Not unlike Philadelphia Cream Cheese, the Phillies have a shortage – a shortage of competent outfielders. And like the bagel, their enormous hole remains in the center.
While many eligible bachelors remain within the free-agent pool, nothing would be more exciting than bringing in bonafide All-Star and Pittsburgh Pirate Bryan Reynolds.
Now, the Pirates have tremendous leverage. Reynolds is 27-years-old and owed just $4.5MM in 2022. Even if Pittsburgh’s already decided they won’t extend Reynolds with a formal contract, he’s still under team control until 2026.
This won’t be easy by any means, but it’s not impossible, so here’s what it may take to see Reynolds in Red Pinstripes for 2022.
Phillies Get: OF Reynolds
Pirates Get: RHP Mick Abel, RHP Ranger Suárez, SS Nick Maton & OF Matt Vierling
This might be fixing one problem and creating another because the Phillies need pitchers.
If you ask Twitter, even Aaron Nola remains a massive question mark, and cutting Suárez loose means the Phillies are comfortable rolling the dice on Zach Eflin’s health and a mystery name behind door number two.
Ranger Suarez made 12 starts. He allowed 11 runs.
— Corey Seidman (@CSeidmanNBCS) October 2, 2021
He finishes the season with a 1.36 ERA, the lowest by any major-league pitcher with 100+ innings since Bruce Sutter in 1977.
0.88 ERA when he became the closer
1.86 ERA as the closer
1.51 ERA as a starter
What a season.
Abel, the Phillies’ #1 ranked prospect by MLB.com, would also be on the move in this version of the deal. I always say a prospect is a prospect, but this still hurts.
Next, Maton falls on the sword, but I think you can justify this if you believe Johan Camargo can stick. Vierling’s the final casualty here, a more valuable asset than either Adam Haseley or Mickey Moniak.
Headline?
The Phillies save their farm, and the Pirates feel good about swiping the Phillies’ best prospect while adding a handful of cheap, young pieces to field a respectable 26-man roster for 2022.
Let’s make a deal.
Tell me it's crazy. Please, I dare you. pic.twitter.com/Tiddj6kMT8
— Tommy Orme (@t_orm3) March 4, 2022
Phillies Get: OF Reynolds
Pirates Get: RHP Abel, SS Bryson Stott, RHP Andrew Painter & 3B Alec Bohm
Prospects are overrated, but the Pirates rejecting this deal is equivalent to a bouncer denying four 21-year-olds at the door because they aren’t 22 (that’s a real thing in New York).
Funny enough, they may be looking for more. The Phillies could offer their three best prospects, the 2020 Rookie of the Year runner-up, and still get heckled.
Abel remains the cornerstone, and quite frankly, I cannot imagine a deal that doesn’t include the 20-year-old. This is the money prospect, the kind of prospect that makes people pull over and say, wow, I need this prospect right now.
The Phillies also lose Stott, who, quite frankly, might be too valuable given the current state of affairs surrounding shortstop. Didi Gregorious isn’t long for Philadelphia, and I’m just not sure how much we know about Maton at this point.
Painter, Philadelphia’s most recent first-rounder, would also be on the move. At just 18-years-old, Pittsburgh might believe they’ve found their one, two punch in Painter and Abel for the second half of this decade.
And then there was Bohm, the veteran of the group. Although he’s less attractive following his 2021 struggles, he’s an immediate everyday player as the Pirates climb their way out of oblivion.
Headline?
Phillies mortgage future – still worse than Braves and Mets.
Yes. If the Phillies can pry Reynolds away from the Pirates, you can look forward to at least three years of him and Bryce Harper paired in the Citizens Bank Park outfield.
Even if left-field ends up a revolving door, Harper and Reynolds combined 2021 WAR nets out to 11.9. Imagine that world, and we can follow up on your precious prospects.
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