The Toronto Blue Jays should trade one of their catchers to the ...
Doolittle: St. Louis Cardinals
One of the surer bets of the hot stove season is that the Blue Jays will be dealing from their surplus of starting-worthy catchers (
Gabriel Moreno,
Danny Jansen and
Alejandro Kirk), but it's unclear who will be the one to go. Moreno probably holds the most trade value and the veteran Jansen the least. So I'm splitting the middle and sending Kirk to the Cardinals to become the successor to future Hall of Famer Yadier Molina.
Kirk could step right in as St. Louis' regular backstop with
Andrew Knizner behind him. Kirk not only hits well enough to DH on a regular basis, but he has the same kind of contact ability that was Molina's strength at the plate. The offense is important because if catching prospect
Ivan Herrera pans out, then the Cardinals would be set at the position for years to come and the DH slot would help give them both enough at-bats.
Toronto is going to need a starting pitcher with some control in return, so the Redbirds could send lefty
Matthew Liberatore along with Canadian-born outfielder Tyler O'Neill. Moving O'Neill would free up a lineup spot for fast-moving hitting prospect Jordan Walker in St. Louis while, for the Blue Jays, he'd help fill the void created by the trade of
Teoscar Hernandez. It would also allow John Schneider to use
Whit Merrifield more as a super-utility player than as a regular in the outfield.
Schoenfield: Cleveland Guardians
There is no doubt the Cardinals will be adding a starting catcher -- president of baseball operations John Mozeliak has repeatedly said that is the team's top objective this offseason. But he has also emphasized that defense is important, understandable for a franchise that employed Molina since 2004. That could rule out Kirk, who is OK defensively, but his bat-first profile and weight issues might make him more of a DH in the long term. I do have the Cardinals acquiring a catcher (see below) -- but not one from the Blue Jays.
For the Jays, I'm sending Jansen to the Cleveland Guardians. Cleveland's backstops hit a woeful .180/.267/.267 last season. The Guardians have also been linked to Oakland's
Sean Murphy, but they also have a very good prospect ready for an opportunity in
Bo Naylor, who hit .263/.392/.446 with 21 home runs (and 20 stolen bases!) across Double-A and Triple-A. The Guardians don't usually make 3-for-1 deals unless they're the ones receiving the three players, so I think that rules out Kirk, Moreno or Murphy, who will cost prospects the Guardians might not want to give up.
Jansen, however, makes sense to split time with Naylor and allow the rookie to ease into the job. Jansen has two years of team control and while he might not match the .855 OPS he put up in 2022, there is a solid platoon option here because Naylor hits left-handed. The Guardians have a wealth of pitching prospects in the upper minors, and the Blue Jays could use deep rotation depth, so I'll send right-hander
Xzavion Curry to Toronto. He debuted in the majors in 2022 with two starts for Cleveland after striking out 134 in 122 innings in the upper minors, relying on a low-90s fastball that plays up because of a high arm slot and efficient spin.