The Rays are routinely one of the league’s most creative teams, and a report from USA Today’s Bob Nightengale this morning suggests that they figure to remain flexible this summer even after being aggressive to add right-hander Bryan Baker to their bullpen in a trade with the Orioles last week. Tampa currently boasts a 50-46 record and is just half a game out of the final AL Wild Card spot, but Nightengale suggests that isn’t going to stop them from listening to offers on young right-hander Taj Bradley.
On the surface, a contending club listening to offers on a starting pitcher who’s just 24 years old and remains under team control for four-and-a-half seasons would be hard to believe—even for a small-market club that frequently trades players well before free agency. The Rays aren’t a typical club, however. Tampa has never shied away from making controversial or surprising trades, as seen just last year when they shipped out third baseman Isaac Paredes with three-and-a-half years of team control remaining on his deal.
That’s one year less than Bradley currently has, but Paredes was a far more established player who had already made it to the All-Star game previously in his career. Bradley, by contrast, has largely pitched like a back-of-the-rotation starter in his career with a 4.70 ERA in 346 1/3 innings despite his status as a former top propsect. The right-hander has never posted even an average ERA+, having topped out at 97 last year, and while he entered 2025 with a tantalizing 27.3% strikeout rate during his time in the majors the whiffs have dropped off significantly this season to leave him striking out just 20.4% of his opponents.
All of that could make now a decent time for the Rays to listen to offers on the right-hander. He’d surely have more trade value in the offseason if he managed to put it all together and dominate down the stretch, but if Bradley’s performance doesn’t improve then his value will only drop from here as he gets older and further away from those high-strikeout seasons he opened his career with. Given the fact that virtually every contender is in need of starting pitching help at this point, if the Rays are one of the few teams willing to dangle a cost-controlled young starter with long-term team control it’s not hard to imagine them recouping significant value for both 2025 and the future by dealing Bradley now.
The Rays don’t exactly have a surplus of rotation depth, with no surefire starters waiting in the wings at Triple-A in the event of an injury or trade. With that being said, however, Tampa does have Shane McClanahan on a rehab assignment with an eye towards returning at some point in the second half. They’d be down an arm in the meantime if they dealt Bradley, but the club has been very comfortable with getting creative to piece together innings with multi-inning relievers and swing men in the past. Joe Boyle, Connor Seabold, and Joe Rock are all on the 40-man roster and could be tasked with handling some of the innings vacated by a hypothetical Bradley trade, to say nothing of non-roster pieces like Logan Workman.
If the Rays were to shop Bradley, there would surely be plenty of interest. The Padres and Astros stand out as surefire contenders who need starting pitching help this summer but may not have the budget to stomach the salary of a veteran player. Bradley could also be of interest to some clubs looking to sell. The Diamondbacks, Braves, Twins, Orioles, Nationals, and Guardians are all clubs that seem like potential or likely sellers this season with near-term postseason aspirations who could benefit from adding a controllable rotation piece like Bradley, and each has pieces that could surely improve the Rays if they decide to push in for the playoffs this year.
Marlin
The Rays have intimate knowledge of his game and are willing to trade him away at such a young age with so much control.
Holee, I agree with your concern/sarcasm. They likely are just seeing what offers would be made. His immediate cost is minimal so even if he pitches lights out for the rest of 25, next year wouldn’t be bad (I’m assuming he’s not signed long term as it wasn’t in the article).
He can be controlled for 4 years after this season
Thanks for the info.
Cow – Maybe.he sounded off after the moron Cash pulled him early in his last start?
They traded Joe Ryan for Nelson Cruz too. The rays aren’t infallible
Brandon – Excellent point, wow did the Rays get screwed on that one!
A very rare occurrence.
“Everything must go”
Stu Sternberg.
He was dealing vs the red sox
Yeah unfortunately he probably won’t be traded to a team in the AL East.
BAL needs to take a serious look at Bradley. The years of control and upside he brings should be exactly what Elias shops for. O’s are loaded with position players which is probably what TB is looking for in return.
Taj Bradley throws hard but his fastball gets hit very hard. It’s not a plus pitch and he throws it far too often. There’s some upside here but I think he’s a #4 starter.
If that’s the price—sure. But I’m not paying for the potential of being a #2
I would never trade a pitcher to the Rays, nor would I ever take one in return.
Ain’t that the truth. Maybe a bullpen arm for cheap. They want to trade Taj because they know there’s value in his age and perceived “ceiling” but he’s so inconsistent, it’s gotta be tough to keep trotting him out there.
The Sox received Eovaldi from the Rays in 18. I realize that was years ago but it worked out pretty well for Boston
Dew – Exactly! And Beeker never amounted to anything.
Padres did alright in the Snell deal. preller has gotten the better of a couple deals with TB
Phils have done well with Cristopher Sanchez and Jose Alvarado dealing with the Rays – very well indeed.
I saw Bradley twice in Durham; wasn’t impressed. Sure the arm has the heat, but the rep was far bigger than the reality on the mound. If you can buy him as an upside play…sure.
Brooks Raley for Keyshawn Askew.
Billy Eppler done good.
Wayback Machine
Bartolome Fortunato plus Zambrano for Scott Kazmir. Oops, LOLMETS
Tris Speaker, Babe Ruth, Sparky Lyle, Wade Boggs, Mookie Betts.
LOL Redsox
The Padres sent two talented pitching prospects to the Rays in the Blake Snell deal in Luis Patino and Cole Wilcox. Snell pitched very well in SD, including a CY and the young arms did squat. Granted the Rays also got two bats in Francisco Mejia and Blake Hunt in that deal.
Oddly enough the Rays might have been Prellers’ best trading partner with the Snell, Jake Cronenwoth, and Jason Adam trades.
But yeah, if the Rays are shopping a pre arb starter that is a big red flag in itself. You’d expect them to squeeze at least another cheap year, maybe two, of production before cashing him in.
Joe Ryan looks pretty good in Minnesota
Jd – That’s who I’d target, but the price will be high.
Trade with Tampa at your own risk. All that glitters is not gold.
I’m a Rays fan. If they are giving up on a 24 year old with that much control, that should tell you something.
It’s how they continue to build and sustain the flow coming up. One or two prospects isn’t enough for them. They need much more, so moving someone extremely attractive with control will pull in a nice return that can resupply. Soto deal Washington pulled off in combination with high draft picks got them back to a foundation to build off of. Rays have more pitchers than the article lends you to believe – McC, Baz, Rass, Pepiot…no different than what they did with the Pirates a few years ago. Glasnow? Rays may not win many WS, but to contend each year with the budget they have, I’m amazed at how they do it.
I know who the Rays starting pitchers are. But Mcclanahan is always one pitch away from another surgery. Rass is on an innings limit and is capped at 5 innings going forward. Baz, Pepiot, and Boyle are all fine. Chris Archer is who they traded to Pittsburgh. Glasnow i believe got traded bc they couldn’t afford him anymore. They can afford Bradley, so this is not really how they normally operate. I can;t think of another pitcher they traded away that wasn’t due to them becoming a free agent, or because were going to cost too much for them.
You are exactly right. Kyle Snyder has them believing the faster your spin rate is, the better you will do, instead of having them focus on changing speeds and trying to locate pitches. Nearly every one of their starters who have been with them over 2 years since Snyder has been in control has been under the knife with TJS or an injury that keeps them out for a year. McClanahan, Springs, Rasmussen, McKay, Glasnow, and Baz are some of the most famous ones. I would keep Bradley for when Pepiot blows out his arm and they need someone to replace his spot in the rotation.
As a Rays fan, I can’t wait until we can roll the dice with these new owners. Perhaps they will spend on some top tier free agents and extend guys like Bradley and Caminero instead of trading them. $ternberg can rot in hell with Monfort, Nutting, Reinsdorf, and other owners that won’t spend to compete.
He’s wildly inconsistent, if someone offers to overpay, why not?
Chris Archer trade 2.0
Pirates Front Office is blocking the Rays calls.
Chris archer was actually good
was thinking same thing. This isn’t much like Chris Archer at all.
Archer was all downside risk.
Taj is all upside returns.
Keep him. He’s not very good.
I’d be scared if the rays don’t sell at the deadline because I have no idea how they have a playoff spot right now when almost their entire roster is a bunch of unproven guys
I need them and the blue jays to regress or otherwise teams like Boston and Seattle and KC or Minnesota will all get left out
KC and MN need to play .500 before they can even think playoffs.
Trade him to the Mets please. Super curious to see what the Stearns pitching lab could do with his talented arm.
Mayb he’ll actually start being a decent SP on a new tm
I wouldn’t deal with Tampa. They know what they’re doing talent wise. They are just cheap owners. They could be a great team if they invested in players instead of trading them all the time.
Do you mean if they held onto:
Longoria
Snell
Glasnow
Crawford
BJ Upton
Archer
Parades is better than Caminero?
Who should they have held onto longer term?
Snell, Glasnow, Price, Joe Ryan, keep Paredes and have one play 3rd, one play short, or split them between 1 position and DH, Adames, Arozarena, and Johnny Gomes are just some of the decent players they have traded and have done well with other teams or where the verdict is still out. Why not keep ace type pitchers like Snell and Glasnow and build a super rotation like the Dodgers? But after losing the 2020 World Series, they trade their best starter in Snell for duds like Patino and Mejia. Snell, Glasnow, and McClanahan would’ve made a hell of a top 3rd of a rotation, and Ryan and some combination of Baz, Littell, Bradley, and the next promising rookie in the 4 and 5 spots would give them the best rotation in the league. With Adames still there, they lose out on Rasmussen, but don’t need him with all the arms they kept. Put Adames at 2b, Paredes at 3b, Caminero at SS, keep Manzardo and split him with Diaz at 1b, Randy being kept gives you another MVP type guy who can carry at team in LF and bash with Caminero, no DeLuca, but try out Simpson and Mangum in CF, and Josh Lowe in RF, and Brandon Lowe at DH to conserve his body. Pretty decent lineup at staff, and team might win a championship, and if ownership gets a brain and moves ballpark to Tampa or more central area, people will fill ballpark up.
Chris Archer, kinda sorta, maybe. Rays are always a step ahead. Smart Organization making moves.
I mean..doesn’t seem like he’s worth more than a AA prospect or two.
I’d love to see what Niebla could unlock in him.
Taj 2.0
Liked Taj better than Ryan Reynolds