Red Sox Linked To 5x All-Star Phenom

As the MLB trade deadline approaches, the Boston Red Sox could greatly benefit from the potential availability of superstar Francisco Lindor, enhancing their lineup for a strong playoff push.

The Red Sox have spent the first half of 2026 doing more than hanging around. They’ve pushed themselves into the playoff conversation, and with the trade deadline now three weeks away, Boston suddenly looks like a team that has to think big.

That’s what makes the Francisco Lindor chatter worth watching so closely.

Boston is 46-48 and sitting just a half-game out of a playoff spot after running off nine straight wins. The club won’t return from the All-Star break until July 17, and there’s no soft landing waiting on the other side - the Red Sox open with a doubleheader against the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday.

Even with Garrett Crochet and Roman Anthony missing as the team’s No. 1 pitcher and No. 1 offensive weapon, Boston has done enough to put itself in buying mode. And if the Red Sox are hunting for a right-handed impact bat, Lindor is the name that jumps off the page.

The Mets shortstop became the center of speculation last week after WFAN’s Mike Francesa said New York is "trying to trade him." The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal pushed back hard on that idea.

"With all due respect to Mike, he is not a beat reporter, and I haven't seen this from any of the beat reporters," Rosenthal said.

Lindor’s name kept circulating after the Red Sox swept the Mets on Sunday, and the shortstop spoke with reporters after the game about several topics, including the error that helped Boston stay alive in the ninth inning.

Before the game, Will Sammon of The Athletic noted that Lindor declined to comment when asked about potentially using his trade veto power this summer if the Mets tried to move him. Joel Sherman of The New York Post also reported that Lindor did not address the subject before the contest.

If Boston ever had a chance to get involved, Lindor would be the kind of player that changes the entire conversation. He’s 32, a five-time All-Star, and under contract through five more seasons after 2026 on a 10-year, $341 million deal that pays just over $32 million per year. Earlier this summer, reports said the Red Sox were willing to take on money in a deal.

The production is still star-level when he’s right. Lindor was a 5.8-WAR player in 2025, a 6.8-WAR player in 2024, a 6.1-WAR player in 2023, and a 5.4-WAR player in 2022.

He has dealt with a calf injury this season, but he was remarkably steady over the previous four years in New York, never appearing in fewer than 152 games in any of the last four seasons. Over the last three seasons, he has posted at least 31 homers, 86 RBIs, and 29 stolen bases each year.

That’s the kind of middle-of-the-order production Boston could use in a hurry.

And if Lindor is actually on the table, he’d be the exact type of player Craig Breslow and the Red Sox should be circling. With the way Boston’s rotation is throwing, adding a bat like that this summer wouldn’t just keep the Red Sox in the wild-card race. It would put them in a position to think much bigger, especially if Crochet and Anthony make it back.

In Other News...

Red Sox Suddenly Tied To A Blockbuster Rumor That Feels Off

A rumor with a massive footprint started making the rounds around the Red Sox when a Spanish-language pregame host posted that Boston had opened trade conversations for a young Nationals outfielder, with the expected asking price sounding steep from the start. It is the kind of idea that can set off instant speculation, but it also lands in a place where the fit is not especially clean, especially with Boston already carrying real outfield depth.

The bigger obstacle is on the Washington side, where there is little obvious reason to move a player the Nationals view as part of their future. Even if Boston were willing to put together a serious offer, the sort of package that would have to be considered would likely be painful enough to test how far the Red Sox would actually want to go, and there has been no official confirmation that talks have even begun. [Read more 🡒]

Chris Sale Opened Up About His Red Sox Exit And It Stings

Chris Sales reflections during the 2024 All-Star Game broadcast landed with the kind of weight that only comes from a player looking back on a complicated chapter. The 10-time All-Star spent seven seasons with the Red Sox, and even with the injuries that slowed the end of his run in Boston, he made clear how much that stretch still means to him. He also acknowledged the fans who stood by him through it all, even as his time with the club ended in a way that never quite matched the expectations that came with it.

Sale said he had committed to giving everything he had in what would have been his final season with Boston, a promise shaped by how much he felt he owed the organization after the injuries. He also admitted the frustration of not being healthy enough in those last years, which made the exit sting even more. Now with the Braves, Sales comments served as a reminder that for all the change, the bond between him and Red Sox Nation still carries plenty of unfinished emotion. [Read more 🡒]

Red Sox Suddenly Have A Rotation Arm Drawing Trade Interest

The rotation picture in Boston has shifted enough that clubs around the league are watching closely, and the Red Sox could find themselves with a movable arm if the right offer comes along. Patrick Sandoval has re-entered the mix after a long injury absence, and his return gives Boston another healthy starter in a group that has been thinned and then replenished as the season has worn on.

For a team like St. Louis, sitting near the Wild Card line and trying to avoid paying premium prices for a short-term fix, that kind of profile is worth monitoring. Sandovals recent first start back was encouraging, and with his contract and injury history shaping how rival front offices view him, he fits the sort of affordable pitching addition that can linger on the deadline market even as bigger names dominate the conversation. [Read more 🡒]