Trade deadlines rotation market has major Garrett Crochet question

Unusually yet undeniably, the rotation market is easily led by a pitcher who’s already almost doubled his previous MLB innings high.White Sox reliever-turned-starter Garrett Crochet, the ace of baseball’s worst team, is coveted by the Yankees, Dodgers, Orioles, Padres and most other contenders, too.

And why not? He’s perhaps the only true No.1 starter available.Crochet leads the AL with 141 strikeouts and a 2.37 FIP and has a 3.9 WAR (third in MLB in a category led by Seth Lugo, yet another ex-reliever).

But there’s one big catch: A serious question remains about how many more 2024 innings remain for Crochet.The former setup man, who’d never before logged more than 54 ¹/₃ MLB innings, is on pace for about 200.(The Yankees very much like Crochet.

But as was the case in talks regarding ex-Sox star Dylan Cease, they still seem unwilling to part with power-speed OF Spencer Jones, a potential hang-up assuming he remains a South Side target.)As for the innings issue, teams with huge leads (like the Dodgers) could carefully monitor Crochet before turning him loose in October, some might transition him back into a featured reliever, and a few might just let him go full throttle in the belief that’s what he was meant to do.One interested exec who favors keeping him in regular rotation claims, “The innings limit is a scam.”That exec isn’t alone.

But of course, Crochet’s camp isn’t about to let acquiring teams employ without limitation the former first-rounder who had Tommy John surgery in 2022, and thus risk his future without some sense of security (i.e.an extension.)The White Sox did broach an extension, as Bob Nightengale of USA Today reported, but word is no offers were exchanged — no surprise since the White Sox aren’t known as a big (or even medium) spender, and aren’t close to a contender, either.

Meantime, the White Sox and Crochet’s camp wisely are working on a reasonable innings plan — though the chances they keep him are cl...

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Publisher: New York Post

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