Showing posts with label Aroldis Chapman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aroldis Chapman. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Report: Aroldis Chapman returns to Yankees on five-year deal


Sport Science: Aroldis Chapman

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. Before making the blockbuster Aroldis Chapman trade with the New York Yankees, the Cubs checked in with the Kansas City Royals about Wade Davis and found the asking price to be Kyle Schwarber.

The psychology and the supply-and-demand dynamics are different in July. Schwarber had been damaged goods, still recovering from major knee surgery and months away from his dramatic return in the World Series. Davis also could have impacted two pennants races for his new team instead of one.By the time a $10 billion industry reconvened this week outside Washington, D.C., for the winter meetings, the small-market Royals could compromise with Jorge Soler, betting on his long-term upside and facing the reality that their World Series closer could have been part of a mass exodus of free agents after the 2017 season.

The Cubs also checked into the g*****d National Resort & Convention Center knowing that Soler is a diminishing asset for a loaded team at a time when his best attribute right-handed power could be found on the free-agent market in sluggers like Edwin Encarnacion and Mark Trumbo. I think theres some great baseball ahead for him, team president Theo Epstein said Wednesday night after the Cubs finalized the Soler-for-Davis trade. I think its more likely that he reaches his ceiling now than it was 24 hours ago, because hes got a chance to play every day.

Soler became a top priority within the first weeks of the Epstein administration as Cubs officials scouted the Cuban defector in the Dominican Republic before Thanksgiving 2011, picturing him as a building block for future playoff teams at a renovated Wrigley Field.

Even chairman Tom Ricketts met with Solers camp during a trip to the Dominican Republic before the Cubs won the bidding war and the prospect signed a nine-year, $30 million major-league contract in the summer of 2012.

Years later, manager Joe Maddon would describe Soler as Vladimir Guerrero with plate discipline, the kind of talent who would be drafted No. 1 overall if he had been born in South Florida.

Soler showed flashes of superstar potential. He absolutely crushed the St. Louis Cardinals during the 2015 playoffs (2.341 OPS) and will get a well-deserved World Series ring. But he didnt look like a complete player or an athlete the Cubs could count on to stay healthy, profiling more like a designated hitter in the American League.

When George was playing sporadically, he became a little bit more of an all-or-nothing power threat, Epstein said, because its hard to get into a good rhythm and youre not seeing pitches as much. Youre not recognizing spin the same way.

When hes locked in, he can work really good at-bats. And hes a hitter not just a power hitter. So I think its more likely now that his potential gets unleashed at some point. Were rooting for him.

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Maybe Soler who still hasnt turned 25 yet can avoid some of the leg injuries as a part-time DH and put it all together in Kansas City as the Royals try to balance the present, the future and their financial realities. But the Cubs are a win-now team that believes Davis could get them the final out of the 2017 World Series.

An October legend (Schwarber) and a $184 million Gold Glove defender (Jason Heyward) would keep blocking Soler at the corner spots in Wrigley Field, where a National League MVP (Kris Bryant) and a World Series MVP (Ben Zobrist) can move away from the infield. Javier Baez is another versatile, well-rounded player who would continue to marginalize Soler.

It became tough for us, Epstein said, with Schwarber looking like hes destined to play quite a bit of left field. Not ruling catching out as an option to some extent, but hes going to play a lot of left field.

And with Javys emergence and what that means for Zobrists possible role in the outfield as well at times it just became tougher and tougher to see George getting regular at-bats with us.

We felt like he needed to play and it would have been a tough fit.

It would have been even tougher to trade a spare outfielder during his fourth season in the big leagues. Stashing Soler who has 27 career homers in less than 700 big-league at-bats at Triple-A Iowa wouldnt have been the answer.

The Cubs saw this day coming. Schwarber wrecked his knee in early April and Soler injured his hamstring two months later and wound up missing two months.

He just couldnt quite stay healthy enough, Epstein said, and kind of slumped at the wrong time and started to get hot right before he got hurt.

That was kind of how we envisioned it: Hey, if theres an opportunity, this guy can take the job and run with it and then we have an even more valuable trade chip or weve got an everyday leftfielder/middle-of the-order bat. It just didnt quite come together.

But I think this trade despite that recouped a lot of his value. It made sense for him, for us and for the Royals.

Source: http://www.csnchicago.com/chicago-cubs/report-aroldis-chapman-returns-yankees-five-year-deal

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Monday, July 25, 2016

Cubs land marquee closer Aroldis Chapman from Yankees


The Cuban Missile: The Legend Of Aroldis Chapman

The Cubs made their boldest move of the Theo Epstein regime by acquiring power-throwing closer Aroldis Chapman from the Yankees on Monday.

Chapman, 28, gives the Cubs the formidable left-handed late-inning specialist theyve sought in their efforts to win their first World Series title since 1908.

The trade cost the Cubs prized shortstop prospect Gleyber Torres, pitcher Adam Warren, left-handed-hitting outfielder Billy McKinney, 21, and, reportedly, minor leaguer Rashad Crawford.

But the Cubs believe Chapman, who has a 3-0 record with a 2.01 ERA and 44 strikeouts in 31 1/3 innings, is worth the cost and controversy surrounding him. Chapman has 165 saves over the past five seasons with the Reds and Yankees, and his fastball was clocked at 105 mph numerous times last week.

Chapman, however, served a 30-game suspension at the start of this season under Major League Baseballs new policy on domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse. Chapman was accused of choking his 22-year-old girlfriend and firing eight shots in his Florida home after last season but was not prosecuted due to conflicting information.

Chapman also has been cited for numerous driving violations primarily speeding penalties in Florida.

In a July game at Great American Ballpark in July 2014, Cubs slugger Anthony Rizzo took exception to several of Chapmans pitches sailing near the heads of a few teammates.

Rizzo went toward the Reds dugout, igniting a bench-clearing incident. But Rizzo and several Reds players made their peace at the 2014 All-Star Game.

Epstein, who is in a win-now mode for the second consecutive summer, has been aggressive in his search to upgrade the bullpen particularly from the left side.

The Cubs acquired lefty Mike Montgomery from the Mariners in a four-player trade completed Wednesday. After making the deal, Epstein was pleased that he still maintained several of his top trading chips in the minors that allowed him to continue pursuing a marquee pitcher of Chapmans talents well in advance of the Aug. 1 trade deadline.

Travis Wood, the Cubs primary left-hander in the bullpen, is among the league leaders with 49 appearances.

Chapman was scheduled to earn $11.325 million this season in his final season as an arbitration eligible player and is expected to become one of the most highly sought-after free agents in what is projected as a shallow free agent pitching market this winter.

Chapman, a former starting pitcher, still is equipped to throw multiple innings. That fits in well with manager Joe Maddons habit of asking relievers to get more than three outs on certain occasions.

The Cubs have struggled against left-handed hitters in late-inning situations, but Chapman, 28, has limited left-handers to a .123 batting average with one home run in 309 career at-bats against left-handers.

Chapman also is familiar with the St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates from his days with the Cincinnati Reds. The Cardinals havent scored in their past 25 innings against Chapman, who has a lifetime 2.01 ERA to go with an .099 batting average with 51 strikeouts in 31 innings against them.

Cardinals All-Star catcher Yadier Molina is 0-for-7 with four strikeouts against Chapman, while Matt Holiday and Matt Carpenter are each 1-for-8 with five strikeouts.

Chapman has a lifetime 0.90 ERA with 72 strikeouts in 40 innings against the Pirates, who are batting only .145 against him.

Chapman has pitched in only two postseasons and none since 2012, but he should know whats at stake as he approaches free agency with the chance to help the Cubs win their first World Series since 1908.

Against potential playoff opponents, Chapman has struck out 28 in 17 innings against the Washington Nationals while limiting them to a .125 batting average to go with a 1.04 ERA.

Chapman has been even more dominant against the Los Angeles Dodgers, not allowing a run while striking out 17 in nine innings. Dodgers sluggers Justin Turner, Chase Utley and Adrian Gonzalez are a combined 0-for-14 with eight strikeouts.

Hehas struck out 23 in 14 1/3 innings against the San Francisco Giants to go with a 1.26 ERA.

Reports also stated that the Yankees were hesitant to move left-hander Andrew Miller, who is signed through 2018 and drew heavy interest from the Cubs and several teams. That caused many teams to look at other relievers, especially Chapman.

A Yankees scout attended the Cubs three-game series at Milwaukee this weekend.

Torres, 19, was deemed expendable with Addison Russell, 22, as the Cubs shortstop and versatile Javier Baez, 23, who came through the Cubs" system as a shortstop.Torres hit.275 with nine home runs, 47 RBIs, 19 stolen bases and 62 runs in 94 games. The Cubs signed him to a $1.8 million bonus in the 2013 international draft.

The Yankees have been looking to fortify their 40-man roster with top high-level prospects to take over for aging, high-salaried veterans.

Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs/ct-cubs-aroldis-chapman-20160725-story.html

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