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Cubs Bolster Rotation, Land Quintana

José Quintana will still be in pinstripes, but he’ll be pitching his home games a few miles north as of this morning. In a blockbuster deal completed before the All-Star break even ended, the Cubs acquired the Colombian left-hander Quintana from the White Sox in exchange for top prospect Eloy Jiménez, top pitching prospect Dylan Cease, and a pair of Single-A infielders in Matt Rose and Bryant Flete.

Theo Epstein and Rick Hahn reportedly stole away from All-Star festivities this week to discuss the deal, and the trade generally surprised the baseball world.

For the Cubs, the deal postures them well for the second half of the season, and bolsters their rotation for the next several years. Quintana has been a top-five pitcher in the American League since his sophomore year, with ERAs between 3.20 and 3.51 from 2013-2016, and DRA marks between 15 and 20 percent better than league average. Quintana is a quintessential control pitcher, with a career walk rate of only 6.5 percent, but he has good stuff, too: his sinker and fourseamer both sit around 92, complemented by an 86 mph changeup and a curveball. Last year, he abandoned his cutter. Versus lefties, he goes almost exclusively fourseamer-curveball, but against righties he uses his changeup around 10 percent of the time. Those secondary pitches get a fair amount of whiffs. In summation, Quintana is just a very good all-around pitcher; not an exorbitant amount of strikeouts, not an abnormal amount of grounders, but enough of both, with few enough walks, to be consistently great. This season, Quintana has struggled to a 4.49 ERA (3.99 DRA), but his peripherals and his last five-to-seven starts have trended in the right direction. In terms of absolute quality, Quintana was possibly the best arm available via trade.

Analysis of the trade hinges partially on that “possibly,” though. The other starters purportedly available—Chris Archer, Sonny Gray, Justin Verlander, Johnny Cueto, Jeff Samardzija—range between young aces and veteran innings-eaters, but all but Cueto have had their own inconsistencies over the past few seasons. One could argue for Quintana’s supremacy and be quite convincing. However, more important than those pitchers’ qualities, is those players the Cubs made available, and the youth and contract status of those pitchers. Quintana is only 28, and he has one more year left on his contract before two team options in 2019 and 2020 at $10.5 million per year. He’s young, and he’s going to be a Cub for several more years. That is a large part of his appeal to a team like the Cubs, who will be losing two of their starters this offseason and have a yawning chasm in the middle of their rotation. Quintana slots in between Jon Lester and Kyle Hendricks for next year’s rotation, and he rounds out a nice Lester-Hendricks-Jake Arrieta playoff rotation for this season.

The Cubs were never going to land a quality starter for 2017 and beyond without parting with either Eloy Jiménez or Ian Happ, and Happ’s breakout 2017, combined with the Cubs’ scuffling offense, essentially made that choice for them. Jiménez was to be included in any deal that the Cubs completed for a non-rental, unless the Cubs were willing to deal a major-league hitter. Despite many overtures to the contrary, it was always highly unlikely that Epstein et al. would part with Happ, Addison Russell, Javier Baez, or Kyle Schwarber. As I posited last week, Jiménez-Cease-plus would be the working package from which the Cubs would deal.

And so, the Cubs got one of the best, if not the best, starter available this deadline, without giving up a major-league piece, and they secured a rotation spot for years to come. Unless Jiménez flames out, this will be a deal that changes the future of two franchises fairly significantly, and this will be a deal that provokes debate for a long time. As of right now, there are some fair critiques already floating around: I think BP’s Jarrett Seidler brought up several important points about payroll and paying in prospects for “cheap” players. If the Cubs fail to land a free agent starter in this offseason’s abundant class, Seidler’s argument will have more merit. As of right now, one would be hard pressed to find another starter who so readily fills the Cubs’ biggest needs.

One final consideration, if you’ll allow me. By trading for Quintana on July 13 and not July 31, the Cubs benefit from several more starts from Quintana. With a few games to gain on the division-leading Brewers, those starts could have an outsized impact on the Cubs’ playoff prospects. Making up even one more game in July than they would have without Quintana is important, and a testament to the gravity of the Cubs’ under-.500 situation.

It’s hard to dislike this trade. After all, the Cubs got their man, and their man is very good. Losing Jiménez just one year after losing Gleyber Torres completes the exhaustion of a farm system that was the envy of baseball just two years ago, but with the graduation of top prospects into quality major leaguers and the exchange of top prospects for other quality major leaguers, it’s difficult to be upset. Concerned, yes—there is a large project on the horizon for the Cubs in remaking their farm system—but the Cubs are good now, and their organization has proven fruitful. They are positioned well for the rest of 2017 and better positioned for 2018 than they were prior to the trade.

And, hey, we get to watch Quintana pitch in a Cubs uniform now. That’s pretty cool.

Lead photo courtesy Chris Humphreys—USA Today Sports

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3 comments on “Cubs Bolster Rotation, Land Quintana”

Excellent write up. TheoJed keeps surprising me. I felt for sure they would actually use the misfortune to replenish the farm asset bank, but I also think it’s a mistake to assume this means they are all in on competing this year. If Cubs really do terribly in the next 2 weeks, I wouldn’t put it past them to sell Wade and Jake to try and recoup assets to go after next season. After all – they needed JQ for next year whether they were competing or not this year.

Gordon

I disagree that the main value of Quintana is cheap control — he is a quality, young, controlled pitcher. The cheapness is just a bonus.

Renegade

Note to Jarrett Seidler (the BP guy quoted above):

The salary cap is an actual thing. The Yankees are trying to get under it, the Dodgers are trying to get down close to it. The Red Sox are counting pennies and waiting to make a deal because they only have around $7 million of “cap space” remaining (per Cafardo) or *they go into the luxury tax

Don’t think of this trade on face value, the return was better because of Q’s contract. The Cubs may have an extra $10-15 million to work with the next three seasons because of the contract. (Versus paying market rate for a playoff-worthy starting pitcher in the offseason.)

Would the deal sound better to you if it was Jimenez and Cease + for 3½ years of Quintana AND three more seasons of Wade Davis?

Not saying that’s what Epstein will do with the extra cash, but the deal gives the Cubs room to make an extra move – every roster decision needs to consider salary cap considerations.

We’ll see when Harper and Machado hit the market in November 2018, but it seems to me that the clubs are treating this luxury tax very seriously. The penalties are no longer “just money”.

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