Ho! Ho! Ho! Carlos Santana finds $60 million under the tree, Cleveland Indians still searching
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com phoynes@cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio - Right now the Indians are in a tough spot money wise regarding their roster. Tough as in they're not going to spend much more than they've already committed to it.
If they had traded Jason Kipnis earlier in the offseason - and make no doubt they're shopping their second baseman/outfielder - maybe they could have stopped Carlos Santana from going to Philadelphia on Thursday afternoon with the best Christmas present of his life - a three-year $60 million deal.
The Indians owe Kipnis just over $30 million for the next two years. That includes a $2.5 million buyout on his club option for 2020.
There is still a lot of winter left. Spring training as well. A lot of time between now and opening day to make a deal.
The Mets have shown interest in Kipnis. Manager Callaway, former Tribe pitching coach, knows him well.
Depending on how much of Kipnis' salary the Mets would be willing to take, it would give the Indians some financial flexibility to make a concerted run at Jay Bruce. When the Indians acquired Bruce from the Mets in August, he stabilized the outfield with his play in right and the lineup by protecting Edwin Encarnacion in the No. 5 spot.
The addition of Bruce allowed manager Terry Francona to move switch-hitter Jose Ramirez into the No. 3 spot where he did the kind of damage that helped him finish third in the AL MVP voting.
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If not Bruce or some other outfielder - forget about J.D. Martinez -- the Indians could definitely use the money to help fill Santana's vacancy at first base or Bryan Shaw and Joe Smith's spots in the bullpen.
Right now, the Indians, no matter if Kipnis stays or goes, need a hitter. It doesn't matter if it's at first base, third base or the outfield. They need somebody to replace the production they've lost with Santana and possibly Bruce and Austin Jackson, another free agent.
Terry Francona on Jason Kipnis and conversations
In the outfield, they have Michael Brantley trying to recover from right ankle surgery and Brandon Guyer rehabbing from left wrist surgery. It sounds like they'll both miss part of April. Bradley Zimmer has recovered from a broken left hand, but Lonnie Chisenhall watched his best offensive season get derailed by the most persistent calf injury since Keith Hernandez limped into retirement way back in 1990.
Then there are guys like Greg Allen, Tyler Naquin and Abraham Almonte. Where they fit is anybody's guess.
Is Yandy Diaz the answer at third base? What about first base? Encarnacion, Chisenhall and Brantley have been mentioned as Santana's internal replacements. Versatility is a good thing, but are the Indians really going to move Brantley from left field to first base to stay out of harm's way? Isn't there much more action/danger at first base than in the outfield?
There are a lot of first basemen still available. Except for Eric Hosmer, they should be in the Tribe's price range. They include Logan Morrison, Mike Napoli, Yonder Alonzo, Lucas Duda, Mitch Moreland, Chris Carter, John Jason, Adam Lind, Mark Reynolds and Matt Adams.
The Indians, perhaps, could use one of their catchers - Yan Gomes or Roberto Perez - to fill a hole in the bullpen. They have Francisco Mejia and Eric Haase waiting in the wings. Haase, by the way, came back from winter ball early because of illness.
Talented, but fragile Danny Salazar has drawn interest as well. Between 10 and 15 teams asked about the hard-throwing right-hander at the winter meetings. The Cubs were one of those teams and they have plenty of young hitters who interest the Indians.
If the Indians don't trade Kipnis, they could take the path of least resistance and put Kipnis back at second, Ramirez back at third and hope Brantley can stay in left field. They'd still need a first baseman and a couple of relievers, but it's a long winter.
And they need to take a moment and realize what they lost in Santana. The switch-hitter never played fewer than 152 games in the last five seasons. He caught and played third base before finding a home at first. The last few years, he worried more about the Indians winning than his own stats and in doing so his play improved.
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