With the trade deadline set for Aug. 3, a handful of American League clubs are staring at a stretch run that could reshape everything. Some are trying to chase down a playoff spot.
Others are deciding whether to push in chips now or start thinking about what comes next. Either way, the pressure is real.
Boston is one of the most intriguing teams on the board. Not long ago, the Red Sox looked like a clear seller, but nine straight wins heading into the All-Star break changed the mood fast.
They’re 46-48, sitting 10 games back in the AL East, yet only a half-game out of a wild-card spot. That kind of position makes the deadline tricky, especially with Sonny Gray and Aroldis Chapman potentially staying put if Boston keeps rolling.
The second half won’t be gentle, either. The Red Sox come out of the break with 10 straight games against AL East opponents, and the first four are at home against the division-leading Rays.
The Yankees are in a different kind of squeeze. They sit between Boston and Tampa Bay in the division standings, but the bigger issue is simple: they still haven’t found a steady way to win without Aaron Judge in the lineup.
Their second half starts with three home games against the Dodgers, and that series could say a lot about how urgent New York feels by deadline time. They need help.
The real question is how hard they’re willing to go get it.
Tampa Bay, meanwhile, is the team everyone else is chasing. The Rays own the best record in the American League at 56-38, and they’ll be put to the test right away with an eight-game road trip through Boston and Toronto.
That stretch could go a long way toward showing how legitimate this team really is. The deadline brings another layer, too.
There are rumors the Rays have interest in Detroit ace Tarik Skubal, but landing him would take a massive prospect package.
Detroit’s situation may be the most complicated of all. Skubal’s near-term future is front and center because he’s on track to become a free agent after the season.
That leaves the Tigers with a major decision: lock him up on a big long-term deal, trade him for a haul at the deadline, or keep him through the end of the year and try to work something out later. That last option comes with its own uncertainty, especially with the possibility of a lockout in the offseason.
And this isn’t just about one pitcher. Detroit is 44-52, but still only 6.5 games out in the AL Central and 3.5 games back in the wild-card race.
The bigger question is whether the Tigers think they can still make a real run.
Seattle rounds out the list, and the numbers tell a strange story. The Mariners’ pitching staff has been one of the best in baseball, posting a 3.61 ERA that ranks sixth in the majors, but that hasn’t translated into enough wins.
At 48-49, they’re 1.5 games behind the Rangers in the AL West and still control their own wild-card fate. Luis Castillo is a name to watch as a possible trade chip, with MLB insider Bob Nightengale saying he could be on the move if Seattle decides to boost its position for the final stretch.
The Mariners also have a seven-game road trip coming up through Texas and Los Angeles, facing the Rangers and Dodgers right before the deadline. That trip could have a big say in how aggressive Seattle gets.
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Donovans absence has been felt in a lineup that has struggled to find enough offense, and Seattle has been waiting for some kind of jolt from a player acquired in February. Since arriving, he has been limited to 25 games, so even a rehab assignment carries added weight as the Mariners try to get him back into the mix and see how quickly he can move toward a return. [Read more 🡒]
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Mariners Suddenly Have A Tough New Decision On Their Young Arms
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Bryan Woo is the obvious name in that conversation, but he is hardly the only one. Seattle also has top prospects like Ryan Anderson pushing toward the majors, and the organization has to decide how aggressive it wants to be before those pitchers get expensive through the arbitration process. The Mariners have already made their comfort with extensions clear in other parts of the roster, but the pitching side is where the next big test may come, and the Burns deal only sharpens the clock. [Read more 🡒]
