CHICAGO — It’s a dilemma every general manager grapples with at one time or another: Do you make a trade from a strength to shore up a weakness while hoping and praying that moving those parts doesn’t create a new hole to fill?
If the Chicago Cubs are at all interested in New York Mets pitcher Jacob deGrom — and if the Mets take deGrom to the market in the next two weeks — Chicago’s front office will be facing that dilemma head-on.
The Mets would more likely be looking to retool in the majors than completely tear down with a rebuild, which could make the Cubs a good fit — if New York decides to field offers for its All-Star ace. In a classic deal of four to five prospects for a veteran star, Chicago would have trouble competing with fellow contenders such as the Milwaukee Brewers or Philadelphia Phillies. But if starting major league players are the asking price, the Cubs have plenty of those.
Cubs manager Joe Maddon uses a rotation of nine position players for seven spots, not including his catchers. A couple of those players could be expendable. A survey of major league baseball scouts, front-office executives (not associated with the Mets or Cubs) and media members zeroed in on a trio of Cubs who could be the centerpiece of a larger deal with the Mets: shortstop Addison Russell, infielder/outfielder Ian Happ and pitcher Mike Montgomery.
“Two of those three could start to get it done,” one National League scout said.