Philadelphia Phillies: Trading Forecast

Will the Acquisition of Benoit Lead to More Deals? Photo by Peter G. Aiken - USA TODAY Sports.
Will the Acquisition of Benoit Lead to More Deals? Photo by Peter G. Aiken - USA TODAY Sports. /
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Ramos May Be the Reliever Klentak Trades for a Left-Handed Bat with Power. Photo by Richard Mackson – USA TODAY Sports.
Ramos May Be the Reliever Klentak Trades for a Left-Handed Bat with Power. Photo by Richard Mackson – USA TODAY Sports. /

The front office is taking a circuitous route to achieve their goals because general manager Matt Klentak of the Philadelphia Phillies is using the Winter Meetings to lay the groundwork for future deals.

Bargaining Chips:

Before money was the preferred method, bartering one’s services or possessions with another allowed each to procure necessities.

Through Wednesday (December 7), many GMs went from one negotiation to another at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland. Sleep was optional. But did the Philadelphia Phillies accomplish something during the four days? Well, Double D, a poster from another site, your question represents the thinking of many fans locally. But it will depend on their recent acquisitions and competitive proposals.

Shaping their roster, management re-signed Jeremy Hellickson to head the rotation, inked Pat Neshek and Joaquin Benoit to be the eighth-inning setup men, and picked up Howie Kendrick to plug the fifth hole in the lineup and a corner outfield spot. So, Double D, the decision-maker won’t add another starter, and he won’t block corner outfielders in the pipeline with a multi-year contract to a free agent. However, one viable avenue for a left-handed bat would be to swap a catcher and a reliever to a contender with those needs.

Before the annual marathon of general managers and agents, manager Pete Mackanin phoned Klentak, and the exec voiced his hopes for Cesar Hernandez, Cameron Rupp, shortstop J.P. Crawford and receiver Jorge Alfaro. Ergo, if Crawford and Alfaro can start for the Phils in July, the GM will have Rupp, Hernandez, Freddy Galvis and Kendrick available before the trading deadline. Of course, the manager stated his preference for a left-side hitter with power, and Klentak replied he’d get more creative to accomplish that before spring training. How?

Considering the teams needing a backstop, a second baseman and/or relievers, Klentak is putting himself in position to reel off a deal before February. For instance, Double D, the executive will have Benoit, Neshek and Joely Rodriquez as keepers, while Hector Neris, Jeanmar Gomez and Edubray Ramos would give Klentak a bullpen piece to swap. But one wrinkle is not re-signing A.J. Ellis, which complicates things but doesn’t stop them. Eventually, the tandem behind the plate will be Alfaro and Rupp with no spot for catcher Andrew Knapp.