
MLB trade deadline: Nearly every prospect dealt in 2024 looks like a dud
Major League Baseball's annual transaction bazaar is nearly here. And for fans of less-dominant teams, the concept of 'selling' at the trade deadline holds some appeal.
It might indicate their favorite franchise is showing some semblance of direction, that the hope of the unknown remains preferable to the drudgery of the present. But in this era of deadline gridlock thanks to extra wild card berths and clubs clutching their best prospects ever closer to them, the gifts that arrive at the end of July are more suitable for a white elephant exchange than an actual holiday.
And for clubs hovering around or just below .500, selling means kicking the can down the road again, at least in part because internal 'playoff odds' might not suggest earnestly competing is the best choice.
So just what did last year bring, and are the sellers better off?
Not a lot: Of the 83 prospects acquired, three have become replacement-level big league regulars, and one - Marlins slugger Kyle Stowers – an All-Star. Two more are platoon players.
Yet just two traded prospects cracked the top five of the acquiring team's most recent prospects list as rated by Baseball America, while 17 others are currently in an organizational top 30. And not a single current top 100 overall prospect changed organizations.
Just call the following an exercise in managing expectations.
USA TODAY Sports examined the biggest deals in the last week leading up to the 2024 deadline, excluding trades that didn't involve obvious buyers and sellers, blatant cash dumps, those involving players designated for assignment and similarly minor moves.
As that seven-day window opens for 2025, is it worth it for clubs to get "something" instead of nothing? Let's see:
The biggest deals
Dodgers get: INF/OF Tommy Edman, RHP Michael Kopech, RHP Oliver Gonzalez
Cardinals get: RHP Erick Fedde, OF Tommy Pham
White Sox get: INF Miguel Vargas, INF Jeral Perez, INF Alexander Albertus
Outcome: Dodgers win World Series; Cardinals finish 83-79; White Sox finish 41-121
Aftermath: The two Dodger blockbusters certainly pushed them over the top to a World Series title and they even convinced Edman to stick around a while. Kopech was a regular season and playoff savior, posting eight scoreless outings in 10 postseason games, although he's been injured almost all this year. The Cardinals failed to make the postseason and Fedde, though solid down the 2024 stretch, was designated for assignment last week. For all those moving parts, the White Sox got little assurance of a future cornerstone. Vargas flourished momentarily with a long runway for big league at-bats but now has a .221/.304/.402 line with 12 homers. Perez, 20, is ranked 22nd in the Sox system and has a .296 OBP at high A while Albertus has played just 19 career games outside of complex league ball.
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Dodgers get: RHP Jack Flaherty
Tigers get: SS Trey Sweeney, C Thayron Liranzo
Outcome: Tigers win wild-card series, lose in AL Division Series
Aftermath: The trade that broke all conventions. The Dodgers snagged the most significant starting pitcher upgrade just before the deadline and Flaherty started three of the Dodgers' 11 postseason victories. Meanwhile, the Tigers regrouped behind a 'pitching chaos' plan, gained an everyday shortstop in Sweeney, reached the playoffs – and re-signed Flaherty in the off-season. Kids, don't try this at home. Something about the exception that proves the rule.
As for assets? Check back. After solidifying shortstop last season, Sweeney has produced negative WAR and a 63 adjusted OPS this season, which included a brief trip to Class AAA. Liranzo, 22, is No. 4 in Baseball America's midseason re-rank of the Tigers' system, with a .748 OPS at Class AA.
Padres get: LHP Tanner Scott, RHP Bryan Hoeing
Marlins get: LHP Robby Snelling, RHP Adam Mazur, LHP Jay Beshears, INF Graham Paulling
Outcome: Padres win wild-card series, lose in NL Division Series; Marlins finish 62-100
Aftermath: San Diego won the stakes for the top reliever on the market and gave the Dodgers their toughest fight of October, losing a five-game NLDS thriller. Scott left as a free agent; Hoeing remains a member of the Padres' bullpen.
The Marlins fortified their system, getting their current No. 4 (Snelling), No. 7 (Mazur) and No. 22 (Paulling) prospects, though only Snelling – having a nice bounceback year at Class AA and AAA – projects as a potential impact player.
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Astros get: LHP Yusei Kikuchi
Blue Jays get: INF/OF Will Wagner, INF/OF Joey Loperfido, RHP Jake Bloss
Outcome: Astros lose AL wild card series; Blue Jays finish 74-88
Aftermath: A pretty good ol' fashioned deadline deal here, even as there's no carrying potential star in the return. Kikuchi pitched great in Houston (5-1, 2.70 ERA) yet somehow did not start a playoff game before the Astros went two-and-out. Wagner and Loperfido have played in 33 and 10 games respectively for the Jays, each sitting on 0.0 WAR (and if that's not the perfect illustration for the modern trade deadline return…). Bloss, now the Blue Jays' No. 13 ranked prospect, underwent Tommy John surgery in May after six rocky outings at Class AAA.
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Yankees get: INF Jazz Chisholm
Marlins get: C Agustin Ramírez, INF Jared Serna, INF Abrahan Ramírez
Outcome: Yankees advance to World Series
Aftermath: Chisholm was a key immediate and future piece for the Yankees, producing an .825 OPS and 11 regular season homers and filling a massive hole at third, sometimes with difficulty defensively. He's their everyday All-Star second baseman this year.
It looked like a strong return for the Marlins after Agustin Ramírez debuted April 21 and slugged six homers with a .923 OPS in his first 23 games. He's hit eight more homers but with just a .674 OPS and 19% K rate in the 54 games since. Abrahan Ramírez is their No. 22 prospect but at 20 is still in the Florida complex league; Serna, 23, is on the 40-man roster but has a .569 OPS at Class AA.
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Orioles get: LHP Trevor Rogers
Marlins get: OF Kyle Stowers, INF Connor Norby
Outcome: Orioles lose in AL wild card series
Aftermath: Like the Flaherty trade above, this one went haywire from the jump. Rogers was bad and injured for a very good Orioles team down the stretch; he's now very good for a bad Orioles team this season. Meanwhile, the Orioles made a potentially crushing mistake in choosing Stowers to deal from their surplus of outfielders. After three years on the Baltimore-AAA shuttle, he's an All-Star and possible superstar in Miami, with 22 homers, a .295 average and .937 OPS. Norby started out hot in Miami but has cooled, with a .291 OBP and 13 homers in 108 games as a Marlin. Still, he's a useful big league piece and if there's anything we learned from this deadline, it's this: The Marlins seem to know what they're doing.
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Orioles get: RHP Zach Eflin and cash
Rays get: INF Mac Horvath, RHP Jackson Baumeister, OF Matthew Etzel
Outcome: Rays finish 80-82
Aftermath: Eflin served his purpose, delivering a 2.60 ERA in 10 starts and a representative playoff outing; he's been injured and inconsistent in 2025 and, having just returned from the IL, is a likely candidate to get traded again this week. The modern front office is unafraid to trade within divisions and the Orioles appeared to pull this deal off without getting burnt by the savvy Rays.
Baumeister, a second-round pick and the highest-drafted pitcher in the Mike Elias era, fell out of the Rays' top 30 and is on the 60-day IL in Class AA after a 6.86 ERA in 10 Class AA starts. Horvath (23, .765 OPS at high A) and Etzel (23, .707 at AA) don't appear to be impact players.
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Phillies get: RHP Carlos Estévez
Angels get: LHP Samuel Aldegheri, RHP George Klassen
Outcome: Phillies lose in NLDS; Angels finish 63-99
Aftermath: Kind of the platonic ideal deal for both franchises. The Phillies burn trade capital to try and win now under Dave Dombrowski, who's ultimately undercut by his bullpen. And the Angels acquire OK talent that's, in Aldegheri's case, rushed to the majors with uninspired results. Aldegheri posted a 4.85 ERA in three starts last year and two relief appearances this year; he has a 4.75 ERA at Class AA and is ranked No. 8 in the system. Klassen, 23, has a bit more upside, ranked No. 4 in the system and a Futures Game pick this year thanks to what Baseball America calls 'mid-rotation upside.' But his command remains iffy, with a 5.86 ERA and 28 walks in 58 ⅓ Class AA innings.
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Padres get: RHP Jason Adam
Rays get: RHP Dylan Lesko, OF Homer Bush Jr., C J.D. Gonzalez
Aftermath: Padres first-rounders are drafted to be traded and in two years Lesko went from 15th overall pick to the Rays' system, as Adam was a stalwart in '24 and an All-Star this year for the ever-contending Padres. The cost? Not much. Lesko, 21, made just four starts this year at high A before he was shut down. Bush is ranked No. 24 in the Rays' system and has speed (33 steals at Class AA) but zero power. Gonzalez, 19, is on the 60-day IL at high A rehabbing an injured elbow and has slipped out of the organizational top 30.
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Royals get: RHP Lucas Erceg
Athletics get: RHP Mason Barnett, RHP Will Klein, OF Jared Dickey
Outcome: Royals win AL wild card series, lose in ALDS: Athletics finish 69-93
Aftermath: A great pickup for Kansas City, giving it a stout bullpen for the playoff drive and a controllable relief arm; in fact, Erceg may be flipped this year as the Royals hover near the buy-sell line. The A's landed their now-No. 4 prospect in Barnett, who shined at Class AA before a mixed stint at AAA this year. Klein was sold to Seattle in January.
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Mariners get: OF Randy Arozarena
Rays get: RHP Brody Hopkins, OF Aidan Smith and a player to be named
Outcome: Mariners finish 85-77
Aftermath: The Rays have built mini-empires off trading with Jerry Dipoto, though this one was pretty symbiotic. Seattle missed the playoffs last year but Arozarena is still producing at an All-Star level this year, even as Tampa Bay has largely readjusted its offense without him. Hopkins, a Futures Game selection, has made gains in the Rays pitching program and is now their No. 5 prospect, with 99 strikeouts in 81 innings and a 3.32 ERA in 18 Class AA starts. Smith, who turned 21 July 23, is No. 12 in the Rays' system and trending well at Class AA, his 10 homers and 26 steals auguring a versatile offensive profile.
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Guardians get: OF Lane Thomas
Nationals get: LHP Alex Clemmey, INF Rafael Ramirez Jr., INF Jose Tena
Outcome: Guardians win AL Central, lose in AL Championship Series; Nationals finish 71-91
Aftermath: Thomas hit an epic postseason home run in Cleveland, though his overall production tailed off switching leagues in the trade. The Nationals hit on Clemmey, a Futures Game participant who's now their No. 5 prospect, but still has a long climb ahead from A ball. Tena has shown no power or speed and league-average hit ability in major league stints, while Ramirez has spent all season on the Class A injured list.
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Guardians get: RHP Alex Cobb
Giants get: LHP Jacob Bresnahan and player to be named (INF Nate Furman)
Outcome: Guardians win AL Central, lose in AL Championship Series; Giants finish 80-82
Aftermath: Cobb didn't pitch for the Giants in '24 due to injury but made three effective starts down the stretch and started two playoff games for the Guardians, who won his ALDS outing against Detroit before he was injured again in the ALCS.
Bresnahan, 20, is ranked 16th in the Giants system and having a decent year in low A; Furman has yet to play in their system due to injury.
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Royals get: RHP Michael Lorenzen
Rangers get: LHP Walter Pennington
Outcome: Rangers finish 78-84
Aftermath: In a weird buy-sell deadline for the Rangers, the Royals got the veteran arm they needed for a playoff drive as Lorenzen posted a 1.57 ERA down the stretch, joined the playoff bullpen and re-signed in K.C. Pennington made a one-game debut with the Rangers but was placed on waivers in April and claimed by Baltimore.
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Diamondbacks get: LHP A.J. Puk
Marlins get: INF Deyvison De Los Santos, OF Andrew Pintar
Outcome: Diamondbacks finish 89-73, miss playoffs on tiebreaker
Aftermath: Puk pitched splendidly down the stretch for Arizona, but underwent an internal brace elbow reconstruction in June; he should recover to pitch in the 2026 second half before hitting free agency. Whle De Los Santos, now the Marlins' No. 18 prospect, led all the minor leagues with 40 homers in 2025, his strikeout rate - 27% this year, with 11 homers - has long diminished his stature as a prospect. Pintar, 25, has reached Class AAA but is not on the 40-man roster.
The middling middle
Mariners get: DH/INF Justin Turner
Blue Jays get: OF RJ Schreck
Aftermath: Turner was solid (.363 OBP, .766 OPS) in 48 games with the Mariners and while they didn't make the playoffs, his lasting impact was as hitting counselor for franchise player Cal Raleigh. Schreck, 24, is Toronto's No. 16 prospect and has reached Class AA (.941 OPS in 41 games).
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Mariners get: RHP Yimi Garcia
Blue Jays get: OF Jonatan Clase, C Jacob Sharp
Aftermath: Garcia was a decent high-leverage relief prize (2.70 ERA) at the deadline but didn't pitch nearly as well (6.00) in 10 games with Seattle. For that, the Blue Jays got a utility guy who produced a 64 adjusted OPS in 112 plate appearances this year before heading to the minors, and a 23-year-old Class AA catcher with a .195 slugging percentage.
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Brewers get: RHP Nick Mears
Rockies get: RHP Bradley Blalock, RHP Yujanyer Herrera
Outcome: Brewers lose in NL wild card; Rockies finish 61-101
Aftermath: Mears is still paying dividends for the ever-contending Brewers, with a 0.85 WHIP this year. Blalock has a 7.18 ERA in 14 games, 11 starts, for Colorado the past two years and has an 8.32 ERA at Class AAA. Herrera, 21, underwent Tommy John surgery in October.
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Mets get: OF Jesse Winker
Nationals get: RHP Tyler Stuart
Outcome: Mets lose in NLCS
Aftermath: The vibes were good enough for Winker in New York, who goes back to childhood in Orlando with Francisco Lindor, that they re-upped him in the winter, and he's produced at replacement level for a calendar year. Stuart, who turns 26 in October, is the Nationals' No. 18 prospect but is out for the year with an elbow injury that's limited him to 10 appearances.
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Rangers get: C Carson Kelly
Tigers get: RHP Tyler Owens, C Liam Hicks
Aftermath: Kelly's star turn wouldn't come until he joined the Cubs this year; he provided an 84 adjusted OPS to Texas' futile playoff run. Owens, 24, is Detroit's 16th-ranked prospect and made three relief appearances this season, but has been hit hard in Class AAA Toledo's pen.
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Padres get: LHP Martín Pérez
Pirates get: LHP Ronaldys Jimenez
Outcome: Pirates finish 76-86
Aftermath: Pérez was a near-ideal deadline stopgap, pitching to a 3.46 ERA in 10 starts, though he did not make San Diego's postseason rosters. Jimenez, 19, has a 4.28 ERA as a reliever for the Pirates' Florida complex team.
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Brewers get: RHP Frankie Montas
Reds get: RHP Jakob Junis, OF Joey Wiemer, cash
Outcome: Reds finish 77-85
Aftermath: The fifth trade of Montas's career, he made 11 starts for the Brewers and one playoff start, his 3 ⅔ innings apparently convincing the Mets to give him an ill-advised contract last winter. Junis was on an expiring contract, while Wiemer played in two games for the Reds and was a throw-in in the winter deal sending Jonathan India to Kansas City for pitcher Brady Singer. He's spent all season in Class AAA.
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Diamondbacks get: RHP Dylan Floro
Nationals get: INF Andres Chaparro
Aftermath: Floro had a 2.06 ERA when the Nationals flipped him; he posted a 9.37 mark in 15 games with Arizona. Chaparro, 26, got three hits in his major league debut with Washington but batted .186 (24-for-132) since and has a .228/.333/.465 line at Class AAA.
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Rangers get: LHP Andrew Chafin
Tigers get: RHP Joseph Montalvo, RHP Chase Lee
Aftermath: Yet another uncommon W for the Tigers, who deal a major league regular yet finish 34-19 and reach the playoffs while adding Lee, now their No. 15 prospect and a reliable (1.05 WHIP) member of their big league bullpen.
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Yankees get: RHP Mark Leiter Jr.
Cubs get: INF Ben Cowles, RHP Jack Neely
Outcome: Cubs finish 83-79
Aftermath: A classic get-us-an-arm deal, Leiter provided the Yankees a relief body and was actually better (1.98 ERA) in the postseason than the regular season (4.98). Cowles, 25, has a .233/.296/.379 line at Class AAA; Neely made six relief appearances for the Cubs last season but has a 6.91 ERA in AAA.
Smaller potatoes
Red Sox get: RHP Luis Garcia
Angels get: RHP Ryan Zeferjahn, CF Matthew Lugo, RHP Yeferson Vargas, 1B/DH Niko Kavadas
Outcome: Red Sox finish 81-81
Aftermath: A classic modern Red Sox half-measure, where they don't really sell but also don't buy anything of significance and leave fans wondering what the point was. Garcia logged an 8.22 ERA in 15 games; while the Red Sox basically gave the Angels a bunch of guys, Zeferjahn, Lugo and Kavadas have made their major league debuts, with Lugo a potentially useful utility player. Warm bodies, anyway, more than the Red Sox can now say about Garcia.
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Red Sox get: C Danny Jansen
Blue Jays get: SS Eddinson Paulino, INF Cutter Coffey, RHP Gilberto Batista
Aftermath: See above. Jansen capped off the worst year of his career by hitting .188 in 30 games for Boston. None of the Jays' acquisitions rank in their top 30, and only Paulino, a 155-pound 23-year-old, is playing above A ball.
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Mets get: RHP Huascar Brazoban
Marlins get: OF Wilfredo Lara
Aftermath: Brazoban was good (2.90 ERA) for the Marlins, bad (5.14, no playoff run) for the Mets, though he's still around as a sentient member of the Mets' bullpen, striking out a batter an inning. Lara, 21, has a .203/.300/.326 line at high A.
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Pirates get: INF Isiah Kiner-Falefa
Blue Jays get: OF Charles McAdoo
Outcome: Pirates finish 76-86; Blue Jays finish 74-88
Aftermath: Hey, remember the time the Pirates were buyers, kind of? Yeah, we don't, either. But Pittsburgh was 55-52 before finishing 21-34 and just two games ahead of Toronto – which added who's now its 20th-ranked prospect in McAdoo, 23, who has a .749 OPS and 10 homers at Class AA.
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Pirates get: LHP Jalen Beeks
Rockies get: LHP Luis Peralta
Aftermath: Those swashbucklin' Pirates were active at the deadline, though Beeks produced a 1.79 WHIP in 26 games for them. Peralta has made 24 relief appearances over two sesons with the Rockies but has a 10.72 ERA at Class AAA this year.
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Mets get: RHP Paul Blackburn
Athletics get: RHP Kade Morris
Aftermath: Blackburn was hurt before this deal and also this year but was a five-start stopgap for the NLCS finalists. Meanwhile, the A's coached up Morris, 23, into their No. 8 overall prospect after a strong half season at Class AA.
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Diamondbacks get: 1B Josh Bell
Marlins get: Cash considerations
Aftermath: The 'or player to be named later' never showed up so this was just a cash dump; Nationals fans should have similar expectations with Bell on the block once again, though he did have a .796 OPS in Arizona's failed playoff drive.

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29 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
A look at some interesting story lines from baseball's trade deadline frenzy
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Charles Krupa/Associated Press Seattle sluggers: The Mariners now have the American League leader in RBIs in Cal Raleigh and the former National League leader in Suárez. Through Thursday, they had combined for 78 home runs and 175 RBIs. Suárez, who played for Seattle from 2022-23, had 36 homers at the time of the trade. That's the most for a player in a midseason trade since Mark McGwire had 34 in 1997 when he was traded from the Athletics to the Cardinals on July 31. McGwire hit 24 homers in 51 games for St. Louis. The Mariners also have Julio Rodríguez , Randy Arozarena , J.P. Crawford , and newly acquired Josh Naylor . That's a strong lineup to back an impressive rotation. The Mariners have made the playoffs once since 2001 and have never been to the World Series. Mr. Entertainment: A.J. Preller has run baseball operations for the Padres for 11 years. He's been more entertaining than most of his players with all the deals he makes. Advertisement Preller made five trades on Thursday involving five teams and 22 players. The Padres now have Nelson Cortes , Ramon Laureano , Mason Miller , and Ryan O'Hearn to further torment the Dodgers. San Diego trailed Los Angeles by only three games going into the weekend. Since becoming GM in 2014, Preller has made at least one trade with every team except Arizona. Since 2020, only the Diamondbacks, Cardinals, and Rockies haven't made a deal with Preller. Yaz on the move: Mike Yastrzemski is going to make an unexpected return trip home. The Andover native was traded to the Royals minutes before the deadline, ending a successful seven-year run with the Giants. The Royals will be at Fenway for a three-game series starting Monday. Yastrzemski has played six games at Fenway in his career. He is 6 of 20 with two homers and four RBIs. Related : Yastrzemski will be a free agent after the season. He turns 35 this month, but is a solid platoon bat and an excellent outfielder and should not lack for suitors. Yastrzemski was an Orioles minor leaguer from 2013-18 before he was traded to the Giants and his career flowered. 'San Francisco gave me something I'll never forget — a chance,' Maybe nobody is untradeable: Arizona traded six players as general manager Mike Hazen embraced being a seller after resisting the idea throughout his career. He even managed to find a taker for Jordan Montgomery , who hasn't pitched this year after undergoing Tommy John surgery. Montgomery will be a free agent after the season, but Milwaukee agreed to take him and pay $2 million of his remaining $7.1 million salary this season as part of acquiring righthanded reliever Shelby Miller . Advertisement Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick said last winter that signing Montgomery to a two-year, $47.5 million contract was a 'horrible decision' and blamed himself for pushing for it. 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Cashman made nine trades in all. 'We certainly knocked on many doors regarding potential starting pitching. But obviously we weren't able to match up in that category,' he said. The Yankees worked to get Sandy Alcantara from the Marlins, but Miami held on to the righthander, who has a 6.36 ERA and is signed through 2026. Advertisement The Yankees have Luis Gil set to make his season debut on Sunday after recovering from a lat injury. That led to the release of Marcus Stroman . Releasing Stroman also could be viewed as the Yankees having confidence in rookie righthander Cam Schlittler of Walpole, who has made three starts. Yankess GM Brian Cashman kept his promise that his team would 'go to town' at the deadline. Frank Franklin II/Associated Press HIS HERO Yoshida reflects on Ichiro's impact Masataka Yoshida was 7 when Ichiro Suzuki made his debut with the Mariners in 2001. All the Japanese players in the major leagues to that point had been pitchers. For Yoshida and other hitters growing up in Japan, Suzuki was an inspiration. 'He was one of my role models,' Yoshida said. 'He showed you could get to the major leagues and be one of the best players.' So it was with a healthy dose of national pride that Yoshida watched the coverage of Suzuki's Hall of Fame induction last weekend. The first Japanese player granted entry to the Hall delivered a speech that was sentimental, funny, and thankful. 'That speech had the right message to the next generation,' Yoshida told the Globe via a translator. 'He was showing his gratitude to the people who supported him. I thought it was great.' Related : As a young player, Yoshida watched Suzuki and then Hideki Matsui on television, and made it his goal to play at the highest level. 'The reason I'm here is because of [Suzuki] and the other players of that time,' said Yoshida, who followed Suzuki by signing with Orix in the Japanese league. 'They paved the way. I think our job is to pass it on to the next generation.' There have been a record 14 Japanese position players in the majors this season. 'I'm proud of that for sure,' Yoshida said. 'But also of the other Asian players, too. So many players want to come here. That is the goal.' Advertisement It was Ichiro who showed it was possible. Ichiro Suzuki became the first Japanese player granted entry to the Hall of Fame. Seth Wenig/Associated Press A few other observations on the Red Sox: ⋅ Craig Breslow has had some good offseasons. He hit on Tyler O'Neill and Justin Slaten before the 2024 season, and give him full credit for trading Alex Verdugo for Richard Fitts and Greg Weissert . He traded for Garrett Crochet and Carlos Narváez last winter, and signed Aroldis Chapman and Alex Bregman . Great job. The trade deadline work is suspect. Related : Luis Garcia , Danny Jansen , James Paxton , and Lucas Sims were worth minus-0.9 bWAR in 2024. They made the team worse. This season — with clearly defined needs and a supposedly deep farm system — Breslow delivered only Steven Matz and Dustin May . There wasn't a first baseman anywhere to be had, or a better starter? The old expression 'perfect is the enemy of good' seems to apply. Breslow sometimes seems more satisfied about what he didn't do than what he actually did. It's hard not to wonder if more Sox fans would have preferred that Breslow sold high on Chapman, Lucas Giolito , and Justin Wilson instead of making such cautious additions. ⋅ The 2020 draft and the machinations that accompanied it are interesting. The Sox took second baseman Nick Yorke with the 17th pick, a surprise to many draft evaluators who didn't see him going that high. Chaim Bloom signed Yorke to an under-slot deal and used the savings to land high school slugger Blaze Jordan in the third round. Yorke was traded to the Pirates in 2024 for righthander Quinn Priester . Breslow then traded Priester to Milwaukee in April for two prospects who haven't cracked the organization's top 30. Priester is since 10-2 with a 3.27 ERA for the Brewers. Jordan had an .872 OPS over 88 minor league games this season, but is viewed by scouts as a slugger who doesn't handle high velocity well and may not have much of a ceiling. He's back with Bloom, having been traded to the Cardinals for lefthanded reliever Matz, a rental. The other two players the Sox took in that draft, college lefthanders Shane Drohan and Jeremy Wu-Yelland , haven't gotten beyond the minors. Five years later, Matz may be the last chance for the Sox to get some value from that draft, however indirectly. ⋅ For the first time since 2007, the Red Sox faced a righthander named Clemens. Kody Clemens pitched the ninth inning for the Twins on Wednesday and allowed two runs on two hits — home runs by Yoshida and Romy Gonzalez . Clemens hit 86.7 miles per hour with a pitch to Abraham Toro that resulted in a grounder back to the mound. That was an offspeed pitch for Roger Clemens . But Kody has 26 homers and his pops didn't have any in 179 career at-bats. ⋅ The Sox have been involved in 18 walkoffs this season, winning eight of those games. It's the most since the 2014 team had 19 such games, winning nine. Related : ⋅ As was expected, MLB awarded the 2027 All-Star Game to the Cubs. The next opening on the schedule is 2028. Boston, Baltimore, and Toronto are cities known to be contending for the game. This will be the fourth All-Star Game at Wrigley, and the first since 1990. Only Municipal Stadium in Cleveland and old Yankee Stadium in New York have hosted four times. Fenway hosted in 1946, '61, and '99. ⋅ Jackie Jensen's 1958 MVP award Jensen had a .931 OPS that season with 35 homers and a league-leading 122 RBIs. He received nine of a possible 24 first-place votes. ⋅ Glenn 'Goose' Gregson joined the Sox for their three games in Minnesota. Gregson, 75, has been with the team for 24 years as a pitching coach, instructor, and coordinator. Now retired, Gregson is with the team in spring training and occasionally during the season. He lives in Montana, about a two-hour flight from Minneapolis. ETC. Jansen still impressing for Angels The Angels have only a 1.9 percent chance of making the postseason, but they added infielder Oswald Peraza and acquired relievers Andrew Chafin and Luis Garcia from the Nationals. (Yes, that would be the same Luis Garcia who was with the Angels in 2024 and was traded to the Red Sox at the deadline). The Angels were nine games out in the AL West at the time of the trade and 4½ games out in the Wild Card. Kenley Jansen could have returned some decent prospects. He went into the weekend having not allowed an earned run over 17 appearances and 16⅓ innings. He struck out 17 and walked two in that stretch. Take away a six-run meltdown against the Tigers on May 2 and Jansen would have a 1.25 ERA this season. He also has converted 20 of 21 save chances. Jansen, who turns 38 in September, has 467 saves, fourth all-time and 11 away from tying Hall of Famer Lee Smith for third. Jansen's 1,260 strikeouts are the fifth most in history by a reliever. Extra bases The Brewers averaged 31,323 fans last season. It's 31,041 this season. That's not a big drop, but Milwaukee went into the weekend 64-44 and leading the Cubs by a game. The Brewers have the fourth most runs scored in the National League, and are second in the majors in stolen bases. What are the fans waiting for? … Brian Knight retired after 16½ seasons as an umpire because of injuries. He was behind the plate for Jon Lester's no-hitter at Fenway Park on May 19, 2008 … Happy birthday to Kevin Morton , who is 57. The lefthander from Norwalk, Conn., played at Seton Hall from 1987-89. His teammates included Craig Biggio , Dana Brown [now general manager of the Astros], Mo Vaughn , and John Valentin . Morton was a first-round pick of the Red Sox in 1989 and made his major league debut in 1991. He was 6-5 with a 4.59 ERA over 16 games. It proved to be his only season in the majors because of underperformance and injury. Morton stayed in baseball through 1996, spending time in the minors with the Royals, Mets, and Cubs before playing briefly in Mexico and Taiwan. His son, Korey , was an outfielder at UConn from 2021-24 and played a season in the Astros system. Peter Abraham can be reached at


Fox Sports
29 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Who Is The Team To Beat? Top Division Races? 5 Big Post-Trade Deadline Questions
From the risky gambles to the shrewd moves, we saw all sorts of deals go down ahead of the MLB trade deadline. But the dust has now settled, and we can turn our attention to the teams to beat and the top division races. Let's answer the biggest burning questions following Thursday's flurry of deals. 1. Lots of contenders improved, but are the Dodgers still the team to beat? Kavner: The reigning champs, even after a surprisingly quiet deadline, remain the team to beat. Still, for a franchise that touts "optionality," the Dodgers — who rank 21st in ERA — didn't do much to improve their outlook or their precarious pitching situation. Brock Stewart is a nice add and a weapon against right-handed hitters, who have a .327 OPS against him this year, but at a deadline that saw Mason Miller go to the Padres, Jhoan Duran go to the Phillies, Ryan Helsley go to the Mets and David Bednar go to the Yankees, the Dodgers opted to sit out of the top end of an active bullpen market and are now counting mostly on better health and better performance down the stretch from their stars. They have the talent, certainly, that it could work out, especially if Blake Snell, Max Muncy, Tanner Scott and Michael Kopech can come back healthy and — most importantly — if Mookie Betts can find his way offensively. But a quiet deadline, especially with the Padres once again pushing their chips in, is a risky choice. The field is much more wide open than anyone might've anticipated before the year began. The Mariners and Yankees stood out as deadline winners in the American League, and the Mets, Phillies and Padres are all much better positioned now to make a run in the National League. Still, I don't think any of them have dethroned the reigning champs as the team to beat. Thosar: Yes, the Dodgers are still the favorites to win the World Series. I'm not as surprised as others that they didn't do much at the trade deadline because, even if some of their stars and key pieces are injured right now, they're expected to be healthy and just as dominant as ever by the time October rolls around. The Dodgers operated this summer's deadline like they're not panicking about their repeat title aspirations, and that's the way it should be. If anything, I think everyone else having bigger deadlines is a testament to how desperately they tried to close the gap, particularly A.J. Preller's Padres. The division rivals were certainly big winners at the deadline, with upgrades all over the diamond and additions to their already powerful bullpen. And while it was terrific to see contenders being bold and going for it with splashy and risky acquisitions in a seller's market, I still don't think any one team has surpassed the Dodgers' excellent championship outlook. 2. True or False: The Mariners 'won' the trade deadline in terms of adding win-now pieces. If not, who did? Kavner: True, I think the Mariners won the deadline by adding Eugenio Suarez and Josh Naylor, filling their two biggest needs in the lineup with two of the best hitters on the market without depleting their farm system in the process. An offense featuring Suárez, Naylor, Cal Raleigh, Julio Rodriguez, Randy Arozarena, J.P. Crawford and Jorge Polanco combined with a rotation led by Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, Luis Castillo and Bryan Woo certainly has an argument to be the scariest roster in the American League. Now, in terms of which team acquired the most "win-now" pieces, the answer is probably — per usual — the Padres, who addressed their issues with lineup depth (Ryan O'Hearn, Ramon Laureano, Will Wagner) rotation depth (JP Sears, Nestor Cortes) and at catcher (Freddy Fermin) while adding the most electric young arm in the game (Mason Miller) to what was already MLB's best bullpen. This is now a roster capable of contending. Of course, doing all that meant emptying the farm, but it's hard to say any other team added more "win-now" pieces. Their moves are as all in as it gets. Thosar: True. There are some rumblings around the league that the Diamondbacks were surprised more teams didn't try to make a big push for Eugenio Suarez, so good for the Mariners for going for it without taking a major hit to their farm system. The centerpiece of the deal was first baseman Tyler Locklear, the No. 9-ranked prospect in Seattle's system, and it's somewhat surprising Arizona wasn't able to do better than that, given Suarez was the top bat available this summer. In the end, the three players the D-backs received in return for the difference-making power hitter with the fifth-most home runs in baseball was underwhelming. Suarez, a rental, is as win-now as it gets, but on top of that, the Mariners aren't getting nearly enough credit for landing Josh Naylor. The first baseman's consistent production should be a huge boon for Seattle's already-solid lineup. There is no argument that the Mariners won the trade deadline. 3. Relief pitchers were among the biggest moves. Who came out with the most improved bullpen? Kavner: The two New York teams. If I had to take one, I'd give the slight edge to the Mets. Their bullpen had an ERA over 4.00 in July, and that's despite Edwin Diaz allowing no runs in 11 innings. They needed another left-hander with A.J. Minter and Danny Young out for the year, found their answer in Gregory Soto and then kept going, adding two-time All-Star Ryan Helsley and submariner Tyler Rogers, who has been a weapon against righties (.505 OPS) and lefties (.542) alike. The Yankees, meanwhile, had a 6.03 bullpen ERA in July and underwent their own overhaul. David Bednar and Camilo Doval are former All-Stars enjoying bounceback campaigns, and the Yankees may be able to get the most out of Jake Bird simply by getting him out of Colorado. There's more volatility associated with their moves, which showed in Friday's wild 13-12 loss to the Marlins in which all three pitchers struggled. Bednar was optioned at the start of the year before getting back on track, Doval had an ERA close to 5.00 last season and can be prone to free passes, and Bird's ERA jumped from 2.68 at the start of July to 4.73 by the end of the month — but the Yankees brass managed to turn a weakness into a strength. It's also worth noting that all three relievers the Yankees added will be with the club beyond this year. Thosar: I have to go with the Yankees (despite Friday's loss), though the Mets are not far behind. The former came out with the most improved bullpen because that unit was reeling before Thursday's additions, whereas the latter at least boasted the best closer in the majors in Edwin Diaz. In terms of ERA, the Mets' bullpen is ranked 11th, and the Yankees' is 20th. The Yankees have struggled without injured relievers Mark Leiter Jr. and Fernando Cruz. Plus, there was the whole Devin Williams situation to be concerned about because, even though he strung together a large stretch of solid relief appearances in June, there is still a feeling of uneasiness when he takes the mound in high-leverage situations. He's prone to melting down when things go south in the Bronx, and I'm expecting the Yankees to let him walk away when he hits free agency this winter. That's in part why the additions of Bednar, Doval, and Bird were key for the Yankees. All three relievers have team control beyond this season, and even though Yankees GM Brian Cashman said that wasn't a conscious goal of his when he landed those high-leverage arms, it certainly helps the club both now and in the future. 4. What are the division races you're looking forward to the most? Kavner: Both of the West races are suddenly a lot more compelling, but it's the AL East. Did the Blue Jays do enough on the pitching side to hold off the Yankees and Red Sox? Can the Yankees' litany of moves — adding Ryan McMahon, David Bednar, Camilo Doval, Amed Rosario, Jose Caballero, Jake Bird and Austin Slater — get them back on track, even with Aaron Judge ailing? What will Judge look like upon his return? Will Boston's disappointing deadline ultimately be its undoing, or can the Red Sox keep their momentum going into August? There are a lot of questions waiting to be answered. Thosar: It's both of the East divisions for me. The Mets entered Friday with a teeny tiny half-game lead over the Phillies for first place in the NL East, and I'm expecting these division rivals to duke it out down the stretch. It's a compelling storyline to watch the new and improved Mets potentially win their first division title in 10 years in Juan Soto's first season in Queens. Sure, many expected something like that to happen, but it's another thing to go out and do it. On the other side of town, even though the Blue Jays have held onto first place in the AL East since the beginning of July, it would be shocking if the Yankees don't at least threaten to win the division after all the roster upgrades they made at the trade deadline. Can Toronto really stay in first all the way through the end of the regular season? And are the Red Sox just a hot stretch away from inserting themselves into that conversation? Right now, the East is a beast. 5. A's, D-Backs, Twins: Which of the trade deadline sellers have the best reason to believe they're set for the future? Kavner: The Athletics had the best trade deadline of any seller, getting one of the top prospects in baseball in exchange for a reliever. Sure, Mason Miller has one of the most electric arms in the sport, and 18-year-old switch-hitting phenom shortstop Leo De Vries has a ways to go before we can definitively say what he will become, but that's the kind of move we just don't see at the deadline. It's a potential franchise-altering one for the A's, who also received three intriguing arms in the deal, including one of the Padres' top pitching prospects in Braden Nett, San Diego's 2024 Minor League Pitcher of the Year in Henry Baez and a 26-year-old reliever in Eduarniel Nunez, who has the stuff to help their bullpen immediately — he had a strikeout rate over 40% in the minors this year — if he can refine his control. As for Twins fans … I'm sorry. Thosar: As previously mentioned, Arizona's returns weren't that impressive, and the Twins deciding to blow the whole thing up wasn't convincing anyone that they're not completely set for the future. So I have to go with the A's here, especially since they received the highest-ranked prospects. Rowan Kavner is an MLB writer for FOX Sports. He previously covered the L.A. Dodgers, LA Clippers and Dallas Cowboys. An LSU grad, Rowan was born in California, grew up in Texas, then moved back to the West Coast in 2014. Follow him on Twitter at @RowanKavner . Deesha Thosar is an MLB writer for FOX Sports. She previously covered the Mets as a beat reporter for the New York Daily News. The daughter of Indian immigrants, Deesha grew up on Long Island and now lives in Queens. Follow her on Twitter at @DeeshaThosar . recommended Item 1 of 3 Get more from the Major League Baseball Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
The Saturday Spread: How to Use Descriptive Math to Play the Hand, Not the Dealer
Suppose that you're the manager of an MLB team and it's the bottom of the ninth of the World Series. You're down to your last out. Do you go with the player who has a great career batting average but can't perform well under pressure or elect the guy who had a relatively average season but consistently comes through in the clutch? If you're into baseball or just sports in general, the answer is obvious: you go with the competitor that contextually gives you the best chance to win. Ultimately, your job is to take home championships, not dabble with math exercises. More News from Barchart How to Buy KO for a 2% Discount, or Achieve a 17% Annual Return Coinbase Shows Huge Unusual Options Volume After Lower Results Stop Missing Market Moves: Get the FREE Barchart Brief – your midday dose of stock movers, trending sectors, and actionable trade ideas, delivered right to your inbox. Sign Up Now! However, what seems so obvious isn't that way in the financial sector. Practically every western approach — from Black-Scholes-Merton-based models to the efficient market hypothesis — utilizes prescriptive financial modeling. Essentially, these methodologies dictate what should be, which theoretically sounds enticing. However, my contention is that this prescription is flawed. In contrast, I prefer a Markovian approach, which models behavior based on a descriptive framework. Such methodologies demonstrate what has been, not what should be. As such, we don't need complicated formulas rooted in stochastic calculus and other difficult concepts. A key reason why I'm not a fan of prescriptive models like Black-Scholes (aside from its inapplicability with American options) is that the underlying probabilities are based on the entire distribution of the dataset. That's like trying to predict hurricanes based on the last ten years' worth of weather reports. Instead, to accomplish this, you would focus on the immediate conditions that cause hurricanes to be more likely. With that said, below are three stocks that are potentially flashing buy signals based on a descriptive framework. Kroger (KR) Quantitatively, Kroger (KR) makes for an intriguing idea for bullish speculators. In the past 10 weeks, the market has essentially voted to buy KR stock four times and sell six times. Throughout this period, KR enjoyed an upward bias. For brevity, we can abbreviate the sequence as 4-6-U. At first glance, it may seem silly to compress the price magnitude of KR stock into a simple binary code. But what we have accomplished here is to define KR's price discovery process as a behavioral state. Through the study of past analogs, we can determine how the market responds to the 4-6-U sequence relative to the baseline. It's just like card counting in blackjack. If the deck favors us, we bet big. If it doesn't, we bet small (or in this case, not at all). On any given week, the chance that a long position in KR stock will rise is only 51.74%. It's an upward bias but a very modest one. However, this statistic stems from the derivative probability of upside across the entire distribution of the dataset. But our contention is that because the deck is flashing a 4-6-U sequence, the odds of upside are actually 72.73%. Barchart Premier members gain full access to the platform's options pricing tools, which can be incredibly powerful when integrated with a Markovian approach. Here, we can identify that the 72/73 bull call spread expiring Aug. 29 may be the least expensive multi-leg strategy that has a realistic chance of being fully profitable. Cinemark (CNK) For extreme contrarians, Cinemark (CNK) may be an intriguing name for its implied discount. On Friday, CNK stock dropped nearly 4%, while for the trailing week, it hemorrhaged almost 11%. On a year-to-date basis, the security — which is tied to the struggling movie theater business model — is down 16.49%. It's a mess but it has the potential to be meme-able. In the past 10 weeks, the market voted to buy CNK stock four times and sell six times. Throughout this period, CNK incurred a downward trajectory. For brevity, we can label this sequence as 4-6-D. Through past analogs, we can identify that this sequence has materialized 46 times on a rolling basis since January 2019. In 58.7% of cases, the following week's price action results in upside, with a median return of 3.87%. As a baseline, the next-week upside probability is only 51.16%. Therefore, assuming that the implications of the 4-6-D hold up, there's a compelling incentive to place a wager. With CNK stock closing at $25.87, it could swing close to $27 in short order. It's a terribly risky idea but for hardened speculators, the 26/27 bull call spread expiring Aug. 15 could be attractive. Confluent (CFLT) It's no exaggeration to say that Confluent (CFLT) got obliterated this past week. On Friday, CFLT stock dropped 3%, which would be notable in and of itself. However, the real drama occurred the day before. Following a second-quarter earnings print that left investors severely disappointed, CFLT opened sharply lower against Wednesday's close. When the dust settled, the security had lost almost 38% in the trailing five sessions. Generally, it's best to avoid enterprises exhibiting such extreme volatility. However, the market has enticingly printed a relatively rare 6-4-D sequence. It's unusual because, despite the number of accumulative sessions outweighing distributive, the overall trajectory is negative. This quantitative signal has flashed 23 times since the company's public market debut in 2021. Notably, in 65.22% of cases, the following week's price action results in upside, with a median return of 3.79%. As a baseline, the chance that a long position in CFLT stock will rise is only 53.49%. Subsequently, there appears to be a clear incentive to place a wager. With CFLT closing at $17.20 on Friday, it could jump to $17.85, perhaps close to $18, in short order. With that said, the most aggressive idea that you can arguably consider while still being rational is the 17/18 bull spread expiring Aug. 15. On the date of publication, Josh Enomoto did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data