The Mets and Rangers lined up on a surprising one-for-one swap over the weekend, with outfielder Brandon Nimmo heading to Texas and infielder Marcus Semien to Queens. Today, members of the media got to speak with many of the parties involved. Arguably, the most notable comment came from Nimmo himself, who waived his no-trade clause to become a Ranger. “I would not have waived that no-trade clause if I didn’t think I could come here and win,” Nimmo said, per Shawn McFarland of the Dallas Morning News.
It has been fair to wonder about the direction of the Rangers recently, as they’ve clearly been trying to dial back their spending. They pushed their competitive balance tax a bit over the line in 2023 and 2024. In 2025, they hoped to duck under the line but may have gone over with in-season trades, such as acquiring Merrill Kelly from the Diamondbacks. Their 2025 status won’t be official until MLB releases the final calculations, likely in December, but it’s possible the Rangers will be tax payors for a third straight season.
Even if they did go over the line, it was surely by a narrow margin, so the tax bill won’t be huge. Regardless, it seems they are going to be extra motivated to pinch pennies in 2026. The club parted ways with manager Bruce Bochy at the end of the regular season. President of baseball operations Chris Young admitted that the club didn’t have a lot of financial certainty, which played a role in that separation. Esteemed pitching coach Mike Maddux also left, heading to the Angels, which prompted speculation that was financially motivated as well.
In terms of the roster construction, the Rangers were recently trying to trade outfielder Adolis García and catcher Jonah Heim, despite both players being part of the 2023 championship club. Each could have been retained via arbitration for 2026 but the Rangers clearly didn’t want to pay them at their projected prices. Ultimately, no trade came together. On Friday, the Rangers non-tendered both, along with relievers Jacob Webb and Josh Sborz.
Amid all of that, rumors have swirled that the Rangers could trade a more expensive franchise players such as Corey Seager or Semien as part of a larger step back. Now Semien has indeed been traded but the Rangers have taken on another sizable contract by getting Nimmo in return. The remaining contracts are somewhat analogous, with Nimmo making less annually, but signed for two extra years. The Rangers are therefore taking on more money overall but less per year.
It seems that Nimmo has been assured that the club is still planning to compete and isn’t doing a big teardown. That’s somewhat encouraging for fans in Texas but the club will probably still have some tight parameters to deal with. RosterResource estimates the club has a pure payroll of $169MM next year and a competitive balance tax figure of $187MM. Last year, those numbers were $224MM and $237MM.
Getting back up to those levels would give the Rangers roughly $50MM to work with but the signs are pointing to them setting a lower target. They have a number of things on the to-do list this winter. The rotation could use some shoring up. Almost the entire bullpen reached free agency, meaning there’s work to do there. Replacing Heim behind the plate and potentially Semien at second are other potential areas to target, though it’s possible the Rangers are happy with Willie MacIver as a backup to Kyle Higashioka behind the plate. It’s also possible they feel Josh Smith and/or Sebastian Walcott can take over at the keystone.
President of baseball operations Chris Young also spoke today and echoed Nimmo’s comments that the Rangers want to win. “I do think we are focused on winning moving forward,” Young said, per Kennedi Landry of MLB.com. “The last two years have been very difficult as we feel like we have not lived up to our expectations, and when you don’t meet expectations, you have to make tough calls, and that’s part of this.”
Young also said Nimmo will likely end up in right field, per McFarland, but there are still conversations to be had there. Nimmo has primarily been a left fielder in recent years, with Statcast ranking him as having 48th percentile arm strength. The Rangers could perhaps keep Nimmo in left while moving Wyatt Langford to right. Langford’s arm strength was slightly ahead of Nimmo in 2025, with Statcast giving him 59th percentile arm strength. However, Langford has no professional experience in right, while Nimmo has over 600 big league innings at that spot.
Turning to the other side of the trade, Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns also spoke to the media today, complimenting his new second baseman. “It’s notable that this is a player that can contribute to winning baseball in a variety of different ways,” Stearns said, per Deesha Thosar of Fox Sports, “and the bat may not actually lead the way at this point in his career. We think there’s likely some bounce back in his offensive profile and his offensive game. But what we’re counting on at the top of his skillset is the contributions he can make for us defensively, how he can perform on the bases, and we think those are going to help us win games.” Stearns has highlighted a desire to improve the Mets’ run prevention, so it’s understandable he would focus on Semien’s defense.
Naturally, Stearns was asked about what’s next for the Mets. While the story in Texas might be scaled-back spending, that doesn’t appear to be a concern with the Mets. “Sure,” Stearns said, when asked if it’s possible for the Mets to re-sign Pete Alonso and Edwin Díaz and a notable free agent outfielder. “I think anything would be realistic right now.”
Under owner Steve Cohen, the Mets have been one of the top-spending clubs in the majors. Per RosterResource, they had a $340MM payroll and $337MM CBT number in 2025. For 2026, those numbers are at $263MM and $264MM. That gives the Mets something like $70MM in wiggle room if they are willing to get to the same level and it’s entirely possible they could be willing to go even higher.
MLBTR predicted Díaz to secure an $82MM deal over four years. He is reportedly setting his sights higher than that, targeting a deal in the same range as his last one, which was a $102MM guarantee over five years. Either way, a deal worth roughly $20MM annually is probably likely. MLBTR predicted Alonso for $110MM over four years, which would be $27.5MM in terms of average annual value.
Put together, those two would likely eat up something near $50MM of next year’s payroll. If the Mets do have $70MM of space right now, that would leave them another $20MM to spend on an outfielder, though they also presumably want to make additions to the rotation as well. The Mets have already been connected to Cody Bellinger and the Nimmo deal opens a corner, raising immediate speculation about a run at Kyle Tucker. MLBTR predicted Bellinger for $140MM over five years and Tucker for $400MM over 11 years, respective AAVs of $28MM and $36.36MM.
There are other moving pieces at play. With Semien now at second base, it’s possible Jeff McNeil’s chances of getting traded have increased. He can play other positions, such as left or center field, but it’s possible the Mets would rather ship him out the way they did with Nimmo. Even before the Nimmo deal, McNeil’s name was in trade rumors. McNeil is owed $15.75MM next year, plus a $2MM buyout on a $15.75MM club option for 2027. There’s also a $500K assignment bonus if he’s traded. Then there’s also Kodai Senga, who is owed $14MM annually over the next two years and has been in trade rumors as well.
If the Mets can find a taker for McNeil and/or Senga, they could free up some more money for their other pursuits, or perhaps address another area of need by taking back another veteran player, like they did by grabbing Semien. Stearns also mentioned today that McNeil could also play some first base, expanding his versatility, per Mike Puma of The New York Post. McNeil has played every position on the diamond outside the battery but has just three innings of first base experience. If Alonso isn’t coming back, McNeil could be part of the solution there, alongside guys like Mark Vientos. Though it’s also possible the Mets aren’t done shaking up their roster by trading out long-time mainstays.
Photo courtesy of Kyle Ross, Imagn Images

I’m here for the whining about the big bad Dodgers, Mets, Phillies, Red Sox, and Yankees making it unaffordable to attend games and unhinged screaming for a salary cap – as if that might ever lead to lower ticket and concession prices.
What a strange comment on a post about the Rangers. No wonder Jerry is always suspicious of you.
“Nimmo, Stearns, Young Discuss Semien Trade”
Read the article or at least the headline, Einstein. It’s also about the Mets.
Reading comprehension is a thing, you know.
Yikes, thats a leap. You’re like charlie huffing paint trying to connect the dots with string.
Pepe Silvia
Nightcrawlers!
I did read it Neuman (glares just as Jerry would). The point of your post was to attack other posters on stuff they may have posted on other articles and have not posted on this one yet. It just looks like you posted this on another article but it was so late/low that it didn’t get the attention you thought it deserved.
How is this just about the Rangers? Did you get tuckered and have to take a nap halfway through? Don’t be such a
“I do think we are focused on winning moving forward,” Young said.
Not exactly an enthusiastic expression.
Based on 2024 and 2025, he’s right to have a lack of enthusiasm in his statement.
The Mets are an unmitigated disaster. Trading Nimmo was a huge mistake, the guy waived his no trade clause to get out of there, he knows what’s up. Alonso couldn’t wait to get out of there, too.
I’m not sure how much you’ve watched the Mets. While I’m sad to see Nimmo go, my man couldn’t throw his way out of a paper bag in left, and likely due to different hitting coach philosophies, for the last 2 years, the thing making Nimmo valuable OBP, leadoff bat, and decent strikeout to walk ratio, have suffered as a result of this philosophy. Just FYI, Nimmo played all year healthy last year and was a 2.9 WAR, while Semien hurt much of the year was 3.3. Semien has also won 2 gold gloves & I think 3 Allstar appearances. Nimmo has never done either of these things. Lastly, allegedly, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over & over expecting a different result… why would the Mets continue to try with a core that has but once made it past the 1st round of the playoffs in 10 years. Sounds like switching it up (like emphasizing defense) especially up the middle, might not be a bad idea.
The “core” reset last season with Soto. Franchise altering. Nimmo is a steady veteran presence, grinds out solid AB’s, walks a fair amount, sure his defense is slightly below average overall, but his bat is valuable. Semien is in serious decline, and while he brings better defense at 2B, I question whether that’s going to be valuable enough to justify what has become his lackluster hitting.
@stan: You’re replying to a rage-baiting troll. Great reply, though, and I agree with your points.
I’m not a rage baiting troll or any type of troll for that matter, just a guy who loves baseball and can look at things objectively and comment. As if anything any of us has to say matters… our only role is to watch. Now, please apologize for being disrespectful. You wouldn’t call me a troll to my face if we were having a conversation, so doing it behind a screen isn’t authentic.
Luke Strong: If Alonso is so anxious to leave, why didn’t he do so last year?
Lack of appealing offers?
That’s ancient history, an entire year ago… everything was different then than it is now.
“The Mets are an unmitigated disaster”..I wouldn’t go nearly that far. The Mets have an uber rich owner who’ll spend whatever it takes to win.
That puts them in a better position than all but a handful of MLB teams. Cohen’s money will eventually get it right and make the Mets at least relevant.
I think that’s a fallacy. Just throw a bunch of money at it and eventually it’ll work, that’s the mentality, and while I’m sure plenty of fans of franchises like PIT or KC wish their owners spent more, what Cohen has done with his incredibly foolish spending is exactly what PIT and KC don’t have to worry about, building an expensive but terrible team.
So the Mets wanted a second baseman whose bat might not be the best, but who gives you strong defense and baserunning?
May I introduce Luisangel Acuna? Already on the roster, making the major league minimum?
2025 bWAR: Semien 3.3, Acuna 0.6 (Nimmo 2.9)
Now do fwar
Acuña has not proven that he can hot major league pitching. Like, at all. He struggled in AAA with his bat and that continued in MLB. imo, he will pan out as a utility backup with pinch-running skills. A good guy to have on the roster but you can’t count on him to start.
Nimmo translation: I wanted to get out of that hot mess in New York…
Mercenary.Freddie.Freeman: As I’m sure he told you.
I love these types of dumb comments. Makes my day
The Bad Contract Mets simply swapped Bad Contracts.
Semien costs more than Nimmo over the next 3 years plus luxury tax but the Mets shortened their obligation by 2 years. Now the Mets have a logjam at 2B and an aging MI with Lindor and Semien.
Bye Bye McNeil! Where’s the Pitching? What Pitching?
Having watched Nimmo for the past 10 years I have grown fond of him. He used to look to walk and then ran to 1B leading to very high OBPs. He has changed now looks to hit HRs with negative impact on OBP. High strikeouts have always been a problem and weak OF throwing arm limits him to LF or DH IMO.
Best of Luck!
McNeil can slot right into Nimmo’s spot in LF. Or continue his utility role depending on how the rest of the offseason plays out
Are you aware that McNeil just had thoracic outlet shoulder surgery so throws from the OF might not be good utilization these days.
He really just needs hit the cut-off in short left field. I honestly think they move Soto to LF anyway which leaves openings at CF and RF 🤷♂️
That leaves the Rangers with looking for catching help, starting pitching depth, a completely rebult bullpen, and now potentially a second basemen. Brendan Donovan anyone? He’d be expensive though is the problem
I think there are a lot of trade possibilities with the Cardinals. Both teams have what the other would want. I could see a deal involving Contreras or Arenado with Pederson coming back for salary matching purposes. Donovan certainly makes a ton of sense. Rangers could use Romero. Burger is from St Louis. Cardinals could use a young 3b prospect or right handed pitching and thats what the Rangers have.
There wil be a ton of interest in Donovan everyone agrees with that.
The best fit might be the Rangers. They need a 2b. Their 3b situation is a bit unsettled and they also need outfield depth. And they are on a budget. And again they have what the Cardinals would want.
If you want to actually add something to the conversation feel free.
Nimmo just got a big raise. No more NYC taxes, state withholding taxes, metro commuter taxes etc. plus less commies in TX.
LGM!
LGM dumped his last girlfriend because she was a communist.
He should’ve known sooner. There were red flags everywhere.
You’re trolling but you should look into how athletes are taxed. The savings isn’t as big as people think. Also, cry harder.
The raise he got was actually playing baseball for a team who can give him a perceived opportunity to win, you absolute doofus.
Plus he’s in a safer state. Now he can own & carry a gun! Welcome to Texas young man!!!
Texas has nearly twice the rate of homicides as New York.
I wonder if Stearns was overhyped coming out of Milwaukee. Not much I’ve been too impressed with so far.
This trade makes the Mets better….. in 2029 and 2030.
I think they did this so they could go after a lefty hitting outfielder like Tucker or Bellinger. Let’s wait and see the rest of their offseason before jumping to conclusions.
Maybe it’s just they’re betting on Semiens next 3 being healthier than Nimmos next 5 or 6 w/e it was.
Plantar fascitis is nagging and his neck injury was also something that is not going to resolve. He’s tough as hell to play as much as he did but there might be a price to pay for that later down the line.
Also Semien in his last @ $20M is prob easier to move than Nimmo would be at his age and price.
I agree that the off-season for all thirty teams remains to be fully written.
The Rangers could probably sign a stopgap like Thairo Estrada for 2B until Walcott is ready for fairly cheap. Bring back Tellez and let he, Burger, and Joc share 1B/DH. MacIver is decent as a backup Catcher. They still have deGrom/Eovaldi/Leiter/Rocker but probably need some starting pitching depth and a Closer