(Audacy) For the first time in three years, MLB held the Winter Meetings this week. Traditionally an annual event, these meetings in San Diego sparked a slew of transactions. Here are our winners and losers from the week that was.
Winner: Aaron Judge
Aaron Judge landed a lucrative contract to remain with the Yankees.
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Judge declined what felt like a fair seven-year, $213.5-million extension offer from the New York Yankees prior to the 2022 season before turning in the greatest contract year in the history of professional sports. If setting a new American League single-season record with 62 home runs wasn't enough, Judge was then heavily courted by the San Francisco Giants and San Diego Padres in his first trip to free agency. As Andy Martino of SNY put it, Judge "really made the Yankees sweat" before ultimately agreeing to a nine-year, $360 million deal to remain in the Bronx. It would be hard to have a better calendar year than Judge has had in 2022.
Loser: San Francisco Giants
Farhan Zaidi and the Giants had a disappointing trip to the Winter Meetings.
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The Giants may pivot and sign star shortstop Carlos Correa to ultimately make this offseason a successful one, but there were times earlier this week when it felt like Judge may follow in the footsteps of his childhood idol Barry Bonds by signing a lucrative free-agent contract to head home to California. Instead, he returned to the Yankees. The Giants did ink talented-but-often-injured outfielder Mitch Haniger to a three-year, $43.5-million deal during the Winter Meetings, but they entered the offseason needing to close the star power gap that exists between them and both the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres, their two fiercest NL West rivals. So far this offseason, they haven't done that.
Winner: Philadelphia Phillies
Dave Dombrowski and the Phillies had a productive week.
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Dave Dombrowski and the Phillies haven't had a chance to catch their breath since making a rather shocking run to the World Series, with the GM Meetings starting just days after they lost Game 6 to the Houston Astros. But the reigning NL champion Phillies will have time to regroup now after getting the bulk of their shopping done this week. Trea Turner is their new starting shortstop, and Taijuan Walker has joined a rotation that already includes Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola and Ranger Suárez and which could also add top prospect Andrew Painter relatively early in the 2023 season. And new signee Matt Strahm will be another option in a bullpen that saw a drastic improvement this past season due to dominant stretches from José Alvarado and Seranthony Domínguez. The Phillies finished 14 games back in the NL East in 2022 but have closed the gap that existed between them and both the Atlanta Braves and New York Mets.
Loser: San Diego Padres
A.J. Preller and the Padres missed out on two huge targets at the Winter Meetings.
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On one hand, we want to commend Padres owner Peter Seidler for continuing to give lead executive A.J. Preller the budget to poke holes in the idea that small-market teams really are a thing in 2022. On the other hand, the Winter Meetings were in San Diego and the Padres couldn't reel in Turner despite offering him $40 million more than the Phillies. The Padres were also a late entrant into the Judge sweepstakes and offered him a 10-year, $400-million deal, according to reports, only for him to take a smaller deal to return to the Yankees. There are worse fates than having a lineup that includes Juan Soto, Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr., as the Padres will in 2023, but imagine if they had added another superstar on top of that.
Winner: Chicago Cubs
Cody Bellinger has joined the Cubs.
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Make no mistake, the Cubs shouldn't be done -- either Correa or Dansby Swanson would look good in their lineup next season. But they inked former NL MVP Cody Bellinger to a one-year deal worth $17.5 million, and right-hander Jameson Taillon will give the Cubs strong middle-of-the-rotation production after signing for four years and $68 million. Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer has more work to do, but so far, so good.
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