CHICAGO — The trade that sent Yu Darvish to the Padres last month not only removed an ace arm from the top of the Cubs’ rotation, but it was also a package deal that included his personal catcher.
By including Victor Caratini in the trade, Chicago created a vacancy behind
CHICAGO — The trade that sent Yu Darvish to the Padres last month not only removed an ace arm from the top of the Cubs’ rotation, but it was also a package deal that included his personal catcher.
By including Victor Caratini in the trade, Chicago created a vacancy behind All-Star starting catcher Willson Contreras. The Cubs have addressed their No. 2 catching role with a one-year contract with free agent
While Contreras — under contractual control through 2022 — has found himself in trade rumors this offseason, he remains a crucial piece of Chicago’s core. The Cubs also have a highly touted prospect in Miguel Amaya (
“We have one of the top handful of catchers in baseball on our roster,” Hoyer said of Contreras last month. “So I feel great about our catching. Amaya, I don’t see him as an option, certainly to start the season.”
That is where Romine comes in.
Last year with the Tigers, the 32-year-old Romine hit .238/.259/.323 with two homers and 17 RBIs in 37 games. It is worth noting that Romine was hitting .291 (.726 OPS) through August, but a foul ball to his right knee led to some lingering issues. In his final 15 games in September, Romine hit .157 (8-for-51) with a .362 OPS.
Romine hit .281/.310/.439 in 72 games in 2019 with the Yankees, and he turned in a .262/.302/.428 slash with a 95 OPS+ in 149 games across ’18-19 in New York. For his career, Romine has hit .239 with a .639 OPS in parts of nine years with the Yanks and Tigers.
Defensively, Romine had minus-4 defensive runs saved and minus-3.1 framing runs in 2020. That followed a subpar showing in ’19 (minus-1 DRS and minus-0.9 FRM) and an above-average performance in ’18 (five DRS and 4.8 FRM). Romine has stopped would-be basestealers at a 23 percent clip for his career.
Jordan Bastian covers the Cubs for MLB.com. He previously covered the Indians from 2011-18 and the Blue Jays from 2006-10. Read his blog, Major League Bastian and follow him on Twitter @MLBastian.