrics — it was just his second year with a positive Outs Above Average figure, at plus-5.

The boost in his defensive production offsets the loss in his hard contact, but the likely trend for all players in their 30s is for defensive value to slip and for them to move down the defensive spectrum.

Padres’ immediate motivation

The Padres viewed Bogaerts as the best hitter among the Big 4 shortstops in this free-agent class. Trea Turner, as evidenced by an unsuccessful $342 million bid, was their top priority. Then, San Diego had a scintillating but brief flirtation with Aaron Judge.

After going 0-for-2 on superstar targets, general manager A.J. Preller would not be denied a third time. In agreeing to a surprisingly hefty commitment to Bogaerts, the Padres far outbid the competition. The Boston Globe reported that the Red Sox’s offers to their longtime shortstop were below $200 million. – Lin

Other looming factors for San Diego

At this point, no sweepstakes seem too outlandish for the Padres. But their unmistakable desire to make a splash was driven, in part, by future considerations. In light of recent nine-figure contracts, Manny Machado appears increasingly likely to opt out after the 2023 season and perhaps pursue another $300 million payday.

The Padres realize that extending Juan Soto, the sport’s most accomplished 24-year-old hitter, could be a long shot. For at least one season, San Diego should benefit from one of the most potent offensive foursomes in baseball: Soto, Machado, Bogaerts and Fernando Tatis Jr. – Lin

Would this have made sense for the Red Sox?

Bogaerts was the heart and soul of the Red Sox in many ways, but at some point this deal didn’t make sense for the Red Sox, not so much the $280 million, but 11-year term. While earlier in the day there was clear optimism from the Red Sox that they were working toward a deal, chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom presciently said when asked about a timeline for working toward a Bogaerts deal, “I don’t know. It wouldn’t be my place to say but I think the game teaches you, you shouldn’t speculate too much on those things.”

Earlier in the week, the Red Sox narrowly missed out on free agent deals for Zach Eflin, Andrew Heaney and Tommy Kanhle, but this reaches a whole new level. After a productive day with deals in place or pending for Chris Martin, Kenley Jansen and Masataka Yoshida, ending the meetings this way puts the club back closer to square one. –Jennings

What’s next for Boston

The Red Sox now have several questions to answer, chiefly, what do they do from here? Who will they pursue at short? Dansby Swanson or Carlos Correa in free agency? A trade? Or will they shift Kiké Hernandez or Trevor Story to shortstop and fill an outfield or second base hole instead? How do they fill Bogaerts’ hole in the middle of the lineup? – Jennings

Required reading

(Photo: Winslow Townson / Getty Images)



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Padres land Xander Bogaerts with 11-year contract worth $280 million as All-Star leaves Red Sox, per reports

The San Diego Padres have reached an agreement with shortstop Xander Bogaerts, according to Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Bogaerts, who opted out of the final three years and $60 million remaining on his Red Sox contract after the season, will ink an 11-year pact worth $280 million. The exact structure of the deal has yet to be revealed, but MLB Network’s Jon Morosi reports that the deal does not contain any opt-outs. It does, regardless, feature no-trade protection.

Bogaerts turned 30 in October and was the oldest of this offseason’s big-name free agent shortstops (also Carlos Correa, Dansby Swanson, and Trea Turner, who earlier this week signed with the Philadelphia Phillies). He slashed .307/.377/.456 in 2022, though he slipped to 15 home runs after averaging 29.7 homers per 162 games from 2018-21. The dip in power was mitigated by improved defense. Bogaerts rated very well in the field in 2022.

Our R.J. Anderson ranked Bogaerts the fifth best free agent available this offseason and the third-best available shortstop behind Correa and Turner. Here’s his write-up:

Bogaerts is the Max Martin of shortstops, a consistent hitmaker with a sparkling trophy case. In each of the last five seasons, he’s appeared in at least 84 percent of his team’s games and has produced an OPS+ north of 125. He can hit for average, he can walk, and he’s mostly hit for power. This season proved to be an exception on that last note, though a late May collision with Alex Verdugo that resulted in wrist and shoulder discomfort might be to blame. Defensively, Bogaerts has been a few years away from moving off shortstop for, oh, a decade now. Statcast data confirms that he still doesn’t have top-end speed or arm strength relative to his peers. It’s not easy to convince a big-league team you’re playable at the six for this long unless you’re doing something right. Even if Bogaerts is asked by his next employer to shift elsewhere, you have to give him credit for the hard work he put into improving his defense. Do note that Bogaerts opted out of his contract with three years and $60 million remaining, suggesting he’s looking to improve on an AAV of $20 million. He should, easily.

Bogaerts has benefited from Fenway Park’s nooks and crannies over the years, hitting .312/.375/.497 at home and .271/.338/.420 on the road in his career. Also, he posted a .424 batting average on balls in play on the ground in 2022, well above his career average (.333) and the league average (.302). Some regression there is likely, making it important Bogaerts rediscovers his power.

Bogaerts will presumably play an infield position for the Padres, though where precisely is to be determined. San Diego has a number of talented infielders as it is, including Fernando Tatis Jr. (likely to shift to the outfield after missing the entire 2022 campaign due to a combination of injury and suspension), Manny Machado (locked in at third), Ha-Seong Kim (a good shortstop), and Jake Cronenworth (previously cemented at second base). In theory, Bogaerts’ addition could allow the Padres to trade one of those players for rotation help or to slide one to first base (Wil Myers, Josh Bell, and Brandon Drury are all either free agents or already signed with another team). Still, again, things are and will likely remain in flux for the Padres until the arrival of spring training. At a minimum, they have options.

The Padres had previously made runs at Trea Turner and Aaron Judge, falling short on both. General manager A.J. Preller is never one to fear away from making a splash, however. So Bogaerts becomes the latest in his collection of star additions, joining Machado, Juan Soto, Josh Hader, Yu Darvish, and others. Our own Matt Snyder recently detailed how the Padres were in position to make such excessive offers to the top free agents, writing the following:

The Padres right now look to have $184.2 million on the books for 2023 after figuring in arbitration and pre-arbitration salaries, according to baseball-reference.com estimation. It seems like rotation depth is more important than adding another superstar, but it’s possible they can make do with Yu Darvish, Joe Musgrove, Blake Snell, Nick Martinez, Adrian Morejon, Julio Teheran and more (Ryan Weathers bounce back?).

It should be noted that the Padres’ signing of Bogaerts means the Boston Red Sox, his previous team, are now certain to be on the hunt for a new shortstop of their own. That could make the Carlos Correa and Dansby Swanson sweepstakes all the more interesting to watch unfold. 

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Padres, SS Xander Bogaerts agree to 11-year, $280M contract: Sources

The San Diego Padres and free-agent shortstop Xander Bogaerts have agreed to an 11-year, $280 million contract, major-league sources confirmed to The Athletic. MLB Network’s Jon Heyman was first to report the news. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Bogaerts slashed .307/.377/.456 with 73 RBIs and 15 home runs in 150 games last season.
  • He ranked No. 5 on The Athletic’s Keith Law’s list of top free agents of 2022-23.
  • Bogaerts opted out of the final three years and $60 million of his Red Sox contract on Nov. 7 to become a free agent.

Scouting report

With the signing, Bogaerts is expected to continue playing shortstop while Ha-Seong Kim plays second base, Jake Croneworth plays first base and Fernando Tatis Jr. moves to the outfield.

Bogaerts is coming off a platform year that’s a bit different from his norms, as he failed to hit 20 homers for the first time in a full season since 2017 but played his best-ever defense at shortstop. Bogaerts, who turned 30 on Oct. 1, had his best defensive season by advanced metrics — it was just his second year with a positive Outs Above Average figure, at plus-5.

The boost in his defensive production offsets the loss in his hard contact, but the likely trend for all players in their 30s is for defensive value to slip and for them to move down the defensive spectrum.

Padres’ immediate motivation

The Padres viewed Bogaerts as the best hitter among the Big 4 shortstops in this free-agent class. Trea Turner, as evidenced by an unsuccessful $342 million bid, was their top priority. Then, San Diego had a scintillating but brief flirtation with Aaron Judge.

After going 0-for-2 on superstar targets, general manager A.J. Preller would not be denied a third time. In agreeing to a surprisingly hefty commitment to Bogaerts, the Padres far outbid the competition. The Boston Globe reported that the Red Sox’s offers to their longtime shortstop were below $200 million. – Lin

Other looming factors for San Diego

At this point, no sweepstakes seem too outlandish for the Padres. But their unmistakable desire to make a splash was driven, in part, by future considerations. In light of recent nine-figure contracts, Manny Machado appears increasingly likely to opt out after the 2023 season and perhaps pursue another $300 million payday.

The Padres realize that extending Juan Soto, the sport’s most accomplished 24-year-old hitter, could be a long shot. For at least one season, San Diego should benefit from one of the most potent offensive foursomes in baseball: Soto, Machado, Bogaerts and Fernando Tatis Jr. – Lin

Would this have made sense for the Red Sox?

Bogaerts was the heart and soul of the Red Sox in many ways, but at some point this deal didn’t make sense for the Red Sox, not so much the $280 million, but 11-year term. While earlier in the day there was clear optimism from the Red Sox that they were working toward a deal, chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom presciently said when asked about a timeline for working toward a Bogaerts deal, “I don’t know. It wouldn’t be my place to say but I think the game teaches you, you shouldn’t speculate too much on those things.”

Earlier in the week, the Red Sox narrowly missed out on free agent deals for Zach Eflin, Andrew Heaney and Tommy Kanhle, but this reaches a whole new level. After a productive day with deals in place or pending for Chris Martin, Kenley Jansen and Masataka Yoshida, ending the meetings this way puts the club back closer to square one. –Jennings

What’s next for Boston

The Red Sox now have several questions to answer, chiefly, what do they do from here? Who will they pursue at short? Dansby Swanson or Carlos Correa in free agency? A trade? Or will they shift Kiké Hernandez or Trevor Story to shortstop and fill an outfield or second base hole instead? How do they fill Bogaerts’ hole in the middle of the lineup? – Jennings

Required reading

(Photo: Winslow Townson / Getty Images)



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Xander Bogaerts and Padres agree to 11-year, $280M deal, source says

Shortstop Xander Bogaerts and the San Diego Padres are in agreement on an 11-year, $280 million contract, a source familiar with the deal told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.

The 30-year-old Bogaerts, who has played his entire 10-year career with the Boston Red Sox, is a four-time All-Star and a two-time World Series champion. He is coming off one of his best seasons, posting a 5.8 bWAR and finishing ninth in American League MVP voting in 2022.

Bogaerts was a free agent after opting out of a six-year, $132 million contract extension he signed with the Red Sox ahead of the 2019 season. He joined a robust class of free agent shortstops that also included Trea Turner (who signed with the Philadelphia Phillies), Carlos Correa and Dansby Swanson.

The Padres already have Fernando Tatis Jr. at shortstop, but he missed the entire season because of injuries and an 80-game suspension for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug. San Diego also met with Aaron Judge and Turner before the big stars opted for different teams.

“From our standpoint, you want to explore and make sure we’re looking at every possible opportunity to get better,” general manager A.J. Preller said before the Bogaerts deal surfaced. “We’ve got a real desire to win and do it for a long time.”

Before the 2022 season, Boston offered Bogaerts a second extension, which would have added an additional year to his contract and paid him $90 million over his final four seasons. The offer was viewed in the industry as significantly below market value for a player of his stature.

In April, one Red Sox front-office official told ESPN that a strong season from Bogaerts would lower the chance of Boston being able to sign him.

“We are not in the business of signing 10-year deals for a lot of money, because those contracts mostly do not work out well for teams,” the front-office member said.

But the Red Sox changed their tune in recent months, with chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom publicly stating that Bogaerts was the team’s top priority in free agency this offseason.

MLB Network first reported the agreement between Bogaerts and the Padres.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Padres, Xander Bogaerts Agree To 11-Year Deal

11:40pm: The deal contains a full no-trade provision; it does not contain any opt-clauses, reports Jon Morosi of MLB.com (on Twitter).

11:21pm: The Padres are in agreement with Xander Bogaerts on an 11-year, $280MM deal, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post (Twitter link). It’s a stunning development, with the four-time All-Star leaving the only organization he’s ever known to join the Padres on a staggering commitment.

Bogaerts had spent his whole career in Boston, originally joining the organization as an amateur signee from Aruba back in 2009. He quickly developed into one of the sport’s top prospects and was in the majors by August 2013, a few months before his 21st birthday. Bogaerts claimed two Silver Slugger awards within his first four MLB seasons, but his .283/.339/.409 career slash line through 2017 was roughly league average overall. He took a major step forward in 2018, however, reaching another level by his age-25 campaign.

He hit .288/.360/.522 with 23 home runs over 136 games that season, helping lead Boston to 108 wins and a World Series title. Bogaerts sustained that new level of excellence, as he’s been a well above-average offensive performer in each of the four years since then. Going back to the start of the 2018 campaign, the righty-hitting infielder owns a .300/.373/.507 line that checks in 34 percentage points above league average by measure of wRC+.

On the heels of that breakout season, the Red Sox inked Bogaerts to a long-term deal in April 2019. Boston guaranteed him $120MM between 2020-25, allowing him to opt out with half that money remaining after 2022. Bogaerts played well enough to earn some MVP votes in each of the four seasons since signing that extension, making it a no-brainer he’d take his opt-out opportunity unless he and the Red Sox could preemptively agree upon a new deal.

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Everything we know about the Aaron Judge contract talks, including a late pitch by Padres

SAN DIEGO — Aaron Judge agreed to return to the New York Yankees early Wednesday morning on a landmark nine-year, $360 million contract, but only after a last-minute push from a surprise entrant in the sweepstakes for the free-agent slugger — the San Diego Padres.

Judge’s deal, which is pending a physical, gives him the highest average annual value for a position player in major-league history, shattering Mike Trout’s previous mark of $35.5 million by almost $5 million. The deal is two years longer and worth $146.5 million more than the seven-year, $213.5 million extension offer Judge rejected from the Yankees at the end of spring training.

Judge, who turns 31 on April 26, shot up his value by putting together baseball’s all-time best walk year, hitting 62 home runs to break the American League single-season record. He will now be tied to the Yankees through his age-39 season. He is expected to become the team’s captain as part of the agreement, which ensures he likely will retire wearing the only uniform he has ever known.

The Giants made a strong push for Judge, and at one point Tuesday appeared to be gaining momentum in their efforts to sign him. Seeking to add a big-name slugger, they are now expected to pursue one of the remaining three shortstops on the free-agent market — Carlos Correa, Xander Bogaerts or Dansby Swanson.

The Padres struck out Monday on Trea Turner, but as so often is the case under general manager A.J. Preller, were not ready to stop swinging. Club officials met face-to-face with Aaron Judge on Tuesday night at Petco Park in San Diego, four sources briefed on the matter told The Athletic. However, it is believed they never got the chance to make a formal bid.

A sitdown with Judge signaled that Preller and owner Peter Seidler were seriously considering the pivot of all pivots. Before Turner agreed to a $300 million deal with the Phillies, the Padres offered the shortstop a $342 million guarantee spread out over at least 11 years, according to a person with knowledge of the discussions. Now that they have lost out on Judge, they could embark upon a more serious pursuit of Bogaerts, in whom industry sources say Preller maintains interest.

Judge, however, represented a better fit for the Padres than Bogaerts or Turner. Signing him would give San Diego arguably the most star-powered outfield in baseball, with the American League home-run king and Juan Soto patrolling the corners. It also would have allowed Fernando Tatis Jr. to stay in the infield once he returned from his suspension for performance-enhancing drugs on April 20, in some combination alongside Jake Cronenworth and Ha-Seong Kim.

The Padres would have become the first major-league team to carry three $300 million players — Judge, Tatis and Manny Machado. Instead, that distinction will go to the Yankees, who have pitcher Gerrit Cole on a nine-year, $324 million contract and Giancarlo Stanton on a 13-year, $325 million deal they acquired from the Marlins.

With Judge set to return, the Yankees intend to accelerate other free-agent pursuits. Left-hander Carlos Rodón, outfielder Andrew Benintendi and Japanese outfielder Matsataka Yoshida are among the players in whom they have interest. The team has already re-signed first baseman Anthony Rizzo and reached agreement with reliever Tommy Kahnle.

The Athletic’s Andy McCullough contributed to this story

(Photo: Carmen Mandato / Getty Images)



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