The Yankees are officially in trade-deadline mode, and Brian Cashman’s attention is now on what happens between now and Monday, Aug. 3. That starts with this weekend’s Dodgers series, but the bigger picture is obvious: New York has to sort through a roster that still needs help in several spots, and the bullpen sits at the top of the list.
There are other issues to tackle, from catcher to third base, but the relief corps is the area that could decide how far this team goes. It’s tough to feel great about shaky options like Camilo Doval, Tim Hill, and Ryan Yarbrough when the games get bigger in October.
Cashman doesn’t need to chase the flashiest name on the market to fix that. He just needs the right arm at the right price.
That’s where the more realistic targets come in.
Houston looks like a club willing to do business after moving Lance McCullers Jr. to the Brewers on Wednesday, and that opens the door for a veteran rental such as Steve Okert. The 35-year-old left-hander is headed for free agency this winter, and he’s put together one of the best seasons of his career.
Through 46 relief appearances, he owns a 2.31 ERA with 47 strikeouts in 46 2/3 innings, while holding opponents to a .168/.233/.292 line. Baseball Savant also has his plus-8 breaking run value in the 96th percentile, along with his 2.57 expected ERA and 28.4% hard-hit rate.
Okert’s slider has been a problem for hitters all season, producing a 34.2% whiff rate. That kind of swing-and-miss profile would fit a Yankees bullpen that needs more bite, and his expiring contract keeps the cost from getting out of hand. He’d also be a clear upgrade over Hill.
Another lefty worth watching is A.J. Minter, who could be tougher to land than Luke Weaver but still makes sense for New York.
Minter may not draw the same buzz as Weaver, yet he’s been plenty effective in his own right. The 32-year-old Tyler, TX native has a 1.42 ERA across 19 innings, has finished eight of his 19 appearances, and owns a 0.842 WHIP with 17 strikeouts.
Even more impressive, he’s walking just 0.5 batters per nine innings, a career low. For comparison, Doval is at 3.1 BB per nine IP.
Minter’s familiarity with New York only adds to the appeal. Like Okert, he could step in and help replace Hill if the Yankees decide they need a steadier left-handed option.
Colorado is in its usual seller position, and the Yankees have already done business with the Rockies before. Last season, they landed Ryan McMahon and Jake Brid in separate deals less than a week apart, though neither move has worked out the way they hoped. Still, the Rockies remain a possible source of bullpen help, and Antonio Senzatela is one name that fits.
Senzatela has spent all 10 of his MLB seasons in Colorado, and this year has been one of his best. The 31-year-old Venezuelan reliever has a personal-best 3.31 ERA in 30 appearances, along with a 9-2 record, 11 saves, and 11 games finished. He’s also giving up fewer hits and home runs than ever before, with marks of 8.1 hits per nine innings and 0.6 homers per nine.
What makes Senzatela especially interesting is the control beyond this season. Spotrac lists a $14 million club option for 2027, which gives him more value than a pure rental. That could raise the trade price, but it also gives the Yankees a chance at a longer-term bullpen fix if they believe the production holds.
The Angels may not be eager to move Ryan Zeferjahn, since he’s under team control through 2030, but that hasn’t stopped his name from surfacing. Los Angeles is 21 games under .500, and MLB Network’s Jon Morosi reported Friday that Zeferjahn will “garner significant trade interest” before the deadline.
The Angels are under no pressure to move pre-arb reliever Ryan Zeferjahn, but he is going to garner significant trade interest if he continues his improved strike-throwing. Since June 1, he has a 0.98 ERA over 18 1/3 IP. 30 strikeouts; 13 walks. @MLBNetwork
Zeferjahn has been strong in his third MLB season, going 4-3 with a 3.89 ERA in 38 outings. The 28-year-old southpaw has piled up 61 strikeouts in 44 innings, good for a career-high 12.5 Ks per nine IP. He’s also holding opponents to a .151 batting average and a .596 OPS, while his 31.9% strikeout rate sits above the MLB average of 22.2%, according to Baseball Savant.
The recent surge matters too. Since June 1, Zeferjahn has posted a 0.98 ERA in 18 1/3 innings, which only boosts his value. He’d be a tougher get if he keeps pitching like this, but the Yankees have the prospect depth to make a real run at him, especially after restocking the cupboards in the 2026 MLB Draft earlier this month.
If New York wants a bullpen answer that could last beyond this season, Zeferjahn is the kind of arm Cashman should at least explore before another club beats him to the punch.
In Other News...
Yankees May Have Found A Real Catcher Answer Before Deadline Panic
The Yankees have spent enough of this season looking for answers behind the plate that the position has become part of the deadline conversation. Austin Wells has not given the club the production it expected, and general manager Brian Cashman has already acknowledged the issue while the front office sorts through possible trade options before the August 3 deadline. It is the kind of problem that can linger all summer if a team does not find a real fix, especially when the catching group is dragging in a way the Yankees can no longer ignore.
One name that has come up in the chatter is Arizona catcher Gabriel Moreno, a player who would give New York a very different kind of profile at the position if the Yankees decided to push harder. Moreno has been productive for the Diamondbacks this season and, just as importantly for any trade market, comes with years of club control beyond this one. For now, there is no official deal on the table, but the fact that the Yankees are being linked to a catcher of that caliber tells you how seriously they are treating the position as deadline pressure builds. [Read more 🡒]
This Under The Radar Bat Could Fix More Than One Yankees Problem
The Yankees still have a lot of boxes to check before the trade deadline, with clear needs at catcher, in the bullpen and in the rotation, plus some secondary asks that could shape the rest of the roster. One name that keeps surfacing as a fit is Spencer Steer, the Reds versatile bat who can move around the diamond and gives a lineup some right-handed balance while also helping cover more than one hole at once.
Steers appeal goes beyond just being a useful extra piece. He has handled multiple positions, has done damage against left-handed pitching and, with Cincinnatis playoff chances fading, he looks like the kind of player who could become available at the right time. The contract side matters too, since he is affordable now and controlled for several more seasons, which is exactly the sort of flexibility a contender like New York tends to value when it starts shopping for answers. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Have Two Trade Decisions They Cant Afford To Miss
The Yankees are heading toward the trade deadline with the kind of roster pressure that usually forces a front office to pick priorities fast. The bullpen still needs help, the catcher spot remains unsettled, and the outfield and designated hitter mix has been thinned further by injuries, leaving the club with more holes than comfortable answers as it tries to stay on course in the American League race.
Aaron Judges situation only adds to the uncertainty, and Giancarlo Stanton being hurt again makes the lineup picture even harder to read. If the Yankees decide to buy, they will have to choose carefully between adding a bat and reinforcing the pitching staff, with names like Joc Pederson and Miguel Andujar floating as possible fits while the bigger question remains how aggressive they can afford to be. [Read more 🡒]
