The Phillies have gone from a 9-19 start and a managerial change to sitting at 53-43, just two games back of the first-place Atlanta Braves in the National League East. That kind of turnaround usually gets people talking about October. It also gets people talking about the trade deadline.
And if Philadelphia is going to make a real push, the roster still has some obvious holes. The pitching staff needs help, both in the rotation and the bullpen, and with Adolis Garcia out for the year because of a lat injury, the outfield needs reinforcement too.
That’s why ESPN MLB insider Jeff Passan floated a “dream match” for the Phillies: Minnesota Twins center fielder Byron Buxton.
Buxton, 32, is in the middle of another big season. He’s a three-time All-Star, including this year, though he won’t play because of a hip strain. At the plate, he’s hitting .271 with a .904 OPS, along with 45 RBIs and 25 home runs in 75 games.
He would also bring a right-handed bat into a lineup that could use one. The Phillies already have left-handed threats like Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber and Brandon Marsh, but they’ve had trouble against left-handed pitching, hitting just .224 with a .671 OPS in those matchups.
Buxton’s value isn’t limited to offense, either. He won a Gold Glove in 2017, and that matters for a Phillies club currently leaning on rookie Justin Crawford in center field.
Crawford has started there, but he’s missed the last two games with a knee injury. He’s batting .263 this season with 21 RBIs in 88 games.
Still, Phillies fans probably shouldn’t get too far ahead of themselves. Twins general manager Jeremy Zoll said a couple of weeks ago that a Buxton trade is not on the table, according to MLB.com.
“We have no plans to trade Byron,” Zoll said. “It’s not something we’re exploring.
It’s not something we plan to explore. We continue to have productive discussions with Byron.
I think he was very clear on that point last week. But also just from my seat, from the Twins’ perspective, that’s not something that we plan to explore.
Just wanted to hit that head on.”
There’s another major hurdle, too: Buxton has a no-trade clause, and he reportedly isn’t interested in waiving it. He has two years left on his contract at a little over $15.1 million per year.
Minnesota, meanwhile, is 47-49 and sits third in the American League Central.
In Other News...
Royals Fans Showed Freddy Fermin Exactly What He Still Means In KC
Freddy Fermins return to Kauffman Stadium on Friday carried the kind of built-in emotion that only comes when a familiar face comes back in a different uniform. The former Royals catcher, now with the Padres, started the game and went 1 for 3, but the bigger moment came before the first pitch when he reconnected with old teammates and coaches, including Salvador Perez and manager Matt Quatraro.
Royals fans made sure the visit felt personal, greeting Fermin with a warm ovation that reflected how much he still means in Kansas City. Even after the trade that sent him to San Diego, the reception underscored the place he earned here as a steady presence behind the plate and a well-liked part of the clubhouse, the sort of player a fan base remembers quickly when he comes back through town. [Read more 🡒]
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The concern is not just that Witt is having to defend his place in the conversation again, but that the profile of the challenger is the kind of profile voters rarely ignore. A Triple Crown chase carries its own gravity, and history says that when a player gets this close, the spotlight can become hard to wrestle back. For Witt, the issue is less about whether he has been worthy and more about whether worthy will be enough when the voting starts to narrow. [Read more 🡒]
White Sox Suddenly Have 3 Deadline Arms Fans Need To Watch
The White Sox are being linked to pitching help ahead of the trade deadline, and the pitch they seem willing to follow is pretty clear: go after arms with control, stay away from pricey short-term rentals, and try to build something that can matter beyond this season. That framework has put several names into the conversation, including one veteran who has quietly become one of the more dependable starters on the market.
For Kansas City, the interest is the part worth watching. Michael Wacha is not just a stopgap type, and the appeal goes beyond this summer, with club control stretching through 2027 and a team option for 2028. He has also shouldered a heavy workload this year, leading the league in innings pitched, which only adds to the intrigue for a contender weighing how much to pay for stability at the front of a rotation. [Read more 🡒]
