The Tampa Bay Rays have spent much of this season patching holes and keeping the lineup afloat through a wave of injuries. Now, one of the players they were counting on to help stabilize the outfield has run into another problem of his own.
Jake Fraley’s return has been pushed back after a setback tied to the hernia surgery that has already kept him out since May 15. He had been working back with Triple-A Durham on a rehab assignment, but that process has now been interrupted.
Marc Topkin of the Tampa Times reported on X that Fraley was pulled off the assignment and will be examined soon to learn what caused the latest issue and how serious it is.
“#Rays OF Jake Fraley was pulled off his rehab assignment at AAA @DurhamBulls due to issues related to his recent hernia surgery. He will soon see a doctor to determine the cause and extent of the setback,” Topkin wrote in his post.
Fraley signed a one-year deal with Tampa Bay after being released during the offseason, and the Rays expected him to be part of the reshaped outfield mix. That group changed a lot over the winter, and Fraley was supposed to be a meaningful piece of it.
Before the injury, the left-handed hitter had put together a .232/.300/.390 line in 90 plate appearances, with two home runs and seven doubles. He also offered the kind of platoon value Tampa Bay had in mind, especially with his track record against right-handed pitching.
With Fraley unavailable, Jonny DeLuca and Victor Mesa Jr. have been getting more run, and both have given the Rays better production than what they were getting from corner outfield spots earlier in 2025.
The timing of Fraley’s setback could also nudge Tampa Bay’s front office toward being more aggressive before the MLB trade deadline. Another bat in the outfield would fit behind third baseman Junior Caminero, designated hitter Yandy Diaz and first baseman Jonathan Aranda.
If the Rays don’t go the outfield route, they could also look to strengthen the middle of the infield. Taylor Walls is still providing light offense at shortstop, and the club has not replaced Brandon Lowe’s production at second base, with Gavin Lux still sidelined by injury.
In Other News...
Rays Weighing A Real Second Base Backup Plan At Deadline
The Rays are still looking for help at second base as the trade deadline approaches, and the search has a clear postseason purpose. Tampa Bay wants to fortify the roster for a run, with the front office exploring infield options that could stabilize the position and deepen the lineup for the stretch drive.
If the bigger swing does not come together, San Francisco infielder Luis Arraez has emerged as a name to watch. He is under contract through 2026 and has been productive this season, giving Tampa Bay a possible alternative if the market for top-end middle infield help gets too expensive or too complicated. [Read more 🡒]
Rays Just Got Linked To A Deadline Swing Fans Rarely See
The trade deadline chatter around Tarik Skubal has a way of pulling in contenders from every corner, and Tampa Bay is right in the middle of that conversation. Multiple teams have checked in on the Detroit left-hander, with the Rays among the clubs monitoring a pitcher who would instantly reshape any rotation he landed in, even if the path to prying him loose looks steep.
For Tampa Bay, the interest fits the usual deadline pattern of keeping options open while the market sorts itself out. The Yankees have been linked too, but their pitching picture has gotten murkier after an injury on the staff, and the broader sense around the industry is that this is the kind of swing that rarely gets completed. The Rays are also looking at other names as the deadline nears, which suggests they are preparing for a range of outcomes rather than betting everything on one difficult chase. [Read more 🡒]
This Rays Draft Just Sent A Clear Message About The Future
The Rays used the 2026 draft to make a clear statement about where they want to build next, leaning hard into high school talent and giving their farm system a jolt of long-term upside. Their first five picks set the tone with athletic middle infielders and pitchers who bring unusual deliveries and room to grow, a mix that fits Tampa Bays usual appetite for development but pushes even further toward prep position players and arms.
By the end of Day Two, the pattern only became more obvious. Tampa Bay kept targeting pitchers with low arm slots, advanced spin and limited mileage, the kind of profiles that can take time to mature but also offer real payoff if the organization gets them right. The result was a class that says plenty about the Rays future direction, even before the most obvious centerpiece of it all is fully unpacked. [Read more 🡒]
