Everything you need to know about the AL East
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The East has represented the American League in the World Series in two of the last three years. That theme could continue in 2021 as the division boasts three clubs projected to win at least 85 games. Here's a rundown of each team heading into Opening Day:
Baltimore Orioles
2020 record: 25-35 (4th in AL East)
Payroll: $76.4M
O/U win total: 66
World Series odds: +15000
3-year trend: 2018 (5th); 2019 (5th); 2020 (4th)
Highest projected WAR: John Means (2.0)
X-factor: Trey Mancini
Key injuries: Chris Davis, Hunter Harvey, DJ Stewart
Prospect to watch: Adley Rutschman (MLB.com: No. 2)
Winter report card: C+
Projected Lineup
ORDER | PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Cedric Mullins (L) | CF | 0.3 |
2 | Trey Mancini | DH | 1.2 |
3 | Anthony Santander (S) | RF | 1.4 |
4 | Ryan Mountcastle | 1B | 1.3 |
5 | Pedro Severino | C | 0.3 |
6 | Austin Hays | LF | 1.3 |
7 | Maikel Franco | 3B | 0.7 |
8 | Freddy Galvis (S) | SS | 0.6 |
9 | Ramon Urias | 2B | 0.0 |
Bench
PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|
Chance Sisco (L) | C | 0.0 |
Rio Ruiz (L) | 3B | 1.2 |
Pat Valaika | IF/OF | 0.1 |
Baltimore welcomes Mancini back to anchor what was an underrated offense from a season ago. The Orioles finished 13th in wRC+, 14th in OPS, and 15th in the majors in homers. Mountcastle hit five home runs while posting a 140 OPS+ over 35 games and will be a major building block for the future. Santander is one of baseball's underappreciated sluggers. The 26-year-old slashed .261/.315/.575 with 11 homers and 13 doubles in just 37 games last season.
Projected Rotation
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
John Means (L) | 160 | 4.77 |
Matt Harvey | 87 | 5.29 |
Bruce Zimmerman (L) | 100 | 5.18 |
Dean Kremer | 145 | 5.04 |
Jorge Lopez | 85 | 4.96 |
Bullpen
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Cesar Valdez | 56 | 4.55 |
Tanner Scott (L) | 65 | 3.58 |
Travis Lakins | 48 | 4.79 |
Dillon Tate | 60 | 4.49 |
Paul Fry (L) | 58 | 3.82 |
Shawn Armstrong | 53 | 4.73 |
Cole Sulser | 44 | 4.54 |
Tyler Wells | 38 | 4.67 |
Mac Sceroler | 16 | 5.40 |
Adam Plutko | 109 | 5.46 |
Means has looked like a legitimate frontline starter at times while Kremer is among the club's top pitching prospects. While the team is still rebuilding, it's exciting that the organization will start to see some of its young arms pitch in the majors. This might be Matt Harvey's final chance to be an MLB starter. He struggled this spring and owns a 7.82 ERA over his last two seasons across 71 1/3 innings. The back end of the bullpen will be pieced together with closer Hunter Harvey starting the season on the 60-day injured list.
Boston Red Sox
2020 record: 24-36 (5th)
Payroll: $204.3M
O/U win total: 80
World Series odds: +7000
3-year trend: 2018 (1st); 2019 (3rd); 2020 (5th)
Highest projected WAR: Xander Bogaerts (4.1)
X-factor: J.D. Martinez
Key injuries: Chris Sale, Ryan Brasier
Prospect to watch: Jarren Duran
Winter report card: B
Projected Lineup
ORDER | PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Enrique Hernandez | 2B | 1.2 |
2 | Alex Verdugo (L) | CF | 2.4 |
3 | J.D. Martinez | DH | 2.2 |
4 | Xander Bogaerts | SS | 4.1 |
5 | Rafael Devers (L) | 3B | 4.1 |
6 | Hunter Renfroe | RF | 0.6 |
7 | Franchy Cordero | LF | 0.7 |
8 | Christian Vazquez | C | 2.6 |
9 | Bobby Dalbec | 1B | 0.7 |
Bench
PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|
Kevin Plawecki | C | 0.4 |
Christian Arroyo | IF | 0.4 |
Marwin Gonzalez (S) | IF/OF | 0.5 |
The Red Sox spent the winter focused on making the roster more versatile by adding multi-position players like Hernandez, Renfroe, and Gonzalez. The outfield no longer contains the Killer Bs, but V-C-R is at least intriguing and possesses enormous power potential. Boston ranked ninth in OPS last season despite Martinez being a non-factor, so there's plenty of optimism that the Red Sox rank near the top in runs in 2021.
Projected Rotation
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Nathan Eovaldi | 149 | 4.24 |
Garrett Richards | 122 | 4.78 |
Martin Perez (L) | 161 | 5.12 |
Nick Pivetta | 112 | 5.14 |
Eduardo Rodriguez (L) | 152 | 4.39 |
Bullpen
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Matt Barnes | 58 | 3.83 |
Adam Ottavino | 66 | 4.53 |
Josh Taylor (L) | 42 | 4.24 |
Phillips Valdez | 36 | 4.62 |
Hirokazu Sawamura | N/A | N/A |
Darwinzon Hernandez (L) | 53 | 4.18 |
Matt Andriese | 63 | 4.62 |
Austin Brice | 48 | 4.79 |
Garrett Whitlock | 27 | 4.54 |
It can't be understated how awful Red Sox pitching was last season. The club ranked 28th in ERA and 30th in both WHIP and opponent's batting average as 12 different pitchers started games despite the shortened schedule. Boston's rotation is now in a much better place with the return of Rodriguez and the additions of Richards and Andriese, as well as some other depth arms. Sale's eventual midseason return should also give the club a jolt.
New York Yankees
2020 record: 33-27 (2nd)
Payroll: $203.7M
O/U win total: 98
World Series odds: +500
3-year trend: 2018 (2nd); 2019 (1st); 2020 (2nd)
Highest projected WAR: Gerrit Cole (5.2)
X-factor: Corey Kluber
Key injuries: Zack Britton, Luis Severino, Luke Voit, Justin Wilson
Prospect to watch: Deivi Garcia
Winter report card: B
Projected Lineup
ORDER | PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|---|
1 | DJ LeMahieu | 2B | 3.9 |
2 | Aaron Judge | RF | 4.2 |
3 | Aaron Hicks (S) | CF | 2.8 |
4 | Giancarlo Stanton | DH | 2.3 |
5 | Gleyber Torres | SS | 3.7 |
6 | Jay Bruce (L) | 1B | 0.0 |
7 | Gio Urshela | 3B | 1.9 |
8 | Gary Sanchez | C | 1.6 |
9 | Clint Frazier | LF | 1.0 |
Bench
PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|
Kyle Higashioka | C | 0.6 |
Tyler Wade (L) | IF/OF | 0.1 |
Brett Gardner (L) | OF | 0.7 |
Mike Tauchman (L) | OF | 0.1 |
The Yankees return almost the exact same lineup that finished fourth in runs and fifth in homers and OPS a year ago. This is an elite group, but the same questions remain. Can Judge and Stanton stay on the field after missing more than 300 games combined over the last three seasons? Will Sanchez regain his confidence and become an All-Star again? When this club is healthy, no other team in baseball can reach its ceiling, but the injuries are already piling up.
Projected Rotation
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Gerrit Cole | 201 | 3.54 |
Corey Kluber | 156 | 4.18 |
Domingo German | 105 | 4.71 |
Jordan Montgomery (L) | 122 | 4.41 |
Jameson Taillon | 133 | 4.63 |
Bullpen
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Aroldis Chapman (L) | 63 | 3.09 |
Chad Green | 64 | 3.75 |
Darren O'Day | 60 | 4.70 |
Jonathan Loaisiga | 58 | 3.81 |
Luis Cessa | 50 | 4.84 |
Nick Nelson | 44 | 4.55 |
Michael King | 46 | 4.56 |
Lucas Luetge (L) | 20 | 4.26 |
Brian Cashman is rolling the dice with his rotation. Cole was excellent last season but there are a number of question marks otherwise. Kluber and Taillon have made 15 starts over the last two years; Montgomery posted a 5.11 ERA in 10 outings last season; German was suspended for the entire 2020 season. New York will be in good shape if its rotation pitches to its potential, though it seems like a significant gamble for a team trying to win a World Series. A once-terrifying bullpen looks a little less formidable given Ottavino's departure and Britton's injury.
Tampa Bay Rays
2020 record: 40-20 (1st)
Payroll: $79.9M
O/U win total: 87
World Series odds: +1500
3-year trend: 2018 (3rd); 2019 (2nd); 2020 (1st)
Highest projected WAR: Tyler Glasnow (3.6)
X-factor: Austin Meadows
Key injuries: Brett Phillips, Yonny Chirinos, Nick Anderson, Ji-Man Choi
Prospect to watch: Wander Franco (MLB.com: No. 1)
Winter report card: B-
Projected Lineup
ORDER | PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Austin Meadows (L) | DH | 1.3 |
2 | Brandon Lowe (L) | 2B | 2.7 |
3 | Randy Arozarena | LF | 2.2 |
4 | Yoshi Tsutsugo (L) | 1B | 0.8 |
5 | Manuel Margot | RF | 1.4 |
6 | Joey Wendle (L) | 3B | 0.9 |
7 | Willy Adames | SS | 2.4 |
8 | Kevin Kiermaier (L) | CF | 1.5 |
9 | Mike Zunino | C | 1.1 |
Bench
PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|
Francisco Mejia (S) | C | 0.4 |
Yandy Diaz | 1B/3B | 1.4 |
Mike Brosseau | IF/OF | 0.4 |
Tampa Bay returns the exact same group of position players - with the exception of Mejia - that ranked fourth in stolen bases, sixth in runs and OPS, and seventh in homers. The club will get a full season of Arozarena, who enters with sky-high expectations following an epic postseason run that saw him post a 1.234 OPS in the World Series. A bounce-back season from Meadows would go a long way in helping the Rays repeat as AL champs. The 2019 All-Star hit .205/.296/.371 with 50 strikeouts in 36 games last year.
Projected Rotation
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Tyler Glasnow | 163 | 3.55 |
Ryan Yarbrough (L) | 163 | 4.56 |
Chris Archer | 139 | 4.25 |
Rich Hill (L) | 106 | 4.44 |
Michael Wacha | 121 | 4.69 |
Bullpen
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Pete Fairbanks | 64 | 3.34 |
Diego Castillo | 65 | 3.48 |
Ryan Thompson | 58 | 4.19 |
Chaz Roe | 50 | 4.34 |
Cody Reed (L) | 40 | 3.62 |
Andrew Kittredge | 24 | 3.64 |
Ryan Sherriff (L) | 32 | 4.48 |
Jeffrey Springs (L) | 16 | 3.88 |
Collin McHugh | 67 | 4.14 |
Injuries and significant turnover have the rotation looking much different. Glasnow takes over as the ace. He's been excellent when on the mound, but he's thrown over 100 innings just once in five MLB seasons. Archer is trying to rebuild his career after a miserable stint in Pittsburgh that included shoulder surgery. The 41-year-old Hill remains an effective starter, though there are legitimate concerns over how long he can hold up over a full season. Wacha was awful in eight outings (6.62 ERA, 1.156 WHIP) with the Mets in 2020. Kevin Cash covers innings better than anyone, but he'll have his work cut out for him over a full season. Still, with all the concerns, you can't write off Tampa Bay.
Toronto Blue Jays
2020 record: 32-28 (3rd)
Payroll: $150.1M
O/U win total: 85
World Series odds: +2000
3-year trend: 2018 (4th); 2019 (4th); 2020 (3rd)
Highest projected WAR: George Springer (3.9)
X-factor: Robbie Ray
Key injuries: Nate Pearson, Thomas Hatch, Kirby Yates
Prospect to watch: Simeon Woods Richardson (MLB.com: No. 87)
Winter report card: A-
Projected Lineup
ORDER | PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|---|
1 | George Springer | CF | 3.9 |
2 | Marcus Semien | 2B | 3.1 |
3 | Bo Bichette | SS | 3.8 |
4 | Teoscar Hernandez | RF | 0.6 |
5 | Vladimir Guerrero Jr | 1B | 3.1 |
6 | Lourdes Gurriel Jr. | LF | 1.4 |
7 | Cavan Biggio (L) | 3B | 2.5 |
8 | Rowdy Tellez (L) | DH | 0.7 |
9 | Danny Jansen | C | 2.0 |
Bench
PLAYER | POS. | PROJ. WAR |
---|---|---|
Alejandro Kirk | C | 1.4 |
Joe Panik (L) | IF | 0.1 |
Randal Grichuk | OF | 0.7 |
Jonathan Davis | OF | 0.0 |
The Blue Jays added Semien and Springer to a lineup that scored the third-most runs in the AL last year. Not only will the two premier players boost the offense, but they'll also take the pressure off young stars Bichette, Guerrero, and Biggio. Plus, adding Semien and Springer up the middle upgrades what was a poor defensive club last season. That improved defense should help a pitching staff that projects to be the club's weakness.
Projected Rotation
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Hyun Jin Ryu (L) | 179 | 3.96 |
Ross Stripling | 122 | 4.29 |
Steven Matz (L) | 132 | 4.54 |
Tanner Roark | 135 | 5.15 |
Robbie Ray (L) | 163 | 4.30 |
Bullpen
PITCHER | PROJ. IP | PROJ. ERA |
---|---|---|
Jordan Romano | 62 | 3.96 |
Rafael Dolis | 65 | 4.11 |
Tyler Chatwood | 81 | 4.24 |
Ryan Borucki (L) | 56 | 4.07 |
David Phelps | 58 | 4.08 |
Julian Merryweather | 53 | 3.95 |
Tim Mayza (L) | 5 | 3.89 |
Trent Thornton | 67 | 4.79 |
Ryu lived up to lofty expectations a season ago and might be the second-best starter in the AL East. However, much like the rest of the division, the bulk of the rotation comes with significant concerns. Ray, Roark, and Matz are all coming off poor seasons. If the veteran starters are unable to provide the club much value, there are a number of other alternatives in the bullpen or within the system that could slot into the rotation. The front office opted to go with quantity over quality, which may not be the worst approach coming off a shortened season. The lack of top arms in the rotation could hurt the team come playoff time, but that's a problem that can be addressed down the road.