10184
by TFIR
Now from the Seattle viewpoint:
Dipoto finalizes latest trade from hospital bed; Don’t expect Mariners to keep Encarnación
By Corey Brock Dec 13, 2018 14
LAS VEGAS — On Monday afternoon, Jerry Dipoto described the first day of baseball’s Winter Meetings as “boring.” The final day or so at the Mandalay Bay Resort were anything but that for the club and, specifically, Dipoto.
Seattle’s general manager was hospitalized overnight on Wednesday with what the team called an undisclosed illness that was later revealed to be blood clots in his lungs. “It was pretty scary and quite painful stuff,” Dipoto told MLB.com’s Greg Johns via text. “I’m thankful to know there’s an issue while we can manage it.”
That didn’t stop the team from making a deal, though. With Dipoto in his hospital bed, assistant general manager Justin Hollander, with considerable help from the team’s front-office contingent, completed a three-team deal with the Indians and Rays.
The Mariners traded first baseman Carlos Santana — whom they acquired on Dec. 3 from the Phillies — as well as $6 million to the Indians for designated hitter Edwin Encarnación and Cleveland’s competitive balance pick (No. 77 overall) in June’s amateur draft. Seattle also received $5 million in return from the Rays as part of the three-team deal.
Hollander said the team would not have made the deal had the Indians not added the competitive-round draft pick.
All of this was done while Dipoto was essentially incapacitated, a point validated by a photo Hollander had of Dipoto flat on his back in his hospital bed, smiling and giving a thumbs up. Even for “Trader Jerry,” known for his proclivity for making deals, this was a new wrinkle.
“We were texting back and forth, and some of the groundwork had been laid,” Hollander said. “He (Dipoto) basically handed me the keys and said … ‘You know what I want to do. Check in when you have questions, but go with it.’”
Hollander visited Dipoto late Wednesday night, and after handling a late alteration, put Dipoto on speaker phone as the teams agreed to the deal.
“I asked him how he was doing first,” Hollander joked. “Then we talked trade and did the deal. I put him on the speaker phone.”
Hollander was promoted to assistant general manager last month, but after fellow Dipoto lieutenant Jeff Kingston took a job with the Dodgers just last week, Hollander wasn’t left alone to facilitate the deal. He received considerable help from the front-office contingent gathered in Las Vegas, including vice president of scouting Tom Allison, special assistants to the general manager Joe Bohringer and Tom McNamara, director of player development Andy McKay and director of baseball analytics Jesse Smith, as well as other members of the baseball operations group.
“These guys out there are awesome,” Hollander said. “Everyone chipped in and did a little bit more. Everyone jumped in and didn’t leave me hanging, like What am I supposed to do right now? Everyone was terrific.”
So what does the deal mean for the Mariners?
Seattle saved about $9 million in the exchange of players, and are only responsible for one season of Encarnación ($21.6 million in 2019) and a $5 million club option. As was the case with Santana, it’s likely he never appears in a game with the Mariners.
As Seattle continues with its offseason plan to gather as many long-term assets as possible, adding the No. 77 overall pick gives the team a chance to add a potential impact player to a minor-league system that has received an influx of talent since the Mariners started their trading spree — which now stands at seven total deals — on Nov. 7.
Being able to move Encarnación for another long-term asset would also assist the blueprint for the team’s future.
The Mariners could conceivably carry Encarnación into the season as their designated hitter, where his power (32 home runs last season) could give the team a boost. But chances are that Seattle spins Encarnación as they did Santana to try to acquire most long-term assets for 2020 or 2021, when the club hopes to contend again.
“It creates flexibility for us, the comp pick,” Hollander said. “No disrespect to Edwin, (but) it’s what we’re trying to do and speed up our timeline on contenting again. That’s important to us. The flexibility is valuable. We’ll see if he stays with us.”
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain