Red Sox May Have Already Identified The Trade Piece Fans Feared

As the Boston Red Sox face the looming trade deadline, closer Aroldis Chapman emerges as their prime asset, potentially reshaping the team's challenging season.

The Red Sox are running out of runway before the trade deadline, and Aroldis Chapman has emerged as the name most likely to be moved if Boston decides to sell.

With nine games left before the All-Star break and 17 more after it before the deadline, Boston has 26 games left to change its direction. The Red Sox are 37-48 and sit six games out of a playoff spot, which leaves the organization in an unusual holding pattern.

In a normal year, that record would point straight toward a deadline teardown. This season is different because the American League has been so weak that Boston’s decision is still very much unresolved.

That uncertainty was reinforced Wednesday, when Red Sox chief executive officer and president Sam Kennedy addressed the media and said nothing has been finalized. If Boston gets hot, the team could still hold. If the slump continues, a sale remains on the table.

If the Red Sox choose to add instead, the clearest need is a right-handed bat. But if the club pivots into selling mode, there are several players who could draw interest, and ESPN’s David Schoenfield singled out Chapman as the “most likely to go.”

“The dilemma for chief baseball officer Craig Breslow is that the Red Sox have three potential very attractive trade options, or four, if you include reliever Garrett Whitlock,” Schoenfield wrote. “Chapman is the most likely to go, making $13 million with a $13 million vesting option for 2027. Given the need for relievers, he would be one of the most in-demand players if he's made available.”

Chapman has been in trade speculation for weeks. In mid-June, ESPN’s Jeff Passan and Kiley McDaniel gave him a 90 percent chance of being moved.

The veteran lefty has appeared in 26 games this season and posted a 2.19 ERA with 16 saves. If Boston decides to shop him, the return could be significant.

Even if the Red Sox stop short of a full sell-off, Chapman still stands out as the kind of asset that could bring back a strong package. His 2027 vesting option becomes confirmed once he reaches 40 innings and passes a postseason physical, and neither condition appears to be a real obstacle. Boston could also handle the closer role internally, with Garrett Whitlock a candidate to take over those duties.

There is still a path where a big winning streak changes everything. But for now, the Red Sox do not look like contenders, and that keeps a Chapman trade squarely in play.

In Other News...

Red Sox Suddenly Face A Tough Deadline Call On Trusted Closer

The Pirates have taken a step forward in 2026, but their bullpen still looks like the kind of area that can undo a promising season in a hurry. ESPNs David Schoenfield pointed to the closer spot as the obvious place to upgrade, noting that Pittsburgh could use a steadier late-inning answer as it tries to keep pace in the postseason chase.

For Boston, the wrinkle is less about whether a veteran arm can help and more about how long it can afford to keep him. A 38-year-old left-hander with a 2.19 ERA is exactly the sort of reliever contenders ask about in July, but the Red Sox also have to weigh the value of that short-term stability against a contract situation that could become more complicated as the season wears on. [Read more 🡒]

Red Sox Veteran Bat Suddenly Entering Blockbuster Trade Buzz

A potential trade fit is starting to surface around a Red Sox bat who has quietly become one of the more intriguing names on the market. ESPNs David Schoenfield floated the idea of Seattle pursuing Boston first baseman Willson Contreras, pointing to the Mariners need for more punch against left-handed pitching and the appeal of adding a right-handed hitter with real thump in the middle of the lineup.

Contreras has been productive this season, carrying a .906 OPS and a strong track record against lefties, which is exactly the kind of profile that can change how opposing staffs attack a team. He is also under club control through 2028, so any move would be about more than a short-term rental, but for now it remains only a suggestion rather than a confirmed push toward a deal. [Read more 🡒]

Yankees May Fix Their Biggest Problems Without Making A Trade

A seven-game losing streak has only sharpened the Yankees sense of urgency, but the bigger question in the Bronx may not be who they can buy. Even with needs at catcher, third base and in the bullpen, MLB.coms Mark Feinsand suggested the club could lean heavily on internal fixes as the 2026 trade deadline approaches, banking on roster movement and reinforcements already in the organization rather than a splashy external addition.

Carlos Lagrange and George Lombard Jr. are among the names being floated as possible depth answers, which would give the Yankees another path if they decide the market is too expensive or too thin. For a team trying to stop the slide and stabilize its roster, the possibility of solving some of its biggest problems from within may be just as important as any deadline pursuit. [Read more 🡒]