The Guardians’ deadline priorities are starting to come into focus, and it may not be as simple as just hunting for one middle-of-the-order bat.
Cleveland has strung together a couple of wins, including Friday’s 3-2 victory over the Miami Marlins, and that has kept the club right there with the Chicago White Sox in the AL Central. But the division picture is getting crowded fast, with the Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers both heating up over the last few weeks. For the Guardians, every game feels like it matters a little more than the last.
The bigger issue remains the offense. Injuries to José Ramírez, Angel Martínez and Chase DeLauter have helped drag the lineup down, even if DeLauter has thankfully returned recently. That has left Cleveland searching for answers, and one report suggests the front office may be thinking beyond a single splashy addition.
In a recent piece for The Athletic, Ken Rosenthal and Will Sammon said the Guardians could be in the market for a right-handed hitting first baseman, but they also noted another area that might need attention: the rotation.
“As the Guardians await the returns of third baseman José Ramírez and outfielder Angel Martínez, a right-handed hitting first baseman could be on their wish list. Something else to keep in mind with the Guards: They have used only five starters, so they could look to add depth to their rotation as well as their bullpen,” Ken Rosenthal and Will Sammon wrote.
That first-base search makes plenty of sense given how little Cleveland has gotten from the position. Kyle Manzardo is hitting .080 in July, and Rhys Hoskins has just a .165 average since Opening Day. With production that thin at such a key spot, the Guardians have been leaning on a part of the roster that has simply not delivered.
There are a few names already floating around. Christian Walker and Isaac Paredes from the Houston Astros could be available, while Willson Contreras has also been mentioned, though a move for him looks less likely because of the Boston Red Sox’s recent surge.
Luiz Arraez is another possibility on an expiring contract with a struggling San Francisco Giants team. He wouldn’t add power, but he would bring elite contact and would clearly be an upgrade.
The outfield could get some attention too. Adam Gerstenhaber of The Ultimate Cleveland Sports Show recently brought up Garrett Mitchell and Mickey Moniak as possible fits, and both would give Cleveland another option for a battered group. At the same time, it’s hard not to notice that in-house answers like Steven Kwan, CJ Kayfus and George Valera haven’t taken the step forward the club needed this season.
However it shakes out, the deadline looks like it will be a big one for Cleveland. The Guardians appear to need help in more than one spot, and with the American League wide open, this is the kind of year where being aggressive could matter.
In Other News...
Guardians Suddenly Have A First Base Decision Fans Cant Ignore
Ralphy Velazquez keeps making the Guardians take notice, and the timing could hardly be better for a club still sorting out first base. The 21-year-old, drafted 23rd overall in 2023, has been productive across two minor league levels and is carrying an .876 OPS, a strong enough line to keep him in the conversation as the season moves toward its stretch run.
Velazquez has also reached base in 30 straight games for Columbus, a run that only adds to the pressure on the front office to decide whether the organization wants to lean into its own prospect or look outside for help. Cleveland has already been weighing first base as a spot that could use a boost, and the next few weeks may determine whether the answer comes from within the system or from a move at the deadline. [Read more 🡒]
Guardians Fans Just Got Another Reason To Revisit The Bailey Trade
The Patrick Bailey deal is still one of those trades that looks a little different every time Cleveland checks back on it. The Guardians sent pitching prospect Matt Wilkinson and their Competitive Balance Round A draft pick to San Francisco to bring in Bailey, a move that was always going to be judged on whether the catcher could give the staff steadier work behind the plate.
So far, Bailey has done the part Cleveland needed most, giving the pitching staff a more dependable defensive presence while Wilkinson has kept moving through Double-A and Triple-A with uneven results. The draft pick the Giants received also adds another layer to the deal, since it turned into a high school left-hander in the first round, giving both sides something tangible to point to as the trade continues to age. [Read more 🡒]
