The Padres’ rotation has taken enough hits that a deadline add feels less like a luxury and more like a necessity, and one name now sitting in the mix is a familiar one: Michael Wacha.
Zachary D. Rymer of Bleacher Report believes San Diego will go after the Royals right-hander, which would send Wacha back to the club he pitched for in 2023. That season in San Diego was a steady one, with Wacha making 24 starts and finishing with a 3.22 ERA.
Wacha, who is 35, has spent the last three seasons in Kansas City and has kept his ERA below 4.00 in each of them. This year, he has made 18 starts and posted a 3.45 ERA across 114.2 innings.
The appeal is obvious for a Padres team that has had to lean hard on its bullpen. Wacha has been one of the more reliable innings-eaters in the game, reaching at least 124 innings and 23 starts in each of the past six seasons. That kind of stability would give San Diego a chance to ease the load on a relief group that has already been stretched thin.
His contract also makes the fit more realistic. Wacha is on a three-year, $51 million deal, with two seasons left at $14 million per year. There is also a club option for 2028, which gives any acquiring team some added flexibility.
That price tag should keep the trade cost in a more manageable range, especially compared with some of the other pitchers the Padres have been tied to. A.J. Preller has built a reputation for making aggressive moves without emptying the cupboard for non-star pieces, and that could matter here.
San Diego does not have a deep stash of top-tier prospects to dangle, and it would be unlikely to part with its best young talent for Wacha. Still, the organization does have a few minor league players who have started to break out this season and could draw interest from Kansas City.
With the Padres short on healthy starters, Wacha would at least give them a proven arm to plug into the mix. Nick Pivetta and Joe Musgrove are expected back at some point after the All-Star Game, but Wacha could serve as a useful insurance move before then.
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Britos path back has been encouraging enough to earn him another look, with the right-hander performing well in rehab outings at Triple-A El Paso and Double-A San Antonio. For now, the bigger issue is simply getting him available, because the Padres injured list keeps growing and the need for pitching help keeps getting more urgent by the day. [Read more 🡒]
