Angels Acquire: Justin Upton (28 HR, 94 RBI, .279 AVG, 10 SB, 137 wRC+, Age 30)
Cash considerations
Tigers Acquire: Grayson Long (8-8, 2.69 ERA, 1.17 WHIP, 125/42 K/BB at High Class A and AA, Age 23)
Future considerations
Angels Acquire: Brandon Phillips (11 HR, 52 RBI, .291 AVG, 10 SB, 96 wRC+, Age 36)
Cash considerations
Braves Acquire: Tony Sanchez (4 HR, 40 RBI, .272 AVG, 1 SB, 94 wRC+ at AAA, Age 29)
The Angels swung two trades on the last day to acquire players who could be eligible for the postseason, acquiring a power bat to slot behind Mike Trout and a second baseman to play across from dark horse MVP candidate Andrelton Simmons. With the American League Wild Card races still wide, wide open entering the season's final month, the Angels find themselves at 69-65, just 1.5 games back of the Twins for the second Wild Card. Mike Trout (.327/.459/.667) has shouldered almost all of the Angels' offensive production this year, and by bringing in Justin Upton, not only do the Angels get to move the light-hitting Ben Revere (.261/.298/.336) to the bench, they get to add much needed protection behind Trout in the lineup. Perhaps he should be the one happiest about this trade, as he has walked in 23.6% of his plate appearances while pitchers look for other, more human batters to face. Now, teams may not be as thrilled about facing Upton with a runner on first as they were for an aging Albert Pujols (.232/.278/.387), so Trout should get more pitches to hit. Upton (.279/.362/.542) is quietly having a career year, posting a career high .542 slugging percentage despite playing in a pitchers' park. After 2017, he has four years and $88.5 million remaining on his contract, but he can opt out after the season if he chooses, which would make him a one month (plus potentially postseason) rental. Because of this possibility, the Upton trade was clearly a win-now move.
The Angels also picked up 16 year veteran Brandon Phillips as an upgrade over Cliff Pennington (.267/.328/.352) at second base. The 36 year old Phillips was having a pretty good season for his hometown Atlanta Braves, slashing .291/.329/.423 with adequate defense for a middle infielder in his mid-30's. Phillips will be a free agent after the season, so like (potentially) Upton, this is a one month rental plus the postseason. If he gets a big hit that helps the Angels sneak into the Wild Card, he'll have done his job for LA.
In return for Upton:
Going to Detroit, who is in the early stages of a rebuild, is AA pitcher Grayson Long, one of the lone bright spots in a still-dim Angels farm system. Long was drafted in the third round out of Texas A&M in 2015, and while he was limited to 84.2 innings over his first two pro seasons, he's had a breakthrough season in 2017. Starting with three starts at High Class A Inland Empire, he posted a 4.50 ERA and a 14/4 strikeout to walk ratio in 12 innings, which is a credible performance for the very hitter-friendly California League. Quickly promoted to AA Mobile, he's been one of the best starters in the Southern League, going 8-6 with a 2.52 ERA and a 1.13 WHIP, striking out 111 and walking 38 in 121.2 innings. He'll probably start next season in AAA, and could easily be called up with a few strong performances and the right opening in the Detroit pitching staff. In fact, with rosters expanding now that we're in September, he could find himself in Detroit this year if they're feeling aggressive with their new arm. Right now, the 23 year old projects pretty easily as a solid back-end starter, one who could fall back on relief it that doesn't work out. He relies more on pitchability than pure stuff, though his low 90's fastball does have good movement and he's shown flashes of a pretty good slider.
In return for Phillips:
The Angels only acquired one month of a 36 year old second baseman, so the return to Atlanta will be understandably small. AAA catcher Tony Sanchez has played in the majors before, appearing in 51 games for the Pirates from 2013-2015 and slashing .259/.303/.378 with four home runs. However, the former fourth overall pick out of Boston College has never lived up to expectations and almost certainly never will, but he does provide catching depth for Atlanta. He will likely see time with the major league club in September, having slashed .272/.355/.374 with four home runs in the admittedly hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League this year. With Tyler Flowers just going on the DL, Kurt Suzuki has moved into a bigger role and David Freitas was just called up to be his back-up. With rosters expanding, it makes perfect sense to bring Sanchez along with him.
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