The Red Sox have put themselves in a position where the next few weeks matter, and the timing lines up with a name that would change the conversation in Boston fast: Francisco Lindor.
Boston comes out of the All-Star break with real momentum, riding a nine-game winning streak and sitting just a half-game out of a playoff spot at 46-48. The club won’t play again until July 17, and there’s no easing back into things - a doubleheader against the Tampa Bay Rays is waiting right away. With the trade deadline now three weeks away, the Red Sox look like buyers, even with Garrett Crochet and Roman Anthony still missing from the lineup.
That’s why the Mets are suddenly worth watching from Boston’s side. The Red Sox just swept New York over the weekend, and while the Mets were the team on the receiving end, the bigger storyline may be whether Lindor becomes available at all.
Rumors about the five-time All-Star shortstop picked up last week when WFAN’s Mike Francesa said New York is "trying to trade him." Ken Rosenthal pushed back 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.
Still, Lindor’s name didn’t go away. Before Sunday’s game, Will Sammon of The Athletic noted that Lindor declined to comment when asked about the possibility of 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 declined to comment on the subject before the game.
Then came the on-field moment that only added more attention: after the Red Sox completed the sweep, Lindor spoke to the media and addressed a range of topics, including the costly error that helped keep Boston alive in the ninth inning.
Francisco Lindor boots a potential game-ending double play and doesn't get any outs pic.twitter.com/j1oVOoFv3j
If Boston is looking for the right-handed bat it needs, Lindor would be the obvious swing. He’s 32, still a star, and under contract for five more seasons after 2026 on a 10-year, $341 million deal that comes out to just over $32 million per year. Earlier reports this summer said the Red Sox were willing to take on money in a trade, which only makes a player like Lindor more interesting.
Even with an injury-affected 2026 season, his recent track record is hard to ignore. He 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 also missed time earlier this year with a calf injury, but over the last four seasons in New York, he never played fewer than 152 games.
The production has been loud, too. Over the last three seasons, Lindor has posted at least 31 homers, 86 RBIs, and 29 stolen bases each year. That’s the kind of middle-of-the-order impact Boston has been missing.
If Lindor truly becomes available, he’s the kind of player Craig Breslow and the Red Sox should be all over. With the rotation pitching the way it is, adding a bat like that could push Boston beyond a playoff chase and into the kind of team that can talk seriously about a World Series run - especially if Crochet and Anthony make it back.
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