Dynamic photorealistic image of Cubs' Nico Hoerner making a diving play at second base, overlaid with logos of trade-interested teams Yankees, Giants, and Mariners, amid Bregman signing news.
Dynamic photorealistic image of Cubs' Nico Hoerner making a diving play at second base, overlaid with logos of trade-interested teams Yankees, Giants, and Mariners, amid Bregman signing news.
Image générée par IA

Giants Aggressively Pursue Donovan and Hoerner in Heated Second-Base Trade Market

Image générée par IA

The San Francisco Giants are leading the MLB second-base trade market, in deep discussions with the St. Louis Cardinals for versatile Gold Glove winner Brendan Donovan and the Chicago Cubs for Nico Hoerner, whose trade value spiked after Chicago's signing of Alex Bregman created infield surplus. Both players offer elite contact hitting and defense to address San Francisco's 27th-ranked OPS at the position last season, amid the Cardinals' rebuild and Cubs' payroll concerns.

The Giants aim to build one of MLB's top infields alongside Matt Chapman, Willy Adames, and Rafael Devers, upgrading from Casey Schmitt, who is recovering from wrist surgery. Reports indicate active talks for Donovan, a 2025 All-Star who avoided arbitration with a $5.8 million salary for 2026. In 118 games last year, the left-handed hitter batted .287 with 10 home runs, 32 doubles, 50 RBIs, ranking in the 96th percentile for squared-up batted balls and 95th for low whiff rate. A 2022 Gold Glove winner, Donovan plays multiple infield/outfield spots. The rebuilding Cardinals, post-Nolan Arenado trade, seek to shed payroll and promote prospects like JJ Wetherholt; reporter Mark Feinsand calls Donovan a near-lock to be dealt, with interest from Mariners and Red Sox.

Hoerner, a Bay Area native and Stanford alum, earned his second straight Gold Glove in 2025 while hitting .297 over 156 games. The Cubs' five-year, $175 million signing of Bregman ($70 million deferred, ~$31 million AAV for CBT) crowded the infield with Dansby Swanson, Bregman, and prospect Matt Shaw. Hoerner, turning 29 in May and a free agent after 2026 ($12 million salary), posted four straight ~4 WAR seasons, a 7.6% strikeout rate (3rd in MLB), 95.8% in-zone contact (3rd), and elite baserunning. Manager Craig Counsell lauded his intangibles: "Nico is great at some -- really things that I think other people think they're good at, and they're not as good at it... what made Nico a very good baseball player."

Chicago, nearing the $244 million CBT threshold, would require an overwhelming offer to trade a core leader amid NL Central contention. Interest predates Bregman, from teams like Yankees, Giants, and Mariners (who pursued Hoerner/Donovan last offseason). Arizona halting Ketel Marte talks has spotlighted this market. Giants reporter Maria Guardado notes both would majorly upgrade Schmitt. With spring training near, San Francisco eyes a quick deal after their 81-81 2025 season.

Ce que les gens disent

X discussions feature Cubs fans vehemently opposing a Nico Hoerner trade post-Bregman signing, arguing it undermines contention efforts and creates roster holes. Yankees accounts express strong interest and poll fans on acquiring him. Giants' pursuit fuels speculation. Some analysts advocate trading for controllable prospects or arms given his one-year control. Skeptics question the logic amid win-now moves.

Articles connexes

Realistic illustration of Cardinals' Brendan Donovan at a trade crossroads with Giants and Mariners stadiums, highlighting MLB trade rumors.
Image générée par IA

Giants et Mariners émergent comme favoris pour le trade de Brendan Donovan

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

Les San Francisco Giants et Seattle Mariners sont devenus les principaux prétendants pour acquérir l'intérieur des St. Louis Cardinals, Brendan Donovan, selon des rapports. Les Cardinals exigent plusieurs prospects de premier plan en échange de l'All-Star de 28 ans, qui dispose de deux ans de contrôle d'équipe restants. Les discussions se sont intensifiées, bien que St. Louis ne procédera que si l'offre est substantielle.

The Chicago Cubs have agreed to a six-year contract extension with second baseman Nico Hoerner, pending a physical, according to reports. The deal, which keeps the 28-year-old star off the free-agent market, comes days after a similar pact with center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong. Chicago has not yet confirmed the agreement.

Rapporté par l'IA

As the MLB offseason heats up ahead of the 2026 season, the Seattle Mariners are prepared to offer top prospects for St. Louis Cardinals utility player Brendan Donovan. Meanwhile, the Detroit Tigers remain lukewarm on free agent Alex Bregman, and the Baltimore Orioles have re-signed pitcher Zach Eflin. Other notable developments include interest in Japanese star Kazuma Okamoto and Andrew Heaney's retirement.

The San Francisco Giants have agreed to a one-year, $12 million contract with three-time batting champion Luis Arraez, pending a physical. The 28-year-old infielder is expected to bolster the team's second base position after a season of underwhelming performance there. Arraez brings elite contact skills but faces questions about his defense.

Rapporté par l'IA

As the 2026 MLB season approaches, the Chicago Cubs remain focused on adding an impact bat and a starting pitcher, despite modest spending so far. President of baseball operations Jed Hoyer has emphasized deliberate moves, but fans await a significant splash before the Cubs Convention. Rumors link the team to free agents like Alex Bregman and Zac Gallen amid budget constraints.

The Miami Marlins intend to hold onto starting pitcher Sandy Alcantara despite ongoing interest from other teams, according to reports. Meanwhile, the St. Louis Cardinals are targeting a right-handed outfield bat following their trade of catcher Willson Contreras to the Boston Red Sox. These moves reflect broader offseason strategies as teams prepare for 2026.

Rapporté par l'IA

Following reports of Arizona Diamondbacks interest, the Boston Red Sox have emerged as frontrunners to re-sign free agent third baseman Alex Bregman—who hit 18 HR with an .822 OPS for them in 2025—thanks to payroll flexibility from acquiring Willson Contreras. The Blue Jays, Diamondbacks, and Cubs remain in pursuit.

 

 

 

Ce site utilise des cookies

Nous utilisons des cookies pour l'analyse afin d'améliorer notre site. Lisez notre politique de confidentialité pour plus d'informations.
Refuser