August 13: The Rays made it official today, recalling Caminero and optioning Mead as the corresponding move.
August 12: The Rays plan to recall top infield prospect Junior Caminero from Triple-A Durham before tomorrow’s game against the Astros, reports Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times. It’s his first promotion of the season. Caminero is already on the 40-man roster because the Rays initially called him up last September. They’ll only need to make an active roster transaction tomorrow.
Caminero, who turned 21 last month, appeared in seven games for Tampa Bay late last season. He hit his first big league homer but managed only a .278 on-base percentage. The Rays carried him on their Wild Card roster but didn’t get him into a postseason game. Tampa Bay had jumped Caminero directly from Double-A to the big leagues, so they unsurprisingly optioned him to Durham out of Spring Training this year.
The righty-hitting infielder would likely have gotten a call back to the majors sooner if not for a tough stretch of injury luck. Caminero had a pair of stints on the minor league injured list because of quad issues. He’s been limited to 53 games as a result, though he’s playing well when healthy. Caminero carries a .276/.331/.498 slash with 13 homers across 236 Triple-A plate appearances. That’s not overwhelming production in the overall league context, as Triple-A has become very favorable for hitters, even in the International League.
It’s a lot more impressive when considering that Caminero is still the age of a typical college junior. This is technically his age-20 season. He’s one of two players — along with Jackson Holliday — who have managed 200+ Triple-A plate appearances this year at that age. Jackson Chourio is the only 20-year-old to hit that threshold in the big leagues.
Not coincidentally, those players were arguably the top three prospects in the sport entering the season. Chourio has exhausted his prospect eligibility, but Holliday and Caminero respectively landed second and third on Baseball America’s updated Top 100 list. Evaluators continue to laud his massive power potential and overall offensive upside.
The Rays are in dire need of a lineup boost. They dropped tonight’s contest to the Astros 6-1 and have scored two or fewer runs in nine of their past 14 games. Only the A’s have scored fewer runs in August. Tampa Bay dropped back to .500 and sit 5.5 games back of the last Wild Card spot in the American League with three teams to surpass.
Their status as long shot contenders contributed to the front office’s decision to deal the likes of Randy Arozarena, Isaac Paredes, Zach Eflin, Jason Adam and Aaron Civale before the deadline. The Rays didn’t go full scorched earth — they held Yandy Díaz, Brandon Lowe and Pete Fairbanks most notably — but the Paredes and Arozarena subtractions make it easier to find a lineup spot for Caminero.
Topkin writes that the Rays are likely to play Caminero regularly at either third base or designated hitter. Tampa Bay has divided playing time at the hot corner between José Caballero and Curtis Mead recently. Mead has yet to hit in his young major league career. Caballero is a glove-first player who can move around the diamond. He’s capable of playing anywhere on the infield and Topkin suggests the Rays could get him some outfield work down the stretch.
Caminero picked up 10 days of major league service last year. He could accrue another 48 days of service time this year if he’s in the majors for good. That won’t be enough to impact his path to free agency or arbitration. He has already sufficient time in Triple-A this season to push his path to free agency back until at least the 2030-31 offseason. He will not qualify for arbitration until the 2027-28 winter at the earliest. Caminero could surpass the requisite 45 days on an MLB active roster to exhaust his rookie eligibility heading into next season, though. Doing so would render him ineligible for the Prospect Promotion Incentive in 2025, which would take the possibility of Caminero “earning” the Rays a bonus draft pick based on his Rookie of the Year or MVP finish off the table.
That’s a secondary consideration to getting Caminero his first real run against big league pitching. It’s a stretch to count on any young player to immediately carry a lineup, as some early-season struggles from Holliday and Chourio demonstrated. Even if Caminero doesn’t lead Tampa Bay on a furious playoff push, he’s a potential foundational player whom the Rays are hoping establishes himself as their answer at the hot corner in short order.
Bauer Poutage
Aranda, Meade, Caminero, Williams infield in 2025? Rays should be making some deals this offseason.
Bucket Number Six
I wander if they will.
Clofreesz
Franc-ly, I do not Isaac-ly know what the Rays future may look like.
vtadave
weird….
alwaysgo4two
Williams hasn’t seen AAA yet, so unless he blows them away in ST, the most likely spot will be Durham next year.
shibbyhimmy03
He did see a couple games last year didn’t do well but I do agree
CleaverGreene
Could he blow any worse than Walls?
ellisd19830
What about Isaac?
Rays in the Bay
I guess if it doesn’t affect his service time, it’s ok to call him up, right? I never understand the Rays plans. They knew their hitters were struggling all season long. They traded onlytwl infielders in a crowded infield (and DFAd another) and they got a… Infielder back… Which continues the problem of blocking their pipeline stars who are doing very well in AAA. I believe half the guys on the Rays roster could not outplay Durham right now, so the hope would be to at least dump two or three more INFs via trade or DFA and make Mead/Aranda/Caminero/BLowe permanent fixtures in the infield. If the defense is gonna suck, they might as well st least be better offensively.
mp2891
It takes Caminero out of consideration for draft pick compensation if he’s ROY or MVP, and all he would have needed was to wait another 2 weeks or so in the minors to remain eligible. Just incredibly stupid move in my opinion in a lost season.
Now they option Mead without ever really giving him a chance. If they didn’t like the kid, why didn’t they trade him when he was a top 50 prospect?
The Rays have done some good things in the past month to rebuild for the future, but the Paredes trade, the Eflin trade and now this BS really makes me wonder what is driving these decisions. Even if I squint really hard, I don’t see the logic.
LordD99
Aren’t the Rays always building for the future while remaining competitive now?
Rays in the Bay
@Lord
Continuously building for the future but never the present as always. Gets really tiring. But in this case, they’re doing neither because they’re bringing in guys whom they may not be able to fix offensively or defensively, and only blocking development of young guys playing well in Durham. It’s not improving the current team nor the future team. Head scratching.
Rays in the Bay
@mp
And this is why it’s so frustrating. Please tell me why Pinto is still in Durham wasting away while Jackson gets ample playing time. Why is Mangum wasting away when he could likely hit better than Deluca or Siri.
They do so much bait and switch that they hamper development. They want guys to be successful for cheap so they just platoon them or put them in favorable situations… But you have to let young guys struggle so they know what they’re bad at and hope they fix it. They seem to have given up on fixing Mead, Pinto, and Mangum before even giving them the proper chance to establish themselves as big leaguers. Having said that, they’ll have the patience of a saint when it comes to Taylor Walls, Alex Jackson, and Jose Siri… And now we add Morel to that list because he was an acquisition (and therefore must prove to us that RFO knows what they’re doing… Even if he strikes out 30% of the time which is looking pretty likely at this point in time).
Yes RFO usually has a few gems hidden in their trades, but their record is not spotless and this year is looking…pretty bad. Sending away cheap decent players with years of control for lottery tickets and reclamation projects was really deflating.
Every time we get a fan favorite or really good player, they ship them off. Rays management needs to sell or take lessons from the Bucs and Lightning on how to create and maintain fanbases.
sanfranb27
Can’t forget about Morel either.
jhanley108
Morel was an over hyped, selfish player in Chicago, swinging for the fence every time with zero plate discipline and a cast iron glove.. He will be out of baseball in 2 years tops.
Rays in the Bay
@Jhanley
Oh he’ll fit right in with Jackson, Siri, and all the other Rays hitters whom that profile matches.
chemfinancing
I think what their plan was to call him up on August 13th all along just because he wears no 13
Kamalafan
No fans= Yankee in 2028
MickeyTheMod
Guess what?
Muted
That’s what.
Old York
So, Yankee fans are going to turn into TB Ray fans? Noice!
Old York
Looks like the Rays are rolling the dice on Junior Caminero—hoping his power will spark the lineup and not just his bat! If he brings the heat, we might just see a season of ‘Caminero Crater’ home runs.
Rays in the Bay
Possible. So far, no bueno. He’s been fine but it’ll take way more than Junior to bring life to the Rays lineup.
energel
its about time