Matt Chapman Looks Like The Yankees Fix Until New Trouble Emerged

As the Yankees struggle to rectify their third-base dilemma amid a losing streak, Matt Chapman's trade prospects are entangled by injury and financial hurdles.

The Yankees have been hunting for a clean answer to a messy problem, and Matt Chapman looked like the kind of fit that could steady the whole thing. Then the injury news hit, and suddenly the trade picture got a lot more complicated.

New York’s seven-game losing streak has left the club 3.5 games behind the first-place Rays in the AL East as of Thursday, and third base has stood out as one of the biggest issues on the roster. Ryan McMahon has supplied the glove since coming over from the Rockies last summer, but the bat has barely shown up. He is hitting .209 with a .637 OPS in New York.

Chapman, on paper, checks the boxes the Yankees have been trying to fill. The 33-year-old brings elite defense at third, with five Gold Glove Awards and two Platinum Gloves, and he has been a real power threat for years, topping 21 home runs in four of the last five seasons. He also finished 11th in NL MVP voting in 2024.

His offense had started to warm up, too. After a rough opening stretch, Chapman hit .241 with six home runs, 23 RBIs and an .838 OPS in June, according to Yankees On SI, pushing his season line to .235 with seven home runs.

That profile is exactly why his name kept coming up around the Yankees. ESPN’s Buster Olney reported in mid-June that the Giants were open to offers on their three highest-paid position players, Chapman, Rafael Devers and Willy Adames.

Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey later said he would listen on his expensive veterans, according to MLB.com’s Maria Guardado. MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand also listed New York as one of three logical landing spots, alongside the Phillies and Cardinals.

But the fit has always come with a price tag. Chapman is in the second year of a six-year, $151 million deal that runs through 2030, with a $25 million salary this season and a full no-trade clause, according to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal.

Laws and Selbe noted that the contract still has $100 million owed from 2027 to 2030, which could push some teams out unless San Francisco eats money. Yankees On SI’s Michael Rosenstein argued that if the Giants do absorb salary, the prospect cost to New York might not have to be enormous.

One suggested package from Heavy Sports’ TJ French had Chapman going to the Yankees for outfielder Spencer Jones and prospects Ben Hess and Kaeden Kent. That kind of framework matches the expectation around a deal: New York would likely deal from depth rather than its very top prospects if San Francisco is willing to help with the money.

Now the health question has landed right on top of the financial one. The Giants placed Chapman on the 10-day injured list Wednesday with an abdominal strain, one day after he left an 8-2 loss to the Diamondbacks in Phoenix. The injury showed up after Chapman hurt himself Tuesday night while charging a slow roller and throwing out Arizona’s Gabriel Moreno barehanded.

Chapman said after the game that the area had been bothering him for weeks, according to The Associated Press.

“It’s been hot and cold where I’m trying to figure out what’s going on,” Chapman said. “I made that bare-handed play and that was the first time that one specific play made me cringe and go down a little bit, where I was actually in a lot of pain.”

There is at least some optimism in San Francisco. Giants manager Tony Vitello called the strain mild and said Chapman is expected back before the All-Star break. Even so, a lingering core issue in a 33-year-old infielder is the kind of detail that can slow everything down, especially for a Yankees front office already dealing with its own crowded injured list.

Chapman still looks like the most natural answer to New York’s third-base problem. The twist is that the answer now comes with more uncertainty than it did a week ago.

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