Quincy Varnish wrote: ↑13 Nov 2025 13:29 pm
From Grok -
“The St. Louis Cardinals should trade Brendan Donovan to the Cleveland Guardians in exchange for left-handed starting pitcher Logan Allen and outfield prospect George Valera.
Why this trade makes sense for the Cardinals
The Cardinals enter the 2025-26 offseason in retool mode after a forgettable 2025 season (finishing well below .500 and missing the playoffs), with new president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom emphasizing youth development and financial flexibility over high payroll contention. Donovan, a 29-year-old first-time All-Star in 2025 with a 2.7 WAR, .285/.360/.425 slash line, and elite versatility across second base, left field, and shortstop, is one of their most valuable controllable assets (team control through 2027 at a modest projected $4-5M salary in 2026).
Trading him now maximizes his value before his arbitration costs rise further, allowing St. Louis to acquire cost-controlled pitching depth—a glaring need after relying on inconsistent veterans like Sonny Gray (potentially shopped) and a thin rotation that posted a 4.45 ERA in 2025.
• Logan Allen (LHP, age 26 in 2026):
A former top-50 prospect with three years of team control left, Allen showed promise in 2025 (3.92 ERA over 120 innings, 8.5 K/9) despite command issues. He’d slot in as a reliable No. 3-4 starter behind emerging young arms like Matthew Liberatore, addressing the Cardinals’ biggest 2026 priority: mid-rotation stability without breaking the bank.
• George Valera (OF, age 25 in 2026):
Cleveland’s former No. 1 prospect (still top-100 overall), Valera brings plus power potential (.850 OPS in Triple-A in 2025) and outfield versatility as a corner/bench bat. He’s a high-upside lottery ticket for St. Louis’ improving farm system (now top-10 in MLB, headlined by shortstop JJ Wetherholt), providing depth behind Lars Nootbaar while the Cards audition rookies like Victor Scott II.
This package nets two controllable pieces with upside, aligning with Bloom’s prospect-heavy rebuild while shedding Donovan’s $2.85M salary from 2025 (though his next deal is affordable). It avoids overpaying for free-agent pitchers like Blake Snell, preserving flexibility for other moves (e.g., extending Willson Contreras or adding a veteran reliever).
Why this trade makes sense for the Guardians
Cleveland, fresh off an ALCS appearance in 2025 but still offensively anemic (team .235 BA, 22nd in runs), desperately needs left-handed pop and infield flexibility to complement stars like José Ramírez and Steven Kwan.
Donovan’s switch-hitting contact skills, Gold Glove-caliber defense, and ability to play anywhere (he started 85 games at 2B/LF in 2025) make him a “perfect fit,” as ESPN’s Jeff Passan put it—plugging holes at second base (post-Andrés Giménez questions) or as a super-utility bat without blocking prospects like Brayan Rocchio. At his age and cost, he’s a low-risk upgrade over internal options like David Fry, boosting their lineup floor for another deep playoff run.
This isn’t a fleecing—Donovan’s value is high, but Cleveland’s deep farm (ranked top-5) allows them to part with Allen (expendable in their stacked rotation) and Valera (blocked in the outfield) without gutting their system. Rumors have linked the teams since early November, with insiders like Derrick Goold noting mutual interest. If executed, it’s a win-win: St. Louis accelerates its youth movement, and Cleveland gets an All-Star stabilizer.”