Well, here it is — the rarest currency in baseball’s rumor economy: a Cleveland Guardians leak that actually carries weight. When Chris Cotillo, respected Red Sox beat writer for MassLive, reported that the Cleveland Guardians are engaged in talks with veteran first baseman Ty France, the industry didn’t shrug. It leaned in. Because Cotillo doesn’t float smoke. He reports substance.
And substance is exactly what Cleveland’s offseason has been lacking.
According to the report, France has a “robust market.” The New York Mets, New York Yankees, San Diego Padres, and Colorado Rockies are all in pursuit. That’s not background noise — that’s competition with financial muscle. And yet, Cleveland is in the room.
The immediate question isn’t whether France can help. It’s how.

Insiders speculate the Guardians could be exploring a minor-league deal structure, allowing France to compete with David Fry for a right-handed first base/DH role. It would be a very Cleveland move — low risk, layered upside, internal competition. But if the front office is calling France, logic suggests they’re also checking in on Rhys Hoskins, a similar right-handed bat with more thunder, and perhaps even Randal Grichuk, one of the last free agents capable of standing in center field without turning every fly ball into an adventure.
Let’s cut through the speculation and look at the numbers.
France in 2025 posted a 92 wRC+, striking out just 16.3% of the time while walking 4.3%. Against left-handed pitching, he carried a 90 wRC+. Not eye-popping. Not disastrous. Just steady. Over his career, he owns a 110 wRC+, with balanced production against both lefties and righties. That’s league-average to slightly above, packaged in professional at-bats and minimal swing-and-miss.
But here’s the curveball: defense.
France recorded 9 Defensive Runs Saved and 10 Outs Above Average at first base last year. Those are not placeholder numbers. Those are impact metrics. For a Guardians team that preaches run prevention like scripture, that glove matters.
Now compare that to Hoskins.
In 2025, Hoskins posted a 109 wRC+, walking 11.3% of the time but striking out at a 27.7% clip. For his career, he owns a 121 wRC+ and absolutely demolishes left-handed pitching (137 wRC+). If you’re dreaming of a legitimate middle-of-the-order presence, Hoskins is the only name here that fits that script. The problem? Defense. Just 1 DRS and 2 OAA last year, and historically below average at first. He brings thunder — and risk.

Then there’s Grichuk.
An 82 wRC+ in 2025. League-average career bat. Below-average outfield defense but capable of surviving in center. He’s roster flexibility more than lineup solution.
So what exactly are the Guardians doing?
This doesn’t feel like a franchise preparing to drop a headline-grabbing contract. It feels like a front office scanning the margins for incremental gains. Raise the floor. Tighten the defense. Add professionalism. Hope internal development provides the ceiling.
And that’s where the fan base is divided.
Some see France as the quintessential Guardians addition — undervalued, steady, capable of outperforming modest expectations. Others see it as confirmation that Cleveland is unwilling to take the kind of offensive swing required to truly separate in a competitive American League landscape.
Meanwhile, the Yankees loom in the background of every rumor cycle. Fans across baseball are already convinced that Cody Bellinger is destined for the Bronx, reinforcing the perception that big-market aggression will once again dictate October positioning. If New York lands its targets while Cleveland shops for stability, the contrast will be impossible to ignore.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Cleveland’s model has worked before.
Pitching depth. Defensive excellence. Contact-oriented at-bats. Strategic roster layering. They don’t need to win the offseason. They need to win 90 games.
If France signs, it won’t set social media on fire. It won’t spike jersey sales overnight. But it could quietly stabilize a lineup that too often relied on hope rather than certainty last season.
And if the Guardians are indeed talking to Hoskins and others simultaneously, perhaps this is less about settling — and more about waiting for leverage to swing their way.
One thing is undeniable: for the first time this winter, Cleveland is connected to something real. Not message-board fiction. Not speculative dreaming. A credible reporter. A legitimate market. A front office conversation happening behind closed doors.
Whether it ends in a signing or another near-miss, the Guardians are at least stepping into the arena.
The bigger question now isn’t whether Ty France can help.
It’s whether Cleveland is finally ready to do more than tread water in an offseason that desperately needs momentum.