Rangers Trade Idea Could Cost Texas More Than Fans Expect

As trade talks heat up, a former MLB GM's bold suggestion sparks debate over the value of acquiring Luis Robert Jr. for the Texas Rangers.

The Rangers are hanging right in the thick of the AL West race, sitting 1.5 games back of the Seattle Mariners at 45-45 and holding the third and final American League Wild Card spot as July 6 arrives. That makes the next few weeks a fascinating stretch in Texas: if the club is still in the mix by the end of the month, it could easily shift into buyer mode at the trade deadline.

That’s where former MLB general manager Jim Bowden of The Athletic sees a fit, though his proposed price tag looks steep. Bowden identified Luis Robert Jr. as the “Best fit” for Texas and suggested the Rangers could send left-hander Dalton Pence and outfielder Paxton King to the Mets to make a deal happen.

"Best fit: Luis Robert Jr., CF, New York Mets," Bowden writes. "The Rangers might be willing to offer a package of left-hander Dalton Pence and outfielder Paxton King to make the trade work from the Mets' side of things."

On paper, Robert is the kind of name that jumps off the page. But the cost Bowden outlined would ask Texas to part with two prospects who still have real value in the system.

King is a 23-year-old outfield prospect and 2025 draft pick who has put up an .804 OPS in High-A over 53 games and 188 at-bats. Pence, also 23, is a left-handed pitching prospect and 2024 draft pick who owns a 2.60 ERA this season across High-A and Double-A, with 13 starts and 65.2 innings.

MLB Pipeline currently ranks Pence as the Rangers’ No. 12 prospect and King as their No. 21 prospect.

That’s a heavy ask for a player whose stock has dipped. Robert is making $20 million this year and has a club option for 2027, but he has spent much of the season on the injured list. Before the injury, he hit .224 with a .656 OPS in 24 games and 85 at-bats.

The bigger concern is the trend line. Robert’s 2023 All-Star season, when he blasted 38 homers and took part in both the All-Star Game and Home Run Derby, now looks like the high-water mark. He posted a 130 OPS+ that year, then followed it with marks of 86, 85 and 84 in each of the next three seasons.

Robert could still qualify as a buy-low target, and the Rangers do have an offensive need. But giving up both Pence and King for an injured player whose production has declined year after year feels like too much for Texas. The Mets might be happy to move that contract, but that alone is a warning sign the Rangers should pay attention to.

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