Mets Suddenly Have A Clay Holmes Trade Question To Answer

Can the Brewers secure a playoff surge with Mets Clay Holmes predicted as their optimal trade deadline acquisition to solidify pitching depth?

The Milwaukee Brewers are getting Logan Henderson back on Thursday, but that doesn’t solve the bigger problem hanging over their rotation.

Henderson will make his first big league start since May 22 and his sixth appearance overall this season. He’s been effective when healthy, posting a 2.74 ERA in 23 innings, and that matters with Brandon Woodruff sidelined.

But Milwaukee still needs more than a short-term lift. Woodruff is now seeking a second opinion after it was revealed he suffered a new anterior shoulder capsule injury, and Henderson’s own track record makes it hard to count on him as a full-time answer.

He made only five major league starts last year because of a flexor strain, then missed time this season with a back injury.

That’s why the Brewers are being pushed toward the trade market. With Jacob Misiorowski and Kyle Harrison in the mix, the club still needs another veteran arm as the second half and a playoff push draw closer. On Thursday, ESPN’s Jeff Passan outlined the “best match” and “dream match” for contenders ahead of the deadline, and for Milwaukee he landed on Clay Holmes as the “best match.”

“Weakness: Playoff-caliber starting pitching,” Passan wrote. “Best match: Clay Holmes, RHSP, New York Mets.

Dream match: Joe Ryan, RHSP, Minnesota Twins. ... If so, Holmes, returning from a broken right leg, would be more than they did last deadline, when their acquisitions were a reliever who threw 9⅔ innings before getting hurt, a backup catcher and a reserve outfielder.”

Holmes has already been floated as the kind of arm Milwaukee should target if the Mets decide to sell. He hasn’t appeared in a big league game since May 15 after suffering a fractured right fibula when he was struck by a 111.1 miles per hour comebacker.

By late June, he was already back to throwing. Before the injury, he was in the middle of a career year, carrying a 2.39 ERA through his first nine starts.

What also makes Holmes appealing is the contract. He isn’t priced like the top names on the market, with a $13 million salary in 2026 and a $12 million player option for 2027. That option creates a real decision point: bet on himself and test free agency, or take the security if the injury clouds things.

Milwaukee has the farm system to chase a pitcher like this, and that’s part of the appeal. Holmes brings ace-level upside when he’s right, and the injury he’s coming back from is the kind of fluky setback teams can live with more easily than an arm problem.

With Woodruff’s status uncertain, the Brewers need a veteran they can trust in this rotation. Holmes fits that bill.

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