Red Sox Linked to Two Trade Partners in Yoshida Salary Dump

The Red Sox may look to offload Masataka Yoshidas hefty contract in a strategic trade, with two teams emerging as logical fits for a Jordan Hicks-style salary move.

What’s Next for Masataka Yoshida? Two Potential Trade Fits for the Red Sox DH

When the Red Sox signed Masataka Yoshida to a five-year, $90 million deal ahead of the 2022 season, they were banking on his elite bat-to-ball skills translating smoothly from NPB to MLB. Two years in, the results have been mixed - not disastrous, but not quite what Boston had in mind for an $18 million-a-year designated hitter.

Let’s be clear: Yoshida hasn’t been a bust. A career .282 batting average and .762 OPS with 3.0 bWAR is solid production.

But when you’re locked into a DH role and not contributing defensively, the bar is simply higher. That’s the challenge for Boston right now - trying to find value in a player who’s limited in versatility and expensive on the books.

The Red Sox are in a bit of a roster and payroll squeeze, and with two years remaining on Yoshida’s contract, this could be the right window to explore a move. It likely won’t be a blockbuster - think more along the lines of a Jordan Hicks-style deal, where Boston would need to eat some of the salary and potentially include a prospect to sweeten the pot. But there are a couple of teams that could make sense as trade partners.

1. Colorado Rockies: A Low-Risk Swing in the Thin Air

If there’s one thing the Rockies can offer, it’s playing time. Colorado remains in a perpetual rebuild, and adding a veteran like Yoshida could give their lineup a needed boost while also providing leadership to a young clubhouse.

Coors Field could be a sneaky-good fit for Yoshida’s game. He’s not a power-first hitter, but his contact-heavy approach could play well in the altitude, where balls tend to find the gaps and carry a bit farther. It’s not hard to imagine him racking up doubles and keeping pitchers honest in the middle of that lineup.

From the Rockies' perspective, this is a low-risk move. They’re not expected to contend in 2026, but bringing in a competent bat like Yoshida - especially if Boston covers a chunk of the salary - could help them stay competitive and potentially flip him at the trade deadline if he performs well. Add in a mid-level prospect from Boston, and it becomes a move that aligns with both short-term and long-term goals for Colorado.

2. Minnesota Twins: A Lineup Upgrade with Playoff Aspirations

Minnesota is in a very different spot. The Tigers may be the current frontrunners in the AL Central, but the Twins aren’t far behind - and with the expanded playoff format, a Wild Card run is very much in play.

The issue? They’re thin at DH.

Right now, Victor Caratini - a career backup catcher - is projected to get regular at-bats in that role. That’s not ideal for a team looking to stay in the playoff hunt.

Enter Yoshida.

Slotting Yoshida into the DH spot would give the Twins a reliable left-handed bat who can get on base and lengthen the lineup. He’s not going to hit 30 homers, but he doesn’t need to. What Minnesota needs is a consistent presence who can grind out at-bats and drive in runs - and Yoshida fits that mold.

Financially, the Twins have shown a willingness to spend when the roster is competitive, and with Boston likely covering part of the deal, the remaining salary shouldn’t be a deal-breaker. Plus, with new leadership in Minnesota’s front office, there could be a renewed push to find creative ways to improve the roster - especially after last year’s trade deadline came and went with little movement.


The Bottom Line

Yoshida’s not a star, but he’s a capable hitter with a track record of producing - and that still holds value, especially in the right situation. For Boston, moving him now could free up roster flexibility and ease some financial strain. For teams like Colorado and Minnesota, he represents two very different opportunities: a low-risk veteran bat for the Rockies, or a plug-and-play DH for a Twins team looking to stay in the postseason mix.

It won’t be the flashiest move of the offseason, but sometimes the best trades are the ones that quietly make both sides better.