The Texas Rangers have been linked to one of the more intriguing names on the trade deadline board, and it’s a fit that would instantly reshape their catching picture.
On Monday morning, ESPN’s updated rankings of the top MLB trade deadline candidates from Kiley McDaniel and Jeff Passan placed Minnesota Twins catcher Ryan Jeffers at No. 21. Texas was listed among the best fits, alongside the New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pittsburgh Pirates, and San Diego Padres.
Jeffers is the kind of addition that would make sense on pure talent alone. The 29-year-old has been sidelined since May 19 with a fractured left hamate bone, but he started a rehab assignment with Triple-A St.
Paul last weekend and looked ready to move back toward the big leagues. In three games with the Saints, he went 5-for-11 with a home run and a double.
Before the injury, Jeffers was putting together the best stretch of his career. Over 37 games, he hit .295/.408/.541 with a 165 wRC+, along with seven home runs and 26 RBI. His work behind the plate has also stood out, with +1 Block Above Average, +1 Framing Run, and 22 wins in 36 ABS challenges.
Even with the missed time, Jeffers still ranks fourth among AL catchers in fWAR at 1.7. Only the Detroit Tigers’ Dillon Dingler (4.0), the Athletics’ Shea Langeliers (2.2), and the Baltimore Orioles’ Adley Rutschman (2.0) sit ahead of him in 2026.
That’s why the fit in Texas is so obvious. The Rangers have been searching for offense, and their 376 runs rank 26th in MLB. If Jeffers returns to the level he showed before the injury, he would give the lineup a real lift.
But a move for Jeffers would come with a catch of its own: it could push Elias Díaz out of Texas.
That’s not a small thing, either. Díaz has become the Rangers’ best catcher since arriving about a month ago, hitting .290/.297/.452 with a 105 wRC+, two homers, four doubles, and 11 RBI while also providing above-average defense.
Kyle Higashioka would be the easier player to move on from because of his expiring contract, but Danny Jansen is under contract for $8 million next year. If Texas decided it no longer needed Jansen, taking on the rest of that deal would be a tough sell, even if the club should.
A salary-dump trade for Jansen is possible, but the market may not be there. He has been on the injured list since early last month with a right forearm strain and has hit just .171/.277/.309 with a 69 wRC+ in 41 games this season.
So if the Rangers do decide to buy, a catcher upgrade like Jeffers could make sense - but it would also leave Texas weighing what to do with a catcher group that has changed quickly and may be on the verge of changing again.
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