What an exciting and eventful MLB trade deadline it’s been! Several high-profile names have changed teams over the past few days. The impact of some of these trades will be felt for years to come as some top prospects were also moved. 

Things really got going on Wednesday night when Joey Gallo was shipped to the Yankees. Starling Marte was traded from the Marlins to the Athletics and Eduardo Escobar was acquired by Milwaukee. It’s interesting to see three of the top targets moved with so much time to spare in the deadline. 

Then, things took a turn into crazy town on Thursday night. In the late afternoon, it was being reported that the San Diego Padres were close on a deal to land ace Max Scherzer. Then, the Yankees doubled down and nabbed Cubs’ first baseman, Anthony Rizzo. By the time I was live on The Sports Stove Podcast, the script had flipped. 

By then it was becoming clear that the Dodgers had the framework of a deal to grab Scherzer right from under the Padre’s collective nose. They were able to pivot and land reliever Daniel Hudson, but the sting of not getting Mad Max has to hurt. Late Thursday night, the Red Sox finally got into action by trading for Nats slugger Kyle Schwarber.

Trade Deadline Day

The Blue Jays got in on the fun on Friday, trading for Twins pitcher Jose Berrios. Toronto surrendered two of their top four prospects in the deal. Austin Martin (SS/OF), the #5 overall pick in the 2020 MLB draft, and RHP Simeon Woods-Richardson are headed to Minnesota.

Then, the two Chicago teams combined to complete their second trade in as many days. The Cubs sent coveted closer Craig Kimbrel to the White Sox in exchange for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer.

The NL East, mostly quiet on the sellers front, came alive on deadline day too. First, Atlanta traded Pablo Sandoval to Cleveland for Eddie Rosario. They then added Adam Duvall from Miami for backup catcher Alex Jackson

The Phillies got busy, trading for the Kyle GibsonIan Kennedy Texas two-step combo platter.

The Mets, currently in first place in the underachieving division, swung for the fences by making a deal for Javier Báez. Going back to the Southside is their #5 prospect, outfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong.

The A’s added to their earlier haul of Marte and Andrew Chafin. They acquired utilityman Josh Harrison and catcher Yan Gomes from Washington. 

Then, at the eleventh hour, the Giants finally did something and landed perhaps the most desirable position player available. Kris Bryant.

Takeaways

The Red Sox Believe In Chris Sale

The fact that Boston stood pat after trading for Schwarber suggests that they’re comfortable with their team. Schwarber wasn’t really a need but it’ll be interesting to see if they ask him to play first base, a position of need. Sale, on the verge of returning, must have the confidence of the coaching staff and the front office.

The White Sox Want To Shorten The Game

In bringing in Craig Kimbrel, the White Sox can now boast of having the best back-end of a bullpen in baseball. Teams trailing in the late innings will have a hard time coming back against Kimbrel and Liam Hendricks. This reminds me of the 2016 Kansas City Royals, who rode a stellar ‘pen to a World Series Championship. 

Wild, Wild West

After the Scherzer to San Diego, I meant Los Angeles drama, this division will be one to keep an eye on. The Padres were almost undoubtedly in the Berrios sweepstakes, so they have to be feeling disappointed. The Giants get Kris Bryant right before the deadline and that has to be invigorating. What can you say about the Dodgers? The rich get richer. This team is definitely rich, both in talent and assets, and paying the CBT (competitive balance tax) isn’t an issue. 

It seems as though the Giants should’ve made a trade for a starting pitcher. They’ve gotten great starting pitching from a mostly unheralded group. I guess “settling for” the best position player on the market will have to do.

Thanks for reading I hope you enjoyed it! Check out more of my articles here and other Belly Up content here. Follow me on Twitter here.
About Author

Graeme Wallace

My name is Graeme Wallace and I love sports I grew up with the Blue Jays World Series Championship teams in '92 and '93. There were some lean years in between but some good ones too, all leading up to Jose Bautista's epic bat flip in 2015. I'm so excited to be a part of Belly Up Sports!

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