November 22, 2024

Breaking: Mets asking price In Yankees For Trade Here’s……

The Yankees aren’t the only New York team involved in the sweepstakes for Chicago White Sox ace Dylan Cease.

Enter, the Mets.

Mets battling Yankees for ace trade | Here's the asking price - nj.com

According to The New York Post’s Joel Sherman on Friday, the Mets “continue to check in on” Cease as they consider him among many options to enter their rotation. While they are not considered the favorites, per Sherman, the Mets would consider the White Sox’s asking price of “three premium prospects” because Cease is not a one-season rental. The 28-year-old will become a free agent in 2026. MLB Trade Rumors projects Cease to earn $8.8 million in arbitration this offseason.

From Sherman: Cease would be the kind of piece that would help fill the Mets’ twin objectives – to be competitive in 2024 and begin to push harder in 2025 when David Stearns has a clearer picture of what he has in the organization …”

The Athletic reported earlier Friday that the Yankees are “sincere” about their pursuit of Cease, though they are not a favorite, either. Both reporters consider the Baltimore Orioles as the best fit because of their high-end minor league system. It’s unclear at this point which teams the White Sox are engaged with or, more specifically, which prospects the White Sox are eyeing from any of the suitors, which also include the Los Angeles Dodgers, St. Louis Cardinals and Boston Red Sox, per The Athletic.

Cease, a hard-throwing righty with a wipeout slider, recorded a 4.58 ERA/3.72 FIP last season. He struck out 27.3% of the batters he faced, ninth among major league starters. He has thrown at least 165 innings in each of the past three seasons, including 2022, when he was the runner-up for the AL Cy Young with a 2.20 ERA. In his career, Cease has a 3.83 ERA, and the ninth-highest strikeout rate (29.8%) over the past three seasons.

Yankees should trade for pitching upgrade, analyst says | Here's what AL ace  would cost - nj.com

Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns added Luis Severino and Adrian Houser this offseason to a rotation that includes Kodai Senga, José Quintana and Tylor Megill, but it still needs work to stay in the NL East race with the loaded Atlanta Braves and Philadelphia Phillies.

 

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New York Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns continues to reimagine his team with a tint of pinstripes.

On Friday, the Mets announced they claimed infielder Diego Castillo off waivers from the Arizona Diamondbacks. Castillo was a Yankees prospect from 2014-21 until they traded him and infielder Hoy Park to the Pittsburgh Pirates for pitcher Clay Holmes. At the time, Castillo was in Double-A.

The Yankees have since developed Holmes into one of the most dominant late-game relievers and a 2022 All-Star. With New York, Holmes has a 2.50 ERA and 44 saves in 154 2/3 innings over two-plus seasons.

Castillo, 26, has played 97 major league games, posting a .206/.251/.382 slash line with 11 home runs. He has experience all over the field, including the outfield corners, so he’ll give the Mets depth in the minors as a utility player, especially up the middle.

Even though he has struggled in the majors, Castillo flashes on-base skills with a career .346 OBP and 365 strikeouts to 279 walks in eight minor league seasons. In 2023, Castillo recorded a .313/.431/.410 line with three home runs and 72 RBI across 454 at-bats for Arizona’s Pacific Coast League Triple-A team.

Among their offseason moves, the Mets have added Carlos Mendoza (manager), Luis Severino (pitcher) and Harrison Bader (outfielder) — all former Yankees.

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