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Corbin Carroll Placed On IL With Wrist Fracture

By Anthony Franco | June 24, 2025 at 1:30pm CDT

June 24: The Diamondbacks officially placed Carroll on the IL, retroactive to June 21st, and recalled McCarthy today.

June 23: Corbin Carroll has been diagnosed with a “chip fracture” in his left wrist, manager Torey Lovullo told D-Backs’ postgame host Todd Walsh (h/t to Jody Jackson). It’s unclear how long he’ll be out of action or whether there’s any consideration of surgery. Nick Piecoro of The Arizona Republic had reported shortly before Lovullo’s announcement that the D-Backs would place Carroll on the injured list tomorrow. According to Piecoro, Jake McCarthy will be recalled from Triple-A Reno to take his spot on the roster.

It’s the latest hit to an Arizona team that has been battered by injuries. In this month alone, they’ve lost Corbin Burnes and top relievers A.J. Puk and Justin Martinez to season-ending elbow surgeries. Starting catcher Gabriel Moreno went down with a broken index finger last week. They’ll now be without one of their top two hitters for what seems likely to be at least a few weeks.

Carroll was injured during last Wednesday’s loss to the Blue Jays. Toronto reliever Justin Bruihl hit him on the left wrist with a 91 MPH sinker. The D-Backs lifted him for a defensive replacement in the following half-inning. Carroll hasn’t played since and wasn’t recovering as well as hoped. The Snakes sent him for an MRI that revealed the bone break. It’s unfortunately similar to the situation that played out with Moreno, who initially continued to play after a first round of x-rays didn’t catch the hairline fracture in his finger.

The 24-year-old Carroll has had a fantastic season, hitting .255/.341/.573 with 20 homers in 72 games. He got out to a blistering start, cooled a bit in May, and had rebounded to reel off nine extra-base hits in 13 games this month. Carroll has been a fixture in the top two spots in Lovullo’s batting order all season. They’ve bumped Geraldo Perdomo to the leadoff spot, at least against right-handed pitching, in his absence. Randal Grichuk has drawn into the lineup as the right fielder.

Grichuk is a solid role player but obviously isn’t going to come close to replacing Carroll’s production. If there’s a silver lining, it’s that the Diamondbacks still have a strong nucleus. A lineup including Ketel Marte, Eugenio Suárez, Josh Naylor, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. and Perdomo should remain capable of scoring runs. They need an elite offense to compensate for the struggles of the injury-riddled pitching staff, though, and that’s much more difficult without Carroll at the top.

Arizona bludgeoned the White Sox for a 10-0 victory tonight. That brought them to 40-38 on the season. They’re in fourth place in the NL West but are just 2.5 games out of the final Wild Card spot. Few teams have more at stake over the next five weeks as they hope to remain in position to add at the deadline.

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Arizona Diamondbacks Newsstand Corbin Carroll

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MLBTR Chat Transcript

By Steve Adams | June 24, 2025 at 1:01pm CDT

Steve Adams

  • Good morning! I’ll get going at 1pm, but feel free to send in questions sooner than that if you like.
  • Greetings!
  • Let’s get underway

Oz

  • I don’t see any chance that the Braves can overtake 5 clubs currently ahead of them in the standings to qualify for the postseason, especially in view of the injury to Chris Sale.  If they decide to be sellers at the trade deadline, who are their most marketable assets?

Steve Adams

  • Marcell Ozuna, Aaron Bummer, Pierce Johnson. Raisel Iglesias if he gets right between now and July 31. President Alex Anthopoulos sure doesn’t sound like someone who’s keen on a mass sell-off, so even trading Johnson and Bummer with their affordable options might be deemed a bridge too far, but reliever performance is volatile and teams overpay for bullpen help every deadline.

Nolan Arenado

  • Will Yanks, Astros, LAD, or Mets be interested in pursuing me this trade deadline? My defense is still superb, and while I had a down May, my April and June have OPS+’s of over 110

Steve Adams

  • Astros won’t go over the CBT. Yankees, Mets and Dodgers would pay a 110% tax on Arenado’s continued offensive decline. He’s just not worth his current contract — especially not for a top luxury offender — and he has the full no-trade to boot.
  • He’s not even an upgrade in L.A. over Muncy (raking since late April) or Paredes (great all year). Suppose you could play Paredes at 2B, but again, owner Jim Crane doesn’t want to cross the CBT line

Artie moreno

  • Will we see Kyren Paris again this year. What does he need to do

Steve Adams

    • Paris had a crazy start to the season but had terrible contact rates even when he was hot. It never felt sustainable. His contact rate since being sent to AAA is better than it was in the majors with the Angels but also worse than it was in AAA last year. I just don’t think he has the hit tool to be a big league regular, even though the power/speed combo is obviously tantalizing

Read more

Trader Jerry

  • Montes, Ford + 1 FOR Naylor & Suarez + $  WHO SAYS NO?

Steve Adams

  • Can’t see the Mariners giving up that much for a pair of rentals.

Kevin Gregg

  • Suarez + Gallen for Caisie?

Steve Adams

  • Same here … Caissie is a steep ask for two rentals. Gallen isn’t even pitching well.

Optimistic Ms Guy

  • If u had to pick between o’hearn or naylor…. Who’s the better fit for us?

Steve Adams

  • O’Hearn is the bigger upgrade to the lineup, but he’ll cost more, too. That’s not a knock on Naylor, who’s also quite good and would be a pronounced upgrade in Seattle — ROH is just having himself a moment in 2025.

Ray

  • Is Casey Schmidt the best fit at 2B for the Giants once Matt Chapman is back at 3B, especially with Tyler Fitzgerald losing his spot, or will they look to add further before the deadline?

Steve Adams

  • I think they’ll be open to further additions at 2B. Doesn’t necessarily have to be long-term since I’m sure they still hope Fitzgerald can be that (and because the offseason will have ample options to peruse at 2B, as always). Brandon Lowe, Willi Castro perhaps, Luis Urias — there’ll be some names, not all of them sexy, who could be had as a 2B alternative.

Dr. Mantis Tobogan

  • Which CBT-never-payor (AZ, BAL, CIN, CLE, COL, KC, MIL, A’s, PIT, STL, TBR, MIA) will be the next one to pay it for the first time?

Steve Adams

  • Ohh, that’s fun. The D-backs ran their payroll up to $200MM+ this year, so I’d probably go with them. None of the others seem likely to at any point anytime soon, but the Cardinals have at least pushed to the $175MM range, so I would take them — certainly over the Reds, Guards, Royals, Brewers, A’s, Pirates, Marlins.
  • Twins are up for sale, too, so who knows if they end up with an owner with deep enough pockets. Hard to imagine and wouldn’t be anytime soon, but I don’t think it’ll happen anytime soon for any of these teams.

Jeimer Candalario

  • Do I get another chance in the majors and with who? I wasn’t expecting DFA.

Steve Adams

  • Oh yeah, someone will pick him up once he clears release waivers and is a free agent.
  • Yankees, Tigers, Brewers, Twins could all use some other options in the infield. Back to the Cubs to see if he can recapture something there again doesn’t seem completely outlandish.

Paul

  • Roki Sasaki for MacKenzie Gore: who says no? Seems like this could truly be a win-win for both teams.

Steve Adams

  • It’s a fun question. I may be in the minority here, but I wouldn’t trade Gore for Sasaki. Touted as he is, Sasaki is almost completely untested against MLB lineups and is currently on the 60-day IL. He also had a notable injury history in Japan. MacKenzie Gore is among the best young pitchers in the league right now and has 2.5 years of club control remaining. At least in a straight-up swap, the Nats would have to ask for more.

NotBob

  • Could Failter bring back a top 100 prospect?

Steve Adams

  • No, Bailey Falter isn’t going to get that kind of return

John

  • Do you believe the Rays will trade a starting pitcher for more offense with Boyle most likely ready to step into a starting role with the big league team

Steve Adams

  • Both Joe Boyle and Ian Seymour are shoving in Triple-A. I think Zack Littell stands as one of the likelier trade candidates in the game, but he’s not having a great year and probably won’t bring much in return. Would be far, far more interesting if Tampa Bay sold high on Drew Rasmussen, whose contract is hugely valuable and could thus probably net them a pretty major return.Rasmussen is great, but workload and health are always going to be concerns and the Rays have the pitching to absorb that loss (especially since there’d probably be some kind of pitching prospect of note coming back in the deal).

Dana Brown

  • I have Yordon coming back soon do I go get another left handed bat or a starting pitcher?

Prospect Hunter

  • Rank the following prospects based on their next 3 years:  Chase Burns, Bubba Chandler, Andrew Painter, Travis Sykora

Steve Adams

  • Oops, didn’t mean to double-publish there, but I’ll do both (in order)
  • Brown said two days ago that a LH bat is his “big issue” and that he’s exploring various avenues:
    https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2025/06/astros-trade-rumors-left-handed…That’s the big one. The rotation question is contingent on the rehab processes of guys like Spencer Arrighetti, Cristian Javier, Lance McCullers, J.P. France, etc. — as Chandler Rome suggested in his recent Mailbag piece:
    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6446390/2025/06/24/astros-trade-deadl…

    I think SP is on the back-burner with so many arms on the mend, but further injuries between now and July 31 could impact that.

    Also have to consider payroll. Houston is about $5.5MM from the CBT threshold and, again, Crane doesn’t want to pay the tax.

  • On the prospects, I would go Chandler, Burns, Painter, Sykora — but I am not someone who is paid to specialize in evaluating prospects, so take that with a grain of salt.A lot of people might say Painter has the highest ceiling, but with a notable injury like this already under his belt, I’d dip him beneath Bubba and Burns.

    You can promote Bubba anytime now, Pirates.

SoCal Southsiders

  • What would a Zach Neto extension look like?

Steve Adams

  • https://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2025/05/mlb-mailbag-neto-nationals-trad…

Perry

  • What would it take to get German Marquez? I know it’s not a sexy pick up. But he could help the back end of of the rotation.

Steve Adams

  • Yeah, I don’t think the asking price could be all that high — couple of 40-FV (future value) type prospects. Typically those guys fall in the 10 to 20 range of a team’s farm rankings, depending on depth of the system of course.

Nats Guy

  • What would a James Wood or MacKenzie Gore extension look like?

Steve Adams

  • They’re both young superstars repped by Scott Boras. Gore is already only 2.5 years from free agency. I don’t see either being extended, but the price on both is well into nine figures. Gore would probably be eyeing Crochet’s $170MM extension and looking to top it. Wood is good, I don’t even know. $200MM+? He’s an absolute monster.
  • Phone call, one second
  • Ok

Pirate Maximus

  • What happened to candelario?  A low average slugger to dfa?  Age, injury or other?

Steve Adams

  • He was injured for a lot of his time in Cincinnati. I’m surprised he fell off so sharply, but it sounds like he played through a fair bit of pain, at least in year one. I liked the deal for them at the time. Well above-average hitter in three of the four seasons prior to signing, with the exception being a 2022 season wrecked by shoulder problems.

Cubbie

  • Would the Cubs consider making a move for Gore?   What would it cost prospect wise?

Steve Adams

  • Any team that needs pitching would love to. Cubs included. The cost would be obscene, though. Like Horton, Shaw and then some? You’re talking 2.5 years of someone who increasingly looks like a genuine No. 1 starter and who has the prospect pedigree that’s always suggested that outcome is in there.You’re not getting him without multiple 50-FV types and/or young big leaguers. Plus, the Nationals are going to want to contend sooner than later. They’re four seasons into this rebuild. It would need to be a massive return. Gore has the second-highest K% of any qualified starter. Even if you include all qualified relievers, he’s 18th in K% — and he’s doing it with a plus walk rate. He’s up there with Skubal and Wheeler in terms of K-BB% and trailing only Skubal and Cease in swinging-strike rate.

Not Mark P

  • Quick and easy one. Geno back to Seattle. Maybe?

Steve Adams

  • “Maybe,” sure. But as I said before re: Jeimer, lots of teams could use some 3B help. Yankees, Brewers, Tigers, etc. etc.

James Wood Money

  • I think I’m worth more like Vlad G money right?  500 million extension or more.

Steve Adams

  • Wouldn’t be surprised if that’s the sort of deal Boras was eyeing long-term. If you told me right now the price was over $300MM, I wouldn’t even blink. James Wood is a superstar.

Ken

  • Do you see the A’s regretting the Joe Boyle-Jeffrey Springs trade?

Steve Adams

  • There’ll be all kinds of tentacles to it, namely because I think they’ll trade Springs in the next 38 days and then we’ll have to sit here saying, “Well the A’s gave up Boyle, but then they got XYZ for Springs………”
  • Side note, if the Rays have managed to fix Joe Boyle’s like … 30 (??) grade command, I just throw my hands up and wonder what they can’t do, pitching-wise.
  • (Besides, apparently, get good production out of Aaron Civale, which still seems weird)

Clint Eastwood

  • Do you think WAR is an overrated stat? Especially since it combines hitting, defense and baserunning equally. Being sub-par in one area can hide your skill in another when I’d honestly rather have a good hitter than a good defender.

Steve Adams

  • I don’t think it needs to appeal to everyone. You’re finishing your question with an opinion — “I prefer good hitting to good defense” — when WAR exists to try to function in place of such subjective measures. It boils things down to runs created (whether on offense, defense, baserunning), assigns run values and tries to empirically place a value on a player’s entire skill set.It’s of course not flawless, but it’s not intended to be used as a be-all, end-all measure of value. MVP voters aren’t sitting down thinking, “Oh — got to fill out my ballot … let me just sort B-Ref or FanGraphs by WAR, and there we go, there’s my list. Copy and submit!”
  • I think, like any stat, it’s useful within its lane and also has fundamental aspects that it can never capture

Cory

  • How would you fix whatever mojo the Twins don’t have right now?

Steve Adams

  • They still have that now 16-month-old rally sausage floating around somewhere?

Tj Friedl

  • Should it be me, EDC, or Abbott representing the reds in the ASG?

Steve Adams

  • Any of the three are defensible. Could be multiple. Elly should be there for sure.

Last Marlins Fan

  • Who’s the better prospect? Heriberto Hernandez or Victor Mesa….

Steve Adams

  • Mesa, but I don’t think either of them is a big league regular.

Ben Fried Rice

  • With Senga down, has the Mets pitching been exposed after being shockingly good to start?

Steve Adams

  • It’s just being tested. They’re more talented than they’ve been recently, but it takes a toll when you lose your ace, get some short starts from the other guys and then have to ask the bullpen to take on a bigger load. Leads to long mop-up stints for guys who shouldn’t be in the game anymore but need to save the rest of the group. It gets and looks ugly in a hurry.The Twins have had basically the exact same thing happen over in the AL. Lost two starters back-to-back, got some short starts from the remaining guys and it all snowballs quickly.

    Both teams were among the best all-around staffs in baseball from mid-April through mid-June, and both are better than they’ve been during the recent slide.

I Miss Vin Scully

  • Is Alex Feeland the centerpiece of a trade next month or do you believe the Dodgers keep him?

Steve Adams

  • I think they’ll be open to listening but aren’t going to shop him or anything. Generally how the Dodgers are with their very top prospects. I haven’t heard or read anything to suggest that they expressly won’t part with Freeland. They did more or less take that stance with Rushing (although for the right player, pretty much anyone is available)

AJ Preller

  • Does having to watch James Wood go nuclear so soon after the Soto deal change my wheeling and dealing ways? Or am I still going for broke and sending our (now lacking) top prospects away for a short term fix?

Steve Adams

  • AJ Preller trades so much that he’s bound to ship out a star. Hasn’t stopped him before. Trea Turner immediately broke out in Washington after that trade and Preller shrugged and went right back to working the market.It stings to see someone blossom into a star like that, but I believe it’s also a genuine strength for a GM/president to be able to have the courage to trade those guys anyway. Some execs clearly get paralysis when it comes to trading top-tier talent and frequently watch those prospects slowly bleed value until they’re devoid of real value.

    Preller has traded away so many “he should be untouchable” types, and more of them have gone the way of Luis Urias than James Wood.

    Plus, he indirectly has Cease and Michael King by way of trading Soto, and that’ll only create further value both in terms of contending seasons in ’24-’25 and potential draft picks if/when they reject QOs

Guest

  • thoughts on the Miguel Vargas trade now?

Steve Adams

  • I’m on record at the time — and even into the offseason — as saying people are too quick to dump on guys like Vargas, who exhaust their prospect/rookie status and don’t immediately hit the ground running.
  • People were aghast that Fedde/Kopech didn’t net a “top 100 prospect” and “only” got Vargas and two others, while ignoring that Vargas was less than a year from being like the No. 40 prospect in baseball and had never gotten a true everyday look in L.A.I’m wrong about plenty of trades — PLENTY — but that was one where I thought the return was far better than a lot of people were giving it credit for.

Dean

  • What are the chances the Rays flip HSK if he has a few weeks to show his arm is back?  More or less likely than trading Brandon Lowe?

Steve Adams

  • Trading Lowe is way likelier. Kim has the opt-out on his contract that’ll make it very difficult to move him. I won’t go full broken record, but I say every week how opt-out guys are overwhelmingly difficult to trade.
  • I think Lowe has a very good chance to be moved.

ORIOLES SCOUTING CUBS PROSPECTS

  • That is the rumor going around.  Who might the CUBS want from Baltimore and why??  What would be a prospective package going back to the Orioles??

Steve Adams

  • Every team scouts every other team. I don’t put tons of stock in “this team sent an extra scout to watch this team.” There are probably 10 teams that would like to trade for one or more of Zach Eflin, Cedric Mullins, Ryan O’Hearn, Andrew Kittredge, etc. etc.Orioles haven’t made that call yet, but it behooves them to be as informed as possible if they get there.

Marlins

  • Houston wants a LHH, would Jesus Sanchez get Brice Matthews?

Steve Adams

  • No, I don’t think Sanchez has that kind of value. I also think whichever LHH they get would be better off being able to play both infield and outfield.

Still an A

  • Ryan McMahon was a big trade target last year and the Rockies screwed that up by holding onto him. Does he have any value going into the deadline this year and does he get moved?

Steve Adams

  • I gave my colleague Anthony Franco a hard time last week since he wrote back on May 1 how the Rox missed the boat by not trading McMahon when interest was high in 2024. He had been terrible for nearly a calendar year at that point, with a ton of ugly trends (K’s up, hard contact down, walks down, all kinds of red flags)
  • McMahon homered that night and has been on a TEAR since.
  • All arrows pointing up … lower K%, more walks, better contact, all of it.
  • Anthony saved the man’s career.
  • To your point, yes, McMahon should have considerable value and the Rockies should 100% trade him.I am … 15%  sure they do.
  • McMahon is hitting .268/.362/.518 since Anthony wrote that piece, ha (which, to be clear, I agreed with in full at the time)

Padres getting old

  • Oh boy. So when Cease and King leave we get a few draft picks and Randy Vasquez from the Soto dominos.

Steve Adams

  • Well, that and a deep NLCS run last year and a possible playoff run this season. And those picks will be in the top 40 of the draft, so they could immediately turn into high-end prospects (who, with Preller at the helm, are possible bait to acquire even more star-caliber players).The circle of life!

Chris Gimenez

  • Should the Guards trade one of Manzardo or Santana??

Steve Adams

  • I’d be open to trading Santana, who’s on a pricey one-year deal, regardless of contention status. Manzardo can move to 1B full-time. I don’t think the return would be great, though, so if it gets to the point where you’re potentially pissing off the clubhouse to add some Low-A relief prospect with a 3-5% chance of developing into a big leaguer, then it’s probably not worth it.But if Santana goes on a tear here and rebuilds some trade value, you’ve got to at least be open to it.

Senator Blutarsky

  • If not traded, would Ohearn and or Mullins get a QO?

Steve Adams

  • Both should.

Minister of Silly Walks

  • Even if the Cards are contending, could you see them try to move Nolan Gorman. He’s a power hitting lefty but the Cards are already pretty good on the infield (Nado, Wynn, Donny, Willi with Saggese already up and JJ looking ready for AAA)

Steve Adams

  • Gorman increasingly feels like a change-of-scenery guy to me, yeah

MostlyToasty1

  • Who is a player not being talked about much that you think is very likely to be moved prior to the TDL?

Steve Adams

  • Trying to think of a few off the cuff here. I already mentioned Jeffrey Springs. Mike Tauchman isn’t a big name or talked about much (despite playing on a clear seller) and is having a nice year. Edward Cabrera in Miami isn’t “very” likely but is plausible. Feels like the Astros will want to find a taker to buy low on Chas McCormick.Adolis Garcia?

D Hat

  • How do you rate questions worthy enough to be asked in your chat?

Steve Adams

  • There are 784 people actively in here at the moment, plus people coming and going the whole time. I just try to grab one I can answer quickly, usually. And obviously if I see a bunch of readers with different IP addresses (not usernames, haha … I think many don’t realize we can tell when you’re just changing your name) asking about the same topic, I’ll try to get that since it’s on a lot of peoples’ minds.

Steve Cohen

  • Now that Chase Burns is making his debut tonight isn’t it overdue for  Bubba Chandler to make his MLB Debut?

Steve Adams

  • Bubba has been overdue for about 2-3 months, but the Pirates clearly want to make sure he doesn’t get a full year of service in 2025.

TREVOR ROGERS

  • If Rogers manages to pitch 4 more starts like the one from yesterday, could the Orioles be BOLD enough to attempt to FLIP him to recoup some players ( since Mike Elias sacrificed Stowers & Norby for this guy )?????

Steve Adams

  • I don’t think it’s out of the question. If it makes you feel better, I’m not at all sold on Stowers being a legitimate building block in Miami. I liked Norby a lot coming into the season but it’s been a rough year.

Mike Rizzo

  • If you’re shopping for a back end starter at this deadline, would you rather go for Soroka or Trevor Williams

Steve Adams

  • Personally, I wouldn’t target either. Although I’d be happy to take Soroka and put him in the bullpen.

Mets

  • What can the Mets receive for Blackburn?  Not enamored with his ability and would love to see him get moved.

Steve Adams

  • I don’t think they’ll trade him at this point with Senga and Megill down
  • Side note
  • Twins president of baseball ops Derek Falvey said this to the Minneapolis Star Tribune yesterday:”Even when we had a couple injuries, there was a team that felt like they had some pitching depth and we had a brief trade conversation, ‘Hey, could we pick off some?’ And they were open to it. Within 72 hours, there were two different pitching injuries on that team that ultimately peeled them back from the market.”
  • Gee, I wonder which team he could be talking about. Ha.
  • Doesn’t mean a deal was close, but sure seems like the Twins were looking into Blackburn to backfill the fifth spot in the rotation with Lopez/Matthews out and Woods Richardson/Festa struggling.
  • Alrighty, I’ve got to call it this week. I’m on X @Adams_Steve and Bluesky @adams-steve.bsky.social if you have more questions.If you want more opinions from the MLBTR team, you can learn about our Front Office subscription package and sign up here. In addition to ad-free viewing on the site and in the app, you’ll get weekly analysis/opinion columns from Anthony Franco and myself, a weekly mailbag column from Tim Dierkes, weekly fantasy baseball chats and columns with Nicklaus Gaut, two weekly subscriber-only chats (one with me, one with Anthony) where your odds of getting a question answered are much better, direct Q&A opps with Darragh McDonald, access to our new Trade Deadline Outlook series, access to our Contract Tracker, GM Tracker and our Agency Database, and more. It all starts at $2.99/month.

    Have a great week everyone!

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MLBTR Chats

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Mets Reinstate Frankie Montas, Transfer Jesse Winker To 60-Day IL

By Darragh McDonald | June 24, 2025 at 12:59pm CDT

The Mets announced that right-hander Frankie Montas has been reinstated from the 60-day injured list. Right-hander Chris Devenski was optioned to Triple-A Syracuse as the corresponding active roster move. He has enough service time where he can’t be optioned without his consent, so he has presumably agreed to be sent down. To open a 40-man spot for Montas, outfielder/designated hitter Jesse Winker has been transferred to the 60-day IL.

Montas, 32, will be making his debut as a Met when he starts tonight’s game. At the moment, it’s difficult to guess what sort of quality of performance he’ll be able to provide. He was diagnosed with a lat strain back in mid-February. He started a rehab assignment in late May but hasn’t looked sharp, allowing 25 earned runs in 18 2/3 innings over six minor league starts.

Teams generally care more about health than results on a rehab assignment but a 12.05 earned run average is going to cause some concern. It would be one thing if Montas started rough and had been getting sharper but that hasn’t been the case. He surrendered five earned runs in five innings in his most recent outing, with just two strikeouts. The prior outing had seen him allow eight earned runs without getting out of the second inning.

Even before this year, there were question marks with Montas. He had missed almost all of 2023 due to shoulder surgery. Back on the mound in 2024, his 4.84 ERA wasn’t strong. The Mets seemed to be banking on his late-season strikeout surge. He had struck out just 19% of batters faced with the Reds but then 28.7% of opponents following a trade to the Brewers. He then headed into free agency and secured a two-year, $34MM deal from the Mets, with equal salaries of $17MM and an opt-out halfway through.

That was a notable investment in a pitcher who hadn’t been at his best in a few years. The Mets are also paying a 110% tax on spending beyond the top competitive balance tax threshold this year, making it an even more significant expenditure which they have yet to receive any return on.

Despite that cash outlay, the righty’s recent struggles on his rehab assignment almost pushed him to the bullpen. However, the club’s rotation picture changed quickly in recent weeks. Not too long ago, it seemed the club had so much rotation depth that a Paul Blackburn trade was reportedly considered. But then both Kodai Senga and Tylor Megill hit the injured list in the span of a few days, opening rotation space for both Blackburn and Montas alongside David Peterson, Clay Holmes and Griffin Canning.

If everyone is healthy, another squeeze could be just over the horizon. Sean Manaea is also on the IL and just a bit behind Montas in his rehab process. He recently made his fourth rehab appearance, getting to 62 pitches over 5 1/3 innings. Montas is getting a rotation spot for now due to the club’s need and the fact that his 30-day rehab window was closing but there will be pressure on him to perform in order to keep that spot.

As for Winker, he landed on the IL on May 5th due to a right oblique strain. His 60-day count is retroactive to that initial IL placement, so he’ll be eligible for reinstatement in early July. He was initially given a recovery timeline of six to eight weeks but the Mets recently said that he is still multiple weeks away from starting a rehab assignment.

Photo courtesy of Sam Navarro, Imagn Images

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New York Mets Transactions Chris Devenski Frankie Montas Jesse Winker

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A’s Release Dylan Floro

By Steve Adams | June 24, 2025 at 12:06pm CDT

The A’s have released veteran right-handed reliever Dylan Floro, per the transaction log at MiLB.com. He’d been pitching with the Athletics’ Triple-A club in Las Vegas but is now back on the open market.

Floro, 34, has an ugly-looking 7.04 ERA in 15 1/3 innings with the top A’s affiliate, but that number is skewed by one nightmare outing where the Dodgers’ Triple-A club pummeled him for five runs without recording an out. That outing accounts for 42% of his runs allowed in 16 appearances. Floro’s 17.1% strikeout rate in Triple-A is clearly well below-average, but he’s still showing good command (7.1% walk rate).

There are red flags beyond the one poor outing. Floro’s 88.2 mph average fastball velocity is down from last year’s 89.4 mph mark and down considerably from the 92.4 mph he averaged in 2022-23. He’s also made a career out of inducing weak contact but has yielded a blazing 94.7 mph average exit velocity and surrendered a 60.4% hard-hit rate. Those are both alarming trends for the well-traveled righty.

Concerning as those numbers are, Floro has a nice track record in the majors, with a 3.49 ERA, 20.8% strikeout rate, 7.2% walk rate, 50.6% grounder rate, 32 saves and 53 holds in parts of nine MLB seasons. He posted a 3.80 ERA with a 17.2% strikeout rate and 6.1% walk rate in a combined 68 2/3 big league frames between the Nationals and D-backs last year, although his 2024 campaign was a tale of two seasons; Floro posted a 2.06 ERA in 52 1/3 innings with the Nats before being clobbered for a 9.37 ERA in 16 1/3 innings with Arizona.

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Oakland Athletics Transactions Dylan Floro

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The Opener: Burns, Simpson, MLBTR Chat

By Nick Deeds | June 24, 2025 at 8:42am CDT

Here are three things for MLBTR readers to keep an eye on throughout the day:

1. Chase Burns to make MLB debut:

It’s a big day for fans of the Reds, as top pitching prospect and second overall pick in last year’s draft Chase Burns is set to make his major league debut today. He’ll take the mound at Great American Ball Park against Yankees southpaw Carlos Rodon (3.10 ERA) in a game scheduled for 7:10pm local time. Burns has been sensational through 13 starts across three levels of the minors this year, combining for a 1.77 ERA and 36.8% strikeout rate in 66 innings. Even when zeroing in on just his two starts at Triple-A, Burns has been quite impressive with a 2.19 ERA and 30.4% strikeout rate in 12 1/3 innings of work. His rapid ascent through the minors and dominance at every level has made it clear he’s ready for the challenge of the big leagues, though the Yankees are a tough first assignment given that they lead the AL in runs scored and wRC+.

2. Simpson to return:

One of the sport’s fastest players is headed back to the majors. As noted by Adam Berry of MLB.com, the Rays are poised to recall Chandler Simpson from the minors today to take over center field duties from the recently-optioned Kameron Misner. Simpson stole a whopping 19 bases in just 35 games (22 attempts) and batted .285/.315/.317 (85 wRC+) during his first stint in the majors earlier this year. In conjunction with some lackluster defense in center field, that lack of power and paltry 4.5% walk rate resulted in Simpson returning to the minors at the beginning of June. Since then, he’s hit a robust .366/.416/.465 at the Triple-A level. He’ll get another opportunity as the Rays face the Royals at Kauffman Stadium tonight, where he’ll be tested by southpaw Kris Bubic (2.12 ERA).

3. MLBTR Chat today:

With just over a month to go until the July 31 trade deadline, chatter about trade season has already begun in earnest. While it will be difficult for another in-season blockbuster to top the Devers deal from earlier this month, a handful of smaller deals have started to come together around the league as well. Whether you’re looking ahead to the deadline or still trying to sort between the contenders and pretenders, MLBTR’s Steve Adams has you covered in a live chat scheduled for 1pm CT today. You can click here to ask a question in advance, join in live once the chat begins, or read the transcript once the chat is complete.

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The Opener

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Trade Deadline Outlook: Philadelphia Phillies

By Anthony Franco | June 23, 2025 at 11:59pm CDT

MLBTR's team-by-team look at the upcoming deadline continues with the Phillies. President of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski has never been afraid to take swings, and this year figures to be no exception as they battle the Mets for control of the NL East.

Record: 47-31 (90.7% playoff probability, per FanGraphs)

Buy Mode

Potential needs: Late-inning relief, corner outfield, center field, second base

Philadelphia has fewer holes than most teams do. They're the rare club that probably feels good about their rotation depth. They've stacked much of the everyday lineup with star players, most of whom are performing up to expectations. The top priority is a familiar one for the fanbase and front office: stabilizing the back of the bullpen.

Jordan Romano, Orion Kerkering and Matt Strahm are their top in-house options at the back end. Strahm is consistently effective but not a prototypical power arm. Romano's first season in Philly has been up-and-down. Kerkering has high-octane stuff and has gotten excellent results since the start of May, but he's always at risk of losing the strike zone. Rookies Mick Abel and Andrew Painter are starting pitching prospects but might make a greater impact this year in the late innings. Still, that's a lot of onus to put on young pitchers.

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2025 Trade Deadline Outlook Front Office Originals MLBTR Originals Philadelphia Phillies

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Twins Have Exercised Rocco Baldelli’s 2026 Option

By Anthony Franco | June 23, 2025 at 9:17pm CDT

Rocco Baldelli is in his seventh season as Minnesota’s manager. It was unclear whether his deal ran beyond this season, but the 43-year-old skipper is apparently signed for another year. Dan Hayes of The Athletic reports that the Twins have exercised their 2026 club option on Baldelli, though it’s unclear when they did so.

Minnesota did not make any kind of formal announcement at the time. Many teams do not publicly reveal the length of the contracts for their non-playing personnel, so that’s not a huge surprise. Baldelli being under contract for next season doesn’t mean the Twins couldn’t make a change before then. Still, president of baseball operations Derek Falvey has been steadfast in his support for his longtime manager throughout their tenures in the Twin Cities.

Falvey again expressed confidence in Baldelli’s leadership today, ruling out the possibility of making a change at the moment. “It’s just making sure no one runs away from the work that is right in front of him, and Rocco is not running away from any of the work. … We’re all side by side with him, as is the staff and as our core players,” Falvey told Hayes. “We’re trying to figure it out together.”

The Twins have made the postseason in three of Baldelli’s six full seasons. They won the AL Central in each of 2019, ’20 and ’23 but only won one playoff series in that time. They’re 3-8 in the postseason since Baldelli was hired. They looked on track for another playoff berth late last season, peaking at 17 games above .500 in the middle of August. They collapsed to a 12-27 finish over the final six weeks, ultimately landing at 82-80 and on the outside looking in.

That dreadful run carried into this April, as the Twins won only seven of their first 22 games. They picked things up in the second half of the month and ripped off a 13-game win streak — which remains easily the longest by any team this year — in the middle of May. They climbed as high as seven games over .500 earlier this month, but June has been a disaster.

Injuries to Pablo López and Zebby Matthews have dealt a huge hit to the rotation, and none of their starters have pitched well in recent weeks. The bullpen has been even worse, allowing more than seven earned runs per nine innings this month. They entered play tonight with an MLB-worst 6.59 ERA overall in June. That’ll climb even more after Bailey Ober and Joey Wentz were torched for 11 runs by the Mariners tonight. They just wrapped up a defeat that drops them to 37-41 on the season. They have lost 14 of their last 18 games.

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Minnesota Twins Rocco Baldelli

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Blue Jays Release Erik Swanson

By Anthony Franco | June 23, 2025 at 8:27pm CDT

The Blue Jays have released reliever Erik Swanson, reports MLBTR’s Steve Adams. Toronto designated him for assignment last Tuesday. Swanson has already gone unclaimed on waivers and is a free agent.

Swanson spent two-plus seasons with the Jays. Acquired from the Mariners in the Teoscar Hernández trade, the righty had an excellent first season north of the border. Swanson turned in a 2.97 ERA while leading the team with 29 holds across 66 2/3 innings in 2023. That followed a sterling 1.68 ERA showing in his final season with Seattle. He hasn’t maintained that production over the past couple seasons, at least in part due to injury.

The 31-year-old Swanson missed a couple weeks early last season with forearm inflammation. He wasn’t effective when he returned and spent a couple months on optional assignment to Triple-A Buffalo. He looked to be trending towards a non-tender until finding some positive momentum in the second half. Swanson was recalled not long after the All-Star Break and managed a 2.55 ERA with a .172 opponent batting average down the stretch.

Toronto retained Swanson on a $3MM arbitration salary. That would’ve been a bargain if he repeated his second half numbers. Injuries again intervened. Swanson missed the first two months battling a nerve issue in his throwing arm. He was activated on June 1 but allowed runs in four of his six appearances, including three-plus runs in each of his final two outings. His average fastball speed has dropped a tick to 92.9 MPH and he has given up nine runs with five walks and three strikeouts over 5 1/3 innings.

The Jays will remain on the hook for the rest of Swanson’s salary. He wouldn’t cost a new team anything other than a roster spot. They’d pay only the prorated portion of the $760K league minimum for any time he spends on the MLB roster, which would be subtracted from Toronto’s responsibility. His 2022-23 production will at least generate interest on minor league offers, and it wouldn’t be a complete surprise if another team is willing to plug him directly into the MLB bullpen for the league minimum.

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Toronto Blue Jays Transactions Erik Swanson

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Tyler Nevin Signs Two-Year Extension With NPB’s Seibu Lions

By Darragh McDonald | June 23, 2025 at 5:21pm CDT

The Seibu Lions of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball announced that they have signed infielder Tyler Nevin to a two-year extension beginning in 2026. Salary figures were not included. “I’d like to express my sincere gratitude to my teammates, staff, and fans who have trusted me and supported me since the day I arrived in Japan,” Nevin said in a Japanese statement relayed by the team, per Google Translate. “I will strive to make the rest of the season even better and focus on the game in front of me. I can’t wait for the next two years. Awesome!”

Nevin, 28, signed with the Lions in January. His Japanese career has gotten out to a solid start through his first 68 games. His .269/.330/.379 batting line may not be overwhelming in a vacuum but actually translates to a 120 wRC+ in NPB this year. It seems that the club has been pleased enough with that performance to lock him up.

Considering the way Nevin’s career went before this year, it’s understandable that he would agree to be locked up. Broadly speaking, he had always hit in the minors but failed to do so in the majors. From 2022 to 2024, he stepped to the plate 639 times at the Triple-A level. He hit 26 home runs and drew walks at a 10.2% clip while only striking out 17.5% of the time. He had a combined batting line of .313/.391/.536 and a 137 wRC+.

That minor league performance got him a few major league looks from the Orioles, Tigers and Athletics, but he wasn’t able to do much with those chances. He got 591 big league plate appearances over the past few years with a .204/.299/.315 line and 81 wRC+. He exhausted his final option year in 2023, which put him into a fringe roster status. He spent 2024 bouncing on and off the Athletics’ roster, clearing waivers multiple times throughout the year. Finding regular playing time in the big leagues would have been difficult going forward.

Rather than spend another year grinding through the roster bubble lifestyle, he accepted a chance to head overseas and perhaps find some stability. Given that he’s having a decent year, he could have tried to parlay that into a return to North America in 2026. But there would have been no guarantee of that working out, so it’s easy to see the logic in him sticking with the Lions for another few years.

Though the salary figures haven’t been reported for this deal, North American players getting regular work in Japan often get paid in the vicinity of $1MM annually. That’s more than players in the minors in North America get and even more than pre-arbitration major leaguers. Whatever his salary is, Nevin will get a bit of cash and some job security for his age-29 and age-30 seasons. If he can make the most of that regular role, he could perhaps try to return to affiliated ball a few years from now or secure himself another deal to continue playing in Asia.

Photo courtesy of Darren Yamashita, Imagn Images

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Nippon Professional Baseball Transactions Tyler Nevin

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Royals Option Kyle Wright

By Darragh McDonald | June 23, 2025 at 4:52pm CDT

The Royals announced today that right-hander Kyle Wright has been reinstated from the 15-day injured list and optioned to Triple-A Omaha. He had been pitching on a rehab assignment but the club has decided to have him stick in the minors a while longer, as opposed to adding him to the big league roster.

As of a few years ago, the idea of optioning Wright to the minors would have been a huge surprise. In 2022, he made 30 starts for Atlanta, going 21-5 and logging 180 1/3 innings. He had a 3.19 earned run average, 23.6% strikeout rate, 7.2% walk rate and 55.6% ground ball rate. He then tossed six shutout innings in his lone playoff start of that year. He finished 10th in National League Cy Young voting.

It’s been rougher sledding since then. He only tossed 31 innings in the 2023 season due to shoulder issues which eventually required surgery. The Royals acquired him ahead of the 2024 season, even though they knew he was likely to miss all of that campaign. He eventually did miss that entire season while the Royals paid him $1.8MM. They agreed to pay him that same salary figure this year.

The hope was that Wright could potentially help them in 2025 and 2026 after recovering from his shoulder surgery, which hasn’t come to pass yet. His shoulder was still enough of an issue for him to start this year on the 15-day IL. He started a rehab assignment in early May but was pulled off that due to shoulder fatigue after just two starts. He restarted that rehab assignment on May 25th and has since made six starts, two at Double-A and four at Triple-A.

Rehab assignments for pitchers can last as long as 30 days, so Wright was coming to the end of his window, but his results in those rehab outings weren’t especially impressive. His four Triple-A outings resulted in a 6.23 ERA. He did strike out 23% of batters faced but also gave out walks at a 14.8% clip. Perhaps there’s still some rust to shake off or he’s still building strength. He averaged over 95 miles per hour on his fastball in 2022 but has only been at 92 mph at Triple-A so far this year.

The club’s current rotation likely played a role in the decision as well. Even with Cole Ragans on the IL, Kansas City’s starting group is quite strong. It’s anchored by a solid trio of Seth Lugo, Michael Wacha and Kris Bubic. They have Michael Lorenzen as a solid back-end guy. Rookie Noah Cameron has a 2.08 ERA through his first eight big league starts.

The combination of the strength of that group and Wright appearing as though he still needs some fine tuning has seemingly blocked his path back to the majors for now. It makes for an interesting situation for the Royals with the deadline now just over a month away. Ragans may be close to a return by the end of July. If the rest of the group stays healthy, they may have a relative surplus of starting pitching. Trading away from that surplus would be dangerous, especially with the rate of pitching injuries in the modern game, but it could be a way for the club to add some more offense.

Wright came into this year with four years and 62 days of major league service time, 110 shy of the five-year mark. By my count he has added 88 days so far here in 2025, though the clock now stops ticking with this option. He is making a relative modest salary, as mentioned. If he doesn’t have a spot in the Royals’ rotation now and Ragans is coming back, perhaps they could consider making him available. Lorenzen is also one a one-year deal and likely wouldn’t be part of the club’s planned playoff rotation, so perhaps he could end up on the block as well.

This optional assignment could also impact Wright personally. As mentioned, he is still shy of five years of service. If he stays in the minors the rest of the year, it would delay his path to free agency, though he may end up a non-tender candidate in that scenario. He has just one option remaining and will be out of options next year if this assignment last 20 days or longer.

Photo courtesy of Jayne Kamin-Oncea, Imagn Images

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Kansas City Royals Kyle Wright

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