Gleyber Torres, who played the first seven seasons of his big league career at second base for the Yankees, is set to join the Detroit Tigers as a free agent.

According to multiple reports, Torres is signing with the Tigers on a one-year, $15 million deal.

Torres’ departure from The Bronx is no surprise, as it was reported this offseason the Yankees were not pursuing bringing back the 28-year-old, who first joined the organization along with three other players in a trade with the Chicago Cubs that saw closer Aroldis Chapman join the North Siders in 2016.

The Yanks have a few internal options to fill the hole at second base, including moving Jazz Chisholm Jr. over from third base (with either DJ LeMahieu starting at third or a potential addition) and using top prospect Caleb Durbin there.

Torres enjoyed his share of big moments in pinstripes but his streaky bat, questionable base running, and shaky defense left much to be desired at times, especially in the last few seasons.

The 28-year-old started 888 games for New York over the last seven years, with 601 of them coming at second base. But last season, Torres led the league in errors with 18 – a year after committing 15 – and struggled offensively before finding a bit of his footing in the leadoff hole, finishing the campaign with a pedestrian 101 OPS+ and 104 wRC+ while tallying 15 home runs and 65 RBI with a .257/.330/.378 slash line for a .709 OPS.

Torres never reached the promise of his first years in New York, making the All-Star team in each of his first two campaigns and finishing third in AL Rookie of the Tear voting in 2018. In his first 267 games over two years, he totaled 42 doubles, 62 home runs, 167 RBI and slashed .275/.338/.511 for a .849 OPS (125 OPS+).

At the GM Meetings in early November, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman called Torres a good baseball player and “one of the reasons we got as far as we did” last year. When discussing the club’s plans for second base at that time, the GM didn’t want to wouldn’t “dissect” Torres’ strengths and weaknesses when asked if his fielding issues would prevent a reunion.

“He’ll have a lot of conversations with a lot of teams that have a need in that area and that also might include us, you know, who knows,” Cashman said in early November. “But I appreciate his efforts while he was here and he was mashing down the stretch like we needed him to be. But again, everybody has their strengths and weaknesses, but I’m not gonna dissect what’s best moving forward.

“We’re just obviously gonna make the best decisions we can from what’s available from within or outside. We can import a third baseman and move Jazz over, we can promote from within with a guy like Caleb Durbin, for instance, who is crushing it in the Arizona Fall League. We can run into some trade opportunities or free agents. Just not too sure what we’re gonna do just yet. But I want to thank Gleyer for the time while he was here without closing any doors, either on a reunion.”

Durbin, 24, who was added to the 40-man roster in mid-November, had two doubles, one triple, five homers, and 29 stolen bases in 21 games at the Arizona Fall League. In 82 games with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (his first at that level), he had 23 doubles, 10 home runs and 60 RBI with a .287/.396/.471 slash line for a .867 OPS.

Read the full article here

Share.
Exit mobile version