Francisco Lindor is the kind of name that can stop a baseball conversation cold, and now he’s being floated in a way that would have sounded absurd not long ago: as a possible fit for the Red Sox.
That idea comes from a Monday report on WFAN, where Mike Francesa said the Mets were looking to move their five-time All-Star shortstop. Francesa didn’t couch it as a certainty, but he did make the claim plainly enough to set the internet buzzing.
"I think the Mets have decided that, from what I understand, they are trying to trade him, or will be trying to trade him in the next couple of weeks," Francesa said at the end of a long segment about the strained relationship between Lindor and fellow Mets star Soto.
For Boston, the fit is at least worth thinking through. The Red Sox have more uncertainty at shortstop than the Mets do, and Lindor would immediately give them a projected starter there for the foreseeable future. He’d also offer a potential answer for the end of Trevor Story’s run in Boston.
There’s no question about the talent. Lindor is viewed as a potential Hall of Famer, and the case only gets stronger if the next few years don’t go off the rails. Even with Boston unlikely to make the playoffs this season, he’s the kind of player who changes the conversation simply by being on the roster.
The contract, though, is where the dream gets complicated. Lindor is signed through 2031, which would mean the Red Sox would be taking on $34.1 million per year from his age-33 through age-37 seasons. That’s a hefty number, even for a team with Fenway Sports Group resources.
The bigger question is whether Boston would actually go there. The organization has not exactly made a habit of betting big on players in their late thirties.
Roman Anthony and Garrett Crochet both received extensions last year that were designed to end in their early thirties, and that approach has been pretty clear. Even if Craig Breslow were no longer the chief baseball officer, it’s tough to picture that philosophy changing.
And if Francesa’s report is accurate, there’s also a baseball reason the Mets might be looking to move Lindor instead of Soto. Lindor has a .666 OPS in 34 games this season, a number that raises the obvious concern that his bat could start to slide in the years ahead. It also reminds you that shortstops his age aren’t immune to health issues, especially when you look at Story at nearly the exact same age this year.
So yes, it’s a fun idea. It’s also probably a bridge too far.
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New Yorks draft board gets thinner from there, too. The Mets will not have a second-round selection after the free-agent move that brought in Bo Bichette, which means their next crack at the class comes much later in the process. For a team trying to balance immediate roster upgrades with long-term pipeline health, the cost of that setup is already showing up in the shape of the 2026 draft. [Read more 🡒]
