Preparing for the Nationals' Offseason and Their Potential Huge Acquisitions - Pitchers
The Nationals fell short of all of baseball’s preseason predictions and our expectations. A team that was expected to win the pennant failed to win their division or even make the post season. We’ve beaten to death the reasons that this team crashed and burned like it did but the good news is that much of the core that made us so optimistic about this team is returning for 2016 and the Nationals have room to make some major acquisitions. This is a long post so it’s broken up into 2 parts. This is part 1, the pitchers. I bolded potential acquisitions and wrote a summary at the bottom.
The Nats would probably be best served signing another 6th starter as some insurance. Some pretty inexpensive options include Bronson Arroyo who missed all of 2015 with Tommy John surgery but had started at least 29 games every single year from 2004-2013 and threw at least 199 innings every season from 2005-2013. With Arroyo, you won’t get much in the way of upside but he could be stashed as a clean-up reliever while the rotation is healthy and eat innings if any Nats starter goes down. Dillon Gee, formerly of the Mets, had been one of the most underrated 5th starters from 2012-2014 before completely imploding last season. Arroyo and Gee would probably each only receive around 4 million. I’m also a huge fan of signing a talented injury magnet like Brandon Morrow or Josh Johnson to incentive-laden deals.
Aroldis Chapman is still on the Reds’ trading block but I don’t see the fit now that the Nats have Pap and the team could really make better use of its prospect trade chips. Oliver Perez is an excellent under-the-radar lefty to pick up, Perez has averaged nearly 12k/9 in the past 3 seasons and put together some excellent seasons with Arizona prior to really struggling in just 12 innings with the Houston Astros at the end of the season. Joel Peralta – who was money with the Nats in 2010 – and Sean Marshall (who is great when healthy) are each high-upside guys that could help the Nats build a great pen on the cheap. Mark Lowe has had one great half-season in his 10 year MLB career but it was really really great and I think the Nats should consider signing him to a deal of around 2 years/12 million but walk away if he requests significantly more than that. The Nationals are rumored to be the front-runners for Darren O’Day and the side-armer will come with a hefty pricetag, he has produced excellent results in 7 of his past 8 seasons and would be a worthwhile short-term investment. Tony Sipp is another possibility but will probably sign a deal for more than what he’s actually worth.
To Recap:
Guys they should target to sure up the rotation include: Bronson Arroyo or Dillon Gee and they should look at Brandon Morrow or Josh Johnson on incentive-laden deals.
For the Bullpen: Oliver Perez, Joel Peralta, Sean Marshall, Mark Lowe, and Tim Lincecum are all possibilities while Darren O’Day and Tony Sipp would be great acquisitions if their price-tags don’t inhibit the Nationals from making other improvements. Brandon Morrow, mentioned above, would also be a good ‘pen piece. I do not predict that the Nats will trade Drew Storen or Jon Papelbon before opening day.