Pirates Trade Rumor Just Took An Unexpected Turn At Deadline

The Pirates might reconsider targeting Isaac Paredes as they weigh the risks and rewards of a trade amidst evolving team dynamics and player performances.

Jeff Passan’s latest trade board has the Pirates circling a familiar name, but the better fit might be a pitcher instead of the bat that’s been linked to Pittsburgh for months.

Isaac Paredes was one of the most talked-about Pirates targets over the offseason, and those rumors followed the Houston Astros third baseman into spring training. Passan now has Pittsburgh as a possible landing spot for Paredes again, even though the Astros star was not included as a target in the original version of his top 100 trade candidates.

But the fit looks different now than it did in the winter. Konnor Griffin’s ring finger injury and the long recovery timetable could push infield help higher on Ben Cherington’s list, yet the Pirates no longer have the same obvious opening at third base that existed before.

Back then, the position looked like the clearest hole on the roster, and if no move was made, Jared Triolo seemed likely to handle the hot corner with Griffin taking shortstop. Instead, Nick Gonzales has given Pittsburgh something real with his contact-driven production at third.

That’s where the Paredes question gets tricky. Gonzales is hitting .308/.370/.391 with a 112 wRC+ at the All-Star break, while Paredes sits at .254/.348/.419 with a 118 wRC+. The styles are different, but the gap in production is not dramatic enough to make Paredes an automatic upgrade.

There’s also a bigger obstacle: Gonzales can’t really cover shortstop for more than a cameo, which means the Pirates would still be leaning heavily on Triolo while Griffin is out, no matter what they do at third.

And the Astros’ motivation to move Paredes has changed too. In the winter, Houston had five infielders for four spots with Paredes, Jeremy Peña, Carlos Correa, Jose Altuve, and Christian Walker all in the mix.

That logjam disappeared when Correa suffered a season-ending ankle injury on May 5. Even with Houston’s rough start, the club has stayed in the playoff chase, and with an owner who isn’t inclined to wave the white flag, Paredes looks like a tough get unless Pittsburgh comes in early with a serious offer.

The name that makes more sense for the Pirates from Passan’s list is Washington Nationals left-hander Foster Griffin.

Pitching is the quieter need here, but it’s a real one. Paul Skenes is stuck in a rut, Mitch Keller has imploded, and there are legitimate questions about how many innings Braxton Ashcraft and Bubba Chandler can handle.

Griffin would help on multiple fronts. He has emerged as an intriguing arm after three years in Japan’s NPB, and he’s put together 110 1/3 innings across 19 starts with a 2.77 ERA, almost a strikeout per inning, and a sharp 5.8% walk rate.

He’d also give Pittsburgh something it doesn’t currently have in the rotation: a quality left-hander. The Pirates’ starting staff is entirely right-handed, so Griffin would bring a different look and a useful change of pace.

Paredes is still the name with the louder rumor history, but Griffin is the cleaner match for Pittsburgh with about three weeks left before the August 3 deadline.

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