Headlines

  • Rockies Name Paul DePodesta President Of Baseball Operations
  • Munetaka Murakami’s Posting Period Begins Today
  • 2025-26 Top 50 MLB Free Agents With Predictions
  • 13 Players Receive Qualifying Offers
  • Rays Decline Option On Pete Fairbanks
  • Enter The MLBTR Free Agent Prediction Contest
  • Previous
  • Next
Register
Login
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Rumors

MLB Trade Rumors

Remove Ads
  • Home
  • Teams
    • AL East
      • Baltimore Orioles
      • Boston Red Sox
      • New York Yankees
      • Tampa Bay Rays
      • Toronto Blue Jays
    • AL Central
      • Chicago White Sox
      • Cleveland Guardians
      • Detroit Tigers
      • Kansas City Royals
      • Minnesota Twins
    • AL West
      • Athletics
      • Houston Astros
      • Los Angeles Angels
      • Seattle Mariners
      • Texas Rangers
    • NL East
      • Atlanta Braves
      • Miami Marlins
      • New York Mets
      • Philadelphia Phillies
      • Washington Nationals
    • NL Central
      • Chicago Cubs
      • Cincinnati Reds
      • Milwaukee Brewers
      • Pittsburgh Pirates
      • St. Louis Cardinals
    • NL West
      • Arizona Diamondbacks
      • Colorado Rockies
      • Los Angeles Dodgers
      • San Diego Padres
      • San Francisco Giants
  • About
    • MLB Trade Rumors
    • Tim Dierkes
    • Writing team
    • Advertise
    • Archives
  • Contact
  • Tools
    • 2025-26 Top 50 MLB Free Agents With Predictions
    • 2025-26 MLB Free Agent List
    • 2026-27 MLB Free Agent List
    • Projected Arbitration Salaries For 2026
    • Contract Tracker
    • Transaction Tracker
    • Agency Database
  • NBA/NFL/NHL
    • Hoops Rumors
    • Pro Football Rumors
    • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • App
  • Chats
Go To Pro Hockey Rumors
Go To Hoops Rumors

Jo Adell, Taylor Ward Drawing Trade Interest

By Steve Adams | July 29, 2025 at 12:52pm CDT

The Angels still haven’t picked a firm lane with the trade deadline just over 48 hours away, but they’re getting “significant” interest in outfielders Jo Adell and Taylor Ward, per Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic. Both outfielders are controlled beyond the current season, meaning the Angels would seek a notable return even if they do opt to trade either slugger.

Adell, 26, was the No. 10 overall pick in the 2017 draft. He’s never fully delivered on his longtime top prospect status but is in the midst of a career-best season at the plate, hitting .233/.303/.463 with 21 homers and 14 doubles. He’s in the midst of a roughly weeklong slump but has generally swung the bat well following a rough first month or so. Since May 6, he’s taken 275 plate appearances and turned in a more robust .254/.332/.539 batting line with 19 of his 21 home runs coming in that time. In that stretch of nearly three months, Adell has been 37% better than average at the plate, by measure of wRC+.

The Angels control Adell for another two seasons beyond the current year. He’s earning $2.1MM in his first season of arbitration eligibility, making him highly affordable for any club looking to add some right-handed thump to its outfield mix. He has very similar batting average and on-base percentage marks against righties and lefties alike, but Adell has shown far more power against southpaws. Speculatively speaking, teams like the Reds, Padres and Giants all make varying degrees of sense. The Reds badly need help against lefties and have outfield reps available. The Giants are in a similar boat. The Padres have limited financial resources at their disposal and have gotten no production from left field this season.

Adell has spent the bulk of his time in center field this year, but he’s miscast in that role. The Halos have moved Mike Trout to a right field/designated hitter timeshare alongside Jorge Soler and have Ward entrenched in left, so Adell has given his best effort to hold things down in center. It hasn’t been pretty. Statcast pegs him at six outs below average, while Defensive Runs Saved has graded him even more harshly (-10). In nearly 1500 right field innings across the past four-plus seasons, Statcast grades Adell as a scratch defender, while DRS credits him as a strong defender (+9).

As for the 31-year-old Ward, he’s the more established and more expensive option of the two. He’s controlled one less year, through the end of the 2026 season, and is earning $7.825MM in 2025. Another former first-rounder (No. 25 in 2015), Ward has been a steadily productive corner outfield bat since his 2022 breakout. He’s batting .232/.308/.491 on the season (117 wRC+) but, like Adell, has really turned things on after a sluggish start. Ward hit just .172/.215/.352 through his first 130 plate appearances. His turnaround coincides almost perfectly with that of Adell. In Ward’s past 324 plate appearances (dating back to May 4), he’s broken out with a .258/.346/.552 batting line (144 wRC+).

Ward played plenty of right field earlier in his big league tenure but has been locked in as the Halos’ primary left fielder since 2023. Both DRS and Statcast feel he’s been at least average with the glove each year since ’23, though Statcast grades him a bit more favorably on the whole (combined 9 OAA in that time).

It bears emphasizing that neither Adell nor Ward is a lock to be traded. The Angels are buried by eight games in the AL West but sit a more manageable 4.5 games back in the AL Wild Card hunt — albeit with four teams to leapfrog if they hope to secure a spot. Angels owner Arte Moreno is generally loath to sell — particularly when it comes to players who are controlled for multiple seasons, as both Adell and Ward are.

That said, the Angels are perilously thin on pitching talent and could look at a rotating carousel of four outfielders who are best-suited for corner/DH work (Ward, Adell, Trout, Soler) and opportunistically look to flip Ward or Adell for a younger arm (or arms). Moving Adell would create a gap in center field, but as already outlined, he’s not a strong option there anyhow. The Angels could deal Ward or Taylor for pitching and/or prospects, play the other in left, and still look to backfill center field with a trade for someone like Luis Robert Jr., Harrison Bader or Cedric Mullins (to name just a few options).

The Angels haven’t reached the postseason since 2014 — the longest active drought in the sport. It’s understandable if that gives Moreno and general manager Perry Minasian some extra incentive to make a push for October, even with FanGraphs and Baseball Prospectus both placing their playoff odds at under five percent. Moving Adell or Ward doesn’t necessarily need to equate to waving the proverbial white flag on 2025, however. Given the glut of corner options, lack of pitching depth and lack of a true center fielder, there’s a compelling argument that they should deal one of the two even if they’re striving to remain competitive. Angels outfielders rank 29th in the majors in DRS and 27th in OAA, so shuffling up the outfield mix and using some of their corner depth to address the pitching depth could leave them in a better spot when all is said and done.

Share Repost Send via email

Los Angeles Angels Jo Adell Taylor Ward

131 comments

Brewers Acquire Danny Jansen

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 9:47pm CDT

The Rays and Brewers announced a trade sending catcher Danny Jansen from Tampa Bay to Milwaukee in exchange for infield prospect Jadher Areinamo. The Rays are including some cash to help pay down the remaining $2.667MM on Jansen’s one-year, $8MM contract. It’s a homecoming for Jansen, who’s a native of Appleton, Wisconsin. The Rays’ changes behind the plate don’t stop there, as they’re reportedly in agreement to acquire Marlins catcher Nick Fortes in a separate trade (full breakdown on that swap available here).

Catching wasn’t a prominent need for the Brewers entering the season. William Contreras has emerged as one of the best backstops in the sport, slashing .283/.363/.472 from 2022-24. His once-panned defense has improved to premium levels in Milwaukee. However, Contreras has been playing through a fracture in his left middle finger and struggled considerably at the dish this season, slashing just .242/.342/.340 this season. Backup catcher Eric Haase hasn’t picked up the slack with the bat. Over the past month, Contreras and Haase have combined to hit .228/.294/.289.

As the Brewers’ catchers have struggled to increasing levels, Jansen has picked up the pace. He’s hitting just .204/.314/.389 on the season overall, but that’s dragged down by a brutal start to the year. Since May 11, he’s batting .232/.321/.486 in 163 trips to the plate.

Notably, while Jansen is hitting only .197 against lefties, he’s still getting on base against them at a big .356 clip and slugging .465 versus southpaws. Contreras is hitting .223/.373/.266 against lefties on the season. Haase is batting only .160/.192/.280 in his 26 plate appearances against left-handers. Jansen struggled against lefties mightily early in his career but has above-average on-base and power numbers against them each year since 2022. In that time, he’s slashing .216/.344/.442 when holding the platoon advantage

Jansen has graded as a plus defender in the past, but his framing and throwing grades have dwindled in recent years. Milwaukee has a knack for vastly improving catcher defense — framing in particular — which could bode well for a Jansen rebound in that regard. He’ll presumably move into a timeshare behind the plate with Contreras, who is penciled into tonight’s Brewers lineup. That could spell the end of Haase’s time on the roster, but it’s certainly possible the Brewers will carry three catchers or that they’ll give Contreras some extended downtime to allow his ailing left hand to heal.

Areinamo, 21, was an amateur signee out of Venezuela during the 2021-22 international signing period. Baseball America ranked him 10th among Milwaukee prospects on their latest midseason update of the system. He sat 17th at FanGraphs in mid-May and is currently 24th at MLB.com.

Though he’s primarily been a shortstop in High-A this season, Areinamo has more experience at second base than at short. He’s also dabbled at the hot corner. He’s turned in a .297/.355/.463 batting line in 415 plate appearances and popped 11 home runs on the year. Areinamo also has 24 doubles, a pair of triples and 15 stolen bases — albeit in 23 tries (65.2% success rate).

Scouting reports on Areinamo tout his plus hit tool but question an overaggressive approach that could be exposed as he moves up the ladder and faces more advanced pitching. Accordingly, he’s fanned in just 11.6% of his plate appearances in what is his second run through the High-A level. Listed at just 5’8″ and 160 pounds, Areinamo unsurprisingly possesses what scouts feel is below-average power. He has a chance to develop into an everyday option at second base, where his average arm profiles better than it does on the left side of the infield. He could also wind up being a contact-oriented utilityman who bounces between several positions.

ESPN’s Jeff Passan first reported that the Rays and Brewers were finalizing a Jansen trade. Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times reported that the deal was done and that the Rays were in the process of adding another catcher. MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand reported that Areinamo was the prospect return for the Rays and that Tampa Bay was including some cash in the swap.

Share Repost Send via email

Milwaukee Brewers Newsstand Tampa Bay Rays Transactions Danny Jansen Jadher Areinamo

70 comments

6 Former Prospects Who Now Look Like Change-Of-Scenery Candidates

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 8:06pm CDT

It's easy this time of year to focus on the most obvious trade candidates among the bunch. Players on expiring contracts -- or perhaps with one more year of club control -- who play for rebuilding teams or playoff hopefuls who've fallen short of expectations tend to dominate the conversation. That's understandable. Even the short windows of control over those seasoned veterans can be huge difference-makers with regard to the postseason fortunes of those teams that are still in the race.

On the other side of the coin, fans of those rebuilding clubs or disappointing teams can scour prospect rankings for contending clubs, hoping to get a glimpse of what the future might hold and what their soon-to-be-traded stars and mainstays might net.

Somewhere in between those two extremes, however, there are plenty of players who hold appeal. The reception when one of these players is included in a trade isn't always great among the fanbase. White Sox fans weren't exactly thrilled last year when the main return in the team's trade of Erick Fedde and Michael Kopech was infielder Miguel Vargas, for instance. Vargas wasn't far removed from being a consensus top-100 prospect and was only 24 at the time of the swap, but he no longer carried that shiny "top prospect" label or as much of the allure of the unknown. Instead, he was a young big leaguer who'd struggled to establish himself in three short, partial MLB seasons.

Vargas hasn't exactly broken through to superstardom in 2025 -- far from it -- but he's been a regular at the infield corners in Chicago and provided league-average offense on the whole, including a .246/.325/.458 slash (117 wRC+) over his past 320 plate appearances. He's walked in nearly 10% of those plate appearances, punched out at only a 14.7% clip and increasingly has the look of a solid regular.

Though he'd lost some of the luster from his prospect status, Vargas --who's controlled all the way through 2029 -- could yet wind up being a nice piece for the White Sox.

With that very recent example in mind, and with so much focus on the Eugenio Suarez-es and Spencer Jones-es of the world (i.e. rental veterans and hot-hitting prospects who are the talk of the deadline), it seemed like a worthwhile endeavor to try to pinpoint some once-ballyhooed prospects whose star has dimmed and who perhaps no longer have a clear path to an everyday role in their current organization.

Here's a look at six former top prospects who have exhausted that "prospect" designation but are hitting well in the upper minors without much of a path to playing time on their current club...

JJ Bleday, OF, Athletics (controllable through at least 2028)

Bleday was the No. 4 overall pick out of Vanderbilt by the Marlins back in 2019. Miami traded him to the A's in exchange for lefty A.J. Puk -- a swap of former top-10 picks who hadn't panned out as hoped with their original clubs.

Bleday's first year with the A's in 2023 was a disappointment. He hit .195/.310/.355 while Puk pitched well down in South Florida. It looked like a flop. At least, that was the case until 2024. Bleday was miscast as a center fielder last year -- he should clearly be in a corner -- but was still worth more than two wins above replacement despite terrible defensive grades. He hit .243/.324/.437 with a career-low 19.5% strikeout rate and popped 20 homers in 159 games. Factor in the cavernous confines of his former home at the Coliseum, and Bleday was 20% better than league average at the plate, by measure of wRC+.

This year, Bleday's numbers dipped. He hit .191/.288/.358 in 233 plate appearances in the majors. The A's have optioned him twice. Bleday still walked in 12% of those MLB plate appearances, though his strikeout rate crept back up and he became more prone to infield flies. His overall hard-hit rate increased, however, and he's currently hitting .354/.393/.584 in 122 Triple-A plate appearances.

Unfortunately for Bleday, he increasingly looks like a player without a role on the A's. Lawrence Butler signed a long-term extension in right field. Nick Kurtz's emergence at first base has pushed Tyler Soderstrom to left field. Denzel Clarke hasn't hit in the majors but has been maybe the best defensive player on the planet in his short time in the majors.

It's possible there's still a role for Bleday with the A's -- Butler can play center field, and Clarke can't keep striking out at a 38.4% clip and continue playing regularly -- but a team with playing time to spare in the outfield could try to buy low.

Unlock Subscriber-Exclusive Articles Like This One With a Trade Rumors Front Office Subscription

BENEFITS
  • Access weekly subscriber-only articles by Tim Dierkes, Steve Adams, and Anthony Franco.
  • Join exclusive weekly live chats with Anthony.
  • Remove ads and support our writers.
  • Access GM-caliber tools like our MLB Contract Tracker
Share Repost Send via email

Front Office Originals MLBTR Originals

9 comments

Sonny Gray Unlikely To Waive No-Trade Clause Prior To Deadline

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 7:32pm CDT

Cardinals ace Sonny Gray was briefly in trade rumors this past offseason but quickly quashed them when he told president of baseball operations John Mozeliak that he wasn’t keen on waiving the full no-trade clause in his contract. Gray’s name has at least tangentially popped back up on the rumor mill with the July deadline now just three days away. The right-hander tells Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that Mozeliak recently revisited the subject of Gray waiving his no-trade clause.

The 35-year-old Gray declined to elaborate beyond the mere fact that he and Mozeliak had recently talked about the matter. However, MLB.com’s John Denton reports that during that conversation, the right-hander again conveyed that he prefers to stay in St. Louis — at least for the remainder of the current season. Barring a late change of heart, it seems Gray will remain with the Cardinals for the balance of the regular season.

The Athletic’s Katie Woo reported this weekend that the Cardinals would “entertain” offers on Gray and that Mozeliak had gauged interest from some clubs. Presumably, that was done in an effort to provide Gray with as much information as possible when having this conversation with him. There’s no indication that the Cardinals spent significant time workshopping trade offers before talking with Gray, but Mozeliak & Co. have surely fielded a wide swath of calls and texts regarding the availability of a notable portion of the roster.

A trade of Gray would likely have been difficult to piece together, though not necessarily due to his performance. It’s true that the veteran righty has turned in ugly outings in consecutive starts, ballooning his ERA from 3.50 to 4.33 over his past two outings thanks to a combined 14 earned runs in 8 1/3 innings. However, he’s also less than a month removed from an 11-strikeout one-hit shutout of the Guardians and obviously has a lengthy track record as a high-quality big league starter. Recent ERA spike notwithstanding, Gray boasts a 26.7% strikeout rate and 4% walk rate on the year — both excellent marks, with the latter in particular registering as elite. Metrics like FIP (3.02) and SIERA (3.09) portray him far more favorably than his recently inflated earned run average.

Gray’s contract is another matter entirely — and a far more complicating factor, at that. The former AL Cy Young runner-up’s three-year, $75MM deal is heavily backloaded, which would surely prove a hurdle in any trade talks. He’s in the second season of that pact but earned just $10MM in year one of the deal. He’s making $25MM this year, with about $8.333MM yet to be paid out as of this writing, and he’s in line for a $35MM salary next year. Gray’s contract also contains a $30MM club option for 2027 that comes with a $5MM buyout (which is included in his guarantee).

As such, even though Gray is past the halfway point of the contract, he’s still owed a whopping $48.333MM for the remaining one and one-third seasons on his contract. That’s nearly 65% of the contract’s total value. The $5MM buyout on his 2027 option is deferred over a five-year period, but that does little to reduce the sizable net-present value of what’s left on the contract.

If the Cardinals were willing to take on a notable portion of that sum, they’d obviously be able to extract a better net return. As things stand, one-plus year of Gray at nearly $50MM doesn’t exactly afford surplus value. Even if a team valued Gray as a $30MM-per-year starting pitcher, his contract would be slightly underwater. All of that is rendered moot by Gray’s preference to stay in St. Louis. The Cardinals could revisit the situation in the offseason, but Gray would still be owed a $35MM salary and that deferred $5MM buyout. It’s a hefty sum, particularly entering his age-36 season.

That said, the Cardinals could have some extra motivation to get a deal done this offseason. One of the driving factors behind their dormant offseason was a desire to not only trim payroll but to clear playing time for younger players who could be core pieces. The Cards already opened up one rotation spot for young Michael McGreevy when they designated Erick Fedde for assignment (and subsequently traded him to Atlanta).

Moving Gray would further open up innings for young arms while simultaneously trimming notable money from the payroll. If the Cardinals were to eat enough of Gray’s contract in the offseason, they could extract some genuine prospect talent. That’s not necessarily the goal, however. Goold wrote in a chat with readers today that the organization would look to clear as much of Gray’s salary as possible — doing so “ahead of any other considerations.”

Share Repost Send via email

St. Louis Cardinals Sonny Gray

31 comments

Braves Acquire Carlos Carrasco

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 6:15pm CDT

6:15pm: The Braves announced today that Carrasco was acquired for cash. Manager Brian Snitker said tonight that Carrasco will start for the team Thursday (link via The Athletic’s David O’Brien). Atlanta will need to open a 40-man spot to create space within the next few days — which should be easy with the looming deadline.

12:48pm: The Braves and Yankees have agreed to a trade that’ll send righty Carlos Carrasco to Atlanta in exchange for a player to be named later or cash, reports Jack Curry of the YES Network. The veteran Carrasco is not on the Yankees’ 40-man roster after being designated for assignment and accepting an outright to Triple-A earlier this season.

Carrasco, 38, started six games and made a pair of relief appearances for the Yankees after signing a minor league deal over the winter. That contract came with a $1.5MM base salary, which will carry over to the Braves. He’s made 10 starts and a relief appearance with New York’s top affiliate in Scranton, pitching to a 3.27 ERA overall. That includes a particularly strong run since mid-June, during which Carrasco has logged 44 innings with a 2.45 ERA — albeit with a middling 16.6% strikeout rate. He’s limited walks at a strong 5.7% clip in that span and has a ground-ball rate north of 51.6% in Triple-A this year.

This is the second deal for a previously DFA’ed starter that the injury-ravaged Atlanta front office has drummed up in the past 24 hours. The Braves also added Erick Fedde last night and plugged him directly onto the 40-man roster. In doing so, they also announced that righty Grant Holmes was headed to the 60-day injured list due to an elbow injury.

Holmes became the latest injury casualty in a snakebit Braves season. Atlanta currently has Holmes, Chris Sale (fractured ribs), Reynaldo Lopez (shoulder surgery), Spencer Schwellenbach (fractured elbow) and AJ Smith-Shawver (Tommy John surgery) all on the 60-day injured list.

Presumably, Carrasco will be added to Atlanta’s 40-man roster if not immediately then in the near future. The Braves need all the help they can get simply navigating the rest of the season. Spencer Strider is still healthy atop the rotation, but the depth chart after him includes Bryce Elder, the just-acquired Fedde and recent waiver claim Joey Wentz.

The Braves gave young right-hander Didier Fuentes a look earlier in the summer before turning to external acquisitions, but he was rocked in four starts — as one might expect for a 20-year-old who was fast-tracked to the majors for injury purposes. Former first-rounder Hurston Waldrep has pitched well over his past six Triple-A starts and could get a look in the final couple months, though he’s walked nearly 13% of his Triple-A opponents this season. Righties Davis Daniel and Nathan Wiles give Atlanta a pair of depth arms in their late 20s — and both are already on the 40-man roster.

Waldrep and prospects JR Ritchie and Blake Burkhalter could all be options at some point down the stretch. Ritchie, in particular, has posted big minor league numbers. At the same time, with the season spiraling out of hand and the team’s playoff hopes dashed, the Braves may not want to rush potential key pieces of the future to the majors before they’re ready.

In that sense, some veteran stopgaps like Fedde, Wentz and Carrasco are fairly logical, even if they’re unexciting. Neither Ritchie nor Burkhalter is on the 40-man roster yet, though the latter will need to be added between now and November if he’s to be protected from this year’s Rule 5 Draft, which could give the team some extra incentive to take a look over the final eight weeks of the season if he can replicate his strong Double-A numbers following a recent promotion to Triple-A.

Share Repost Send via email

Atlanta Braves New York Yankees Transactions Carlos Carrasco

103 comments

Giants Designate Carson Ragsdale For Assignment

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 5:15pm CDT

The Giants announced Monday that they’ve designated minor league right-hander Carson Ragsdale for assignment. His spot on the roster goes to lefty Carson Whisenhunt, whose previously reported promotion to the majors has now been made official. Right-hander Sean Hjelle was optioned to Triple-A to open a 26-man roster spot.

Ragsdale, 27, was a fourth-round pick by the Phillies back in 2020 and made his way to the Giants organization in a 2021 trade for reliever Sam Coonrod. He’s steadily climbed the ranks while battling various injuries but had a healthy 2024 campaign in which he tossed a career-high 120 2/3 innings between Double-A and Triple-A. He was more successful at the former than the latter in terms of ERA, strikeout rate and home-run rate, but that’s perhaps to be expected for a pitcher who was pushing his largest workload in three years and went on to set a new personal-best in that regard.

The 2025 season hasn’t been a good one, however. Ragsdale has spent the whole year in Triple-A and currently sports a 5.37 ERA a career-low 19.9% strikeout rate and a career-worst 13% walk rate. His average fastball is down from 93.4 mph last year to 92.6 mph in 2025. He’s run into a particularly tough stretch of late, with 15 earned runs — on the strength of an alarming nine homers — over his past 18 innings pitched.

Ragsdale entered the season ranked 20th among Giants prospects at Baseball America and 13th at FanGraphs. The Giants will be able to trade him up until Thursday’s 3pm PT deadline but after that would have to place him on either outright waivers or release waivers. Ragsdale has a bit of pedigree and is in the first of three minor league option seasons, so a club in need of some pitching depth might have interest in taking him on as a project in the next few days, whether via small trade or waiver claim.

Share Repost Send via email

San Francisco Giants Transactions Carson Ragsdale Carson Whisenhunt

17 comments

Trade Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 3:00pm CDT

Steve Adams

  • Good afternoon! Three days until the deadline. Deals have started up, but the real avalanche is coming. Let's talk about it all!
  • We'll get going at 3pm CT, but feel free to submit questions in advance, as usual.
  • Good afternoon!

Rox

  • Would a Jarren Duran for Mitch Keller 1-for-1 swap work? Or would the Pirates want younger players for the future?

Steve Adams

  • If the Pirates are trading Keller, I'd expect it to be for multiple young big leaguers with 6+ years of club control who are years from making any real money.

Matt

  • Which available player do you believe Dave Dombrowski would look at and say yes trading a Crawford, Miller or Abel would be worth the investment?

Steve Adams

  • Jhoan Duran or Cade Smith

Ryan H

  • With Clase out now, is Ryan Helsley now the best reliever likely to be traded?

Steve Adams

  • I don't think Clase was ever "likely" to be traded. Helsley is likely to go, but David Bednar is just as likely and I think Bednar is better (and he has a lower 2025 salary with an extra year of club control)

Stavid Dearns

  • Going for it here: Luisangel Acuna, Brett Baty, Brandon Sproat, Blade Tidwell, Jesus Baez, Boston Baro for Mitch Keller, David Bednar, and Oneil Cruz-Who says no?

Steve Adams

  • With the exception of Baty, that sees like a collection of players whose value is down this season. If you somehow want all of Keller/Bednar/(especially) Cruz, you're going to have to give up WAY more than that. That's a non-starter.

Ken

  • Severino, Urias, and $20M to the Cubs for Jaxon Wiggins. Who says no?

Steve Adams

  • Severino/Urias isn't enough of an upgrade to part with Wiggins

Cat_Herder

  • Paddock trade a depth move or does Fetter spin straw to gold?

Steve Adams

  • Curious to see if the Tigers put him in the 'pen, which I think the Twins should've done even though Paddack prefers to start. He looked filthy in relief coming back from Tommy John late in 2023, and he's never been able to hold up as a starter.

Sam

  • Hey Steve - Are the Twins in fire sale mode now? Are we going back to the early 2010s of just having a completely depleted roster?

Unlock Subscriber-Exclusive Articles Like This One With a Trade Rumors Front Office Subscription

BENEFITS
  • Access weekly subscriber-only articles by Tim Dierkes, Steve Adams, and Anthony Franco.
  • Join exclusive weekly live chats with Anthony.
  • Remove ads and support our writers.
  • Access GM-caliber tools like our MLB Contract Tracker
Share Repost Send via email

Front Office Originals MLBTR Chats

4 comments

Emmanuel Clase Placed On Administrative Leave Amid MLB’s Sports-Betting Investigation

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 11:55am CDT

Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase has been placed on non-disciplinary administrative leave through Aug. 31 as part of Major League Baseball’s ongoing investigation into sports betting, per a league announcement. Clase’s teammate, Luis Ortiz, was the first (and thus far only other) player placed on leave under the ongoing investigation. Clase will continue to be paid while the league looks into any alleged wrongdoing. He will not count against the team’s 40-man roster while on leave. ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported that Clase was being placed on leave shortly prior to MLB’s formal announcement.

“The Guardians have been notified by Major League Baseball that as part of their sports betting investigation Emmanuel Clase has been placed on non-disciplinary paid leave per an agreement with the Players Association,” the team said Monday in a statement. “We have been informed that no additional players or Club personnel are expected to be impacted. The Guardians are not permitted to comment further at this time, and will respect the league’s confidential investigative process as we continue to fully cooperate.”

Clase’s name had surfaced as a potential trade candidate this summer, as several contenders around the league have been weighing a run at impact relievers with multiple years of club control remaining. A trade wasn’t seen as likely, given Clase’s below-market contract and general track record of excellence.

The 27-year-old Clase has pitched 47 1/3 innings of 3.23 ERA ball this year — a “down” season relative to his lofty standards. The right-hander boasts a superlative 1.84 ERA in 336 2/3 innings over the past five seasons. He’s saved 181 games, fanned just under one-quarter of his opponents, issued walks at a tiny 4.8% clip and piled up grounders at an elite 58.5% rate along the way.

Clase signed a five-year, $20MM extension back in April 2022. He’s being paid just $4.5MM this year and has a $6MM guarantee for the 2026 season under the terms of that contract. His extension included a pair of $10MM club options for the 2027-28 seasons, though he’s already maxed out a series of escalators that have pushed the value of each of those options up to $13MM apiece.

The news comes as a notable blow to the Guardians’ already-thin postseason hopes. Cleveland is eight games back of the division-leading Tigers and 3.5 games out of an AL Wild Card spot (with three teams to leapfrog). They were already without Ortiz, their fourth starter, due to this ongoing investigation and had lost another rotation member, Ben Lively, to Tommy John surgery. Former AL Cy Young winner Shane Bieber was targeting a June return but has yet to pitch in the majors after a setback in recovery from his own Tommy John procedure — though he’s on a rehab assignment and on the cusp of a return to the majors.

[Related: Cleveland Guardians Trade Deadline Outlook]

Clase’s bullpen-mate, Cade Smith, figures to take over closing duties for the time being. He’s arguably an even better reliever at this point than Clase is, and Smith himself has received plenty of attention on the summer trade market. As with Clase, a deal has been seen as unlikely, given the 26-year-old righty’s four-plus seasons of remaining club control.

Depending on how one chooses to view the Clase suspension, it could make a Smith trade more or less likely. Smith now becomes an even more focal point in the bullpen and all the more critical to whatever playoff hopes Cleveland has left. At the same time, losing Clase further dampens those postseason odds and could make the Guards more willing to turn the page on the 2025 season and focus more on the future. Smith should be an integral part of that future, but he could also net a legitimate prospect haul if moved in the next three days, potentially adding multiple long-term contributors to the Guards in 2026 and beyond.

Share Repost Send via email

Cleveland Guardians Newsstand Cade Smith Emmanuel Clase

272 comments

Twins Designate Connor Gillispie For Assignment

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 11:36am CDT

The Twins announced Monday that they’ve designated right-hander Connor Gillispie for assignment. His spot on the 40-man roster will go to fellow righty Michael Tonkin, whose contract has been selected from Triple-A St. Paul. Right-hander Travis Adams was optioned back to Triple-A in a corresponding move.

Gillispie was a waiver claim out of the Marlins organization last month. He appeared in four games (three starts) with the Twins’ top minor league affiliate but was shredded for 22 runs in 13 2/3 innings. Prior to landing in Minnesota, he’d won a spot in Miami’s Opening Day rotation. Gillisipe made six starts with the Fish, the first three of which went fairly well (3.86 ERA in 14 innings), before being pummeled for 19 runs over his next dozen innings. The Marlins optioned him to Triple-A Jacksonville at that point, and he hasn’t pitched in the majors since, leaving Gillispie with a bleak 8.65 ERA in 26 MLB frames this season.

The 27-year-old Gillispie (28 in November) spent last season in the Guardians organization. He pitched fairly well, logging 113 1/3 innings with their Triple-A club en route to a 4.05 ERA, a 25% strikeout rate and a 10.1% walk rate. That led to a brief big league debut, wherein Gillispie tossed eight innings of relief and held opponents to two runs with an 8-to-5 K/BB ratio. Cleveland non-tendered him nonetheless, after which he signed a major league deal with the Braves and bounced to the Marlins after Atlanta tried to pass him through waivers.

Tonkin, 35, was a 30th-round selection by the Twins back in 2008. He returned to the organization last year when Minnesota claimed him off waivers from the Yankees. He’s pitched in parts of seven major league seasons (in addition to a solid 2018 season in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball). Tonkin has tossed 305 2/3 innings in the majors and carries a 4.18 ERA with solid strikeout and walk rates of 23.6% and 8.2%, respectively.

The Twins tendered Tonkin a $1MM contract over the winter, but he opened the season on the injured list due to a strained rotator cuff. Minnesota passed Tonkin through waivers last month while he was on a rehab assignment. He went unclaimed and accepted his assignment back to Triple-A, keeping him with the organization but removing him from the 40-man roster.

He’s now back on the 40-man after a strong run with the Saints. In 20 1/3 innings since coming back from that shoulder issue, Tonkin has turned in a 3.10 ERA and punched out 24 of 80 batters faced (30%) against just three walks (3.8%). His command hasn’t been quite as sharp as that rate might suggest, as he’s also plunked four batters, but it’s a been a nice run all the same. He’ll give the Twins a fresh arm after Adams tossed 3 1/3 innings in long relief yesterday (and thus would not have been available for several days).

Share Repost Send via email

Minnesota Twins Transactions Connor Gillispie Michael Tonkin Travis Adams

4 comments

Cardinals’ Tekoah Roby Undergoes Tommy John Surgery

By Steve Adams | July 28, 2025 at 11:16am CDT

Cardinals pitching prospect Tekoah Roby underwent Tommy John surgery last week, reports Katie Woo of The Athletic. He’s expected to miss not only the remainder of the current season but also the entire 2026 season as well.

It’s a brutal blow to the team’s prospect base. Roby has ranked among the Cardinals’ most promising young arms since he was acquired two years ago in the trade sending Jordan Montgomery to the Rangers, but he’d taken a considerable step forward this season. The 23-year-old opened the season with a brilliant 10-start run in his second stint at the Double-A level, pitching 47 innings with a 2.49 ERA, a 31% strikeout rate and a 6% walk rate. That earned him his first bump to Triple-A Memphis, where he started six more times and notched a 4.02 ERA, 22.6% strikeout rate and matching 6% walk rate.

Overall, Roby has pitched 78 1/3 innings with a 3.10 ERA between the Cardinals’ top two affiliates. Woo adds that the Cardinals, as part of their player development overhaul this season, had added a two-seamer to Roby’s repertoire and made changes to the shape and velocity of both his slider and changeup. The results were impressive, but those gains are now on hold after a second straight season with elbow troubles will prompt a major surgery.

It’s been a tough season for Cardinals pitching prospects. While McGreevy has remained healthy and now pitched his way into the rotation, many of the system’s other young arms have incurred notable setbacks. In addition to Roby, pitching prospects Cooper Hjerpe and Sem Robberse have both had Tommy John surgery this year. Hjerpe had his surgery in mid-April, and Robberse followed about a month later. Right-hander Tink Hence has missed most of the season due to a rib cage sprain. Lefty Quinn Mathews missed more than a month due to shoulder discomfort and has walked a staggering 21.3% of his opponents in 13 Triple-A starts when healthy.

The complications for the Cardinals extend beyond the obvious and straightforward setbacks in the development of several key young arms. Both Roby and Robberse are on the 40-man roster already. Hjerpe will need to be added this winter or else be left unprotected in the Rule 5 Draft (where there’s plenty of precedent for a team selecting a pitcher who is rehabbing from Tommy John surgery).

There’s no 60-day IL in the offseason, so if the Cardinals indeed add Hjerpe to the 40-man in November, they’ll effectively be navigating the offseason with only 37 of their 40-man roster spots available. Each of Roby, Robberse and Hjerpe would be taking up a spot. And, since none of them has made his big league debut yet, those dead roster spots would even carry over into the 2026 season, unless the Cardinals select any of the three to the major league roster and place them on the 60-day injured list. Doing so would start any of the trio’s service clock early and grant them major league service time and salary while rehabbing.

Share Repost Send via email

St. Louis Cardinals Cooper Hjerpe Sem Robberse Tekoah Roby Tink Hence

24 comments
« Previous Page
Load More Posts
    Top Stories

    Rockies Name Paul DePodesta President Of Baseball Operations

    Munetaka Murakami’s Posting Period Begins Today

    2025-26 Top 50 MLB Free Agents With Predictions

    13 Players Receive Qualifying Offers

    Rays Decline Option On Pete Fairbanks

    Enter The MLBTR Free Agent Prediction Contest

    Dodgers Exercise Club Options On Max Muncy, Alex Vesia

    Padres Hire Craig Stammen As Manager

    Phillies Exercise Option On Jose Alvarado

    Reds Decline Options On Brent Suter, Scott Barlow, Austin Hays

    Jorge Polanco Declines Player Option

    Braves To Exercise Club Option On Chris Sale

    Shane Bieber To Exercise Player Option

    Royals Sign Salvador Perez To Two-Year Extension

    Braves To Exercise Club Option On Ozzie Albies

    Jack Flaherty Exercises Player Option

    Trevor Story To Decline Opt-Out Clause, Will Remain With Red Sox

    Yu Darvish Undergoes UCL Surgery, Will Miss Entire 2026 Season

    Orioles Acquire Andrew Kittredge From Cubs

    Shota Imanaga Becomes Free Agent

    Recent

    Christian Roa Elects Free Agency

    Rockies Name Paul DePodesta President Of Baseball Operations

    Pirates To Sign Joe La Sorsa

    Brewers Release Tucker Davidson

    Padres Coaching Notes: Niebla, Fritz, Bench Coach

    Francona: Not Expecting A Hunter Greene Trade

    Padres Release Wes Benjamin

    Nationals’ Mike DeBartolo To Serve In Assistant GM Role

    White Sox Release Blake Sabol

    Royals Sign Connor Kaiser To Minor League Deal

    MLBTR Newsletter - Hot stove highlights in your inbox, five days a week

    Latest Rumors & News

    Latest Rumors & News

    • Every MLB Trade In July
    Trade Rumors App for iOS and Android App Store Google Play

    MLBTR Features

    MLBTR Features

    • Remove Ads, Support Our Writers
    • 2025-26 Top 50 MLB Free Agents With Predictions
    • Front Office Originals
    • Tim Dierkes' MLB Mailbag
    • 2025-26 Offseason Outlook Series
    • MLBTR Podcast
    • 2025-26 MLB Free Agent List
    • 2026-27 MLB Free Agent List
    • Projected Arbitration Salaries For 2026
    • Contract Tracker
    • Transaction Tracker
    • Extension Tracker
    • Agency Database
    • MLBTR On Twitter
    • MLBTR On Facebook
    • Team Facebook Pages
    • How To Set Up Notifications For Breaking News
    • Hoops Rumors
    • Pro Football Rumors
    • Pro Hockey Rumors

    Rumors By Team

    • Angels Rumors
    • Astros Rumors
    • Athletics Rumors
    • Blue Jays Rumors
    • Braves Rumors
    • Brewers Rumors
    • Cardinals Rumors
    • Cubs Rumors
    • Diamondbacks Rumors
    • Dodgers Rumors
    • Giants Rumors
    • Guardians Rumors
    • Mariners Rumors
    • Marlins Rumors
    • Mets Rumors
    • Nationals Rumors
    • Orioles Rumors
    • Padres Rumors
    • Phillies Rumors
    • Pirates Rumors
    • Rangers Rumors
    • Rays Rumors
    • Red Sox Rumors
    • Reds Rumors
    • Rockies Rumors
    • Royals Rumors
    • Tigers Rumors
    • Twins Rumors
    • White Sox Rumors
    • Yankees Rumors

    Navigation

    • Sitemap
    • Archives
    • RSS/Twitter Feeds By Team

    MLBTR INFO

    • Advertise
    • About
    • Commenting Policy
    • Privacy Policy

    Connect

    • Contact Us
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • RSS Feed

    MLB Trade Rumors is not affiliated with Major League Baseball, MLB or MLB.com

    Do not Sell or Share My Personal Information

    hide arrows scroll to top

    Register

    Desktop Version | Switch To Mobile Version