Before heading to Florida for his 50th season in professional baseball, Jim Leyland thought about all the deals that were made since he walked off the field as the World Series ended last October.

“Toronto probably was the big boy in the offseason as far as the moves they made,” the Detroit Tigers’ manager said. “That’s going to be just one heck of a division, obviously. Toronto, they actually were my sleeper team last year until they had all those injuries to the pitching staff.”

From Joker Marchant Stadium in Lakeland, Fla., to HoHoKam Park in Mesa, Ariz., bats and balls will be broken out next week when teams report for spring training — extra early because of the third World Baseball Classic. For an offseason with a lackluster free-agent market, a whole lot of movement took place.

While the Los Angeles Dodgers and Angels flashed their cash, putting Zack Greinke in Dodger blue and Josh Hamilton in Orange County red, Toronto General Manager Alex Anthopoulos flipped players in the trade market as if they were baseball cards.

NL Cy Young Award winner R.A. Dickey was acquired from the Mets, and 2011 NL batting champion Jose Reyes arrived with pitchers Mark Buehrle and Josh Johnson from Miami, which seemed to jettison virtually every veteran other than mascot Billy the Marlin.

“There’s pressure to win for everybody,” said Manager John Gibbons, back running the Blue Jays’ dugout for the first time since 2008. “It’s survival of franchises. They’ve got to win sooner or later. That forces some teams to do some things if you’re going to keep up.”

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Players and fans are looking forward to sun in Florida and Arizona over the next 1½ months, with the exhibition schedule starting Feb. 21 when the Boston Red Sox host Northeastern University at Fort Myers, Fla. But the cloud of drugs remains over the game. Alex Rodriguez, Gio Gonzalez and others were alleged to have obtained substances on baseball’s banned list from a Florida clinic, charges the players denied.

Who did what will take months to sort out, perhaps years. Teams are more focused on the now.

The Atlanta Braves, minus retired star Chipper Jones, were busy this winter bringing in brothers B.J. and Justin Upton to play alongside each other in a stacked outfield.

The Washington Nationals, who brought postseason baseball to the nation’s capital last year for the first time since 1933, look primed for a run at the World Series. They re-signed Adam LaRoche, and added Dan Haren, Denard Span and Rafael Soriano to a deep and talented roster highlighted by young phenoms Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper.

AND THEN THERE’S HOUSTON

At the other end of the spectrum, Houston, which hosts Texas in the March 31 major league opener, stripped down as it moved into the American League and left itself with just five players on the big league roster who have three seasons or more in the majors.

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With a payroll in the $25 million range — less than Rodriguez alone will earn — the Astros could become the first team to get the top draft pick for three straight years. They also could become just the second team, according to STATS, to lose 106 or more games in three consecutive seasons. The 1962-65 New York Mets are the other.

Spending doesn’t always work. Exhibit A is the Miami Marlins.

Moving into their new ballpark last spring, the Marlins thought they had a good chance to win the World Series for the first time since 2003. Showtime even followed the team around for a reality series, “The Franchise.”

But Miami skidded out of contention, stars were traded, the TV show was cut short an episode early and Manager Ozzie Guillen was fired after one season. A payroll that bulked up to about $97 million last April was sliced in half, leading to harsh criticism of owner Jeffrey Loria.

“It’s not a lot of fun,” Marlins president of baseball operations Larry Beinfest said.

Merriment was found on the other coast.

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The San Francisco Giants had the most convivial offseason after sweeping Detroit to win their second World Series title in three seasons following a 56-year drought. San Francisco kept its core together, re-signing outfielder Angel Pagan, infielder Marco Scutaro and left-hander Jeremy Affeldt for a combined $78 million.

“We’re very proud that our players want to return and we can embrace them,” said the Giants’ president, Larry Baer. “It’s also comforting that so many players are returning by virtue of youth and not for free agency. So, yes, I’m very appreciative in a world of lots of movement in pro sports that we can essentially stay together.”

Ineffectual franchises searched for someone to guide them to success. Gibbons is among six new managers in the majors, joined by Boston’s John Farrell, Cleveland’s Terry Francona, Colorado’s Walt Weiss, Houston’s Bo Porter and Miami’s Mike Redmond.

Weiss is making the rare switch from high school coach to major league manager, leaving Regis Jesuit High School in Aurora, Colo., for Coors Field.

“There is no question the pink elephant in the room is I haven’t done this before,” he said. “This is a job that I’m going to have to figure out on the fly.”

Entering his third season as Dodgers manager, Don Mattingly will be expected to at least lead Los Angeles to its first postseason appearance since 2009. The Dodgers, without a World Series crown since 1988, have boosted their payroll to $215 million-plus and could end the New York Yankees’ streak of 14 years as baseball’s biggest spender.

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In the Dodgers’ first full season since they were bought by a group that includes Mark Walter, Magic Johnson and Stan Kasten, they are likely to join the Yankees in paying the luxury tax.

A BREAKTHROUGH FOR ANGELS?

Down Interstate 5, the Angels gave Hamilton the biggest free-agent deal of the offseason for a position player, a $125 million, five-year contract that puts him in a batting order that already included Albert Pujols and Mike Trout. The Angels, who also could be near or above the $178 million tax threshold, hope the signing ends a streak of three seasons without playoff ball, and lifts them above Texas and Oakland in the AL West.

“It was a great investment,” Angels owner Arte Moreno said.

Oakland won the division despite baseball’s lowest payroll at $59.5 million and came within a victory of reaching the AL Championship Series.

“My expectations are the same as last year. We’re going to compete hard and expect to win,” said Bob Melvin, voted AL Manager of the Year. “We’ll have that much more confidence coming into spring training.”

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With the downtrodden Astros joining the AL West, the Angels, Rangers and Athletics could pick up wins that will help them in the race for the two wild-card berths at the expense of the East and Central.

CHANGES FOR YANKEES, RED SOX

The Yankees, wanting to get under the $189 million tax threshold in 2014, allowed Nick Swisher, Raul Ibanez, Russell Martin and Eric Chavez to leave as free agents — they totaled 80 of New York’s team-record 245 home runs. Rodriguez is likely to miss at least the first half of the season following hip surgery.

After finishing with their worst record since 1965, the Red Sox replaced Manager Bobby Valentine. Boston jettisoned Carl Crawford, Adrian Gonzalez and Josh Beckett in a trade with the Dodgers last summer that eliminated more than $250 million in future obligations, then obtained closer Joel Hanrahan from Pittsburgh, and signed Ryan Dempster, Jonny Gomes, Shane Victorino, Mike Napoli and Stephen Drew.

“Coming off a 93-loss season,” General Manager Ben Cherington said, “we’ve got a lot to prove. We’re trying to build something.”

 


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