First-Place Rays Face One Trade Deadline Pressure They Can't Ignore

As the trade deadline approaches, the Tampa Bay Rays are primed to bolster their already impressive roster to solidify their playoff prospects and address key areas of need.

The Rays have spent the first half of the season looking like the Rays again.

After back-to-back fourth-place finishes in the AL East, Tampa Bay is back in familiar territory: outperforming expectations, sitting first in the division, and heading toward July with the best record in the American League. A sweep of the Diamondbacks pushed the club to its longest active winning streak in baseball at five games, and the Yankees’ four-game sweep in Boston over the weekend opened the door for Tampa Bay to move back atop the division by a game and a half.

The playoff picture looks sturdy enough that a collapse would have to be extreme to keep the Rays out. But there’s a real prize in finishing first in the AL East. The division winner will almost certainly end up with one of the two best records in the league and the first-round bye that comes with it.

That’s where Tampa Bay’s trade deadline posture gets interesting. The Rays rarely sort themselves cleanly into buyer or seller.

Like the Brewers and Guardians, they live in the middle - constantly reshaping the roster to avoid a long rebuild while working around payroll limits. They dealt Brandon Lowe, arguably the best offensive second baseman in the game, just a few months ago, and they enter this stretch with a clean long-term payroll picture and one of the deepest farm systems in the league.

That setup gives them room to chase major league help. And with the American League shaping up as a weaker playoff field, Tampa Bay has a chance to press its edge.

Record: 48-33 (93.8% playoff odds, per FanGraphs)

The Rays’ list of possible needs is longer than you’d expect for a team in first place: high-leverage relief, outfield, second base, back-end starter, catcher. The offense has mostly been driven by Junior Caminero, Yandy Díaz and Jonathan Aranda, while the rest of the lineup has lagged behind despite the group’s usual knack for putting the ball in play.

The bigger concern, though, is on the mound.

Tampa Bay has leaned hard on a bullpen that has had to function without Manuel Rodríguez and Edwin Uceta. Both right-handers have been out all season - Rodríguez while recovering from last summer’s elbow surgery, Uceta because of a pair of shoulder injuries. The expectation is that both could return later in the year, but they do not appear likely to be ready before the August 3 trade deadline.

For now, the Rays have squeezed strong work out of closer Bryan Baker. Kevin Kelly, with a career year built on ground balls, has earned his way into leverage innings.

Garrett Cleavinger remains one of the more gifted lefty relievers in the sport, even if the walks are up and the swing-and-miss has backed up from last season. Cam Booser has also given them good results in a very small sample after a dominant couple of months in Triple-A, but the bigger question is whether that level is real for a 34-year-old they signed to a minor league deal.

There’s still a path to a quality bullpen here if Cleavinger straightens out, Booser keeps dealing and Uceta and Rodríguez return at the levels Tampa Bay expects. But that’s a lot of moving parts.

Until then, the Rays are carrying Craig Kimbrel, Cole Sulser and Casey Legumina in the middle innings, and the numbers show the strain: Tampa Bay relievers rank 22nd in ERA and have allowed the second-highest home run rate.

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