The Houston Astros have a clear need as the trade deadline approaches: another outfielder who bats left-handed. ESPN’s Jeff Passan thinks the answer could come from Toronto, where Daulton Varsho has emerged as a “dream” target for Houston.
That idea is tied closely to the Blue Jays’ uncertain place in the standings. Toronto has slipped well behind in the AL East, but the club is still only 2.5 games back of the Texas Rangers for the third and final Wild Card spot, which leaves its deadline direction far from settled.
Passan framed Varsho’s name as more of a product of Toronto’s situation than a sign the Blue Jays are eager to move him. “Varsho's inclusion here is more a reflection of the current standings than any desire from Toronto to offload players. One bonanza week and the Blue Jays could be right back in the postseason mix,” Passan wrote.
He also pointed to the bigger question facing Toronto if the season doesn’t turn around. “As it stands, however, they are faced with a very difficult choice if things don't change: One season after nearly winning the World Series, is their mediocre first half going to prompt them to move their free agents-to-be?” Passan added.
Varsho is one of those free agents-to-be, and he’s still giving the Blue Jays exactly what they’ve come to expect in center field. His defense remains elite, and at the plate he’s hitting .246/.314/.399 with seven home runs and a 93 OPS+ through 80 games.
For Houston, the price might not be steep. A lower-level prospect or two could be enough to get a deal done, and if Varsho helps push the Astros into the postseason, that kind of move would be easy to justify.
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Daulton Varsho has become one of the more interesting names sitting on Torontos long-term radar, even as the Blue Jays continue to sort out what kind of club they are going to be over the next few months. He is still an impending free agent, which means every stretch of the season now carries a little extra weight for a player whose mix of defense and offense can still draw attention from teams looking for help in center field and beyond.
The Blue Jays do not have to make a snap call, but the pressure is building as the trade deadline gets closer and the front office weighs playoff position against contract risk. If Toronto keeps hanging around the race, Varsho is the kind of player they would prefer to keep in the fold, yet if the season turns and the club starts thinking more about selling than chasing, his name is going to be hard to ignore. [Read more 🡒]
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Otto Lopezs path from afterthought to impact bat has become one of those reminders that player development does not always follow a neat line. Toronto moved on from him in January 2024 after he had received only limited chances with the club, and since then his career has taken off in a way few around the Blue Jays could have expected.
Now in Miami, Lopez has turned into one of the more productive hitters in the sport, pairing a .343 average with nine home runs and 17 steals. He is also sitting atop MLB in batting average, which only sharpens the contrast with what Toronto saw before he left and gives Blue Jays fans another what-if to file away. [Read more 🡒]
