Paul Goldschmidt is headed back to the Bronx after agreeing to a one-year deal with the Yankees. The Diamondbacks had been his only other known suitor for much of the offseason, but it may have ultimately come down to New York and San Diego.
Jon Heyman of The New York Post loosely linked the Friars to Goldschmidt last night. Dennis Lin of The Athletic reported this evening they were indeed among the finalists. The Padres are looking to add one more hitter even after agreeing to a $4MM contract with Miguel Andujar on Wednesday. President of baseball operations A.J. Preller said last weekend the front office was trying to add “multiple bats, that first base, DH, anything off the bench” (link via Greg Beacham of WKYC).
Andujar projects as the primary designated hitter. He can spell first baseman Gavin Sheets against left-handed pitching while splitting DH reps with Sung-mun Song. The KBO signee has multi-positional flexibility that’d allow them to accommodate another first base/DH type. The bench was a weakness for the Padres last season and still seems that way. Song and backup catcher Luis Campusano project for two spots. That leaves two openings with only four other position players on the 40-man roster: Bryce Johnson, Will Wagner, Mason McCoy and Tirso Ornelas.
They’re all fringe 40-man types. Johnson is out of options and hit .342 over 84 plate appearances last year, but that was driven by a .442 average on balls in play that isn’t close to sustainable. Ornelas has been a league average hitter in Triple-A over two full seasons and hasn’t gotten a significant MLB look before his 26th birthday. McCoy has been a below-average offensive player in the minors, while Wagner fell out of the mix in Toronto and hit .225/.324/.279 over 55 MLB games last year.
Rhys Hoskins, Wilmer Flores, Justin Turner and old friend Ty France are unsigned righty-hitting first basemen. Marcell Ozuna, Mitch Garver and Andrew McCutchen are available designated hitters. Speculative trade possibilities include Ryan Mountcastle, Lenyn Sosa and Ezequiel Duran.
San Diego probably also has a move coming on the pitching side. Preller said last week they wanted to add another starter. It’s likely that’ll be a cheaper back-end type, but they kicked the tires on what would have been a much bigger acquisition. Heyman reports that the Padres were among the teams involved on Framber Valdez before his three-year, $115MM agreement with the Tigers. The Padres were able to wait out the market to land Nick Pivetta as a February pickup a year ago, but Valdez commanded a much larger contract that was likely never in the budget.
Most of the remaining free agents of note are starting pitchers. Zac Gallen, Max Scherzer, Zack Littell, Justin Verlander, Lucas Giolito and organizational favorite Nick Martinez are unsigned. Walker Buehler, Patrick Corbin, Miles Mikolas, Germán Márquez and Jose Quintana will be limited to modest one-year salaries if they even command major league deals.
Signing anyone from that group could push JP Sears to long relief or to the Triple-A rotation. They’ll open the year with a strong top three of Pivetta, Michael King and Joe Musgrove. The talent level drops markedly after that. Randy Vásquez is out of options and seems ticketed for one of the final two spots. Sears, Kyle Hart and Matt Waldron are the only other starters on the 40-man roster. They’ve added Marco Gonzales and Triston McKenzie on minor league deals with invites to Spring Training.






















