As the Yankees’ deadline chatter swirls around the marquee names - Lombard, LaGrange, Jones - there’s another layer to the conversation that matters just as much. Beneath the headliners, a few quieter prospects have started to build real trade value, the kind that doesn’t dominate the headlines but can absolutely help push a deal across the finish line.
That’s where Thatcher Hurd, Kyle Carr and Stiven Marinez come in. None of them is likely to headline a blockbuster on his own. All three, though, have done enough lately to become useful chips as August 3 approaches.
Hurd is the most obvious stock riser of the bunch. The right-hander, taken by the Yankees in the third round in 2024 out of LSU, never got to make his professional debut in his draft year.
Then Tommy John surgery in February 2025 erased his first season before it could begin. This spring, he was still clearly finding his way back, flashing ability in between rough outings and carrying a 4.15 ERA that didn’t tell the whole story.
Last week, though, Hurd delivered the kind of outing that changes the conversation. In his eighth start back from surgery, he struck out 10 in 4.2 innings, allowed one hit, didn’t give up a run and generated 15 total whiffs.
His fastball touched 96 mph. Overall, the season has been solid for Hurd, especially in terms of strikeouts and a sub .200 opponent batting average.
He’s still a long way from a major league rotation, but for a rebuilding club willing to wait two or three years, he looks like the type of buy-low arm that can sweeten a package right now, when his health and momentum make him more appealing than he’ll probably be later.
Carr’s case is different, but just as interesting. The left-hander doesn’t scream projection at first glance, yet he keeps producing.
At Double-A Somerset, he logged 83 strikeouts in 66.2 innings with only 27 walks before earning a bump to Triple-A. His ERA sits around 4.00, which won’t jump off the page, but the strikeouts, command and lack of consistently hard contact tell a more useful story.
He’s also been effective against hitters from both sides of the plate, and his sweeper has been a real weapon against lefties.
The honest read on Carr is that he profiles more as a No. 4-5 starter than a frontline arm. That said, teams looking for dependable innings know exactly why a pitcher like this matters.
In a Yankees system that already includes LaGrange, Hess, Cunningham and Hampton, Carr stands out as a solid-floor lefty with real usefulness. For a contender, he can help round out a rotation.
For a rebuilding club, he can be the kind of steady innings-eater that gives a staff some shape.
Marinez is the youngest name here and the furthest from the majors, but he’s also the one whose stock is being shaped by upside more than proximity. The Yankees signed him in the winter of 2024 after missing on other international targets and redirected part of their international bonus pool to get him. So far, that move looks sharp.
In the Florida Complex League, the teenager is hitting .304 with a .439 OBP. He’s a shortstop with above-average speed, solid arm strength and the kind of twitchy athleticism that makes scouts think everyday player.
His 2025 DSL debut also showed strong plate discipline: Marinez was one of only eight DSL players to finish with more than 40 walks and 20 stolen bases. The bat path still needs work and the power is developing, but the hit tool and on-base instincts are already showing up.
That’s why he belongs in the trade discussion, even if he’s nowhere near MLB-ready. A rebuilding team will pay for a teenage shortstop with this kind of athletic profile and offensive feel.
As a secondary piece in a larger deal, he could be the name that gets a rival front office interested. For the Yankees, that’s the point: he gives them another layer of value to work with before the minor league picture gets more complicated.
None of these three names is likely to decide a trade on his own. They don’t have to.
Hurd brings a healthy arm trending up after surgery, Carr offers reliable left-handed pitching depth, and Marinez gives a package some upside and dream factor. That’s the kind of supporting cast that can matter when Brian Cashman gets into the finer points of a deadline negotiation.
In Other News...
Yankees Suddenly Linked To The Deadline Move Fans Have Been Demanding
The Yankees recent slide has only sharpened the conversation around what they might need to do before the trade deadline, especially with the club looking for a way to steady itself after a rough stretch. With about a month left before the 2026 deadline, the focus is drifting toward big-name pitching help, and one familiar front-line arm has started to surface in that conversation as a possible fit for a team trying to get back on track.
Sandy Alcantara is the kind of starter who would change the tone of any deadline discussion, and his name carries obvious appeal for a Yankees club that wants more certainty on the mound. Even so, any pursuit comes with the usual questions tied to his recent injury history and how he would hold up over the rest of the season, which is part of why this feels like the sort of move that could dominate the final weeks before the deadline. [Read more 🡒]
Yankees Deadline Reunion Rumor Raises Big Question About This Lineup
The Yankees offense has spent much of the season looking like a group still searching for a spark, which is why any deadline chatter tied to middle-infield help is going to draw attention. One name floating into the conversation is a familiar one, and the appeal is obvious on the surface: a bat with enough familiarity to make the fit feel easy, at least in theory, for a club trying to patch over its lineup issues.
But the deeper look is where the uncertainty starts to creep in. The player in question has dealt with oblique trouble for much of the year, and even with the Yankees clearly needing more production, there are reasons to wonder whether this is the kind of move that solves the right problem. For a team under pressure to hit better now, the deadline will be about more than reunion nostalgia. [Read more 🡒]
