The Red Sox may be headed for a busy trade deadline, even if the kind of business ahead isn’t the one Boston planned on.
With the season going sideways, the club could end up in seller mode, looking to turn current veterans into future pieces and reset for another run next year. ESPN’s Jeff Passan touched on that possibility Thursday, naming three Red Sox in his trade-rumor roundup: Willson Contreras, Aroldis Chapman and Garrett Whitlcok.
Contreras is the one Passan pegged as the “dream match” for the Seattle Mariners, who need a right-handed power bat. But there’s a catch. Contreras has a no-trade clause, which means Seattle would need him to want the move.
“The most meaningful upgrade (for the Mariners) would come from Contreras, who has been one of the 10 best hitters in baseball this season,” Passan writes. “At the same time, the Mariners taking an already-crowded first-base/DH situation and adding Contreras would put pressure aplenty on manager Dan Wilson to navigate playing time and egos. Compound that with Contreras' ability to block any trade and this is the sort of dream that will be tricky to manifest in reality.”
Chapman, meanwhile, was linked to a more unexpected fit: the Miami Marlins. Passan called that the “best match” for the left-hander, noting that a trade is likely.
“Chapman is almost certainly going to be traded, and though the Marlins' bullpen features plenty of capable right-handed arms -- from Pete Fairbanks to Anthony Bender to Lake Bachar to Tyler Phillips to Michael Peterson to Calvin Faucher to rookie William Kempner -- the lone lefty is John King,” Passan writes. “And as good as King has been this season, bringing Chapman to Miami would infuse the Marlins with the sort of stuff King simply doesn't possess.”
Chapman remains one of the top relievers in baseball, which makes him especially useful for a team pushing toward October.
Passan’s “best match” for Whitlock was the Pittsburgh Pirates. He pointed to Pittsburgh’s desire to win now, while also noting the club’s injury situation could make it less eager to pay heavily for rentals.
“Pittsburgh's desire to win now is understandable,” Passan writes. “It's been a decade, and even then, the Pirates didn't have the ceiling they do now.
At the same time, the rash of injuries could mitigate the urgency to pay significantly for rentals, which leaves the two bullpen options on multiyear deals. Neither will come cheap.
Whitlock is a consistently solid relief arm.”
Passan also mentioned the Mets’ Luke Weaver as another possible target for Pittsburgh.
Like Chapman, Whitlock would make more sense for a contender than for a team still trying to climb out of the standings.
In Other News...
Red Sox Finally Got The Roman Anthony Clarity Fans Needed
Roman Anthonys recovery has been one of the quieter but more closely watched storylines around the Red Sox, and Craig Breslow finally offered the kind of clarity fans had been waiting for. The chief baseball officer said the club sought a second opinion on Anthonys hand issue, and the added check only reinforced the original plan while the outfielder keeps working through his rehab in Fort Myers, Florida.
Even with that reassurance, the timeline has stretched longer than expected, which is why every update has carried extra weight for a team that has already had to manage its share of injury uncertainty. Boston still sounds confident Anthony is moving in the right direction, but for now the focus remains on steady progress rather than any quick return. [Read more 🡒]
Red Sox Just Got A Crucial Willson Contreras Suspension Update
Willson Contreras absence for Boston got a little shorter after MLB ruled on his appeal, trimming the first basemans suspension and giving the Red Sox a clearer sense of when they can expect him back. The discipline traces to the June 30 benches-clearing incident with the Washington Nationals, and it had already put Boston in a spot where every lineup decision around first base mattered a little more than usual.
Contreras began serving the suspension on Thursday, which now sets up a potential return for the second game of the July 17 doubleheader against the Rays. The update matters for a Red Sox club trying to manage the middle of its schedule without one of its more recognizable hitters, especially with the appeal process finally settled and the calendar starting to point toward his return. [Read more 🡒]
Red Sox Have An Obvious Brayan Bello Decision As Pressure Builds
An injury to Ranger Suarez has forced Boston to reshuffle again, with the left-hander landing on the 15-day injured list after the adductor issue he sustained in his July 5 start. The Red Sox also brought up Triple-A infielder Brett Harris to help cover a roster spot, a reminder of how quickly the depth chart can get tested when the pitching staff starts taking hits.
Brayan Bello is now positioned to come back to the major league roster, and the timing gives Boston a straightforward choice about how to handle his return. After being optioned to Triple-A following a rough stretch as a starter, Bello could be slotted into a role that eases him back into the mix while the Red Sox try to stabilize the rotation and keep from burning through more arms. [Read more 🡒]
