The way I see it, Barrett and Treinen might end up being counted on in a major way this season. Barrett had a breakout rookie campaign last season, posting a 2.66 ERA with 49 strikeouts in 40 2/3 innings. He worked the full seventh inning in high-leverage spots at times last year, and could be called upon in that role more frequently in 2015. When Treinen was used out of the Nats bullpen last year, it was mostly as a multi-inning reliever, but he most definitely has the stuff to be a late-inning option called upon to get three big outs late in a game. As we've discussed before, some talent evaluators within the organization see Treinen as a potential closer down the road, and while the Nats could choose to still develop the righty as a starter (they also see him possibly becoming a solid major league starting pitcher), they might now prefer to use him as a big league reliever. One other in-house option to keep an eye on is righty A.J. Cole, viewed as the Nats' second- or third-best prospect by most scouts. Cole has strictly been a starter to this point in his pro career, but the Nats feel that he's big league-ready, and if they have a need in the bullpen, they could use his mid-to-upper 90s fastball and solid changeup and curveball in relief. One other thing that trading Clippard for Escobar does is that it likely frees up around $4 million of salary space for the 2015 season. The Nats could always choose to reinvest that money in the bullpen either with a free agent signing or another trade. Escobar can give the Nats a second baseman for 2015, he can bring insurance at short if Ian Desmond leaves via free agency after this season, and he provides a bridge to Trea Turner, the Nats' likely shortstop of the future. Escobar can't (to my knowledge, at least) work the eighth inning. With Clippard gone, those duties will have to fall to someone else this season.