Big questions left over from 2018 that 2019 will have to answer
3:02 am | December 28, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
7:15 AM ET
As we count down the hours to the new year, baseball is still on the mind. It’s always on the mind. I’m thinking of some of 2018’s still-unanswered questions as we look ahead to 2019. …
Where will Bryce Harper and Manny Machado sign?
This is the big one, the granddaddy of them all. The Los Angeles Dodgers cleared space in the outfield and a little breathing room on the payroll when they traded Yasiel Puig and Matt Kemp to the Cincinnati Reds. And Harper further fueled speculation that he’s L.A.-bound — or would like to be — when on Christmas Eve he liked an MLB post on Instagram asking if the Dodgers were the favorites to land Harper.
Still, the Dodgers will have to pony up the cash. That could leave an opening for another team — the Philadelphia Phillies, the Washington Nationals — to get Harper. Then there are the Chicago Cubs, perhaps looming as a dark horse. The Chicago Sun-Times reported that the Cubs’ brass met with Scott Boras at the winter meetings and Theo Epstein asked Boras to check back in with the Cubs before Harper agrees to a deal with another team. The Cubs would likely need to dump some payroll first (or, rather, desire to dump payroll).
Meanwhile, Machado said he’ll wait until the new year to make his decision. The largest contract in MLB history is Giancarlo Stanton‘s $325 million deal with the Miami Marlins and the general belief is that Boras and Dan Lozano are like Amundsen and Scott racing for the South Pole to break that record. The best chance for that to happen could be if the Phillies miss out on Harper and give the record-setting deal to keep Machado away from the New York Yankees.
Is the Opener here to stay?
One of the hot topics at the winter meetings was the future viability of the “opener” strategy that the Tampa Bay Rays deployed so successfully throughout the season and other teams eventually emulated to a lesser extent. The consensus opinion from managers: The opener isn’t a fad. “I think we’re going to see it happen,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “I know we’re going to do it.”