Reds Face A Painful Deadline Choice With Their Top Prospects

As the MLB trade deadline looms, the Cincinnati Reds face tough decisions on which prospects to trade and which to protect in hopes of securing a brighter future.

The Cincinnati Reds are heading into July in a spot that looks more seller than buyer, with a sub-.500 record and the MLB trade deadline closing in fast. Their postseason chase isn’t officially over, but it’s on life support, which puts the front office in a tricky place as August 3 approaches.

That doesn’t mean Cincinnati should be eager to part with much of its young talent. In fact, most of the organization’s best prospects should be treated like protected assets. But if the Reds do claw their way back into the race and decide to push for a run, there are a couple of names that could realistically be moved to help the big league club.

Cam Collier is one of them. The former first-round pick still has believers in the Reds’ scouting department, but his production hasn’t matched the pedigree.

Injuries have played a part, yet his OPS has sat below .800 over the last two seasons, and it’s below .700 right now. The upside is still there, and another team may be more intrigued by what he could become than what he has shown so far.

Edwin Arroyo also fits that tradeable category if Cincinnati turns into a buyer. He has already made his Major League debut this season and had mixed results, but he brings value as a defender up the middle and can hit from both sides of the plate.

He also flashed power in the minors earlier this year. The problem for Arroyo is simple: with Elly De La Cruz and Matt McLain on the roster, regular playing time is going to be hard to come by.

If those are the two prospects the Reds can consider moving, Alfredo Duno is the name that should stay glued to the untouchable list. The belief around Duno is sky-high, with the potential to be the best prospect in baseball by the time the 2026 minor league season ends. There are still questions about whether he can stick at catcher, but the bat is not in doubt.

Steele Hall belongs in that same untouchable group. Last year’s first-round draft pick has jumped out to a blazing start with the ACL Reds, and the 18-year-old’s speed has long been his calling card. What’s making him even more interesting now is the growth in his power this season, which could raise his stock even further.

Tyson Lewis is another prospect Cincinnati can’t afford to shop. The early results this season haven’t fully backed up the talent, but the former second-round pick has taken steps forward over the past week, and the raw tools are obvious. If he can cut down the strikeouts and hold his own defensively at third base, the Reds may have something special.

Héctor Rodríguez rounds out the untouchable quartet. He probably already belongs on the Reds’ active roster, but for now he’s still stuck in Triple-A. Rodríguez has built a reputation as a bad-ball hitter, and with Cincinnati thin in the outfield, moving him later this summer would be a mistake.

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