PHOENIX — They will be proudly representing their teams at the 96th All-Star Game in two weeks in Philadelphia, but once the festivities are over, and they travel back home for the second half of the MLB season, they soon may be wearing different uniforms.
The Major League Baseball trade deadline is Aug. 3, less than three weeks after the All-Star Game, and there are seven potential All-Star players who could be on the trade block and switching uniforms.
The biggest question is not whether two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal of the Detroit Tigers will be traded, but whether he will be one of the 12 American League pitchers selected to the All-Star Game by the players, managers and coaches. He’s just 4-4 with a 3.15 ERA after missing five weeks after undergoing arthroscopic elbow surgery. Still, he’s one of the finest pitchers on the planet who could be the highest-paid pitcher in baseball history this winter.
Here are this year’s potential All-Star candidates, led by Skubal, who will find themselves subjected to intense trade rumors at the All-Star festivities:
Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers
The Tigers, 37-49, have been one of baseball’s biggest disappointments, but as badly as they’ve performed, the American League stinks to the high heavens, and they are just 6.5 games out of a wild-card berth. Do they ride it out and hope that Skubal’s return gets them back into contention, or do they sell him to the highest-bidder and stock their farm system, knowing they’re not going to re-sign him as a free agent, anyway? If nothing else, Skubal has quieted any doubts that he’s fully recovered from his elbow surgery, striking out nine while yielding just one hit and one earned run in six innings in his last start Tuesday against the New York Yankees, hitting 99 mph on the radar gun.
Prediction: Skubal will go, with Atlanta being the favorite according to rival executives, but this decision likely will go down to the final days, if not hours, before the deadline.
Aroldis Chapman, Boston Red Sox
Chapman is 16-for-18 in save opportunities with a 2.19 ERA, but has scuffled at a time the Red Sox are playing their best baseball. Chapman, 38, has blown two saves and given up at least one run in three of his last six appearances. The Red Sox, 37-47, have also been one of baseball’s biggest disappointments, but let’s repeat: the American League stinks. They are only 5.5 games out of a wild-card berth.
Prediction: Chapman, who has pitched for seven different teams in his 17-year career, will still be the marquee reliever traded at the deadline.
Sonny Gray, Boston Red Sox
Gray is 9-1 with a 2.69 ERA and may be the best pitcher traded not named Tarik Skubal. He has been everything the Red Sox could possibly have envisioned when they acquired him from the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cardinals even chipped in $20 million to cover the remaining $41 million on his contract.
The biggest obstacles in a potential Gray trade is that he has a complete no-trade clause, and will be owed about $11 million in his remaining salary plus a $10 million buyout on his mutual option.
Prediction: The Red Sox will pay his $10 million mutual option, and trade Gray to a team of his choosing, perhaps Atlanta or the Chicago White Sox, unless they somehow claw back into this weak wild-card race.
Luis Arraez, San Francisco Giants
Buster Posey, Giants president of baseball operations, has already let the baseball world know the Giants are open for business, with all of their high-priced players − except ace Logan Webb − available for trades. While infielders Rafael Devers, Willy Adames and Matt Chapman are making too much money for anyone’s liking, Arraez is easily their best trade chip among position players. Arraez, the three-time batting champion, is once again working his magic at the plate, hitting .331 with only 13 strikeouts in 353 plate appearances this year, with his 3.7% strikeout rate easily the lowest in MLB. He also is hitting with more power with a career-high seven triples and four homers. The biggest bonus is that with the help of infield guru Ron Washington, he has morphed into a Gold Glove candidate at second base.
Prediction: The Giants absolutely love Arraez, who has become a clubhouse favorite, but have no plans to keep him. They will thank him for his services, trade him, and wish him well in free agency, knowing they certainly helped increase his value.
Jose Soriano, Los Angeles Angels
OK, so he’s not the same pitcher who dominated everyone in his wake in April, yielding a 0.24 ERA in his first six starts. Still, he’s 8-5 with a 3.42 ERA, and best of all, comes with 2½ more years of team control. He is earning $2.9 million this year, so he won’t stretch out anyone’s budget, either.
Prediction: The biggest question will be whether Angels owner Arte Moreno will allow interim GM John Mozeliak to trade him. Moreno hates to trade players who are under team control, and Soriano has shown this year that he could be one of the game’s premier starters. Yet, if Moreno really is handing the reins over to Mozeliak and wants to rebuild, the return for Soriano could be quite the kick-start.
Eduardo Rodriguez, Arizona Diamondbacks
Rodriguez, who was a bitter disappointment the first two years of his four-year, $80 million contract, is having the finest season of his career and should be headed to his first All-Star Game. He’s 7-2 with a 2.21 ERA, and has six starts in which he has gone at least seven innings and permitted one or no runs, tied for the major-league lead.
Prediction: The Diamondbacks are on the playoff bubble, sitting 2½ games back of a playoff berth. They are 13-2 against the San Francisco Giants and Colorado Rockies, but 30-40 against everyone else. If they fall out of the race, they must decide whether to simply trade starter Michael Soroka, who’s on a one-year contract, or dump Rodriguez, who is owed $21 million in 2027 before he’s a free agent again. They may have no choice but to listen to any and all offers.
CJ Abrams, Washington Nationals
The Nationals put Abrams on the trade block last winter, but never received an offer that ever tempted them to trade him. His trade value has since soared, with him hitting .273 with 18 homers and 60 RBI with an .866 OPS, leading all National League shortstops in virtually every offensive category.
Prediction: The Nationals, one of baseball’s biggest surprises at 44-43, can’t trade Abrams without a huge public relations fallout. At least not now. They still are in the race, just 2½ games out, and Abrams still is under control through 2028. They have plenty of time to listen to trade offers in the future if they don’t sign him to an extension.
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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB trade rumors: Tarik Skubal among 7 potential All-Stars who could soon switch teams