On Friday, CEO Derrick Hall, CBO Tony La Russa, Randy Johnson and Luis Gonzalez are flying to Japan for a six-day “goodwill trip.” On their journey, might they stop in with members of the Hiroshima Toyo Carp, fishing for a new starting pitcher? When Steve Gilbert reported in early July that the trip would happen, he quoted Hall on the purpose of the trip, and what the team hoped to accomplish there:

“The relationships that we have built in Japan since our last trip in 2012 have been very beneficial, and we believe it is important to continue to cultivate those friendships and grow our brand globally,” said Hall. “Not only will we get the opportunity to see several players firsthand, but visiting alongside two Hall of Famers [Johnson and La Russa] and our franchise’s most popular player ever will create an impact in that country for generations to come.”

See several players firsthand, you say? Trip exactly as long as it would need to be to guarantee you can see a Kenta Maeda start, you say? Hmm.

This is a blueprint that the D-backs have followed previously. In this 2012 New York Times article, Ken Belson wrote how the team’s experience in signing Takashi Saito kicked off the idea that Japan was one way that Arizona could add talent without necessarily competing with big market teams. Not the best of the best, necessarily; Belson wrote that former GM Kevin Towers and Hall were “eager to find underappreciated talent at a reasonable price.”

On their last goodwill trip, the D-backs were scouting in hopes of finding “diamonds in the rough because of [the D-backs’] market size,” according to Towers. The posting fees that had climbed into the $50M range were an impediment for a team like Arizona, so they were looking at players who might command a smaller posting fee. Under new rules, however, posting fees are capped at $20M — that’s probably affordable for the D-backs, and that’s part of why the team was so strongly connected to the Maeda rumors last winter.

This season, the D-backs saved about $4M in trading Mark Trumbo to Seattle, and about $10M in the infamous Touki Toussaint sale. Add in some savings by moving Oliver Perez and Cliff Pennington, and we’re not too far from the cost of a posting fee. It fits. And call the D-backs’ impending goodwill trip Exhibit A.

Because we do know that the D-backs like Maeda, who is having an even finer season this year (2.36 ERA in 137.1 innings, 4.6 strikeout to walk ratio) than he had wrapped up last year before the posting rumors began. We know this, because they’ve been weirdly specific about it. From another Gilbert piece, this time last winter:

“I love Maeda,” Stewart said. “I love him. We have a lot of video and film and we have people who have seen him. We think that he’s got a chance to be very successful in Major League Baseball. We’re going to try to be in on the market when he does post, if he does post.”

Hugs. Call those comments Exhibit B. I happen to like this idea quite a lot as a dicey but promising proposition, no more or less than I did at the end of last season, after seeing a Maeda start against a team of MLB All-Stars. It’s still a good idea, in the same ways and to the same extent that going after Yasmany Tomas was a good idea. But let’s still work on whether or not it’s an idea they actually have and are working on.

As Jeff and I discussed on the last episode of The Pool Shot, there’s not a lot that can be done in terms of upgrading the roster. Short of adding Buster Posey behind the plate, the complement of position players is pretty set… everywhere. As things currently stand, the team is disgustingly great defensively, 2nd in baseball in DRS (50) and 4th in UZR (20.4). They are also first in the NL and third in all of baseball in runs scored (508). Yes, as Jeff pointed out on the podcast, second base has been kind of a weak spot this season — but that’s not really a “let’s spend our money there” problem, that’s a “do we just roll the dice with Brandon Drury right now” problem.

Let’s be nice and call the team’s recent track record spending money in the bullpen “poor,” and just kind of assume the team agrees. Sure, if you can add Zeus’s lightning bolts by adding Aroldis Chapman, it’s not like 105 mph fastballs can slump, and that is, at minimum, a significant upgrade for a team that seems very difficult to upgrade. Short of Chapman, or Kimbrel, or Carter Capps, the bullpen isn’t the place to upgrade, either, because other upgrades are not so significant that they measure up with the cost required. Some are not panning out the way we might have hoped, but the D-backs do still have a bevy of relief prospects from which a standout may stand up. And you never know, maybe Matt Stites is learning a Capps Leap down with Reno. That would be nice.

So it’s the rotation that offers the chance for an upgrade, and that’s Exhibit C. Because if Patrick Corbin is a near-ace at the top of the rotation, and if Robbie Ray can continue to pitch like a #2 (with or without, but hopefully with, a Warthen slider next year), and if Rubby De La Rosa continues to offer more good starts than bad — that’s a pretty good base for a rotation. And while Chase Anderson is, I believe, a solid #4 starter or better, neither he nor Jeremy Hellickson nor Zack Godley nor Aaron Blair are likely to pitch as top-of-the-rotation options next year. Helpful, absolutely, probably without exception. And injury and other unforeseen circumstances mean that all four are likely to be counted on at some point next year.

Archie Bradley is still a wild card in all of this, but if you could add a #2/#3 starter type to this mix, you’d be upgrading the team’s fortunes next year. As for whether they can accomplish that via trade — the D-backs don’t seem to have the currency for that without subtracting from their major league team. So we’re talking about free agency. A quick list of all of the pitchers slated to reach free agency this winter who fit that bill:

This looks like a long list, but a handful of the names that you actually like the best will probably be re-signed by their current clubs. If we rule out Cueto, Greinke and Price for cost reasons (and Cueto because he dated one of La Russa’s girlfriends…?), it’s really just Fister, Kazmir, Samardzija and Zimmerman that offer the needed upside while still seeming to be affordable in some way.

A gamble on Kazmir actually does seem like a good play for the team, since they have to take some chances and have them pay off in order to win it all — and Kazmir does have ace upside even next year. Fister has really faded this year, so while I think it would be interesting to get both major pieces of the most-maligned trade to not involve the D-backs over the last few years, the vectors aren’t pointing in the right direction.

Drop Fister, and the three of the guys with a “z” in their name could command $100M contracts this winter, anything from 4/$88M to 6/$120. It really could happen, and I doubt any of them sign for less than $60M even if one of them (probably Kazmir) signed for as few as three years. Just not that likely.

That’s why Exhibit C brings us to Maeda, potentially, who will be negotiating with a somewhat restricted market of teams, and who might sign for a contract more in the 6/$80M range or 4/$60M range. It would be a stretch, but the D-backs could do that — even after footing a $20M bill for a posting fee.

Wasn’t it a little strange to be getting those guarantees about the Toussaint money being re-spent? At the time, we were confused: did that mean this season? If it meant payroll for next season, then why not wait to sell Toussaint later? That’s Exhibit D as far as I’m concerned: a posting fee is a one-time payment that would be due this winter, well before the checks for next year’s payroll start rolling out. It just fits, doesn’t it? I think that’s what the team may be thinking.

Ok, how about how the team seems to be obsessed with 26-28 year old pitchers? Maeda will be 28 next year. It fits, and I’m calling that Exhibit E. You still expect some projection, but it’s not like you’d have to wait for him, either; he fits the Contention Window Exactly. He fits exactly what the team likes almost exactly, not necessarily a fireballer profile but a much more enticing version of the Hellickson profile that was attractive enough for a move.

Really, overall, it fits perfectly. I think it’s time we start acting like Maeda is this front office’s top priority this winter — let’s see if they can lay some of the groundwork for his posting in this Japan trip.