The Juan Soto trade has already lived several baseball lives in San Diego, and somehow it may have another twist left.
What started as the move that put the Padres squarely in the sport’s spotlight has since become a constant source of roster hindsight. Then came the Soto-to-New York chapter. Now the story has circled back to the other side of the original deal, because the Nationals DFA’d Robert Hassell III - one of the former Padres prospects in that package - and San Diego should at least take a look.
Washington needed a 40-man roster spot for reliever Eddy Yean, and Hassell was the odd man out. That’s a sharp fall for a player once viewed as a “jewel” in the Soto return.
Hassell was the No. 8 overall pick in the 2020 MLB Draft and was supposed to be the polished bat in the deal. But James Wood, CJ Abrams, and MacKenzie Gore have all moved ahead of him and found success at the major-league level, while Hassell’s path has gone the other way.
He’s still only 24, and there’s still some appeal in the profile. Hassell has big league experience, but the numbers haven’t changed the conversation much: .223/.257/.315 with 3 home runs, 18 RBI, and a 61 OPS+ in 197 at-bats.
That’s also the reality of where his value sits now. The Nationals are willing to risk losing him, which says plenty. But for the Padres, that doesn’t necessarily mean they should ignore him.
San Diego is not in a position to keep spending premium prospect capital, and the farm system has already been thinned out by years of aggressive moves. A former top prospect available for almost nothing is exactly the kind of situation that deserves at least a check-in.
There’s no reason to expect Hassell would step in and fix anything right away. He’s hitting .215/.304/.289 with two home runs and 21 RBI in 63 games in Triple-A, and if the Padres were desperate for an immediate left-handed bat, they probably would have gone after Jarred Kelenic one of the three times he was DFA’d this season.
Still, the lack of instant impact is part of why Hassell is on the market in the first place. He also isn’t arbitration eligible until 2029, which gives him years of control. At that point, the question becomes simple: what is there to lose?
The Padres could use more outfield depth, and a younger, cheaper option would fit that need. And beyond the roster fit, there’s the obvious full-circle angle.
Getting a piece of the Soto trade back would be a strange little loop, the kind of move that feels both awkward and perfectly on-brand for how this saga has unfolded. San Diego sent Hassell away in one of the most aggressive trades in franchise history, and now it may have a shot to bring him back at the lowest point of his value.
In Other News...
Padres Depth Shakeup Could Be Just The Start Of More Moves
The Padres minor league depth chart got a noticeable reset this week, with a cluster of moves that touched multiple levels of the system. Kannon Kemp was reinstated from the injured list, Johan Moreno moved up to Triple-A, and left-handers Ryan Och and Jamie Hitt both advanced to Double-A, giving San Diego a clearer look at some arms it wants to keep moving.
Jos Leclerc is also working his way back from shoulder surgery, and his return could force another round of decisions as the organization sorts out roles and innings across the system. With the draft signing deadline approaching, the Padres may not be done churning the bottom of the roster, and these moves feel like the first part of a larger shuffle rather than the last. [Read more 🡒]
Padres Could Finally Make The Deadline Move Their Lineup Desperately Needs
As the trade deadline approaches, the Padres are still searching for a lineup upgrade that can change the feel of their offense, and one name from a division rival has started to surface in the conversation. The fit is obvious on paper: a productive outfielder in his prime, the kind of bat San Diego has been trying to add, and a player the front office has already evaluated closely in the recent past.
The complication is just as obvious. Dealing within the NL West is never simple, especially when the target is coming off a strong season and comes with years of team control still attached. ESPNs Kiley McDaniel and Jeff Passan have both suggested there is at least a real chance this gets done before the deadline, but for the Padres the harder part may be turning interest into something the Giants would actually accept. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Could Face A Brutal Deadline Call On Reliable Starter
The Padres are still shopping for rotation help as the deadline approaches, and the need is easy to understand. Injuries have thinned the staff and the depth behind the front end has not offered much cushion, so San Diego is casting a wide net for a starter who can take the ball regularly and steady things over the stretch run.
One name that has surfaced is Michael Wacha, a familiar arm with a track record of giving a club dependable innings and a contract that runs through 2027 with a club option for 2028. Any move of that sort would come down to price as much as fit, especially with San Diego trying to balance urgency against the cost of adding another established starter. [Read more 🡒]
