Light up a cigar, kick your feet up, and take a massive breath. The Juan Soto saga is over. I doubted it would happen at all, but in the end, the San Diego Padres wound up getting both Soto and veteran teammate Josh Bell for comparatively very little. Congrats to the Padres! The deal was amazing! They also landed Josh Hader and now boast one of the most all-around complete rosters in MLB, on paper.
That distinction is still reliant on health and a return to form from guys like Wil Myers โ though he was being shopped just before the deadline โ Trent Grisham, and Austin Nola. I know thatโs asking a lot, but theoretically, they got some dawgs down at Petco. Up until the moment that Soto to the Padres was announced though, there were several teams in the running. The Los Angeles Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals were the two teams most commonly brought up in Soto negotiations, but the Giants also made a small splash in the Soto tsunami. So, where do each of these teams stand after the Padresโ sealed the deal?
Los Angeles Dodgers
Aside from the Nationals, who gave away a Rolls Royce and Kia Sorrento for a couple of Honda Civics and whatever is behind one of the mystery doors onโโLetโs Make a Deal,โ the Dodgers are the biggest losers in this trade. While they may have been jumping for joy at this time last year when they snatched Max Scherzer and Trea Turner from the Padresโ hands at the last second, theyโre now quaking in their boots at the prospect of having Soto in their division for at least the next two and a half seasons โ probably more.
Not only is having to face Soto 12 times in the remainder of the season, and possibly the postseason, a big problem for the Dodgers, but LA was in desperate need of an outfield bat. Chris Taylor is hurt, Trayce Thompson is doing well but he shouldnโt be counted on in key moments, James Outman is unproven, and Cody Bellinger still sucks. They needed a solid player to stick in the 7 or 9 slot, and also not be a hole in their lineup. Soto was that guy, and given the Dodgersโ plethora of prospects, Iโm stunned they didnโt get a deal done.
The Dodgers were so desperate for help in the outfield that they traded for Joey Gallo…JOEY GALLO! The power threat who couldnโt succeed in Yankee Stadium! Thatโs a sentence that should give every baseball fan an upset stomach after reading it.
Gallo stated earlier today that Yankees fans made him โfeel like shit,โ so heโll be happy to have a fresh start in Chavez Ravine where his expectations will be lower than a limbo contest in hell. That said, if Gallo is the consolation prize in the Soto sweepstakes, then Dodgers fans should be drowning themselves in alcohol to help cope.
In terms of what Soto wouldโve brought to the table, the Dodgers were one of the teams that wouldโve benefited least though. The Dodgers were already near the top of the league in terms of outfielder on-base percentage, slugging, OPS, strikeout rate, and walk rate. Soto would obviously be a massive upgrade for the Dodgers, but of each of the teams that were in the running for Soto, the Dodgers likely would have benefited the least in the long run.
St. Louis Cardinals
With Tyler OโNeillโs struggles, Harrison Baderโs injuries, and Albert Pujolsโ…everything, Soto wouldโve been a huge get for the Birds. That said, the Cardinals can walk away from this Soto situation with their heads held high knowing they didnโt have to give up their future, didnโt land a massive name, and still improved more than their greatest divisional adversary, the Milwaukee Brewers.
The Cardinals needed outfield help and starting pitching depth more than anything. While acquiring someone like Carlos Rodรณn (still possible, but unlikely) wouldโve been preferred, the addition of Josรฉ Quintana provides stability to a starting rotation thatโs only had three people start more than ten games all season. Frankly, the Cardinals just needed someone who could eat innings and carry them over into the postseason. Seeing as how Quintana has pitched at least 150 innings in every full season since 2013 (except 2021), Quintana should be much-appreciated in St. Louis.
Thatโs beside the point though. The Cardinals have been in the middle of MLB among outfielder on-base percentage, walk rate, slugging, and weighted runs created-plus. However, since the start of June, Cardinalsโ outfielders have ranked top-10 in nearly every category under the sun. Thatโs with OโNeill struggling as well as Bader and Yepez spending time on the IL.
The Cardinalsโ lineup is very top-heavy. The only great hitters in their lineup this year have been Paul Goldschmidt, Nolan Arenado, and Brendan Donovan. As nuts as it is to say, Albert Pujols is one of only seven Cardinals with at least 50 games played and an OPS-plus of 100 or better. So, while the prospect of putting Soto at DH and letting OโNeill climb himself out of this rut heโs in may have been enticing, the Cardinals wouldโve essentially been limiting one of their better bats this season to a platoon role. At the same time, putting Soto in the outfield would be a drastic downgrade defensively for a group that ranks third in Defensive WAR this season.
The Cardinals should be happy knowing they now have the clear-cut best bullpen in the NL Central. Theyโve been on a tear and that added depth at starter and strong bullpen is going to pay off huge down the stretch. Losing out on Soto doesnโt change that.
Thank Christ the Giants didnโt make this trade. Do you know how braindead youโd have to be to make a trade for Soto when the core of your team is all past their prime, your farm system is pretty light, and your offense is weaker than an amputee sloth? Contrary to what several Giants fans might tell you, the teamโs 107-win 2021 season is a distant memory at this point and it doesnโt look like itโs coming back any time soon. The Giants are more than a strong bat and a bullpen arm away from contending again.
Thankfully, the Giants realized that they needed to be sellers after losing out on Soto. Already, the Giants have announced that All-Star Carlos Rodรณn is on the table to be traded.
Plus, Trevor Rosenthal got traded. Iโll be honest, I didnโt know he had any value at all at this point in his career. So, if the Giants got anything for himโฆanything at all, good on their front office.
The Giants benefitted the most from losing out on Soto, because it showed the Giantsโ front office that they canโt afford to keep pushing for a World Series with their aging core. They took a step back, looked in the mirror, and said โWhat are we even doing?โ and, as a Giants fan myself, I am ever so grateful for that realization.
San Francisco is linked heavily to Aaron Judge in free agency this offseason and while Judge is older, more expensive, and more prone to strikeouts, he wouldnโt cost the Giants any of their top prospects, which canโt be overstated for a team that has failed to reach expectations because they couldnโt get another 24 home runs and 90 RBIs from their 35-year-old shortstop. Theyโre currently under .500 and have been falling further and further from the playoff bubble every day since the start of June. This needed to happen.
According to OddsChecker US, the only team among the teams I just listed to have their World Series odds seriously affected by the trade was the St. Louis Cardinals, who fell from +3000 odds to +4000. The Giants were already long shots and stayed pretty much the same, and the Dodgersโ odds didnโt change at all, staying put at +380. Funny enough though, after the Dodgers acquired Gallo, their odds improved to +360. Iโm sure thatโll make every Yankees fan scoff.
This content was originally published here.