THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,490 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,490 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
General  | Crack The Bat | 12/19/2005

Winter Notes

Where do I start? This offseason has been the craziest that I can remember since the 2000-01 offseason, one that included ridiculous contracts signed by Darren Dreifort, Mike Hampton and Alex Rodriguez. The only thing we can take from looking back at such historically ludicrous signing binges is that they usually don't last from year to year. In other words, B.J. Ryan signing a five-year, $47 million dollar deal shouldn't affect what the top closer signs for next year. In fact, don't be surprised if the Blue Jays are looking to dump Ryan's salary within a year or two, a trend we see more and more often in baseball today.

With Ryan's name we'll start with the short relief purge that has taken place on the free agent market. Ryan's contract was the most ridiculous. While he was coming off of a very good year for the Orioles, he is hardly proven enough to warrant such a pay-day. However, as they say, it only takes one team to really like a player, although it should be noted that the Indians were also thought to be pursuing Ryan very hard.

Billy Wagner, a much more proven and dynamic closer, signed a four-year contract with the New York Mets worth $43 million. The Phillies picked up set-up man Tom Gordon to assume the role as their new closer for a three-year, $18 million dollar deal. The Yankees filled Gordon's spot by inking Kyle Farnsworth (three-years, $17 million). The Giants nabbed Tim Worrell (2 years, $4 million), the Tigers picked up Todd Jones (two years, $11 million), and Cubs bolstered their bullpen by signing two effective set-men in Bobby Howry (three-years, $12 million) and Scott Eyre (3 years, $11 million). Eyre and Howry were the first free agents to sign, and I thought the Cubs were crazy to sign them to the deals they did. However, they just got significantly crazier from there.

Amidst the insanity among the short-relievers and closers, the most proven free agent closer of them all, Trevor Hoffman, remained in San Diego after nearly departing for Cleveland, signing a two-year, $13.5 million dollar deal with an option for a third year. And after the Indians got shot down, twice, they re-signed Bob Wickman.

The run on relievers reminds me of a run on certain positional players in the NFL draft. The rest of the market was slower to materialize, but it picked up considerably with the annual Winter Meetings that started on December 5th. A.J. Burnett gave the Blue Jays two notable free agent acquisitions, signing a five-year deal worth $55 million, very similar to the deal his former teammate, Carl Pavano, signed a year ago with the New York Yankees. Paul Byrd signed up with the Indians (two years, $14.5 million) with Esteban Loiaza heading to Oakland (three years, $21 million). Jamie Moyer re-signed with the Seattle Mariners for one-year ($5.5 million). Kenny Rogers joined the Detroit Tigers for two years ($16 million).

Rafael Furcal's three-year, $39 million dollar deal with the Dodgers turned more than just a few heads, especially when most had him pegged to sign with the Cubs. Furcal is a very good shortstop, and being able to lead off is a big, added value. But is he worth $13 million dollars per year? No, especially considering Miguel Tejada's current contract averages less than $13 million/year.

Brian Giles, like Trevor Hoffman, spurned several teams to stay in San Diego for a relatively modest three-year, $30 million dollar deal. Paul Konerko, the biggest free agent commodity, also remained with his 2005 employer, the Chicago White Sox, for a five-year, $60 million dollar deal. Ramon Hernandez decided to join the Orioles with a four-year, $27.5 million dollar deal, which likely means Javier Lopez will either be moved to first base or moved altogether. Fellow catcher Kenji Johjima is the only other notable positional prospect to sign. The Japanese import signed with the Mariners for a three-year $16.5 million dollar deal. If Johjima turns out as many expect him to, this could easily be the biggest bargain of the year.

Ok, maybe I'm focusing on money too much. After all, living in the country we do everyone has the right to make as much money as they can as long as no one is hurt in the process. However, that's what the game is all about these days, right? Winning championships almost seems like an afterthought to what can certain teams do on a limited payroll. For that, we have the trade market, which has been just as busy.

The trade season was kicked off by the first of many moves by the Florida Marlins, as they dealt Josh Beckett, Mike Lowell and Guillermo Mota to the Boston Red Sox for several top prospects, including RHP Anibal Sanchez and SS Hanley Ramirez. Many wondered why the Marlins would give up on 2003 World Series MVP Josh Beckett, but it's not hard to figure out how happy they were shedding themselves of Mike Lowell's contract.

Carlos Delgado and his big contract were next, being traded to the Mets for another prospect package. In a separate trade with the Mets, the Marlins also got rid of Paul LoDuca, again, for more prospects. Luis Castillo was dealt to the Twins for a couple of minor league arms. Juan Pierre was traded to the Chicago Cubs for, that's right, more prospects. Pretty much, if you play for the Marlins and you made more than one million dollars and/or your name wasn't Miguel Cabrera, Dontrelle Willis or Jeremy Hermida, you were going to be traded. Attention Ron Villone, that means you're next.

The biggest trade not involving the Florida Marlins had slugging 1B/DH Jim Thome heading to the World Champion Chicago White Sox for centerfielder Aaron Rowand and two minor league pitching prospects. Since the White Sox also re-signed Paul Konerko as noted above, the addition of Thome gives the White Sox a formidable one-two punch in the middle of the lineup.

Red Sox shortstop Edgar Renteria was moved for Atlanta Braves super-prospect Andy Marte, who is blocked at third base at the big-league level by Chipper Jones. After acquiring Mike Lowell in the Beckett trade, the Red Sox are likely to trade from their depth at third base to address their new found need at shortstop, with the Devil Rays' Julio Lugo being the most notable target. Miguel Tejada could also be a target, who has recently expressed his displeasure with the Baltimore Orioles.

While the Marlins were involved in all of the big trades, there were several smaller trades made of significance. Lyle Overbay was dealt to the Blue Jays for David Bush, Gabe Gross and minor league lefty Zach Jackson. Mark Loretta of the Padres was traded for the Red Sox' Doug Mirabelli. The Reds traded Sean Casey to the Pirates for Dave Williams. The Giants and Orioles swapped relievers LaTroy Hawkins and Steve Kline. Johnny Estrada went to the Diamondbacks from the Braves for Lance Cormier and Oscar Villarreal. The Padres and Devil Rays traded once high-touted prospects Sean Burroughs and Dewon Brazelton for one another. Pirates' lefty Mark Redman was dealt to the Royals for Jonah Bayliss, the Pirates also obtained reliever Damaso Marte from the White Sox for Rob Mackowiak, the Braves swapped Dan Kolb for Wes Obermueller of the Brewers, while the Reds picked up Tony Womack from the Yankees for a package of prospects.

Whew. You got all that? This doesn't even include minor signings and trades such as the Cubs picking up John Mabry or the A's trading future considerations for Chad Gaudin.

So, who has made out the best so far? The Mets are the sexy pick, but they have been throwing money at problems for years with little to show for it. I will say they went from having the worst production at first base to having one of the most productive sluggers at the position in Delgado. And as I pointed out during the entire season last year, don't bet against the Braves in the NL East until they finally fall off of the top.

The Blue Jays may have paid the price for their acquisitions, but they got a top of the rotation starter in Burnett to team up with Roy Halladay, a potentially dominant closer in Ryan, and a solid, steady bat in Lyle Overbay.

Don't laugh, but the Marlins have done this before, and acquired a lot of young talent in return during their fire sale, while also picking up some supplemental picks in next year's draft with the departure of free agents A.J. Burnett and Todd Jones. You can hardly say they did the best of any team, but a few years down the road we may be looking back at how well they did in some of these deals much like we did with their fire sale after the 1997 season.

After not giving much credit to them all of last season, I'm going to give my vote to the Chicago White Sox. They re-signed the biggest commodity on the open market while retaining their team leader in Paul Konerko, and added another huge bat (Thome) despite giving up Aaron Rowand in the process. I've always believed that keeping your own is very important, and the White Sox have very good outfield depth to make dealing Rowand possible.

Of course, it's far too early to accurately judge who has had the best offseason, as the only way to gauge the results are by looking at the final results a year from now.

The thoughts and opinions listed here do not necessarily reflect those of Perfect Game USA. Patrick Ebert is affiliated with both Perfect Game USA and Brewerfan.net, and can be contacted via email at pebert@brewerfan.net.

General | Blog | 6/16/2026

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 66

Ron Wolforth
Article Image
  The Number That Just Killed MLB Expansion: 1,217   USA Today's Bob Nightengale dropped a bomb shell recently that the baseball world is still digesting. Major League Baseball wants to expand to 32 teams. Team executives are quietly opposing it and the reason has nothing to do with cities or money.   They cannot find enough healthy pitchers.   Between 2020 and 2024, professional baseball performed 1,026 Tommy John surgeries at the minor-league level alone. Another 191 at the Major League level. More than twelve hundred elbow reconstructions in five years on the best young pitchers in the world.   That is not bad luck. That is a system reporting a verdict on itself.   For fifteen years, the youth-baseball industry has chased one number: velocity significantly more than projectability and arm care.    Recruiters scout by it.    Social...
Tournaments | Story | 7/2/2026

Freedom Classic Opens Holiday Weekend

Alyssa Golden
Article Image
More than 30 teams from the 14U-18U age divisions will head to Fort Myers, Florida this Fourth of July weekend for the seventh annual Perfect Game Freedom Classic. The tournament, running July 3-6, features several nationally ranked prospects from across the country as teams look to compete for a championship. Headlining the field are twin brothers Derek and Ryan Yormark of Merrick, New York. Right-handed pitcher Derek Yormack is the No. 51-ranked player in the class of 2027, the No. 1 player in New York and the No. 5-ranked right-handed pitcher in the country. First baseman Ryan Yormark comes in just behind his twin brother as the No. 3 overall player in New York, the No. 5 first baseman in the nation and the No. 90-ranked player nationally. Both brothers are committed to Vanderbilt. Derek Yormark has established himself as one of the top two-way prospects in the 2027 class. He has run...
High School | General | 7/1/2026

PG High School All-Americans

Tyler Russo
Article Image
High School Top 50: Final Update With the High School season all wrapped up, today we take a look at our First, Second and Third Team All-Americans from around the country. Below you'll find three teams with stats that seem otherworldly from players who'll likely hear their names called in the coming week's MLB Draft. Within the "Notable Stats" section you'll see the individual award winners as well. First Team All-American Pos.  Name Class School State Commitment Notable Stats C Cole Prosek 2026 Magnolia Heights MS Ole Miss .595 BA, 18 HR, 79 RBI 1B Will Adams 2026 Hoover AL LSU .489, 13 HR, 52 RBI IF James Tronstein 2026 Harvard-Westlake CA Vanderbilt .531, 10 HR, 29 RBI, 21 XBH IF Grady Emerson 2026 Fort Worth Christian TX Texas .508, 8 HR, 56 RBI, 34/35 SB, National POY IF Jacob Lombard 2026 Gulliver Schools FL Miami .477, 10 HR, 52 R, 42 H, 14 SB OF Martin Shelar 2026 Marist GA...
Tournaments | Story | 7/1/2026

16u Elite Scout Notes: Days 3-5

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
16u Elite Scout Notes: Days 1-2  ‘28 AJ Bonnette (TX) with 7 Ks thru 4 IP thus far, living 89-91 w/ heavy traits. Filling up all four quads & attacking hitters early in counts. Mixing a slurvy breaker & turning the CHG over well. @PG_Uncommitted #NatElite @Texas_PG pic.twitter.com/oz2XXoKHvt — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) June 30, 2026 Aj Bonnette (2028, Keller, Texas) showed out on both sides of the ball at the National Elite Championship, but really stood out on the mound Tuesday. He toed the rubber in round two of the playoffs, proceeding to toss six innings with eight punchouts and zero earned runs allowed. The 6-foot southpaw filled up all four quadrants of the strike zone, attacking hitters early and often with his fastball. The heater lived in the 88-91 mph range with heavy traits, often setting up his slurvy breaking ball. Bonnette showed good feel...
Tournaments | Story | 7/1/2026

Performance Baseball Rolls On

Kinley Kitchens
Article Image
Championship teams often reveal themselves when the game isn’t going their way. Performance Baseball 2028/Milwaukee Brewers Scout Team did exactly that. Trailing Florida Burn 2028 Scout through four innings, the Brewers refused to panic. Instead, they relied on timely hitting, consistent pitching, and an unselfish approach at the plate, rallying a five-run fifth inning before pulling away for a 9-5 victory to clinch their spot in the semifinals. The comeback was fueled by contributions throughout the lineup. Six different players drove in runs, including two RBIs each from Aiden Capobianco and Cameron Massey, while Matthew Heredia, Parker Weston, Ethan Smith, and Aj Bonnette each added an RBI of their own. On the mound, Derek Wenzel set the tone with 3.2 solid innings before Ethan Smith shut the door in relief, helping preserve the comeback victory. Although the Brewers have had a...
Tournaments | Championship | 7/1/2026

JK Select Hawaii Tackles 14u West WS

Emily Hicks
Article Image
JK Select Hawaii capped off an impressive tournament run by defeating GBG Vegas 14u Red14-4 in the championship game on Sunday at Goodyear Ballpark, claiming the 14u West World Series title. From the opening pitch, JK Select controlled the pace of the game. The offense jumped out early, scoring 6 runs in the 1st inning after timely hits from MVP Sean Shindo and Kade Manarpaac. The early lead gave the pitching staff confidence as they worked efficiently through the opposing lineup. “I've worked hard to get better at my game for the past few months; it means a lot that I did well and performed in a tournament like this” said Shindo. Starting pitcher Maddox Prones turned in a strong performance, allowing 3 runs while striking out 5 batters over 3 innings. The defense backed the effort with great plays in the middle infield, preventing GBG Vegas from building momentum....
Tournaments | Story | 7/1/2026

"Wow" Swings Catch Eyes at 16u Elite

Kinley Kitchens
Article Image
On the second day of the 2026 Perfect Game National Elite Championship, one swing turned heads across the ballpark. The next one brought everyone to a stop. With Wow Factor Nation 16U trailing midway through its matchup against Sandlot Scout Team 2028, Micheal O'Connor launched a solo home run to spark the offense. Just one batter later, Aaron Frink stepped into the box and sent another ball over the fence, delivering back-to-back home runs that quickly became one of the most talked about moments of the tournament’s opening days. Parents gathered along the nets, players from previous games stopped to watch, and college scouts turned their attention toward the action as the two towering swings energized the crowd and brought new life to the game. Although Wow Factor Nation ultimately lost 5-3 after a hard-fought performance, the back-to-back home runs served as a reminder of the...
Tournaments | Story | 6/30/2026

Stacked Runs the Table at 17u WWBA

Will Dembo
Article Image
Following a jam-packed week of entertainment at the 17u WWBA Championships, the top nationally ranked program, USA Prime 17u National/Detroit Tigers Scout Team, faced off against Stacked Baseball 17u (No. 80 nationally) in the highly anticipated championship matchup as both teams looked to earn one of the most prestigious titles in all of travel baseball. Each talented squad entered the finale undefeated, but Stacked Baseball continued their dominance throughout the tournament, defeating the Detroit Tigers Scout Team 10-2 in mercy rule fashion to become national champions behind explosive bats and impressive pitching. Stacked Baseball was the overwhelming top team throughout the week as the WWBA Champions outscored opponents by an absurd 117-12 during their 11-0 run. “We got some talented kids, but we played against a little bit of Goliath over there,” Stacked Head Coach Mike...
Tournaments | Story | 6/30/2026

17u WWBA Scout Notes: Day 7

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
17u WWBA Scout Notes: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4  Day 5 | Day 6 Shea Corona (2027, Brooklyn, N.Y.) showcased some loud stuff out of the bullpen for MLB Breakthrough Series 2027. The New York native and primary shortstop topped out at 93 with the fastball, sitting comfortable in the 90-92 range. Corona paired it with a sharp and tight slider at 81-83, staying on the same plane until late. The pitch plays well already and the delivery is very athletic. The uncommitted right-hander went three scoreless and was in the zone plenty, striking out two while not allowing a walk. '27 SS Moises Gudino (FL) continues to stay red hot, working a long AB & cracking an oppo 2B on the 8th pitch. Really seeing ing well. #WWBA @Florida_PG https://t.co/OjNJ8Bmzao pic.twitter.com/WoDDp35EI1 — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) June 30, 2026 Moises Gudino (2027, Tampa, Fla.)...
Tournaments | Story | 6/30/2026

Texas Twelve Firing On Full Cylinders

Kinley Kitchens
Article Image
Every team hopes to start a tournament with momentum, but few make a statement quite like Texas Twelve Maroon 2028. Matched up against defending champion Excel Blue Wave National to kick off their debut in the 2026 Perfect Game National Elite Championship, Texas Twelve Maroon delivered a complete team performance, earning a hard-fought 3-2 victory and immediately establishing themselves as one of the top teams to watch this week. The win showcased the balance that has made Texas Twelve Maroon a powerful team. Strong pitching, timely hitting, and steady defense all played a role as the team held off one of the tournament’s premier programs. Right-hander Ty Antley turned in an outstanding performance on the mound, throwing a complete game while allowing only five hits and two walks over seven innings. The High Follow prospect worked consistently between 85-89 mph and mixed in a sharp...
Tournaments | Championship | 6/30/2026

Flames Capture 18U BCS Title

Alyssa Golden
Article Image
Flames Natty used timely hitting and a dominant start from Beau Collier to defeat NLB American 7-3 and capture the 18U BCS National Championship on Monday at Lee Health Sports Complex. Despite being assembled just hours before the tournament began, the Flames quickly developed chemistry throughout the tournament. “This team was put together 12 hours before this tournament, and they went on a crazy run,” head coach Adam Vasquez said. “These kids know each other locally, but they don’t play together. For them to come together last minute like that, it’s crazy. I’m proud of them for that.” The game opened as a pitchers’ duel, with David Acevedo recording the lone hit through the first two innings. NLB American starter Hayden Graham kept the Flames in check early, allowing just one hit while striking out one over 2.0 innings. The right-hander...
Loading more articles...