MLB free agency is well underway.
All free agents could start signing with teams as of Nov. 6, the start of the hot-stove season.
Shohei Ohtani is the top prize on the market. The two-way superstar is likely to receive the biggest contract in MLB history, if not the biggest contract in the history of North American professional sports. But there are several other star players, notable names and valuable contributors on the open market as well.
[Read more: 2024 MLB free-agent rankings: Shohei Ohtani leads top 30]
Here’s a look at the notable moves made so far this offseason, signing grades, and the top free agents still available.
Dec. 5
RHP Marco Gonzales traded from Braves to Pirates
2023 stats (with Mariners): 4-1, 5.22 ERA, 34 strikeouts, 1.460 WHIP, 50 innings pitched
Reported trade return: Cash considerations
OF Alex Verdugo traded from Red Sox to Yankees
2023 stats: .264/.324/.421 slash line, 13 home runs, 54 RBIs, 100 OPS+
Reported trade return: RHPs Richard Fitts, Greg Weissert and Nicholas Judice
RHP Erick Feede agrees to deal with White Sox
2023 stats (KBO): 20-6, 2.00 ERA, 209 strikeouts, 0.95 WHIP, 180.3 innings
Reported terms: Two-years, $15 million
Previous team: NC Dinos (Korean Baseball Organization)
Dec. 4
Brewers re-sign LHP Wade Miley
2023 stats: 9-4, 3.14 ERA, 79 strikeouts, 1.139 WHIP, 120.1 innings
Reported terms: One year, $8.5 million
Nov. 29
Reds add another starter in RHP Nick Martinez
2023 stats: 6-4, 3.43 ERA, 106 strikeouts, 1.260 WHIP, 110 innings
Reported terms: Two years, $26 million
Previous team: Padres
By the end of last season, the Reds’ pitching rotation was essentially Andrew Abbott, Brandon Williamson, me, you and Mr. Magoo. Injuries to arms like Nick Lodolo and Hunter Greene turned out to be the difference between an October on the big stage and an October on the beach. Remember, the Reds finished just two games behind the D-Backs!
A promising and controllable young offensive core means Cincy’s front office can focus on acquiring more proven arms this winter and Martinez is their first prize. The 33-year-old has had a fascinating career arc — from 18th-round pick to mediocre big leaguer to dominant Japanese League soul-snatcher and back — and opted out of the final two years of his Padres contract in search of a bigger payday. That’s exactly what he got.
Martinez had two years and $16 million left on that deal, and last time I checked, 16 is a smaller number than 26. The Pads had him bouncing back and forth between the ‘pen and the rotation over the last few years and there’s no doubt Martinez himself firmly believes he can start. He’ll get that opportunity and the Reds will get a low-cost hurler who, with less role-related yo-yoing, could emerge as a legitimate mid-rotation guy. —Jake Mintz
Grade: B
RHP Luis Severino reportedly signs with Mets
2023 stats: 4-8, 6.65 ERA, 79 strikeouts, 1.646 WHIP, 19 appearances (18 starts), 89.1 innings
Reported terms: One year, $13 million
Previous team: Yankees
There’s a long winter ahead that will help fully crystalize the degree to which the Mets intend to compete in 2024, but how they choose to address the glaring rotation needs will tell us a lot. Severino is an intriguing upside gamble that could pay dividends for the Mets regardless of what direction their 2024 goes. Maybe the former Yankee a key member of a rebuilt rotation, maybe he’s a great piece to flip for a prospect or two at the deadline. I’d be more concerned about Severino’s recent struggles to stay on the field more than his atrocious 2023 stat line. He’s still throwing hard enough to rack up a lot of whiffs with the right tweaks to his arsenal, but none of it will matter if he can’t stay on the mound. I’d expect the next arm New York acquires to be one with a fair bit more certainty of delivering 25-plus starts in 2024. — Jordan Shusterman
Grade: B
RHP Emilio Pagán signs with Reds
2023 stats: 5-2, 2.99 ERA, 65 strikeouts, 0.952 WHIP, 66 appearances (one start), 69.1 innings
Reported terms: Two years, $16 million
Previous team: Twins
Nov. 27
OF Jason Heyward re-signing with Dodgers
2023 stats: .269/.340/.473 slash line, 15 home runs, 40 RBIs, two stolen bases, 117 OPS+
Reported terms: One-year deal
RHP Sonny Gray reportedly signs with Cardinals
2023 stats: 8-8, 2.79 ERA, 183 strikeouts, 1.147 WHIP, 32 starts, 184 innings
Reported teams: Three years, $75 million
Previous team: Twins
Fresh off a runner-up finish in the AL Cy Young race, Gray lands a hefty multiyear deal with a team in serious need of top-end starting pitching. The pre-Thanksgiving signings of Lance Lynn and Kyle Gibson make a lot more sense in the context of this Gray addition, as the Cardinals have swiftly added three veteran arms before the calendar flipped to December. Gray is the key, though — a rotation filled with strictly innings-eaters of Lynn and Gibson’s ilk likely won’t hold up especially well come postseason time. There are elements of Gray’s sensational 2023 that will be tough to repeat — namely his elite home run suppression — but he’s still someone you’d feel great about giving the ball to in October. That caliber of pitcher didn’t exist on the Cardinals roster until this move. Now, the question is, will St. Louis pursue another front-end starter via trade, or does the focus shift to the bullpen? — Jordan Shusterman
Grade: B+
Nov. 26
RHP Kenta Maeda signs with Tigers
2023 stats: 6-8, 4.23 ERA, 117 strikeouts, 1.169 WHIP, 21 appearances (20 starts), 104.1 innings
Reported teams: Two years, $24 million
Previous team: Twins
Maeda’s return from Tommy John surgery was derailed in April by a triceps strain that put him back on the shelf for a month, but he was highly reliable in his final 17 outings for Minnesota after coming off the IL in late June (3.36 ERA, .680 OPS against). Maeda should be an excellent veteran complement to an otherwise young yet promising Detroit rotation led by ascendent lefty Tarik Skubal. This is exactly the kind of floor-raising move the Tigers should be pursuing aggressively this winter, even if the soon-to-be 36-year-old Maeda doesn’t offer the same kind of upside he once did. — Jordan Shusterman
Grade: A-
Nov. 21
SS Paul DeJong signs with White Sox
2023 stats: .207 batting average, .258 on-base percentage, .355 slugging percentage, 14 home runs, 38 RBIs, four stolen bases
Reported terms: One-year deal
Previous team: Cardinals
RHP Kyle Gibson signs with Cardinals
2023 stats: 15-9, 4.73 ERA, 157 strikeouts, 1.32 WHIP, 33 starts, 192.0 innings
Reported terms: One year, $12 million
Previous team: Orioles
Nov. 20
RHP Reynaldo López signs with Braves
2023 stats: 3-7, 3.27 ERA, 83 strikeouts, 1.273 WHIP, 68 appearances, 66 innings
Reported terms: Three years, $30 million
Previous team: Guardians
A few days after acquiring lefty groundball machine Aaron Bummer, Atlanta bolstered its bullpen further with the signing of Bummer’s former White Sox teammate in López. López is a traditional late-inning flamethrower that is coming off a career year racking up punchouts at a career-high 30% clip, which positioned him as one of the top relievers on the market. Early reports that the Braves are considering having López stretched out as a starter are curious to say the least, but securing a pitcher of his caliber this early in the offseason is a nifty move regardless of the role he ultimately settles into. — Jordan Shusterman
Grade: A-
RHP Lance Lynn signs with Cardinals
2023 stats: 13-11, 5.73 ERA, 191 strikeouts, 1.394 WHIP, 32 starts, 183.2 innings
Reported terms: One year, $10 million
Previous team: Dodgers
Nov. 19
RHP Aaron Nola re-signs with Phillies
2023 stats: 12-9, 4.46 ERA, 202 strikeouts, 1.151 WHIP, 32 starts, 193.2 innings
Reported terms: Seven years, $172 million
Previous team: Phillies
Can’t spell Aaron Nola without three A’s. Nola and the Phillies were canyons apart when they discussed an extension in spring training, but compromise won the day. Nola got the seventh year he wanted, while the Phillies kept the average annual value in a reasonable range. The Phillies needed a pitcher and went with the one they knew intimately, one whose work ethic and makeup they love and one they believe will age well into his late thirties. — Jake Mintz
Grade: A
Top free agents still available
Shohei Ohtani
Yoshinobu Yamamoto
Blake Snell
Cody Bellinger
Jordan Montgomery
Sonny Gray
Matt Chapman
Josh Hader
Clayton Kershaw
Eduardo Rodríguez
Lucas Giolito
Marcus Stroman
Jung Hoo Lee
Jorge Soler
JD Martinez
Teoscar Hernández
Jeimer Candelario
Lourdes Gurriel Jr.
Justin Turner
Mitch Garver
Rhys Hoskins
Seth Lugo
Shota Imanaga
Kenta Maeda
Michael Wacha
Brandon Belt
Joc Pederson
Jordan Hicks
Yariel Rodríguez
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