The Texas Rangers may be reaching a point where Corey Seager becomes more than just a name to monitor, and the Boston Red Sox are already on the list of clubs that have checked in.
On Thursday, The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal reported that this summer could be a “last call” for Texas to consider moving the five-time All-Star shortstop if the team keeps stumbling over the next few weeks. Rosenthal also said the Red Sox were among the teams that asked about Seager last offseason.
“When it comes to the possibility of the Texas Rangers trading shortstop Corey Seager, the deadline represents something of a last call,” Rosenthal wrote. “The Rangers don’t want to part with Seager, mind you.
They want to get him healthy and make a legitimate run at the postseason. But if they sputter over the next three-plus weeks, the idea of moving Seager will at least warrant internal discussion. ...
“A number of clubs, including the Boston Red Sox, asked the Rangers about Seager last offseason, sources with knowledge of the conversations said.”
Texas made its stance clear then: it would take being “overwhelmed” to pry Seager loose. That ask looks even trickier now, though his season has gone sideways by his standards. In 51 games, he’s hitting .182/.292/.374 with a .667 OPS, 10 homers and 25 RBIs, and he was placed on the Injured List on July 1.
The money is the other big hurdle. Seager is attached to a 10-year, $325 million deal, with five seasons left and just over $31 million due per year. Rosenthal noted that if the Rangers decide to seriously entertain a deal, they would likely need to eat some of the remaining salary.
Boston, though, has the kind of farm system that could at least make a conversation interesting. And the Red Sox have already signaled a willingness to add offense and absorb money. In early June, ESPN’s Buster Olney reported that Boston was telling teams exactly that.
The timing is notable, too. Over the last two weeks, the Red Sox have won 10 of their last 12 and entered Thursday three games out of a playoff spot.
There’s obvious risk here. Seager has had injury issues of his own, and Trevor Story’s injuries have already left Boston exposed at shortstop.
But when Seager is right, the bat plays. Last season, he put up 6.1 WAR in only 102 games, hitting .271/.373/.487 with 21 homers, 19 doubles and 50 RBIs.
So if Texas truly makes him available and helps with the contract, Boston should be in the mix again. If the Rangers expect a team to take on the full deal, that’s a different story. But with the Red Sox looking for offense and playing better baseball, Seager is at least a name worth keeping in the conversation.
In Other News...
Corey Seager Trade Talk Just Reached A Tense Rangers Crossroads
Corey Seager has been one of the defining players of the Rangers run since arriving in 2022, the kind of middle-of-the-order presence and steadying force around whom a front office can build. He is under contract through 2031, which on paper should make him a long-term fixture in Texas, and the team has already shown it is at least willing to listen when the subject turns to his future.
The wrinkle is timing, and it gives the Rangers a narrow window to act if they ever decide a Seager trade makes sense. Texas has considered offers for him before, but the next trade deadline is the last chance to move him without needing his approval, and that reality turns every rumor into something more serious than routine deadline noise. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Deadline Rumor Could Force A Brutal Catcher Decision
The catcher market is getting a little more interesting for Texas as the deadline approaches, and one name that has surfaced in the conversation is Minnesotas Ryan Jeffers. He has been working his way back from the injured list and recently began a rehab assignment, a reminder that clubs looking for offense behind the plate may soon have another option to weigh.
For the Rangers, the appeal is obvious enough, but so is the complication. Adding another catcher would only deepen a logjam that already includes Elias Daz and Danny Jansen, and Jansens $8 million salary next year makes the roster math even trickier if Texas keeps adding to the position. The front office has plenty to sort through before the deadline, and this is the kind of move that could force a decision it would rather avoid. [Read more 🡒]
