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  • Trade Deadline SZN: 3 Trade Proposals for José Berríos


    Matthew Taylor

    We are exactly one month away from the 2021 MLB trade deadline, and the Minnesota Twins figure to be active participants in the trade market. One player to keep an eye on is José Berríos. Who could the Twins get back in return?

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    In his second to last season of arbitration, José Berríos has been having another José Berríos-type season. Through 15 starts, Berríos owns a 3.41 ERA and 1.08 WHIP, both numbers that would be career bests for him. Berríos has been an extremely consistent and reliable starter for the Twins all season, and the sports books reflect that, as Berríos is on the board at +5000 to take home the American League Cy Young. Along with his strong play, Berríos makes for an intriguing trade candidate because of his age and years of control. At just 27 years old, teams might be optimistic that Berríos still has another level to reach, and with 1.5 years of control remaining, they will be able to hang onto him for enough time to realize that next level. For the Minnesota Twins, it would be tough to part with such a talented arm, but with as bad as they have been in 2021 and no guarantees about 2022, it might just be the most prudent move.

    In laying out trade proposals for José Berríos, we will use Baseball Trade Values. BTV is a website that assigns a point total of “value” to all Major and Minor Leaguers, and based on those point values assesses whether a trade would be accepted or not. Baseball Trade Values is certainly not a perfect resource, but it gives an objective way to start the trade conversation and provide a starting point for a trade proposal. With that being said…

    Trade Proposal #1:

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    In the first hypothetical José Berríos trade, the Minnesota Twins would be making a deal with the devil, sending the right hander to the Bronx. The New York Yankees are struggling mightily right now as they currently find themselves 4th in the American League East with a record just three games above .500. The New York Yankees are never going to be satisfied with mediocrity and are always going to be pushing for contention, which would make a José Berríos trade extremely tantalizing for them.

    In the proposed trade, the New York Yankees would send back to Minnesota Oswald Peraza, Luis Gil and T.J. Sikkema. The headliner of the deal would be Oswald Peraza, the 97th ranked prospect in baseball. Pereza is a slick-fielding shortstop, an area that the Minnesota Twins don’t have a ton of depth within their system outside of Royce Lewis who is no sure thing after undergoing an ACL repair this spring. Peraza has exceptional plate discipline and contact skills and could be the perfect pairing with Luis Arraez over the next six years.

    In addition to Peraza, the Yankees would send back Luis Gil who, if you remember, was formerly with the Minnesota Twins and traded away in a trade for Jake Cave in 2018. Since being traded away, Gil has turned into a borderline top-100 prospect with immense upside. At just 23 years old, Gil posted a 2.64 ERA and a 14.7 K/9 in 30 innings in AA before earning a AAA promotion. Getting Gil back in the Twins organization would be a nice flip of the script for the Twins.

    Finally, the Twins would also acquire T.J. Sikkema, a single-A right hander who ranks as the Yankees’ 16th best prospect. Sikkema is just 22 years old and still raw, but as a former first round pick in 2019, offers some nice upside that the Twins could use.

    Trade Proposal #2:

    image.png.d3bd7ea2b102bf16f0c0277b67a79750.png

    In the second trade proposal for the Minnesota Twins’ ace, the Twins would deal with the other New York baseball team, the Mets. After many years stuck in mediocrity, the New York Mets have broken out as a legit contender this year, racing out to a 41-34 start with a 3 game lead in the NL East. The New York market is always going to be one that wants to compete, which is why the Mets could certainly get aggressive at the trade deadline and pursue José Berríos.

    Back from the Mets, the Twins could get a nice return in exchange for Berríos, as New York boasts some quality top-end prospect names. The headliner of the deal would be shortstop phenom, Ronny Mauricio, the 50th ranked prospect in baseball. Mauricio is extremely raw, as he is just 20 years old, but has as much upside as almost any prospect in baseball. Mauricio projects to be a franchise cornerstone at the shortstop position and is a prototypical 5-tool player who can run and field in addition to hitting the snot out of the ball. The Twins should be looking to get a top pitching prospect at the deadline this year, but Mauricio is the type of talent you just can’t turn away from, even if pitching is the bigger need.

    To supplement the addition of a bat, the Minnesota Twins could push the New York Mets and try to get a top-100 pitching prospect from them as well, which would be right-hander Matt Allan. Allan projects as one of the top pitching prospects in baseball and boasts a fastball that sits in the upper-90s, along with a devastating curveball. Unfortunately, Allan underwent Tommy John surgery earlier this year and will miss the entire 2021 season and potentially part of 2022. The surgery for Allan certainly adds some risk to his profile, but also means that he can be had and the Minnesota Twins have shown in the past that they aren’t afraid of an injury reclamation project as they showed with Michael Pineda and Rich Hill in free agency in the past.

    Trade Proposal #3:

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    Not only are the Toronto Blue Jays competing in the best division in baseball, they also boast one of best farm systems in all of baseball, with the 7th ranked system in the league. The Blue Jays are in the rare position where they are ready to compete and also have such great prospect talent that they can afford to part with names in order to acquire a name like José Berríos who could help lead them to the playoffs each of the next two seasons.

    The headliner in a Berríos trade to Toronto would be right handed pitcher, Simeon Woods-Richardson, the 68th ranked prospect in baseball. Woods-Richardson has been shooting up prospect lists over this past season as he started his 2021 campaign in AA with a 2.16 ERA and 39 strikeouts over his first 6 starts. Woods-Richardson stands tall at 6-foot-3 and can pump his fastball up to 95 miles per hour. SWR is a name that could turn into a top of the rotation starter sooner rather than later and could be the ideal replacement for someone like José Berríos, who has no guarantees of staying in Minnesota past his arbitration.

    Additionally, the Toronto Blue Jays would send back their 8th and 9th ranked prospects in 20-year-olds, Miguel Hiraldo and Adam Kloffenstein. Hiraldo is a middle infield prospect whose long term position could end up being third base, but owns impressive power and bat-to-ball skills and could one day be a middle of the order bat. Kloffenstein is still raw in A+, but is a former 3rd round pick with a 4-pitch repertoire who projects as a middle of the rotation starter one day.

    Which of the 3 trades above is of most interest to you? Do you think these are fair values for José Berríos? What other trade ideas can you think of? Leave a comment below and start the conversation!

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    Of the three I like the Toronto trade. Given the Twins inability to develop starting pitching that should be the priority in any trade. The Mets five tool Mauricio is intriguing and the Twins honchos like guys with lots of tools. But he’s a ways away from the big leagues. The Twins need talent that can help by next year. 

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    I consider the Twins having strong depth at shortstop, assuming Royce Lewis can play the position. You have Wander Javier, a decision that needs to be made this fall, and far enough back is Keoni Cavaco. If a shortstop is had from another organization, you have to find somewhere to play Lewis, and those other two names are basically tradebait.

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    1 hour ago, Rosterman said:

    I consider the Twins having strong depth at shortstop, assuming Royce Lewis can play the position. You have Wander Javier, a decision that needs to be made this fall, and far enough back is Keoni Cavaco. If a shortstop is had from another organization, you have to find somewhere to play Lewis, and those other two names are basically tradebait.

    I wish we really knew if Lewis was a sure thing or even highly probable to stick at SS.  Javier still has a ways to go in proving he will not be an offensive liability.  Cavaco has shown very little that suggests he is going to make it to the MLB level.  Even Lewis has not proven much outside the fall league.  IMO, we have a few guys that might be average at the position but with all the great SS in this league the guys we have now are not likely to put us on equal ground at SS unless Lewis puts it all together.  He may very well end up in CF and he might not be all that great offensively and BTW  I am generally an optimist..

     

    At this moment ... I might rank Miranda as our best prospect among position players if we consider Kirilloff and Larnach to have graduated from prospect status..

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    Pitching is why we won the division last year.  It is why the White Sox are winning the division and we aren't.  To win next year and in the future, you need to build a staff AROUND Berrios.  That's why, if the Twins make a blockbuster trade it should involve Buxton (ALL THAT POTENTIAL) and not Berrios.  We've probably played HALF or more of our games WITHOUT Buxton since he came up.  We're used to it.  Berrios takes the ball every 5th day.  I trade Buxton.  I SIGN Berrios.

     

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    14 minutes ago, TopGunn#22 said:

    Pitching is why we won the division last year.  It is why the White Sox are winning the division and we aren't.  To win next year and in the future, you need to build a staff AROUND Berrios.  That's why, if the Twins make a blockbuster trade it should involve Buxton (ALL THAT POTENTIAL) and not Berrios.  We've probably played HALF or more of our games WITHOUT Buxton since he came up.  We're used to it.  Berrios takes the ball every 5th day.  I trade Buxton.  I SIGN Berrios.

     

    You have this backwards. 

    When Buxton is on the field, he's a difference maker.

    When Berrios is on the field, he's a little above average starter. 

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    15 hours ago, HrbieFan said:

    Wonder what we could get from the Dodgers with Bauer likely getting a long suspension? 

    As for the deals above, I like the Jays and then the Mets best. Never deal with the devil and I'd prefer Berrios go to the NL 

    I would hope the Dodgers are on our radar right now. If we are seriously considering a Berrios trade, I would rather get their young players back than those of just about any of the other teams mentioned here.

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    19 hours ago, Tim said:

    The front office is not taking back Luis Gil. That is essentially admitting they screwed up and dealt away a top 100 pitching prospect for Jake Cave, ownership would absolutely question their decision making ability. Swap him out for Luis Medina and you got a deal.

    Gil has advanced farther through the minors and has maintained or boosted his performance since that trade. His value in trade has changed, and he's less of a wild card than he was then (though it's still inherently risky to project what value a MiLB player will have in the majors). If they really value Gil, the FO shouldn't be letting the optics of something that happened a few years ago limit them in a deal.

    (....That is, if you think their best move is to trade Berríos, which I don't believe to be true.)

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    53 minutes ago, USAFChief said:

    You have this backwards. 

    When Buxton is on the field, he's a difference maker.

    When Berrios is on the field, he's a little above average starter. 

    I have heard the broadcasters discuss the team's win record with and without him.  He had a big impact even before he started playing like Superman this year.  If I thought Buxton could stay healthy there is no doubt I would prefer to keep Buxton.  I just don't know if it's realistic to believe he can stay healthy.

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    You don't have to get only low minors prospects for a top-30 starting pitcher. The Twins' model for a Berríos trade should be the Cleveland trade of Trevor Bauer (boooo) for Franmil Reyes + other prospects last year. Reyes was already in the majors with San Diego and performing well at the time, and he still has plenty of years left until arbitration.

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    13 hours ago, Major League Ready said:
    1. Berrios is not our best player, at least not according to Fwar.  He has never been our best player.  He had one year where he was among the highest Fwar.  That was 2019 when there were 4 other players with slightly more or slightly less.
    2. Any team where Berrios is the best player is highly unlikely to be a contender. I guess if you had 12 or 15 guys playing at his level, you might have a contender but generally it might be a sign it’s time for a new plan.

    Perhaps more to the point, I just listed the teams that lost their best player (or two) and got better.  There are many other examples like Chicago who without question traded their best player(s) and built a better team.  There are numerous other examples throughout history.  Apparently the norm for sports fans is to just ignore any hard fact that gets in the way of what they like to believe.  There is an old lyric “there is none so blind as he who will not see”.  Sports fans can ignore even the most blatant of examples if it suits their preferred narrative.  

    Berrios IS our best pitcher.  If you trade your best player and you get better, he wasn't your best player.

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    Just now, dxpavelka said:

    Berrios IS our best pitcher.  If you trade your best player and you get better, he wasn't your best player.  AND I said player(S).  He is certainly among our best players.  Trade him and you'll find yourself looking to find another player to give you what he gives you.  You're just chasing your tail.

     

     

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    4 hours ago, singlesoverwalks said:

    You don't have to get only low minors prospects for a top-30 starting pitcher. The Twins' model for a Berríos trade should be the Cleveland trade of Trevor Bauer (boooo) for Franmil Reyes + other prospects last year. Reyes was already in the majors with San Diego and performing well at the time, and he still has plenty of years left until arbitration.

     But Franmil Reyes was a position player. We don’t need those, really. We need pitching. And no one is going to trade a good performing MLB pitcher for Berrios.

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    2 hours ago, Otto von Ballpark said:

     But Franmil Reyes was a position player. We don’t need those, really. We need pitching. And no one is going to trade a good performing MLB pitcher for Berrios.

    We're certainly going to need a DH, because Cruz will be traded. Sanó might be that DH, but boy, I dunno. Larnach could be the DH, but then we do have an opening in the outfield.

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    7 hours ago, singlesoverwalks said:

    We're certainly going to need a DH, because Cruz will be traded. Sanó might be that DH, but boy, I dunno. Larnach could be the DH, but then we do have an opening in the outfield.

    Yeah, we might need to replace Cruz, but when Cleveland acquired Franmil Reyes, they already had a MLB rotation of Bieber/Clevinger/Plesac/Civale (and they still had Kluber and Carrasco around as SP assets too).

    If we trade Berrios primarily for a position player, we’re pretty much doomed to a very long rebuild.

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    3 hours ago, Otto von Ballpark said:

    Yeah, we might need to replace Cruz, but when Cleveland acquired Franmil Reyes, they already had a MLB rotation of Bieber/Clevinger/Plesac/Civale (and they still had Kluber and Carrasco around as SP assets too).

    If we trade Berrios primarily for a position player, we’re pretty much doomed to a very long rebuild.

    I guess it feels like trading Berrios for minor-league pitchers is almost certainly giving up on 2022. It seems really unlikely that you would get starting pitching that would be better than Berrios would be in 2022. Once in a while you'll get a John Smoltz or Dwight Gooden who is an ace starting pitcher as a rookie, but it's really rare.

    Here are the only rookie pitchers who are better than Berrios in terms of Fangraphs WAR this year: Trevor Rogers (MIA) at 2.8 WAR, Ian Anderson (ATL) at 1.9 WAR. Berrios is at 1.8 WAR. In the last full season, 2019, there was no rookie starting pitcher who equaled Berrios's 4.3 WAR.

    So, it's possible to improve, but you would have to make a really good trade and probably get lucky. The most likely way you end up with a better pitcher than the 2022 Berrios is if Berrios gets injured, which is certainly possible, but then it's just as likely that the rookie replacement gets injured.

    If we don't need hitters for 2022 (I'm skeptical about that, but maybe it's true), then I might hold Berrios rather than trading. Maybe we can trade Nelson Cruz and Michael Pineda for some good 2022 arms (probably bullpen arms - it think it's more common to find rookies who can handle relief roles), put them together with Berrios and some free agents (not that 2021 has given us much reason to believe in our ability to find pitching via free agency), and have enough pitching to contend in 2022.

    Or, maybe we need to give up on 2022 and trade Berrios for a vanload of great low minors pitching prospects. 

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    8 minutes ago, singlesoverwalks said:

    I guess it feels like trading Berrios for minor-league pitchers is almost certainly giving up on 2022. It seems really unlikely th.......................................

    Or, maybe we need to give up on 2022 and trade Berrios for a vanload of great low minors pitching prospects. 

    What is the path to 2022 being competitive, even with Berrios? That's 1 starting pitcher you can count on. They might be able to sign one good SP in free agency.....so that's 2. Pineda is gone. Maeda? I don't trust him. 

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    5 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    What is the path to 2022 being competitive, even with Berrios? That's 1 starting pitcher you can count on. They might be able to sign one good SP in free agency.....so that's 2. Pineda is gone. Maeda? I don't trust him. 

    Trade Cruz and any other one-year veterans you can unload for some blazing minor league arms, sign some free agents, cross your fingers and hope the pieces fall into place (like Ober, Maeda, and Dobby get better, some current prospects work out, etc.). It has worked before. The best strategy in MLB, if you're not going to have a $200 million payroll, is often to be good enough to have a chance at contending.

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    1 minute ago, singlesoverwalks said:

    Trade Cruz and any other one-year veterans you can unload for some blazing minor league arms, sign some free agents, cross your fingers and hope the pieces fall into place (like Ober, Maeda, and Dobby get better, some current prospects work out, etc.). It has worked before. The best strategy in MLB, if you're not going to have a $200 million payroll, is often to be good enough to have a chance at contending.

    How many good starting pitchers can they actually sign next year? Maybe 1. 

    To be clear, you think they can trade one year veterans for starting pitchers that will be ready day 1 next year? I have my doubts, but I'd love that!

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    11 minutes ago, singlesoverwalks said:

    If we don't need hitters for 2022 (I'm skeptical about that, but maybe it's true), then I might hold Berrios rather than trading. 

    That's where I'm at -- don't trade Berrios unless we are blown away by an offer (which I doubt will happen).

    I mean, we may want to add a hitter or two in particular spots for 2022, sure. That's every team in every season. But overall, our offense is more or less contending quality right now and for the near future.

    Trading Berrios will most likely give us some combination of the following:
    1. MLB ready hitters like Franmil Reyes
    2. prospects that are 2-3 years away
    3. pitching prospects that are ready right away but not very good (Archer-Glasnow was an outlier trade result, not the norm)

    Any way you slice it, trading Berrios is pretty much a punt on 2022-2023.

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    25 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    What is the path to 2022 being competitive, even with Berrios? That's 1 starting pitcher you can count on. They might be able to sign one good SP in free agency.....so that's 2. Pineda is gone. Maeda? I don't trust him. 

    I'd sign a good FA SP, and also trade for one somehow (and be willing to part with prospect capital), pairing them with Berrios for 2022. For the right guy, with 2022 team control, I'd probably even trade for him right now, like the Mets did in July 2019 with Stroman. Yeah, it would suck to pay a deadline premium when you're not really contending, but it would suck even worse to get shut out or settle for a lesser pitcher in the offseason.

    Still might need Pineda and/or Maeda at the very back end of the rotation, although hopefully with internal candidates applying some pressure.

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    On 6/30/2021 at 3:57 PM, Seansy said:

    You won't get both for just Berríos.

    I like package #2 from the Mets best. 

    Pearson and Woods-Richardson for Berrios, Cruz and a throw in.7956E44A-04E3-43CB-BD32-BCA1FE521172.jpeg.3b7afc9f07db3ca5fc5fbfcbb4ac53bf.jpeg

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