The Nationals Trade Clippard to Oakland for Escobar

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After a relatively quiet offseason, Wednesday the Washington Nationals traded fan-favorite RHP Tyler Clippard to the Oakland Athletics for SS Yunel Escobar. Oakland acquired Escobar a few days ago in the Ben Zobrist trade with Tampa Bay, and now less than a week later spins him to Washington to improve their bullpen depth.

Before focusing on the future, one must appreciate the incredible work of Tyler Clippard in Washington. Acquired as a starting pitcher from the Yankees for pitcher Jon Albaladejo in 2007, Clippard has blossomed as a relief pitcher for the Nationals. The nearly 30-year-old pitcher had another strong season in 2014, with a 7-4 record, a 2.14 ERA and 82 strikeouts over 70.1 innings pitched. Over parts of seven seasons in Washington, Clippard posted a 2.68 ERA, 1.047 WHIP, 34 saves and 530 strikeouts in 464 innings pitched, along with two all-star game selections in 2011 and 2014.

Trading Clippard leaves a hole in the Nationals relief corps as he has pitched 70+ innings and made 70+ appearances five consecutive years, making him conceivably the most reliable setup man in baseball the past half-decade. The Nationals are gambling the trio of Aaron Barrett, Matt Thornton, and Blake Treinen can manage the 8th inning role in Clippard’s absence, although another acquisition is plausible before opening day. Clippard is in his last year of salary arbitration before reaching free agency next winter and projected to earn $9-9.5 million in 2015.

Conversely general manager Mike Rizzo entered the offseason with one major roster need, namely to upgrade at second base, and finds a quality solution in Yunel Escobar. The 32-year-old shortstop struggled offensively last season, batting .258/.324/.340 with 7 home runs in 137 games played. The veteran right-handed hitter does own a career .276/.347/.381 batting line, which gives hope for a rebound offensively in 2015. Escobar possesses strong on-base skills, a knack for making contact, and the occasional home run power. Signed for $5 million this season, $7 million in 2016, along with a $7 million team option in 2017, Escobar is under contract to a team-friendly, below-market deal compared to his present production.

In the field the defensive metrics observed that Escobar took a major step backwards in 2014 and graded him as a below-average defensive shortstop. However, this goes directly against his numbers that rated him as an above-average (or better) shortstop in each of his other seven big league seasons. Escobar does not have good speed and displays below-average range, relying on a strong, cannon-like throwing arm and making the routine play. While he is still likely an average defensive major league shortstop, a shift to second base could allow his strong arm to hide his lack of range and make him an outstanding defender at the keystone.

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This trade is fascinating on a number of levels, in that for Washington it seems to be the first domino in a series of future transactions for the franchise. On the surface it appears the Nationals just acquired their second baseman for 2015 in Escobar, who then in 2016 could remain at second or shift to shortstop, depending on Ian Desmond’s contract status. Escobar also provides a bridge to Trea Turner, the middle infield prospect acquired last month from Tampa Bay.

Unfortunately this acquisition leaves questions in the bullpen, as Clippard and Rafael Soriano have departed and Drew Storen was ineffective last postseason, making this perhaps the biggest current area of weakness on the roster. Furthermore I would be remiss if I did not acknowledge how popular Clippard was with the fans and, from all reports, also inside the locker room. Being without Clippard will be nearly as peculiar as his trademark glasses he wore. But these are the difficult decisions successful teams with homegrown talent must face, and realistically, how well the Nationals navigate these uncomfortable forthcoming situations with Desmond, Jordan Zimmermann, Doug Fister and others will dictate how long their window of success will remain open.

Fortunately just because a decision is difficult or even potentially unpopular, does not mean it is not the proper course of action. This trade immediately solves the Nationals biggest weakness and gives them additional roster and payroll flexibility both in 2015 and in the future. Washington saves approximately $4 million in payroll for 2015 by swapping Clippard for Escobar and the team now has tremendous leverage, and an obvious backup plan, in contract negotiations with Ian Desmond.

Escobar should provide Washington with outstanding defense at second base in 2015 and a more reliable bat than incumbent Danny Espinosa, who now feels like a possible trade chip. In my opinion Washington still needs another relief pitcher, along with depth off the bench, but this deal solidifies their lineup and makes them the clear favorite in the NL East. Tyler Clippard will be sorely missed in D.C., but from a purely baseball perspective, to acquire three years of an everyday player for one year of a relief pitcher makes this trade a home run for Washington.

NatsGM Overall Grade ->    B to B+

2 thoughts on “The Nationals Trade Clippard to Oakland for Escobar

  1. Ryan. Ten years later the commish office deal brokered on Lerner the buyer ends up smelling like stinky Selig
    Who once cried about his Braves moving to Atlanta
    What is the difference between an
    Unequal MASN contract and the team
    Being in Montreal clearing salary cap
    With their SS and 8 th IP stud????
    On another note. Good activity adding turner , Bostick for A plus along with Mayers to help out kids @ Hagerstown .
    Maybe we should just accept Barrett being a hot commodity to work clips
    Role as McCatty works in more Thornton, DelcArmen or Fortunato???
    Eloquent venting ??? Lol!

  2. I haven’t read much about the possibility of Escobar being better suited for 3rd (cannon, lack of range) than 2nd – where Rendon should have better range.

    Also, have read that 2014 defensive abberation as mainly due to combo of injury and/or crappy carpet field. Has anyone split Escobar’s defensive numbers away from Tropicana field? If there is a stat significant split, then it makes a strong case for bounce back with Nats.

    Curious on your thoughts. Thanks.

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