The Rundown: Cubs Trade Speculation Increasing, Winter Meetings Approaching, A’s Break Bank for Severino

Speculating on potential trades at this time of year is akin to a teenager building a Christmas wishlist. You’re excited to jot down ideas and ultimately disappointed when things go in a vastly different direction. I’m no different, but it doesn’t stop me from playing GM for multiple teams whose players I’m only vaguely familiar with. Scouting the numbers gets all of us in trouble, though there’s some merit, albeit misguided at best, to think any of us could do better than back-to-back 83-win seasons. Sigh, if only it were that easy.

So while you discuss the merits of including Nico Hoerner or Isaac Paredes in a package for Bryan Woo, I’ll leave you with what might be the most appropriate — if not annoying — holiday song for all the armchair GMs that have all the solutions to add 11-12 wins to Chicago’s middling National League ballclub. If any of us were smarter than Jed Hoyer, we’d have his job. Yes, that’s the cold, dark reality of hot stove season.

Cubs News & Notes

Odds & Sods

The polar vortex has finally reached the depths of Hell. The previous largest contract in A’s history was Eric Chavez ($66 million) back in 2004. Luis Severino just surpassed Chavez by a cool million. It’s going to be a nice weekend for a Moneyball/The Sandlot double feature.

Central Intelligence

Thursday Stove

Here are the details of Severino’s deal with Oakland.

The Guardians are open to trade offers for first baseman Josh Naylor and outfielder Lane Thomas.

Teams are calling the Diamondbacks about their starting pitchers, GM Mike Hazen told the Arizona Republic.

The Yankees have met with Burnes and Fried.

The Rays are willing to trade their starting pitchers and have received inquiries about Jeffrey Springs and Pete Fairbanks.

The White Sox are expected to operate patiently in fielding trade requests for Crochet.

Roger Clemens made a great counterargument to Rob Manfred’s proposed Golden At-Bat rule.

Get Your Pencils and Scorecards Ready

Some important dates for next week’s Winter Meetings in Dallas.

  • Hall of Fame Classic Baseball Era Committee Results (December 8): Former White Sox star Dick Allen is on this year’s ballot, as are Tommy John, Dave Parker, and Luis Tiant.
  • MLB Draft Lottery (December 10): The Cubs are once again lottery-eligible after missing the playoffs in ’24, though their odds of getting the top pick are incredibly slim.
  • Rule 5 Draft (December 11): The Cubs may lose outfielder Christian Franklin, who would make a nice backup for an analytics-forward rebuilding team like the Cardinals.

Extra Innings

Watching Ben Grieve hit a home run off of soft-tossing Todd Van Poppel in the final season of both mediocre careers is everything I fear about relying solely on prospects. Van Poppel was drafted No. 14 overall in 1990 and Grieve No. 2 in 1994. Both were selected by the A’s and spent time with the Cubs.

They Said It

  • “You’re always trying to be creative, and I think there is room for it this year.” – Hoyer
  • “When you don’t have that elite star, the guys you have will underperform at times. What we are trying to do, like Atlanta did this year, is build a team that can sustain some underperformance thanks to elite play somewhere else. We don’t want to rely on overperformance; we want our roster to be elite enough that it doesn’t matter.” – Hoyer

Thursday Walk-Up Song

I just want one shot at being an MLB GM…

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