MLB Mailbag: Devers, Nationals, DFA Carousels, Guardians, Red Sox
I'm pinch-hitting for MLBTR owner Tim Dierkes on this week's MLB Mailbag! In this edition, we'll get into Rafael Devers' contract and trade value (or lack thereof), the Nationals' unexpectedly strong performance and how it could shape their deadline, the revolving door for "41st men" on 40-man rosters (e.g. Atlanta's Carlos Carrasco), the Guardians' deadline needs, the Red Sox' search for a right-handed bat and more.
Onto the questions...
Peter asks...
With Rafael Devers hitting again (and his defense at first base very good) how would you rate his value on the open market taking into account his remaining contract? What level of return would you expect the Giants might get for him and what teams do you think would be most interested in him? Would the Giants have to pay down any of his remaining contract?
Devers is indeed hitting better after an awful start to the season. Following a disastrous .207/.248/.289 slash and 31% strikeout rate through the end of April (129 plate appearances), he's rebounded with a .257/.321/.500 line over his 165 most recent trips to the plate. It's an encouraging turnaround, but there are some red flags worth mentioning.
First and foremost, that 31% strikeout rate that dogged Devers through his dreadful early slump hasn't abated. Over this stretch of 165 plate appearances, he's fanned at a 30.9% clip -- effectively the exact same rate. The biggest differences have been a modest bump in power (six homers in this stretch) and a huge spike in Devers' batting average on balls in play. His BABIP in that slump was a roughly league-average .288. During this turnaround, he's at .344.
That doesn't all come down to luck. Devers' exit velocity has jumped from an average of 89.8 mph during that cold snap to a huge 93.4 mph in his hot streak. His hard-hit rate has soared from a solid 41.5% to an elite 55.6%. Devers is making better contact, so it only stands to reason that more of his balls in play should be landing for hits.
Be that as it may, however, Devers still isn't walking much. His contact rate on pitches within the strike zone, even during his recent surge, is 75% -- well shy of the league-average 85.9%. And while Devers has been good during this span, he hasn't been his peak self. By measure of wRC+, Devers has been about 27% better than average since early May. That's very good, but it's not close to his best output. Back in 2021-22, for instance, Devers crushed 65 homers in 297 games and did so with rate stats that placed him about 36% better than average: .287/.355/.530. His strikeout rate over those two years was 20.1%. His contact rate on balls in the zone was still below average but was five percentage points higher than during this recent revival.
All of that is to say, Devers has been performing like an above-average but flawed hitter since the beginning of May. That's a nice development after he looked lost to begin the season -- and after he dealt with a disk injury in his lower back last summer -- but does it restore any semblance of trade value? I don't believe so.
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Angels Select Logan Porter
4:19pm: The Angels have officially announced Porter’s selection. Rivero was placed on the 10-day IL with a left hamate fracture and will require surgery, reports Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com. Kochanowicz was transferred to the 60-day IL to open a 40-man spot.
10:31am: The Angels are set to select the contract of catcher Logan Porter, reports Ari Alexander of 7News. He signed a minor league deal with them five days ago after choosing free agency over an outright assignment with the Giants. Porter hasn’t even suited up for a game with the Halos’ Triple-A affiliate yet, but he’ll jump right to the big leagues after backup catcher Sebastian Rivero exited last night’s game due to an apparent hand injury.
Porter, 30, is joining his third big league team. He has brief experience in the majors with both the Royals and Giants, for whom he’s totaled a combined 47 plate appearances. Porter is just a .184/.326/.289 hitter in that time, but he’s a .244/.359/.389 hitter in parts of five Triple-A seasons. He’s light on power but has walked at a gaudy 14.4% clip in more than 1200 Triple-A plate appearances.
Porter also gives the Angels a defensively sound backup to starting catcher Logan O’Hoppe. He’s thrown out a roughly average 22% of runners who’ve attempted to steal on him in the minors (33% dating back to last season) and drawn quality framing grades with slightly below-average marks for his blocking abilities, per Baseball Prospectus.
The Angels have already utilized four different catchers in 2026. Porter will be the fifth, joining the quartet of O’Hoppe, Rivero, Travis d’Arnaud and Omar Martinez. He has a full slate of minor league options remaining, so the Angels don’t necessarily need to designate him for assignment when d’Arnaud and/or Rivero get healthy. The Halos will need to open 26-man and 40-man roster spots for Porter, but that should be pretty straightforward. His selection to the majors seems to point to an IL trip for Rivero, and righty Jack Kochanowicz can be shifted to the 60-day IL after undergoing Tommy John surgery this week.
Braves Designate Carlos Carrasco For Assignment
The Braves have once again designated righty Carlos Carrasco for assignment. This time, his roster spot goes to right-hander James Karinchak, whose contract has been selected from Triple-A Gwinnett. Atlanta also placed right-handed reliever Tyler Kinley on the 15-day injured list due to elbow inflammation and recalled righty JR Ritchie from Gwinnett in his place.
Readers should be plenty familiar with the cycle at this point. Carrasco, 39, can’t be optioned and thus must be designated for assignment any time the Braves want to send him down to the minors. At this stage of his career, the former Cleveland ace is amenable to functioning as an effective 41st man on Atlanta’s 40-man roster. The team regularly selects his contract to the majors, designates him for assignment, passes him through waivers and re-signs him on a new minor league deal once he elects free agency. He’s then summoned the next time Atlanta’s bullpen needs some length.
The cycle will very likely repeat itself again several more times this season. Atlanta has now designated Carrasco for assignment five times dating back to last August. He’s re-signed a new minor league deal after each prior DFA and also signed a minor league contract with the Braves as a free agent over the winter. The setup clearly works for both parties.
Carrasco has pitched well overall with the Braves this year, though he’s been tagged for runs in each of his past two appearances. He’s still held opponents to a total of three runs on 10 hits and a walk with four strikeouts in nine big league innings. His work in Gwinnett has been even sharper. In 30 frames with the Stripers, he has the exact same 3.00 ERA but a much stronger 21% strikeout rate against a tidy 5.6% walk rate.
The 30-year-old Karinchak, a former Cleveland teammate of Carrasco, will be returning to the majors for the first time since 2023. Karinchak looked like a potential bullpen monster for the Guardians at one point, pitching to a 2.51 ERA with a preposterous 46.6% strikeout rate through his first 32 1/3 MLB frames from 2019-20. Injuries and poor command have since derailed him. He still posted a 3.24 ERA in 133 1/3 innings from 2021-23, but Karinchak did so while walking more than 14% of his opponents and with a lesser (albeit still excellent) 33.9% strikeout rate.
Karinchak spent nearly the entire 2024 season on the minor league injured list due to a shoulder issue, pitching only 6 2/3 innings that year. A fastball that averaged 97 mph during his MLB debut was sitting at 92.1 mph during that injury-ruined season. Cleveland outrighted him off the 40-man roster that offseason, and he signed a minor league deal with the White Sox. He pitched 29 1/3 innings with a 2.45 ERA for the South Siders’ Triple-A club in Charlotte, but Karinchak also walked nearly 17% of his opponents there and sat 92.7 mph on his heater. He was released in June and didn’t latch on with another club until the Braves signed him this past December.
Thus far in 2026, Karinchak has pitched 25 2/3 innings with a 2.45 ERA that matches his mark from Charlotte last season. He’s toned his walks down, relatively speaking, issuing a free pass to exactly 10% of his opponents. He’s punched out a gaudy 38% of the batters he’s faced. His fastball velocity still isn’t nearly back to its peak levels, but this year’s 93.8 mph average is up noticeably from his 2024-25 levels.
Karinchak still has a minor league option remaining, and if he can carve out a role in the Atlanta bullpen, he’d be controllable through the 2027 season via arbitration. That’ll depend on whether he can continue to show improved command/velocity and whether he can stave off further injuries.
Cardinals Option Victor Scott II
June 9th: The Cards have made it official, announcing that Church has been reinstated and Scott optioned.
June 8th: The Cardinals are optioning center fielder Victor Scott II to Triple-A Memphis today, as first reported by KMOV’s Tamar Sher. Fellow outfielder Nathan Church will return from the 10-day IL today and take Scott’s roster spot, per Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat. Church will presumably see the bulk of action in center field.
It’s the first time that Scott, 25, has been optioned since the 2024 season. He spent all of 2025 in the majors and has been a regular player in 2026 despite nonexistent offensive output. He’s hitting .194/.276/.258 (57 wRC+) through 184 turns at the plate thus far. Scott only has six extra-base hits (two homers, four doubles).
Scott has swiped nine bases but been caught four times; that’s already as many times as he was caught stealing in all of ’25, when he swiped a total of 34 bags. His 29.7 ft/sec sprint speed is still elite, sitting in the 98th percentile of big leaguers, but it’s down half a foot from last year’s 30.2 ft/sec, which tied him for tops in the game. Scott’s 8.7% walk rate is almost average, and his 23.9% strikeout rate isn’t egregious, but he has the sixth-worst hard-hit rate among the 235 players to tally at least 150 plate appearances this season.
Defensively, Scott still grades out quite well, though not to the same extent as in 2025. Last year, he was credited with 12 Defensive Runs Saved and 16 Outs Above Average in 1087 innings. This year, through 471 innings in center, OAA has credited Scott as a positive but not elite defender (3), while DRS has dinged him at -2.
If Scott stays in the minors for at least 20 days, this will burn the second of his three minor league option years. It’s unlikely to impact his potential free-agent and arbitration timelines, as he’s already less than three weeks from reaching two years of MLB service time. If Scott spends the rest of the season in Triple-A, he wouldn’t reach two years of service, thus giving St. Louis an extra season of club control, but it feels likely that he’ll be back at some point, whether because he hits his way onto the roster or because the Cardinals incur an injury in the big league outfield mix.
Church, also 25, has struggled at the plate in his own right, but not to the same extent. He’s taken 156 plate appearances and turned in a .247/.282/.390 slash (88 wRC+) with five homers, six doubles, a 3.8% walk rate and a 21.2% strikeout rate. He’s also making hard contact at lower-than-average levels, but not quite at the same bottom-of-the-scale levels as Scott. Church also has the more productive Triple-A track record; he slashed .335/.400/.521 in 242 plate appearances there last year. Scott’s only Triple-A work came back in 2024, when he hit .210/.294/.303 (58 wRC+) in 362 trips to the plate.
The rest of the Cardinals’ outfield mix seems largely set. Lars Nootbaar is back after missing the first couple months of the season and should see regular action in left, plus occasional time in center. Jordan Walker, in the midst of a full-fledged breakout, is entrenched in right field. (Nootbaar could play right field if the Cards give Walker a day off or a DH breather.) Nelson Velazquez, Jose Fermin and Bryan Torres can all mix in occasionally. Fermin and Torres have minimal opportunities in an infield with Alec Burleson, JJ Wetherholt, Masyn Winn and Nolan Gorman getting regular work (though Gorman isn’t hitting enough to justify regular at-bats for the remainder of the season).
MLBTR Chat Transcript
Steve Adams
- Good afternoon! I’ll get going at the top of the hour, but feel free to start sending in questions now.
Cards Fan
- Gorman a change of scenery candidate?
Steve Adams
- I don’t think they’ll get a ton for him, but at a certain point, I don’t know why they wouldn’t move on. He’s trending toward a non-tender, and he’s had a pretty substantial leash both in ’26 and more broadly over the past several seasons. Does feel like a change-of-scenery guy, whether this summer or in an early-November trade or just as a free agent with a new team after he’s non-tendered.
Dave
- Who says no: Josue De Paula straight-up for CJ Abrams?
Steve Adams
- One prospect — and De Paula is a good one! — isn’t going to pull two-plus years of Abrams.
Yankeespitching
- Do you think Jac Caglione would be worth keeping or dropping. I was hoping for a break out year but so far it hasn’t worked out
Steve Adams
- Always depends on league context, but if you’re in a standard 10- or 12-team mixed league, yeah, I don’t see a need to hang onto him. If it’s a deep mixed league or an AL-only format, might be another story
Guest
- If the Astros are 4+ GB at the deadline, what are the odds they trade Yordan Alvarez?
White Sox Promote Braden Montgomery
12:15pm: The White Sox have formally announced the selection of Montgomery’s contract. Veteran outfielder Austin Hays moves from the 10-day IL to the 60-day IL to open a 40-man spot. Chicago also recalled lefty Joe Rock from Triple-A Charlotte and optioned Nishida and righty David Sandlin to Charlotte in a sequence of additional moves.
11:17am: The White Sox are calling up top outfield prospect Braden Montgomery, as first reported by Matt Snyder of CBS Sports. Chicago will have to open space on the 26-man and 40-man roster to accommodate Montgomery, who currently ranks 33rd on Baseball America’s top-100 prospect rankings.
Selected No. 12 overall out of Texas A&M by the Red Sox in 2024, Montgomery landed with the White Sox as the co-headliner (alongside catcher Kyle Teel) of the blockbuster trade sending Garrett Crochet to Boston. The 23-year-old Montgomery opened the 2026 season in Double-A and has since been promoted to Triple-A, tormenting opposing pitchers at both levels. He’s appeared in 56 games this season, taken 258 plate appearances between those two levels, and turned in a stout .314/.422/.548 batting line (152 wRC+) with 10 homers, 13 doubles, three triples, five steals (albeit in 11 attempts), a huge 15.1% walk rate and a 24.8% strikeout rate.
Montgomery has been particularly productive at the dish as of late. After falling into a mini-slump that saw him go hitless for 16 plate appearances, he’s turned things around with a .474/.580/.711 batting line over his past 10 games. In that time, the switch-hitter has popped a pair of homers and three doubles while drawing 10 walks against seven strikeouts. The dip in strikeouts is notable, as the main knock on Montgomery for many scouts is a penchant for swinging and missing that leads to bearish grades on his hit tool; Baseball America pegged his hit tool at a 40 (on the 20-80 scale) heading into the season, while FanGraphs gave him a present-day 30 with a chance to get to a 40.
Even if Montgomery strikes out more than the Sox would prefer, he garners praise for elite bad speed, plus-plus raw power and a prodigious arm in right field. That latter element is to be expected for a former two-way star who ran his heater up to 96 mph as an amateur. Montgomery has focused solely on hitting and playing the outfield in pro ball, but the fact that he was a touted amateur pitcher as well only underscores his natural athleticism.
Montgomery is the latest promising young hitter to join an increasingly exciting White Sox core. The Sox have already called up Sam Antonacci and former first-rounder Jacob Gonzalez this season. They’re getting a full-fledged breakout from former top prospect Miguel Vargas. Former first-rounder Colson Montgomery has cemented himself as a potent source of power and claimed the long-term shortstop role. Chase Meidroth (also acquired alongside Montgomery and Teel) is light on power but has hit for average and gotten on base while staking a claim as the organization’s long-term second baseman. And, of course, the White Sox struck gold when they signed NPB slugger Munetaka Murakami to a two-year contract after the market failed to produce the type of long-term pact most envisioned for the 26-year-old. The aforementioned Teel has been out all season due to a knee injury but hit .273/.375/.411 in 78 games as a rookie last year.
For all that young potential, Chicago’s outfield is still pretty open. Antonacci has been a nice tablesetter in left field. Tristan Peters has hit well in center, but he’s a 26-year-old rookie whose production is buoyed by a .385 average on balls in play that he won’t sustain over a larger period. None of Derek Hill, Luisangel Acuna, Everson Pereira, Tanner Murray, Rikuu Nishida or veteran Andrew Benintendi has been a standout thus far; Pereira has hit reasonably well in 71 plate appearances but has a 30% strikeout rate and is out with a pectoral injury. Montgomery should have a path to regular at-bats in either center field or right field moving forward.
Based on the timing of Montgomery’s promotion, he’s not going to receive a full season of big league service unless he hits the ground running and finishes top-two in AL Rookie of the Year voting with a massive four-month finish to the season. Barring that unlikely event, the Sox will have six years of club control over him beyond the current season. He’s probably going to fall just a few days shy of Super Two eligibility, meaning he’ll be eligible for arbitration the standard three times rather than four, though that assumes he’s in the majors to stay. Whether that proves to be the case will hinge on how well he adjusts to big league opponents.
2026-27 MLB Free Agent Power Rankings: June Update
We’re more than one third of the way through the 2026 MLB season, and what looked like a weak free agent class heading into the year only looks thinner following injuries and poor performances from many of the top names. It’s not hyperbole to call this the thinnest crop of free agents in recent memory. That doesn’t mean there aren’t solid contributors to be signed, but there’s only one true marquee free agent — he recently had elbow surgery — and there are charitably only four or five players who might command a nine-figure deal. (Realistically, it’s more like two or three.)
Of course, there’s plenty of time for things to turn around. As we’ll get into in the full breakdowns of our top 10, several players on this list stumbled through poor March/April showings before finding their form in May. If that continues through season’s end, then a poor April performance will be a mere footnote that teams pay little heed. That cuts both ways, however. An impending free agent who’s out to a strong start right now could suffer an injury of note or tank his stock with a poor four-month finish to the season. Power rankings are subjective and inherently fluid — perhaps more so than ever with this class.
As a reminder, our rankings at MLBTR are based on earning power. We’re not ranking these free agents based on potential impact in 2027 or 2028. Sonny Gray is having a nice season, but he’ll be 37 in November and probably isn’t going to command more than two years in free agency, for instance. Despite the fact that he’d be a big boost to a team’s 2027 chances, he’s not likely to land on any installments of this year’s power rankings (unless the class really tanks as a whole over the next few months).
With that preamble stated, let’s dive into the rankings…
1. Tarik Skubal, LHP, Tigers
Skubal’s recent elbow surgery rules out a third consecutive American League Cy Young Award, but it doesn’t do much to alter his broader free agent stock. He’s on a fast track to recovery after undergoing a cutting-edge “NanoNeedle” arthroscopic procedure to remove a loose body from his pitching elbow. Skubal had surgery one month ago, was throwing two weeks later, and threw a five-inning rehab start yesterday. A return later this week isn’t out of the question.
In seven starts pre-surgery, Skubal looked as good as ever. He pitched 43 1/3 innings with a 2.70 earned run average, a 27.1% strikeout rate and a 3.6% walk rate that would register as a career-best mark over a full season. The left-hander’s velocity was down a mile per hour relative to 2025 but right in line with his overall career mark. His 13.7% swinging-strike rate is great but not up to his previously elite 16-17% levels. Then again, Skubal clearly wasn’t pitching at 100%. Posting the marks he did with an elbow issue that eventually required an elbow scope is impressive.
If Skubal comes back strong, teams aren’t going to pay much mind to the elbow procedure. He’s been the best pitcher in baseball since 2024 and won’t turn 30 years old until November. The expectation entering the season was that Skubal would reach free agency and set a new record for the largest contract ever signed by a pitcher, eclipsing Yoshinbou Yamamoto’s $325MM guarantee. That’s still firmly in play, barring diminished performance during his return.
And, if the Tigers can’t pull themselves back into contention and ultimately have to trade Skubal, he’ll come with the added benefit of being ineligible for a qualifying offer, meaning he won’t cost his new team a draft pick. Even if the Tigers hold Skubal, however, his status is so high that no team is going to balk at the draft cost to sign him. Pitchers like this just don’t come around often, and when they hit the open market, a bidding war should be expected.
2. Freddy Peralta, RHP, Mets
Peralta isn’t having his best season, but he’s having a very good one and getting better as it progresses. Peralta, who turned 30 last week, celebrated his birthday a day early with six innings of one-run ball in a win over the red-hot Mariners. He’s posted a 2.98 ERA, 23.4% strikeout rate, 10.2% walk rate and 43.1% grounder rate in 45 1/3 innings across his past eight trips to the mound. Overall, Peralta touts a 3.38 ERA, 23.9% strikeout rate, 9.7% walk rate and 42% ground-ball rate in 13 starts — all while averaging about 5 2/3 innings per appearance.
One of baseball’s most consistent starters since establishing himself, Peralta pitched to a 3.30 ERA from 2021-25. His ERA each season was between 2.70 and 3.86. His strikeout rate sat between 27.1% and 33.6% each season along the way, and his walk rate fell between 7.9% and 9.7%. Peralta hasn’t had a hiccup or a true down season. He’s a playoff-caliber starter year-in, year-out. Peralta turns 31 next June, which is still young enough to command five, six or even seven years in free agency.
The quality of his finish will play a significant role in which of those lengths ultimately comes to fruition, but Peralta is a clear candidate for a contract north of $100MM. A look at MLBTR’s Contract Tracker shows Max Fried (eight years, $218MM), Blake Snell (five years, $182MM), Aaron Nola (seven years, $172MM), Jacob deGrom (five years, $185MM) and Kevin Gausman (five years, $110MM) as the starting pitchers who’ve reached free agency ahead of their age-31 season (if not older) over the past half decade and commanded nine-figure deals. Peralta isn’t likely to reach the very top end of that spectrum, but he has a better track record than Gausman did when he signed his deal five years ago.
Like Skubal, Peralta is pitching for a losing club that entered the season firmly expecting to contend. If the Mets bite the bullet and decide to sell some veteran pieces this summer, Peralta will be among the most sought-after names on the trade market. A trade would render him ineligible for a qualifying offer, which would only enhance his appeal on the open market.
3. Jazz Chisholm Jr., 2B, Yankees
Chisholm had a 30-30 season in 2025 and went 24 homers/40 steals in 2024. Speed/power packages of this caliber are rare and often locked up on early-career extensions. That’s not the case with Chisholm, who’ll reach free agency at 28 and play all of his first free-agent year at 29. Entering the season, it seemed like a compelling package with a $100MM+ deal on the horizon.
A couple months into the ’26 campaign, and things aren’t so rosy. Chisholm had one of the worst months to begin the year. Through April 30, he was hitting .202/.281/.330 — 26% worse than league average, by measure of wRC+. He looked more like a candidate to sign an opt-out-laden bounceback deal than a long-term contract.
Chisholm turned a corner in early May, and since the calendar flipped beyond April, he’s looked like his typical self. Dating back to May 1, he carries a .265/.331/.460 batting line with five homers and seven steals. That’s a 120 wRC+ (20% better than league-average production), which is right in line with last year’s season long 126 mark. Chisholm has walked at a 9.4% rate and fanned at a 29.1% clip since May — again, not far off last year’s season-long numbers.
If Jazz is back to being Jazz, his poor April probably won’t matter much. He’s a clear candidate to receive and reject a qualifying offer in that scenario, and the associated draft pick cost might cause some teams to shy away. The market generally doesn’t pay second basemen, but Chisholm would likely be valued based on his overall offensive prowess rather than his defensive home. That he can at least claim the ability to play on the left side of the infield or in the outfield helps his cause, even if he’s clearly best-suited for work at second base.
In most seasons, Chisholm would be closer to the No. 8-10 spots on this list, but it’s a grim class and he offers a blend of youth, offensive upside and track record not present elsewhere in this class. A big finish will make him the consensus top position player in the class. A poor or only slightly above-average showing over the next four months will leave him in a difficult spot — likely weighing disappointing long-term offers versus higher-risk, short-term deals with opt-outs.
4. Michael King, RHP, Padres
King isn’t technically a free agent yet, but he can opt out of the final two seasons of his three-year, $75MM contract at season’s end. Based on the way things have been going thus far, that seems likely to happen. The right-hander’s 2025 season was derailed by injury, but King has averaged just over 5 2/3 innings over his first 13 starts, turning in a 3.41 ERA over 74 innings. His 23.3% strikeout rate is down from the 27.7% mark he logged in a career-best 2024 season but is still better than average. His 9.8% walk rate is a career-worst mark — the first time he’s been worse than average in that regard — but he’s kept 47% of batted balls against him on the ground (about five percentage points north of average).
King’s 94.1 mph average fastball is up slightly from the past couple seasons. His 10.9% swinging-strike rate is close to average, sitting between last year’s 10.4% mark and 2024’s 12% mark. He doesn’t have age on his side, as he’ll turn 32 next May, but King rejected a qualifying offer from the Padres last November and is accordingly ineligible to receive a second one.
King’s age probably caps him at a four-year deal. Blake Snell and Jacob deGrom are the only two pitchers in the past decade to score a contract of five or more years on the open market ahead of their age-32 season. It’s possible King is again limited to three-year offers with a hearty annual value, but he pulled a guaranteed $75MM on the back of an injury-ruined season, so him topping that guarantee after a healthy season — even when he’s a year older — seems plenty possible.
5. Randy Arozarena, OF, Mariners
Arozarena has been quite consistent since becoming established as a big leaguer. From 2021 to 2025, he hit between 20 and 27 home runs each year and stole 20 to 32 bases. His wRC+ finished in the 114 to 127 range. FanGraphs credited him with two to four wins above replacement in each campaign. In short, he has been a solidly above-average corner outfielder with some power and speed.
His 2026 season has largely been more of the same. He only has six home runs, which is a bit shy of his usual pace. However, some batted ball luck has actually made his overall offense a bit better than usual. He has a .285/.376/.442 line and 138 wRC+ on the year. That is due in part to his .358 batting average on balls in play but some regression in that category would nudge him into his usual range.
He already has 18 stolen bases in less than half the season, putting him on pace to set a new career high. His defensive numbers are trending up slightly. Outs Above Average has always disliked him in the field, giving him minus-6 grade in 2024 and 2025. This year’s minus-1 isn’t great but is a relative improvement. Defensive Runs Saved has wobbled for Arozarena but had him below average in 2024 and 2025. This year, he’s at +3 DRS so far. Put it all together and Arozarena is at 2.2 fWAR already, on pace to beat his previous best of 3.9.
Though he is generally having a good season, Arozarena’s earning power is capped by a few factors. He was a late bloomer and is getting to free agency at a relatively older age, as he’ll turn 32 before next year. As a corner-only guy, that’s a profile that doesn’t lead to major long-term deals.
A look at MLBTR’s Contract Tracker shows that the biggest deal for an outfielder that age or older in recent years was the four-year, $78MM deal the Mets gave to Starling Marte, who was still a viable center fielder. Next on the list is the three-year, $66MM pact the Dodgers gave to Teoscar Hernández, a deal which contained notable deferrals. Mitch Haniger, Jorge Soler and Jurickson Profar signed three-year deals in the $42-43.5MM range. Those deals give a vague approximation of what Arozarena could reasonably expect, though he’s probably closer to Hernández territory than the latter trio.
6. Brandon Lowe, 2B, Pirates
Like Arozarena, Lowe is a 32-year-old who plays a position that the market doesn’t tend to value all that highly. As MLBTR’s Contract Tracker shows, the only second basemen to land deals of three or more years in free agency over the past half decade have been foreign players coming over from the Korea Baseball Organization. Hyeseong Kim and Sung-Mun Song, however, signed for modest annual values that reflected the uncertainty surrounding whether their offensive output could be sustained against major league pitching.
Marcus Semien is the last pure second baseman to land a notable multi-year free agent deal, but his seven-year, $175MM isn’t a clean comp for Lowe, either. Semien was 31 in the first year of that contract and was coming off a Gold Glove-winning season at second base after years spent as a shortstop. Most clubs viewed him as a viable option at shortstop. The Rangers only kept him at second base because they also signed Corey Seager that winter. Semien was also coming off a 6-WAR season. Good as Lowe has been, he’s not going to get to that point.
Be that as it may, there’s reason to believe Lowe can buck the trend of 32-year-olds and second basemen being shrugged off by the market. He has a long track record of hitting for power and is doing so at a level we haven’t seen from him since 2020-21. Lowe has already belted 15 homers in 60 games. His .270 ISO (slugging minus batting average) is his best since a 39-homer campaign back in 2021. His 10.7% walk rate is a nice rebound after a couple down seasons in that regard, and his 25.2% strikeout rate — while still higher than league average — is the second-best mark of his career. Most encouraging is that Lowe’s 82% in-zone contact rate is the second-best mark of his career as well.
Lowe can credibly claim that he’s the second-best offensive second baseman in the sport behind Brice Turang this year. His oft-maligned defense has improved, too. Whether it’s sustainable or a one-year blip is an open question that scouts will have to weigh heavily, but he’s been credited with positive marks from both Defensive Runs Saved (2) and Outs Above Average (5) in 2026 after drawing cumulatively negative grades the over the five preceding seasons (including career-worst marks of -14 DRS and -14 OAA in 2025).
Lowe has some experience in left field and at first base, even if he’s spent the vast majority of his playing time at second base. He also has more than enough bat to be an above-average designated hitter. Even though second basemen are rarely paid well, we saw Jorge Polanco get a two-year, $40MM deal for his age-32 and age-33 seasons last year. Lowe’s performance has been steadier over the years, and his production right now is outpacing what Polanco did last year in a rebound season after an awful 2024 campaign.
There are probably some teams that would prefer Lowe’s left-handed bat at second base to Arozarena’s right-handed bat in left field. A deal north of $60MM seems plausible if he can continue his blistering start to the season.
7. Casey Mize, RHP, Tigers
For a former first overall pick, it is perhaps underwhelming to some that Mize hasn’t turned into an ace. But expectations aside, Mize has developed into a valuable mid-rotation starter. In 2021, he took the ball 30 times for the Tigers and posted a 3.71 earned run average. His 19.3% strikeout rate was low but he only walked 6.7% of batters faced and induced grounders on 48.1% of balls in play.
Tommy John surgery wiped out most of his 2022 and 2023 seasons. In 2024 and 2025, he was back to his previous form. He posted a 4.12 ERA over 251 1/3 innings across those two campaigns. His 20.1% strikeout rate was again below par but with an excellent 6% walk rate and solid 43.2% ground ball rate. He made two postseason starts last year with a flat ERA of 3.00 in those.
Here in 2026, he has twice gone on the injured list due to an adductor issue, but the results have been encouraging around that. In his nine starts, Mize has thrown 47 2/3 innings with a 2.27 ERA. His 35.2% ground ball rate is a drop for him but he has increased his strikeout rate to 26.5% while keeping his walks at a 6.5% level. He has thrown his slider way more at the expense of his slurve. He went to the slider 16.3% of the time last year but that’s up to 25.1%, while his slurve usage has gone from 13.3% to 4.7%.
A reliable mid-rotation starter going into his age-30 season can land a healthy contract, even for pitchers who haven’t shown Cy Young upside. In recent years, Eduardo Rodriguez, Taijuan Walker, Marcus Stroman, Jameson Taillon and Luis Severino have signed deals of three or four years in the range of $67-80MM while in their early 30s. Just below that are guys like Jon Gray, Nick Pivetta and Steven Matz (Cardinals deal), who signed in the $44-56MM range.
8. Luis Arraez, 2B, Giants
Luis Arraez the hitter is well known. He doesn’t have a ton of power and doesn’t draw many walks but is the game’s preeminent contact hitter. In an age where the league average strikeout rate is around 22%, Arraez is usually somewhere about a third of that. He won three straight batting titles from 2022 to 2024.
He had a bit of a dip in 2025. As he battled a thumb injury, his batting average dipped to .292, a strong number for most but low for him. Since that’s his main asset, that reduced his overall output. He hit just eight home runs on the year and only walked in 5% of his plate appearances. That left him with a .292/.327/.392 line and 104 wRC+, barely above league average. Since his defense has generally been poor in his big league career, he went into free agency last winter without a ton of juice. He settled for a one-year, $12MM deal with the Giants.
Here in 2026, the offense is back. He has only two homers and just a 5.4% walk rate but the batting average is up to .323, much more normal for him. His .323/.359/.431 line leads to a 120 wRC+, a nice improvement relative to last year.
What might be more interesting is the improvement he has shown in the field. The Giants plugged Arraez in as their regular second baseman, which seemed like a recipe for disaster. He came into this year with almost 3,000 innings at the keystone and had graded at minus-6 Defensive Runs Saved and a shocking minus-36 Outs Above Average in that time. The Twins started giving him more time at first base back in 2022. The Marlins tried moving him back to second in 2023 but the Padres acquired him in 2024 and mostly had him back at first. He only had 82 innings at second in 2025.
The idea of Arraez suddenly becoming a strong second baseman in his age-29 season wasn’t on most people’s radar but that seems to be happening. In over 500 innings this year, DRS has put Arraez at league average. OAA, which was so remarkably down on Arraez, has him at +9 this year. JJ Wetherholt is the only second baseman ahead of Arraez on the OAA leaderboard.
Defensive metrics can be wonky in small samples, so some of this is to be taken with a grain of salt. Nico Hoerner has +8 OAA on the year, for instance, and most people probably don’t think Arraez is suddenly better than Hoerner on the dirt.
Still, the fact that Arraez seems playable at the keystone should open up his market. Second basemen don’t usually get big paychecks in free agency but being passable there is better than being viable at first base only. Jeimer Candelario and Jorge Polanco recently signed deals in the $40-45MM range as solid bats with questionable defense but the capacity to at least play a couple of infield positions.
9. Adrian Morejon, LHP, Padres
The only reliever in the top 10, Morejon has some of the best stuff of any southpaw in the game. His 99.4 mph average sinker speed is tops among left-handed fastballs and eighth overall. He has a plus slider and an excellent changeup, which he uses almost exclusively against righty hitters.
Morejon is among the top 10 relievers in swinging strikes and has the third-highest opponents chase rate (minimum 20 innings). He’s top five in ground-ball percentage at 61.6% while posting plus strikeout (28.2%) and walk (5.3%) marks. His 2.34 FIP and 2.08 SIERA are among the best in MLB.
It’s all the ingredients of a wipeout back-end arm. Morejon was just that between 2024-25, combining for a 2.42 ERA while striking out more than a quarter of opponents in 137 1/3 innings. His ERA has spiked to an ugly 4.60 mark this season, though that comes mostly from a handful of bad early-season outings. Morejon allowed runs in four of his first six appearances but carries a 2.92 ERA dating back to April 14. He has reeled off 11 scoreless appearances in his past 12 around a three-run clunker against Philadelphia last week.
Morejon only has six career saves, as he has been a setup arm in front of Robert Suarez and Mason Miller for the past few seasons. It’s admittedly an indictment of the overall free agent class that a setup arm with a near-5.00 ERA nabs a spot on the top 10, but it’s also a testament to Morejon’s ceiling. There are probably teams that feel he’s one of the three to five best left-handed relievers in MLB right now. He’s squarely in the prime of his career, turning 28 next February. Tanner Scott commanded a four-year deal with a lesser track record at age 30. Devin Williams secured a three-year, $51MM deal at 31 with a similar gap between his ERA and much stronger underlying marks.
It’s also worth considering the possibility another team targets Morejon as an upside play for the rotation. He already has the changeup and plus command that clubs prefer in a starter. Morejon was a high-end rotation prospect in the minor leagues who only moved to the bullpen because of a series of early-career arm injuries (2019 shoulder impingement and Tommy John surgery in ’21). Morejon continued to battle injuries through 2023 but has been fully healthy for the past two and a half seasons.
Morejon will be eligible for a qualifying offer. The Padres have shied away from making the QO to borderline candidates in recent years as they navigate short-term payroll concerns. The franchise’s forthcoming sale to José E. Feliciano and Kwanza Jones could change that, but Morejon still seems a longer shot qualifying offer candidate.
10. Ian Happ, OF, Cubs
Happ and Arozarena have been bucketed pretty similarly on previews of the class. They’re both left fielders who’ll turn 32 before Opening Day 2027. Both players have been consistently above-average but shy of elite offensive players. They’re having similarly productive ’26 campaigns.
The main separator is a spike in Happ’s strikeout rate. The former #9 overall pick has fanned at a 32.1% clip on the season, easily his highest rate since 2018. Happ has never had great pure hitting ability but had trimmed his strikeouts to a slightly higher than average 23.4% mark between 2022-25.
Despite the increased swing-and-miss, Happ has some of the best numbers of his career. He’s walking at a typically excellent 13.9% rate while hitting for power. Happ has 14 home runs through the team’s first 66 games, putting him on pace to eclipse 30 for the first time in his career. Even if he doesn’t quite maintain this kind of power production, he’s essentially a lock for his fifth 20-plus homer season in the past six years (and sixth of his career).
Happ has done a disproportionate amount of this year’s damage versus right-handed pitching. He has been better from the left side of the dish throughout his career, though he’s generally close to average versus lefties and well above against right-handers. This year, he’s mashing righties at a .267/.395/.559 clip while limping to a .153/.228/.319 mark versus southpaws. It might just be a blip but is something interested suitors will need to weigh if it continues all season.
Although he’s limited to a corner, Happ has a reputation as one of the top defensive left fielders in the game. He has won the NL Gold Glove in four straight seasons. Outs Above Average has typically rated him right around par. Happ has traditionally fared better by Defensive Runs Saved but also has an essentially neutral grade (+1) in 521 1/3 frames this season. Assuming they remain in contention and avoid a deadline sale, the Cubs will need to weigh qualifying offers for Happ and Seiya Suzuki.
Note: While players with opt-out clauses are eligible, MLBTR currently projects Bo Bichette, Tatsuya Imai and Corbin Burnes not to test free agency.
Honorable Mentions (listed alphabetically): David Bednar, Kris Bubic, J.P. Crawford, Kevin Gausman, Sonny Gray, Trent Grisham, Clay Holmes, Shota Imanaga, Ryan Jeffers, Nick Martinez, Michael Soroka, Seiya Suzuki, Gleyber Torres, Daulton Varsho, Taylor Ward, Brandon Woodruff
Images courtesy of Imagn Images.
Mariners Place J.P. Crawford On 10-Day IL
The Mariners have placed shortstop J.P. Crawford on the 10-day injured list, three days after a hit-by-pitch forced him from the game. They’re calling the injury a right hand contusion. In Crawford’s place, Seattle has recalled infielder Ryan Bliss from Triple-A Tacoma.
It’s a poorly timed injury for the Mariners, as Crawford’s recent play has played a big role in Seattle’s climb to the top of the AL West. Dating back to late April, the veteran shortstop has slashed .258/.366/.500 with nine homers, a pair of doubles and a 12.7% walk rate in 142 trips to the plate. He’s done so while handling shortstop duties on a near-daily basis, though Crawford recently volunteered to begin working out at the hot corner and could slide over to third base as a means of opening more shortstop work for top prospect Colt Emerson. Crawford is a free agent at season’s end, whereas Emerson is viewed as the shortstop of the future.
Overall, Crawford is hitting .228/.356/.409 this season. By measure of wRC+, he’s been about 26% better than average — thanks largely to that hearty on-base percentage. His glovework at shortstop no longer grades plus (or even average), which is also partly why he’s been tinkering with a move to third base.
With Crawford sidelined, Emerson figures to handle shortstop for at least the next week. He’s gotten out to a .242/.319/.548 slash with four homers through his first 69 trips to the plate at the major league level. Since Brendan Donovan is on the shelf again — and has been since May 15 due to a groin strain — third base reps will fall primarily to Patrick Wisdom and Bliss for the time being. Bliss has been more of a second baseman in his career, but he’s played 56 innings at the hot corner in Tacoma recently.
It’s an unenviable spot for now, but since Crawford’s injury doesn’t seem too severe, the Mariners can hope they’re not that far from having a healthy Donovan, Crawford and Emerson to man the left side of the infield in some capacity. Donovan could always shift to the outfield corners or second base at some point, too, but the Mariners have gotten good production from Randy Arozarena in left field, Luke Raley in right (against righties anyhow), Cole Young at second base and Dominic Canzone at designated hitter. The exact alignment will be determined by the overall health of the roster, but Seattle has quality hitters at just about every position if they can get everyone on the active roster at the same time.
Trade Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript
Steve Adams
- Good afternoon! I'll get going at about 2pm CT, but feel free to submit a question(s) ahead of time if you're so inclined. Looking forward to it!
- Good afternoon! I'll get going in one minute here, just wrapping up a long email on our forthcoming Free Agent Power Rankings.
- Ok!
Little Texas
- could you see the Rangers moving in the outfield walls this winter or try signing more power hitters
Steve Adams
- They've already brought in power hitters on both sides of the plate. Neither Joc Pederson nor Jake Burger has had the impact they hoped. I can see them altering the dimensions at some point, yeah. Seems like they're pretty surprised the new Globe Life plays so pitcher-friendly.
Guy Incognito
- Hi Steve. Do you think the uncertainty of the next CBA and possible work stoppage is going to affect trade deadline targets? I was wondering specifically about guys that have extra years of control beyond 2026. Would a guy with 1 extra year be treated as such if 2027 might get washed out? Would a guy with 2+years be affected because of the possible salary cap?
Steve Adams
- It didn't have a major impact last time around, just like the shortened Covid season didn't have a huge impact on the trade deadline. Teams are motivated to win now, and I expect everyone to operate under the assumption that there'll be a lockout but no games lost. I think fans have a more pessimistic outlook on games being played in '27 than a lot of people who work within the sport, which is kind of the point. The league is trying (and succeeding) to rally fan sentiment/support for the cap with a lot of doom-and-gloom narratives but I don't think nearly as many front office people (I'm sure there are some) see it as a foregone conclusion that games will be lost.
Steve
- Instead of teaching and encouraging pitchers to throw ungodly MPH. Is it a lost cause to teach pitchers how to pitch instead of throw? This, in my mind, cut down TJ surgeries, especially younger and younger kids getting the operation. I site a prime example of Greg Maddox. It takes strategy. Have a great fastball...that's fine, but there are a few pitchers scattered throughout MLB that are good pitchers and not gifted with speed. I was going to point to a guy like Bailey Ober, but I think even he had the surgery. Any thoughts on any of this. Love the chats. Thanks.
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Rays To Select Austin Slater
1:20pm: The Rays have officially announced Slater’s addition to the roster. Heasley was transferred to the 60-day IL as the corresponding 40-man move. To open an active roster spot, infielder Oliver Dunn has been optioned to Triple-A Durham.
9:55am: The Rays will select the contract of outfielder Austin Slater from Triple-A Durham, reports Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times. Slater signed a minor league deal with Tampa Bay late last month but is now headed to the major league club as the Rays gear up for a slate of left-handed pitchers.
Tampa Bay will need to open a 40-man spot for Slater. Righty Jon Heasley, who was recently diagnosed with a stress reaction in his elbow and placed on the 15-day IL, seems like a potential 60-day IL candidate. Outfielder Jake Fraley underwent a hernia procedure last month that came with a recovery timetable of six to eight weeks and could be a candidate as well, if the team feels his recovery will skew toward the lengthier end of that window.
Slater, 33, has already played with two different teams this season and seven over the past three seasons combined. He’s been hitting well in Durham, going 8-for-23 with five doubles, a homer, five walks and six strikeouts in 28 trips to the plate (.348/.464/.696).
Slater has taken 49 major league plate appearances between the Marlins and Mets this season, and they haven’t gone well. He’s 8-for-43 with only one extra-base hit (a double) and three times as many strikeouts (15) as walks (five). Broadly speaking, his past three seasons in the majors have been a struggle — hence the frequent changes of address. He’s taken 421 plate appearances in the bigs since Opening Day 2024 and slashed just .212/.298/.304.
Even with that lackluster run, however, Slater is still a lifetime .263/.352/.420 hitter in 1067 plate appearances against left-handed pitching. The Rays will face Red Sox left-hander Connelly Early tonight and are slated to face fellow southpaw Payton Tolle tomorrow. The Angels’ rotation is in disarray, so it’s hard to gauge exactly who’ll be starting for them next weekend when the Rays visit Anaheim. They’ll miss lefty Reid Detmers, barring a shuffle of the current order, but the Halos currently have five lefties in the bullpen. That should lead to plenty of chances for Slater to contribute off the bench or perhaps in the starting lineup if the Angels opt for bullpen games with a lefty opener and/or bulk reliever (e.g. Mitch Farris, Sam Aldegheri).






