1. Toronto Blue Jays | GM: Alex Anthopoulos
Acquired: RHPs R.A. Dickey, Josh Johnson, LHPs Mark Buehrle, Darren Oliver, SS Jose Reyes, C's Josh Thole and Mike Nickeas, IFs Emilio Bonifacio, Maicer Izturis, OF Melky Cabrera
Analysis: Anthopoulos had a tremendous offseason, making two of the biggest offseason trades in baseball history. It cost him some prospects, and when the dust settled the Blue Jays added three top-of-the-rotation starters to complement Ricky Romero

and Brandon Morrow to give the Jays the best five-man rotation in the division -- on paper. They now have the veteran leadership, speed, energy and enthusiasm to be a legitimate World Series contender.
2. Los Angeles Dodgers | GM: Ned Colletti
Acquired: RHP Zack Greinke, LHP Ryu Hyun-Jin, IF Skip Schumaker, re-signed RHP Brandon League
Analysis: Owner Magic Johnson made it clear in his expectations that anything short of a World Series in 2013 will be considered a failure. The Dodgers improved their chances, adding Greinke and Hyun-Jin to a starting rotation that already boasted Clayton Kershaw. The bench and bullpen also now have added depth with Schumaker and League. These moves, coupled with the Dodgers' blockbuster trade with the Red Sox in July, have put them in position to pass the Giants or secure one of the two wild-card berths.
If LA's really got a bottomless pit of cash, I guess this makes sense, but they brutally overpaid for Hyun-Jin and League.
3. Los Angeles Angels | GM: Jerry Dipoto
Acquired: OF Josh Hamilton, LHPs, Jason Vargas, Sean Burnett, RHPs Tommy Hanson, Ryan Madson, Joe Blanton
Analysis: After signing Albert Pujols in his first season as GM, Dipoto stayed aggressive this winter and pounced on Hamilton, the best player available. Dipoto jettisoned unproductive players such as Ervin Santana, and added innings to the starting rotation. However, Madson suffered a setback in his rehab after elbow surgery and won’t be ready for the start of spring camp.
Hamilton's in, but Greinke is out. Hanson's in, but Haren's out. I dunno, seems like they're treading water here.
4. Atlanta Braves | GM: Frank Wren
Acquired: OFs B.J. Upton, Justin Upton, 3B Chris Johnson, RHP Jordan Walden
Analysis: Though Chipper Jones’ retirement and Michael Bourn’s departure via free agency left a void, Wren did a terrific job in replacing them in the lineup. B.J. Upton is a comparable defender to Bourn and provides more power, with the capability for a 30/30 year. Justin should at least replace Jones’ production, if not surpass it. Walden is a health risk but adds depth to what is already one of the league’s best bullpens.
"B.J. Upton is a comparable defender to Bourn" is completely untrue.
5. Detroit Tigers | President/GM: Dave Dombrowski
Acquired: OF Torii Hunter, re-signed RHP Anibal Sanchez
Analysis: After finishing just four wins away from a World Series title, Dombrowski signed Hunter and upgraded the defense in right field and in the No. 2 hole. Hunter also gives them a vocal leader who will have a positive impact and teach their young outfielders. But the Tigers gain the most from within as Victor Martinez returns from injury and rookie Bruce Rondon -- he of the 101-mph fastball -- will be given first shot at the closer’s role.
Martinez is back, but a lot of teams are getting injured players back. And I wouldn't assume that Rondon's going to be an asset.
6. Cleveland Indians | GM: Chris Antonetti
Acquired: RHPs Brett Myers, Trevor Bauer, Bryan Shaw, Matt Albers, OFs Michael Bourn, Nick Swisher, Drew Stubbs, 1B Mark Reynolds, Manager Terry Francona
Analysis: Antonetti’s trade to acquire Bauer, Stubbs, Shaw and Albers ranks as one of the best trades of the offseason. The Indians’ lineup possesses better left-right balance, while Bourn’s on-base percentage and speed should create more fastballs for Jason Kipnis and Asdrubal Cabrera. Swisher, Stubbs and Reynolds all add significant power.
Drew Stubbs' lifetime slugging percentage is .386.
7. Washington Nationals | GM: Mike Rizzo
Acquired: OF Denard Span, RHPs Dan Haren, A.J. Cole, re-signed 1B Adam LaRoche
Analysis: Despite owning the best record in the major leagues last season, Rizzo did not rest. Trading for Span solves Washington’s two biggest needs -- a defensive improvement in center field and a leadoff hitter, while Haren replaces Edwin Jackson’s workload cheaply with a one-year deal. However, shrewdly convincing LaRoche to take a two-year deal was Rizzo’s best move. LaRoche maintains important left-right balance in the middle of their order.
I really like what Washington did.
8. Boston Red Sox | GM: Ben Cherington
Acquired: RHPs Ryan Dempster, Joel Hanrahan and Koji Uehara, OFs Shane Victorino and Jonny Gomes, Cs David Ross and Mike Napoli, SS Stephen Drew, Manager John Farrell
Analysis: The Red Sox finished in last place in the AL East last season and were just as bad in clubhouse. Cherington replaced manager Bobby Valentine with John Farrell and loaded up in free agency, acquiring not only talent, but character that will provide a positive clubhouse culture. However, many of those free agents also have either injury or decline risk. Cherington’s best moves could be a simple return to health for his team’s established stars.
I don't know what that last sentence means. The Victorino deal was brutal, the Hanrahan trade was horrific, and catcher is a logjam. I wouldn't mistake a lot of activity for a "good" offseason.
9. Tampa Bay Rays | GM: Andrew Friedman
Acquired: OF Wil Myers, SS Yunel Escobar, RHPs Kyle Farnsworth, Joel Peralta, Roberto Hernandez, 2B Kelly Johnson, 1B James Loney, DH Luke Scott
Analysis: The Rays bid adieu to three homegrown players, in Upton, James Shields and Wade Davis. However, Friedman continues to show why he’s one of the game’s best, dealing Shields and Davis for super-prospect Myers and starter Jake Odorizzi. Friedman always has a good feel of when to trade a player for maximum return. Acquiring Myers alone makes it a successful offseason for Friedman.
I'd put TB higher than this on the strength of the Myers trade.
10. Kansas City Royals | GM: Dayton Moore
Acquired: RHPs James Shields, Wade Davis, Ervin Santana, re-signed RHP Jeremy Guthrie
Analysis: Tired of having a great farm system and yet never contending, Moore decided to go all out and trade the organization’s best prospects to finally contend in 2013. Moore built a new rotation by committing $74 million over the next couple of years to a rotation of Shields, Guthrie, Santana, Luke Hochevar, Bruce Chen and Davis. If the new rotation works, the Royals might just have their first winning season since 2003.
Similarly, I'd put KC in the bottom five. I also don't understand how getting rid of Santana for the Angels is a good thing, but it's not a bad thing for the Royals to sign him?
11. Philadelphia Phillies | GM: Ruben Amaro
Acquired: OFs Ben Revere, Delmon Young, 3B Michael Young, RHP Mike Adams, LHP John Lannan
Analysis: The Phillies needed a leadoff hitter/center fielder and acquired Revere on the last day of the winter meetings. Revere brings high energy and serves as the table-setter they so desperately needed. Michael Young will solve their short-term issue at third base and adds more leadership to the clubhouse. Delmon Young could hit 25 or more home runs in Citizens Bank Park. However, both Youngs hamper the Phillies’ defense.
This is a loose definition of the word "solve." Neither Young should be an everyday starter at this point.
12. Oakland Athletics | GM: Billy Beane
Acquired: OF Chris Young, SS Hiroyuki Nakajima, IF Jed Lowrie, C John Jaso
Analysis: Beane gutted the middle of his infield as Drew left via free agency and Cliff Pennington was traded. Both moves were surprising, considering the A’s had won the AL West mainly thanks to their range up the middle. But with Young, Lowrie, Jaso and Nakajima -- who scouts say has average range but soft hands and a solid arm -- the A’s are actually better and deeper up the middle than last year.
I thought the savvy trade of Tyson Ross was worth a mention.
13. Minnesota Twins | GM: Terry Ryan
Acquired: RHPs Alex Meyer, Vance Worley, Trevor May, Mike Pelfrey, Kevin Correia
Analysis: Coming off a dismal 66-96 season, the Twins were 13th in the league in ERA and yielded more hits than any other AL team. Improving the starting rotation was the priority, and a former first-rounder such as Meyer is a good start. Worley is ready to go now, and May is a solid middle-of-the-rotation starter in the future.
Bleh.
14. Seattle Mariners | GM: Jack Zduriencik
Acquired: 1B/DHs Kendrys Morales, Michael Morse, OFs Jason Bay, Raul Ibanez, IF Robert Andino, LHP Joe Saunders
Analysis: The Mariners spent the offseason trying to find ways to improve their offense and might have accomplished that feat. Zduriencik added veteran bats -- sure there’s a lot of age and decline, but they will be crucial to developing the young Mariners hitters. And he did it without sacrificing any of his young pitching depth. Felix Hernandez’s extension should be finalized soon and, if he stays healthy, is a club-friendly deal.
Yes, it's important to have old guys to teach the young guys how to hit. Jaso for Morse was awful. Bay, Ibanez, and Saunders are all terrible. Not enough DH spots.
15. St. Louis Cardinals | GM: John Mozeliak
Acquired: LHP Randy Choate, IF Ty Wigginton
Analysis: Choate and Wigginton fill gaps, but the Cardinals' offseason was about improving through development of their best young prospects. Young pitchers Trevor Rosenthal, Shelby Miller and Joe Kelly will be expected to fulfill the confidence Mozeliak showed in them by allowing Kyle Lohse to leave via free agency. The Cards’ farm system does have one of the game’s best prospects in outfielder Oscar Taveras, and second-base prospect Kolten Wong is nearly ready.
Not sure how maintaining status quo is worse than the Royals setting fire to their team.
16. New York Mets | GM: Sandy Alderson
Acquired: RHP Noah Syndergaard, RHP Brandon Lyon, OF Collin Cowgill, Cs Travis d’Arnaud and John Buck
Analysis: The Mets' offseason continued to build for the long term as Alderson sent NL Cy Young Award winner Dickey to the Blue Jays in exchange for arguably the game’s best catching prospect in d’Arnaud, future middle-of-the-rotation starter Syndergaard and a short-term solution at catcher in Buck. They missed out on Bourn, but trading a Cy Young winner to get d’Arnaud was a gutsy move.
Agreed.
17. Cincinnati Reds | GM: Walt Jocketty
Acquired: OF Shin-Soo Choo, re-signed RHP Jonathan Broxton
Analysis: Manager Dusty Baker finally got the leadoff hitter he’s been seeking in Choo. He brings loads of offensive ability, but can he play center field? He was a right fielder for the Indians and known for some bad jumps and angles. Choo also is in his walk year, and prospect Billy Hamilton should be ready to take over both leadoff and center in 2014. The Reds already had a World Series-caliber team, so they didn’t have to do much.
No, he can't. I think they'd be better off just letting Hamilton run with it
18. San Francisco Giants | GM: Brian Sabean
Acquired: Re-signed OF Angel Pagan, 2B Marco Scutaro, LHP Jeremy Affeldt
Analysis: After winning the World Series two of the past three years, the Giants' offseason game plan was simple: retain their players. Pagan, Affeldt and Scutaro all represent huge financial risks, but after two World Series championships, who should question Sabean and his loyalty to the players who have given him the rings?
Building a team based on sentiment is usually a great idea. All three of those guys were pretty serious overpays.
19. Texas Rangers | GM: Jon Daniels
Acquired: RHPs Joakim Soria, Josh Lindblom, OF/1B Lance Berkman, C A.J. Pierzynski
Analysis: Consider for a moment the players the Rangers lost this offseason: Josh Hamilton, Michael Young, Mike Napoli. Then they missed on signing Greinke and trading for Justin Upton. But, like the Cardinals, the Rangers hope to improve through their farm system, with rookies Mike Olt, Martin Perez and Jurickson Profar. Soria, who is still recovering from 2011 Tommy John surgery, could be the sleeper move of the offseason.
20. New York Yankees | GM: Brian Cashman
Acquired: 3B Kevin Youkilis, DH Travis Hafner, re-signed OF Ichiro Suzuki, re-signed LHP Andy Pettitte, RHP Hiroki Kuroda
Analysis: This might have been the Yankees’ worst offseason in the past decade, between the departures of Rafael Soriano, Russell Martin and Swisher, as well as Alex Rodriguez’s hip surgery and more PED accusations. Signing Youkilis and Hafner might help a little, as will Mariano Rivera’s return from a knee injury. At least on paper, the Yankees went from a 95-win team to an 85-90 win team this offseason.
21. Chicago Cubs | President: Theo Epstein/GM: Jed Hoyer
Acquired: RHPs Scott Baker, Scott Feldman, Carlos Villanueva and Edwin Jackson, Kyuji Fujikawa
Analysis: The Cubs were active this offseason, but most of their moves were to stockpile talent to trade at the July deadline. They did sign a couple of long-term pieces such as Jackson and Fujikawa, but the Cubs’ best "moves" probably will be the return to health of right-hander Matt Garza and the continued development of first baseman Anthony Rizzo, shortstop Starlin Castro and starter Jeff Samardzija.
22. Arizona Diamondbacks | GM: Kevin Towers
Acquired: SS Didi Gregorius, OF Cody Ross, RHPs Brandon McCarthy, Heath Bell, IFs Cliff Pennington, Martin Prado, Eric Chavez, and Eric Hinske, LHP Tony Sipp
Analysis: They traded three high-ceiling players in Upton, Bauer and Young and instead gambled that McCarthy and Bell would return to form. They completely remade their infield with Prado, Gregorius and Pennington. How all these moves will play out remains a question, but this team certainly has been rebuilt with the gritty style Towers and manager Kirk Gibson wanted.
Bottom 5 along with Florida and KC.
23. Milwaukee Brewers | GM: Doug Melvin
Acquired: RHP Burke Badenhop, LHPs Tom Gorzelanny and Mike Gonzalez
Analysis: For the second year in a row, first baseman Corey Hart required surgery on his right knee, and he will be sidelined for at least four months. Also, Ryan Braun’s name has emerged amid the recent PED news. Still, the Brewers wanted to improve a bullpen that led the majors in blown saves with 29, and they acquired three solid relievers. They are eyeing free agent Kyle Lohse in case his price falls.
24. Pittsburgh Pirates | GM: Neal Huntington
Acquired: RHP Mark Melancon, LHPs Francisco Liriano, Jonathan Sanchez, C Russell Martin, IF Ivan De Jesus, OF/1B Jerry Sands
Analysis: The fact that they were above .500 at the All-Star break last season is some small consolation. However, the Pirates’ offseason has been a mixed bag of reclamation projects in Liriano, Sanchez and Melancon. But they did improve their catching with Martin, who will slow down the running game and add 15-20 homers.
Don't get Sanchez, but Liriano's a good pickup for cheap and the trade with Boston was uncharacteristically savvy.
25. Houston Astros | GM: Jeff Luhnow
Acquired: RHPs Alex White, John Ely, Brad Peacock, 1B Carlos Pena
Analysis: Astros GM Luhnow continues to wheel and deal as he has since taking the job, though stockpiling more quantity than quality. He has picked up some quality young arms such as White, Ely and Peacock. The Astros are still a long way from contending and have an excellent chance at the first overall pick in the 2014 draft.
No mention of Chris Carter? Weird
26. Chicago White Sox | GM: Rick Hahn
Acquired: Re-signed RHP Jake Peavy, IF Jeff Keppinger
Analysis: Hahn’s rookie year as a general manager got off to a great start with the Peavy signing, but he soon watched an exodus of talent as Youkilis, pitchers Brett Myers, Phil Humber, Liriano and Pierzynski all left via free agency. Hahn signed only infielder Keppinger, who the Sox hope will be at least adequate defensively at third base.
27. San Diego Padres | GM: Josh Byrnes
Acquired: RHPs Tyson Ross, Jason Marquis, Freddy Garcia
Analysis: The Padres' offseason was extremely quiet, with the biggest trade being the Andy Parrino and Andrew Werner deal for Ross. The Padres also signed free-agent pitchers Marquis and Garcia. However, the Padres continue to build with scouting and player development, so their lack of movement was expected.
If they see something in Ross that nobody else has been able to tap into, that's great, but they got smoked on this deal.
28. Baltimore Orioles | GM: Dan Duquette
Acquired: IF Alexi Casilla, 3B Danny Valencia
Analysis: The Orioles had a very quiet offseason marked by signing Duquette and manager Buck Showalter to long-term deals. They increased their payroll by approximately $20 million because of arbitration. But this left Duquette very little room to maneuver. A team that went from 93 losses in 2011 to 93 wins in 2012 did very little to continue the momentum.
29. Colorado Rockies | GM: Dan O’Dowd/Bill Geivett
Acquired: RHP Wilton Lopez, 3B Ryan Wheeler, manager Walt Weiss
Analysis: The Rockies are hoping Weiss and a return to health for Troy Tulowitzki and Jorge De La Rosa will be enough to contend. They also need the further development of lefties Drew Pomeranz and Christian Friedrich. Otherwise, watch for an active July trade deadline.
30. Miami Marlins | President: Larry Beinfest/GM: Mike Hill
Acquired: OF Juan Pierre, 3B Placido Polanco, RHP Henderson Alvarez
Analysis: It was only last offseason that Miami’s future looked so bright. In one year, their manager was fired and the trio of free agents signed at the winter meetings got traded away. The Marlins took such a bad public relations hit in South Florida that just a handful of fans were in line when single game tickets were put on sale last week.