The trade deadline has come and gone. While trade season was slow to get started this year, when all was said and done, there were several dozen trades made in a flurry of movement over the final few days before the deadline arrived. The full impact of these trades won’t be known for years to come, but that doesn’t mean we can’t analyze the deals and decide whose haul looks the best right now. Over the next week-plus, MLBTR will be running a series of polls asking which club in each division had the best deadline. So far, the Phillies, Reds, and Padres have each come out on top in their respective divisions. Today, we’ll be moving on to the American League with the AL West. A look at each of the five clubs, listed from best to worst record in 2025:
Houston Astros
The Astros made one of the most shocking moves of the deadline when they brought Carlos Correa home in a trade with the Twins. Adding Correa back to the mix creates something of a positional logjam on the infield for the club in the long-term, but with third baseman Isaac Paredes unlikely to return this season due to a severe hamstring injury, Correa shores up the infield in a big way and cost the club virtually nothing other than money. Two more players were acquired to help round out the club’s position player mix: infielder Ramon Urias and outfielder Jesus Sanchez.
All three are controlled beyond the 2025 season, and while Sanchez cost the Astros rookie right-hander Ryan Gusto, no upper-level prospects changed hands in the club’s trio of deals. That ability to add long-term talent without surrendering the best prospects in the system was impressive, though the roughly $70MM they’ll be paying Correa over the life of his contract is a significant outlay and they failed to add the starting pitcher they were hoping could fill out the middle of the rotation behind Framber Valdez and Hunter Brown.
Seattle Mariners
The Mariners’ moves at the deadline were arguably even splashier than those in Houston. While the club acquired three rental players without any team control beyond the current campaign, it’s hard to argue against the fact that they’ve significantly upped their chances of winning both the AL West and even the World Series this year. Adding Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor to the infield corners in separate deals with the Diamondbacks represents a sizable upgrade over Luke Raley and Ben Williamson.
Meanwhile, the return (Tyler Locklear and a quartet of pitching prospects outside of Top 100 consideration) was lighter than what was required to bring in high-end controllable talents at this deadline. The Caleb Ferguson trade with the Pirates follows a similar path. The swap gives a club in need of left-handed help in the bullpen a steady, capable setup man who throws from the left side and can partner with Gabe Speier. That deal cost only Class-A pitching prospect Jeter Martinez, who has a 6.18 ERA in 16 starts this year. The Mariners opted to maximize short-term impact while doing so on a budget, and if they can overtake Houston in the West down the stretch, it would be hard to argue with them as the winners of the deadline.
Texas Rangers
With one-and-a-half games currently sitting between the Rangers and a postseason berth, it’s understandable that they acted quite aggressively this trade season. The focus of their haul was a trio of veterans: starter Merrill Kelly, setup lefty Danny Coulombe, and relief arm Phil Maton. Kelly stands out as arguably the best starting pitcher traded this summer, and the high cost (by the standards of a rental player) reflects that. The Rangers had to surrender their #5, #9, and #13 prospects according to MLB.com to get the deal done. Coulombe and Maton weren’t quite that expensive, but cost Texas a trio of prospects led by southpaw Garrett Horn, who was recently added to the club’s top 30 prospects list over at Baseball America at #25.
Shelling out significant prospect talent in order to make a serious run at a Wild Card berth is understandable, but what’s worth noting is that the Rangers also blew past the luxury tax in order to make those additions. Texas had worked meticulously throughout the season in order to stay below the first threshold and reset their penalties, but all of that work has now been thrown out in an effort to maximize their odds at making the postseason in 2025. The potential impact is clearly significant, but was that worth it for a team not even in playoff position on deadline day?
Los Angeles Angels
The Angels had a quiet deadline that was somewhat incongruent with their status as fringe (at best) contenders. The Halos are currently six games out of an AL Wild Card spot with a middling 55-60 record, but that didn’t stop them from doing some light buying this summer. Adding former top prospect Oswald Peraza in a minor swap with the Yankees made some sense, given the club’s long-term needs on the infield, Peraza’s many years of remaining team control and a low cost of acquisition.
Acquiring a pair of rental veterans for their bullpen in the form of Andrew Chafin and Luis Garcia was a bit more questionable, but the cost do so was low. Former 13th-round pick Sam Brown and 26-year-old lefty Jake Eder (whom the Angels had picked up off waivers earlier in the year) went back to the Nats in that swap.
The Angels didn’t really damage the farm, but they missed an opportunity to listen on players like Yoan Moncada, Taylor Ward, Luis Rengifo, and maybe even Reid Detmers. Selling even some short-term pieces could have helped restock a farm system that’s been viewed as below-average for quite some time. The urge to push in during a rare, mostly-healthy season for Mike Trout is an understandable one, but it’s hard to say with confidence that doing so was the right move.
The Athletics
Unlike the rest of the division, the Athletics were sellers this summer. They made just two trades. Shipping Miguel Andujar to the Reds wasn’t a major move but netted a 2022 fourth-rounder (right-hander Kenya Huggins) who now sits 25th among their prospects at MLB.com.
The vast majority of their deadline focused on the single biggest blockbuster that happened this July: the deal that sent closer Mason Miller and lefty starter JP Sears to the Padres. Acquiring a consensus top-five prospect in the sport by bringing in Leo De Vries is arguably enough to win the deadline by itself, but he was also joined by well-regarded prospects Braden Nett and Henry Baez, Double-A starters who could be part of the rotation mix in West Sacramento sometime next year.
Rounding out the package is rookie reliever Eduarniel Nunez, who struggled in his first appearances with the A’s but could bolster their bullpen in the future. It was a very strong return, with De Vries in particular standing out as the sort of elite prospect that almost never gets dealt at all, much less in a deadline trade for a reliever. On the other hand, giving up Miller with four-plus years of team control remaining (not to mention the possibility he could be converted into a rotation role in the future to further raise his value) could make this deal a tough pill to swallow, particularly if the 18-year-old De Vries does not blossom into an All-Star caliber player.
A number of different approaches characterized this deadline for the AL West. The Rangers and Mariners were very aggressive on bringing in short-term additions, while the Astros focused on bringing in controllable talent, the A’s brought in a haul for the future and the Angels largely stood pat. Who had the best deadline of that quintet? Have your say in the poll below:
It’s only been a few days and the answer today might not be the same answer come September/October. And that most certainly goes for all the other teams and divisions as well
To your point Josh Naylor was just pulled in the 4th inning. Was seen making faces while swinging in the 3rd
I wasn’t watching today’s game so i have no idea what happened to Naylor, but having watched him the first four months of the season, I can confirm that he makes faces while at the plate every AB. That said, earlier in July, he was nursing a sore right shoulder and/or neck.
Just saw one of the swings in question and I’m gonna toss in possible oblique with your neck and shoulders. Could be either of those as well it was an awkward follow thru
I know I’m biased, but I think it’s the Mariners, and I don’t think it’s particularly close. A’s would be second for getting De Vries–which was a great move–but they put a lot of faith in him not only panning out but developing into a star by getting just solid secondary pieces in that deal. Still a great trade for them, though.
Also a mariners fan and im gonna say Mariners for 2025 Houston beyond. To acquire 3 players that aren’t rentals is significant.
To play devil’s advocate, they upgraded out of necessity. Correa’s had a .381 BABIP since the trade and they assumed the remainder of the contract. Urias and Sanchez are nice pieces but the Red Sox are white hot and IMO, cohesing right in time for a playoff run.
Most upgrades are out of necessity rarely do you target a position you’re doing well with
Not disputing that they were hurting at these positions, but more asserting that these don’t feel like the proper caliber hitters to get them to World Series. IMO, they’re missing too many core contributors (Alvarez, Paredes, Myers).
The Astros are going to need internal improvements from the minors sooner rather than later. Going past the luxury tax threshold makes that even harder.
My personal philosophy is that pushing all in at the deadline for a single playoff appearance, particularly when there are better teams in the AL, isn’t sound asset management.
Astros have the worst ranked farm system in the game they aren’t getting that help anytime soon
They’ve out produced said rankings for at least 3 seasons because player development has been a priority since their 2010s tank job. Moving up even 5 spots in the rankings would translate into a wealth of talent for their coaches to work with. Call it rigid but the mark of a good front office is identifying a team’s strength and then leaning into it as heavily as possible.
@dank- They assumed either $70M or $73M of the $103M, not the entire contract. Just to clarify.
I’m biased so I abstained from voting M’s, instead I voted for the Angels because they made the rest of us laugh. thanks Arte
I was just about to say that voting for the angels is diabolical
I thought the Rangers did a really good job addressing their specific needs through guys who can take up innings.
They didnt clear payroll, didnt get bat, and didnt get closer. Already had best rotation in baseball and solid BP. So what needs did they address?
DeGrom has thrown 40 more innings than his max since 2019. A lot of injuries in their rotation gets supplemented by a guy who throws consistent innings. Added a couple nice pieces to the best bullpen in baseball. The bats have come around after a slow start and added Jung back.
Mariners. I looked at their lineup. They have seven starters slugging .440 or better. Add JP Crawford and Victor Robles to those sluggers. Crawford and Robles have good OBP and will set the table for stacked lineup.
Our lineup is so good we can afford to have Luke raley and canzone on the bench instead of riding the hot hand like last year
The A’s got a nice haul for Miller. De Vries along with Wilson, Kurtz, Rooker, Butler, Soderstrom and Langeliers give them a nice core heading to Vegas
Butler fell off but no worries with Colby Thomas and Henry Bolte right there.
Mariners and the A’s both had great deadlines for what their clubs need. Mariners are going for it now, A’s are building and got incredible value for a reliever. Miller is great, but throws 104 with an injury history. Always risk in those kinds of trades for the seller but I felt like the A’s did as well as they could. I’m sure Houston’s moves will work out too. Rangers got some decent players. Same old angels
Mariners helped their team now and the Athletics helped the team for down the road.
Five very different trade deadlines, four of which I would consider to be very good and one (Angels) that I would consider to be very bad.
Hope the M’s can sustain the momentum they got now for the long run!
My vote went to Texas. At least for 2025, they now have the best pitching staff in the division and it’s not even close. The offense is by no means a strength, but has been roughly league average for the past 2+ months. Getting Carter and Burger back from the IL will help further.
Call it crazy but the Rangers run differential suggests they’ve played much better baseball than the record suggests. The gradual emergence of Leiter provides more tailwind for their WC bid. They continue to hang around for a reason.
The team that left me unimpressed were the Angels. They could’ve leaned into their past success in developing top draft picks and brought in additional prospects. Instead, they spent on a futile playoff bid.
Rangers are 16-21 in one run games. Worst in the West. They’re playing decent ball but if they miss the playoffs that will be why.
Agreed, it’s kept them out of the final spot so far. However, I believe better health from the position players will rectify the problem. The rotation, bullpen and defense are all elite.
As long as Bochy is stubborn enough to run Robert Garcia as closer – we’ll keep inching in the wrong direction..
He was good early in the season but with the heat on he has wilted.
The Angels had the worst trade deadline in all of baseball.
I really like the A’s long term additions but in the short term, Seattle added two big bats they really needed.