rbirules wrote: ↑05 May 2026 14:35 pm
The question of
"What if the Cardinals keep winning?" has been pervasive amongst Cardinals fans after the surprising start to the year. I read a (humorous) trade idea in the comments over at Viva El Birdos within the last week (I believe Kindred was the poster, IIRC, to credit my source).
But first the context . . .
The Cardinals are a very exciting young team at the moment that is a lot of fun to watch, compared to the past few years which where watching this team felt like a slog. This team has been pretty good offensively (even if they could use another bat in LF, 3B, and a RH platoon partner for 1B if we’re being greedy), and an exceptional one defensively. Their problems are on the mound. May (after a slow start) and McGreevy look like solid mid-rotation SPs, Pallante is having a good season thus far, and is probably a solid back of the rotation SP, or a very good swingman on a contender. Libby is still a bit of a mystery, but I think at worst he’s a solid back of the rotation SP. Leahy is another swingman who is ideally in the bullpen. This team severely lacks options in the bullpen at the moment where it’s hard to feel confident beyond ROB and JoJo. Pushing Leahy to the bullpen would help.
So the targets are clear:
-SP (mid-rotation at least)
-Backend RP (maybe more than one)
Now, the Cardinals also have players on expiring contracts (May, Romero) that fit into those categories that they could sell at the deadline and/or might not be part of the long term plan (ROB due to age). Even with manageable salaries ($10M for May, $4.26M for Romero) you’re unlikely to get a major return at the deadline for rentals like this. This works for and against the Cardinals. While it’s nice to get some filler depth of prospects by flipping players like this you’re unlikely to add meaningful pieces to your farm doing this. The Cardinals have made trades like this for a few years now, and they have pretty good depth in the minors at this point.
So the question becomes: Is it worth adding more depth by selling, or can we afford to spend some of that depth (not top prospects) by adding players like that at the deadline? Or even better, take on salary and pay even less in prospects?
This early in the year it’s hard to find teams that are already looking to sell off players, so this will likely have to wait a couple of months (unless you find a team really underperforming expectations, with a GM that might be in a tight spot, and a very specific motivation to make a move now). While the Mets are off to terrible starts they aren’t in a position where they can shed enough salary to get below luxury tax thresholds. The Phillies might be able to get below the 4th threshold by shedding $10M, but they also might see themselves as still able to compete this year, especially in a division with the Nationals and Marlins to beat up on.
There’s another team, in a much tougher division off to a terrible start, with a GM that might be feeling the pressure, and they are only $24M from the lowest threshold and thus resetting the clock on consecutive years exceeding the luxury tax threshold. This brings us back to our favorite trading partner, the
Boston Red Sox.
They need to move $24M to get below the $244M threshold.
If the Red Sox traded Sonny Gray, and Aroldis Chapman right now, they would shed $26.8M in payroll and drop to a $241M payroll. The longer they wait the less they shed. Both players have options for 2027 so they aren’t pure rentals. Gray is probably worth a fractions of what he was over the winter, and that’s going to keep going down as we approach the deadline. Also he has a NTC which he's used because he wanted to be in St. Louis, close to home (though the Braves could be an attractive landing spot), would he waive to come back? According to BTV Chapman’s contract is $5M underwater, but he’s off to a great start this year. They could also dump Garrett Whitlock, their setup man, making $7.5M this year and has two option years.
I know it’s crazy to talk about “undoing a trade” you just made a few months ago, but I think it actually makes a lot of sense, and they have two backend relievers that could be expired deals or options for next year (I think Chapman vests with 40 IP). All three players make $41.5M for the whole season, $24M is 93 games worth of that, or acquiring all three around the 69-70 game point of the season, or in a little more than a month from now. By then we’ll know if we’re still in the race, and if Boston is out of it in the AL. Would ownership be willing to add $24M in payroll to give us a SP and a RP (or two) to help this exciting team, and bring fans back to the ballpark? “You gotta spend money to make money”.
Imagine our current lineup with this pitching staff . . .
Gray, May, McGreevy, Libby, Pallante/Leahy/Dobbins
ROB,
Chapman, Whitlock?, Romero, Fernandez, Graceffo, Soriano, Leahy/Svanson/Stanek/???
That team probably isn't going to win it all, but I think you can at least compete down the stretch with that team, and you haven't even spent all the money you saved by dumping contracts this winter. I know it's asking a lot for an "arbitrage" situation like this to occur, where we get a player back for less than we received selling them, but that's how what happens with assets with diminishing value. How many playoffs teams, or hopeful playoff teams, could potentially afford to add payroll like this to keep the prospect cost down? I think most of those teams are near the top of their budget already.
(No, I'm not going to expand the trade and get Willson Contreras back even though a RH hitting 1B/DH would do wonders for this roster).