Yankees Eye Rafael Devers In Potential Red Sox Nightmare

Despite recent caution in trades, the Yankees may seize the opportunity to turn rivals' losses into their gain with Devers at third base.

The Giants’ messy situation could open a door the Yankees can’t ignore.

If San Francisco really is willing to listen on almost everyone, Rafael Devers suddenly becomes the kind of name that changes the conversation. The New York Post’s Jon Heyman reported Monday that the Giants are making nearly the entire roster available, with only outfielder Jung Hoo Lee and ace Logan Webb off limits.

“The Giants are sending the message nearly everyone is available but outfielder Jung Hoo Lee and ace Logan Webb,” Heyman reports. “But in their condition, perhaps they could be talked into it.”

Devers wasn’t mentioned specifically, but that’s exactly why his name has to be in the mix. He’s the sort of expensive star a team can only move if it’s serious about reshaping things, and his contract is no small obstacle. Spotrac says he’s owed $28.5 million per year through 2033, carrying him to his age-36 season.

That kind of money narrows the field fast. The Yankees are one of the few clubs that could actually take it on.

And from a baseball standpoint, it makes sense. Third base has been a problem spot for New York since the trade that sent Gio Urshela to the Twins. Since 2022, the Yankees have posted a 93 wRC+ at the position, which ranks 16th in baseball, along with a .683 OPS that sits 19th.

Devers would change that immediately. He’s a career .274/.347/.504 hitter with a 126 wRC+, and even in what’s been a down year by his standards, he’s still hitting .249/.319/.479 with a 118 WRC+.

There’s also a fit issue that could work in New York’s favor. In San Francisco, he’s pulling fly balls at a 15.6% clip, and that may be by design. Put that same bat in Yankee Stadium, and the short porch in right field could turn some of those balls into damage in a hurry.

That’s where Devers already does his best work. On balls he lifts in the air, he’s hitting .407 with a .641 wOBA and an average exit velocity of 94.9 mph.

He’s already shown what that power looks like when he gets a hold of one. Earlier this month, he crushed a ball in Colorado, sending it to the upper deck in right.

There are questions beyond the bat, of course. Devers has drawn some character concerns, including being outspoken about how he was used defensively in Boston and, more recently, shooing away a pinch runner in the ninth inning.

But the Yankees have seen enough of him to know what he can do in their park. In 64 all-time games at Yankee Stadium, he’s hit .266 with an .855 OPS and 18 home runs.

And then there’s the Boston angle, which would make this even louder. Devers’ exit from the Red Sox was abrupt, coming in a trade on a random Sunday afternoon in June after he homered off Max Fried.

He came up through Boston’s system, helped them win the 2018 World Series, and was paid well for it. He’s also the kind of player who has tended to rise when the moment gets bigger, with eight home runs in 89 postseason at-bats.

If the Yankees ever needed a bat with some bite, this is it. Devers in pinstripes would not just fill a hole at third. It would give New York another middle-of-the-order force alongside Aaron Judge and Ben Rice, and it would give Red Sox fans a nightmare they’d have to watch unfold in real time.

In Other News...

Ceddanne Rafaelas Favorite Former Red Sox Teammate Will Hit Fans Hard

At All-Star Game media day, Ceddanne Rafaela was asked to name his favorite former teammate, a harmless question that still carried a little weight for Red Sox fans watching the roster turn over around him. The Boston center fielder, now an All-Star himself, answered in a way that spoke to the kind of bond that can outlast a uniform change, especially when the player in question once sat at the center of the clubs lineup and clubhouse.

The timing gives the answer extra bite because the former teammate in question is no longer part of Bostons present, having been dealt to San Francisco during the 2025 season. For a team that has already seen enough moving parts in the trade market, Rafaelas reflection is a reminder of how quickly a familiar face can become a memory, even if the respect and appreciation remain very much intact. [Read more 🡒]

Willson Contreras Just Put More Pressure On Red Sox Deadline Plans

Willson Contreras has given the Red Sox another reason to think carefully as the trade deadline approaches. The newly minted All-Star has settled in as Bostons first baseman, and he made clear he has enjoyed his time at Fenway Park, where the atmosphere has only added to the appeal of staying put. With the club still in the playoff mix, his comfort level matters, especially for a team trying to balance short-term urgency with longer-term planning.

The timing also makes the situation harder to ignore because Contreras is under contract for two more seasons, which already makes a move less likely. Even so, the faint trade chatter around him has not disappeared entirely, and his preference to remain in Boston only sharpens the pressure on the front office as it decides whether to buy, hold, or reshape the roster in the days ahead. [Read more 🡒]

Red Sox Make Curious Deadline Move During Playoff Push

The Red Sox added another layer to their roster shuffle by bringing in Jahmai Jones from Detroit for a player to be named later, a move that fits the kind of deadline maneuvering clubs make when they are trying to keep options open without paying a heavy price. Jones gives Boston an outfielder-designated hitter type with some big-league experience across several organizations, and he arrives with a track record that includes a strong season in Detroit not long ago.

For Boston, the more immediate significance is roster math. Jones slides onto the 40-man after Danny Coulombe was designated for assignment, and he will need a spot on the 26-man roster once play resumes, which makes this less of a pure depth add than a bet on whether the Red Sox can get something useful out of a player Detroit had already moved on from. The intrigue is whether Boston sees a short-term bench piece, a reclamation project, or simply a flexible name to keep in the mix as the playoff push tightens. [Read more 🡒]