Major League Baseball's trade deadline has finally passed, so we can all stop checking Twitter every 17 seconds. Plenty of minor transactions were made, but it was a blockbuster that made things wildly entertaining. Here are 10 things that stand out from Wednesday's dealing.
1. Astros take dead aim at second title in three years.
Every legitimate contender in the American League could have used additional starting pitching for the stretch run. Although Houston was mentioned prominently in rumors involving hurlers Trevor Bauer and Zack Wheeler, the Astros ended up making a bigger splash than anyone expected. Shortly before the deadline, Houston executed a blockbuster trade with the Diamondbacks, trading for six-time All-Star Zack Greinke. All it took to close the deal were prospects. Surprisingly, Houston was able to keep its best minor leaguers, outfielder Kyle Tucker and pitcher Forrest Whitley. Alongside Justin Verlander and Gerrit Cole, Greinke gives the Astros an incredibly difficult rotation to knock out in October. He's also excellent insurance for their 2020 rotation because Cole will be a free agent.
2. Yankees GM Brian Cashman wasn't going to overpay for pitching.
The Yankees are neck and neck with Houston for the best record in baseball, but that hardly means they are without flaws. New York desperately needed to add a quality starting pitcher — no member of its current starting five has an ERA under four. Cashman was interested in Marcus Stroman and Bauer, but once they landed elsewhere, his options dwindled. Robbie Ray could have been had from Arizona, but the southpaw has walked almost a batter every other inning, and his 3.93 ERA didn't represent enough of an upgrade for the Bombers. Zack Wheeler and Madison Bumgarner were on Cashman's radar, but he knew he would have to overpay the Mets, the Yankees' crosstown rivals; the Giants never seemed all that interested in moving Bumgarner, the face of their franchise. New York's options were limited, and Cashman was probably wise to not make a deal. Now the Yankees must contemplate a possible ALCS meeting against the Astros' vaunted rotation.
3. The Braves think they can win the National League pennant.
The Dodgers and Braves have been the most consistent teams on the senior circuit. But the Braves' bullpen has been a mess. Projected closer Arodys Vizcaino appeared in only four games before getting hurt and later traded, A.J. Minter and Chad Sobotka have failed to duplicate breakout 2018 seasons, and Luke Jackson has looked like a deer in headlights since he was pushed into a closer's role. In fewer than 24 hours, most of those concerns have been alleviated. The Braves acquired right-handed setup man Chris Martin from the Rangers on Tuesday. On Wednesday, they added veteran righty Mark Melancon from the Giants and dominant closer Shane Greene from the Tigers. Greene is quite the get, as his 1.18 ERA and .153 batting average against look like they should be typos. Already armed with a dynamic offense, the Braves and their fortified bullpen may be enough to get Atlanta back into the World Series.
4. Cleveland was determined to move Trevor Bauer.
When was the last time a playoff contender traded its best starting pitcher ahead of the stretch run? I am waiting. Bauer was due to be a free agent after the 2020 season, and the small-market Indians were not eager to pay the salary he was likely to be awarded in arbitration this winter. But there was more to it than that. Clearly Cleveland had grown tired of the veteran's curious personality, which was on full display earlier this week when he hurled a ball over the center field fence in frustration when manager Terry Francona headed to the mound to remove him from the game. While it was still surprising a trade actually went down, the Indians certainly did well in the transaction. In a three-way deal involving the Padres and Reds, the Tribe imported right-handed-hitting outfielders Franmil Reyes and Yasiel Puig, both of whom should give a struggling offense a shot in the arm. The Indians also added lefty Logan Allen and two other lower-level minor leaguers. But if Cleveland's rotation struggles, this will be a bad deal.
5. The Mets aren't exactly sure what they're doing.
A few weeks ago, the Mets were a clear seller, but a hot streak since the All-Star break put them within range of a playoff spot. So they changed their minds. Kind of. On Sunday night, the Mets stunningly acquired ace righty Marcus Stroman from the Blue Jays. For weeks it seemed Mets starter Zack Wheeler would be dealt. But New York decided to hang on to him for the stretch run to see if it can qualify for the playoffs. Those moves alone were not what made New York's deadline strategy curious. If the Mets were truly committed to going for it, they should have added bullpen help and a legitimate bench bat. It's difficult to imagine the addition of Stroman and two unexpected months with Wheeler being enough to overcome this team's shortcomings.
6. The Dodgers didn't think they needed Felipe Vazquez to win their third straight NL pennant.
One of the best tweets of deadline day came courtesy of Jon Morosi, who reported about an hour before the deadline that the Dodgers and Pirates were locked in a "staring contest" over Vazquez that could ultimately determine the outcome of the World Series. That sounds dramatic, but it quite possibly could turn out to be true. The Dodgers have longtime stopper Kenley Jansen cemented in the ninth inning, and Pedro Baez has been solid as his bridge. But beyond those two, Los Angeles' relief corps has been wildly inconsistent. Vazquez has arguably been the best reliever in the National League in 2019, and if the Dodgers had been able to secure his services, they would have had the majors' best bullpen. Los Angeles' decision to not part with its best prospects for Vasquez might be heavily scrutinized all winter.
7. The Giants got caught in the middle.
Like the Mets, the Giants were clear sellers at the All-Star break, but a second-half surge has put them in a realistic position to make an October push. San Francisco had three highly sought relief pitchers and the best postseason starting pitcher of all time, Madison Bumgarner. It looked primed to set up the organization with several impact trades. In the end, the Giants ended up in no-man's land. The temptation to move setup men Mark Melancon and Sam Dyson proved to be too strong, and San Francisco found willing partners in Atlanta and Minnesota, respectively. The Giants kept Bumgarner and All-Star closer Will Smith and traded for Reds second baseman Scooter Gennett. It was a surprising strategy, as it would appear the Giants would have been better served either retaining everyone for the duration of 2019 or executing the full sell they had planned earlier.
8. Boston wasn't willing to make an aggressive trade for a reliever with the AL East out of reach.
Before spring training, every Red Sox fan would have told you Boston didn't have enough in the bullpen. The first four months of the season have done nothing but reaffirm that thought. Boston has consistently coughed up leads all season, a primary reason it's third in the AL East. Impact relievers clearly were available at the deadline. So why didn't something happen? President of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski essentially told reporters that with the Yankees having the AL East all but clinched, the Red Sox didn't feel comfortable dealing talented prospects for at best a shot at a toss-up wild-card game. That rationale made sense, but it did little to alleviate the frustration of fans in New England.
9. The Nationals didn't have the same reservations.
Washington is not as far back in its division as the Red Sox, but it's increasingly unlikely the Nationals will finish the season as NL East champions. The Nationals are probably playing for a potential wild-card entry, and entering August, they are in prime position to grab one of the invitations to the one-game playoff. In a full 180 from Boston's viewpoint on that scenario, though, the Nationals felt good enough about their chances to add three difference-makers to a struggling relief corps. In the span of about 90 minutes Wednesday, Washington added Hunter Strickland, Daniel Hudson and Roenis Elias.
10. The Blue Jays are in the doghouse of GMs around the league.
In the most surprising deal of the trade deadline, Toronto sent ace righty Stroman to the Mets for minor league pitchers Anthony Kay and Simeon Woods-Richardson. Everything about that trade bothered executives in the game. First off, the timing was curious, as the Jays pulled the trigger three days before the deadline. They could have waited to see if a better offer materialized. While Kay and Woods-Richardson were the best pitching prospects in the Mets' system, neither profiles as more than a middle-of-the-rotation starter. The deal was almost unanimously viewed as an instant coup for the Mets. The relatively small return Toronto got for Stroman hurt the market for pitchers like Robbie Ray. The Blue Jays will be looked down upon by their peers for the foreseeable future.
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Mike Trout and the Los Angeles Angels are once again to miss out on the MLB postseason, but Trout will get to head into his 2026 campaign with a major milestone completed. Trout hit his 400th-career home run in the eighth inning of an Angels 3-0 win over the Colorado Rockies this weekend, making him the 59th MLB player to eclipse 400 homers. After the accomplishment, Trout met with the fan who caught his ball on the field for a quick game of catch (and some signed memorabilia) in exchange for the piece of history. Which brings us to today's quiz. While age and a history of injuries will likely keep Trout from ever returning to his MVP form again, he's one of the most accomplished all-around players in MLB history. With that being said, how many of the 15 players in Major League Baseball history to rack up at least 400 home runs and 200 stolen bases in their career can you name in five minutes? Good luck! Did you like this quiz? Are there any quizzes you’d like to see us make in the future? Let us know your thoughts at quizzes@yardbarker.com, and make sure to subscribe to our Quiz of the Day Newsletter for daily quizzes sent right to your email!
The Dallas Cowboys have played about as poorly as they possibly can on defense through the first three weeks of the NFL season. One week after needing a pair of late field goals from kicker Brandon Aubrey to outlast the New York Giants, 40-37, in overtime, the Cowboys dropped their second game in three weeks on Sunday in a 31-14 loss to the Chicago Bears, showing no signs of improvement whatsoever. Rex Ryan blasts Cowboys defense Simply put, Dallas just looks lost on defense, leading to former head coach and current ESPN analyst Rex Ryan going off during Monday's edition of "Get Up." "Just when we thought it couldn't get worse, this defense comes up with even a worse performance," Ryan said. ... "You're so dumb. I can't stand it. Do something. I don't want to hear about you can't rush the passer. Then how about we send more players on the quarterback. We can't play zone coverage, then how about we play man coverage. You guys stink. Dumbsday defense." Dallas had no answers for the Bears and QB Caleb Williams on Sunday. After struggling to find a rhythm in the first two games, Williams was sensational, throwing for 298 yards and four TDs to pick up head coach Ben Johnson's first win in Chicago. As good as Williams was, though, the Cowboys defense certainly helped. Dallas (1-2) has given up 92 points through three games and is 28th in the league in opponent points per game (30.7 PPG), per TeamRankings. Something Ryan alluded to in his rant was Dallas' inability to stop Chicago on a 19-play, 76-yard drive in the third quarter that took 9:54 off the clock. It was a 24-14 game before then, and the Cowboys were picked off on each of their final three drives afterward to seal their fate. Quarterback Dak Prescott has been solid, accounting for 800 passing yards — fourth-most in the league — and three TDs. Before Sunday, he had only thrown one interception. The run game has also contributed four combined TDs between Javonte Williams and Miles Sanders, providing a much-needed balance. That has ultimately not mattered with the defense unable to get stops and limit drives from opposing teams. To make matters worse, star wideout CeeDee Lamb suffered a left ankle injury in the loss on Sunday, and it sounds like he could land on injured reserve, which would put him out of action for at least four games. That is the last thing Dallas needs right now. The team will likely be without its best player for an extended period of time, in addition to having an abysmal defense, which does not sound encouraging going forward for a franchise that always seems to be in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons.
The worst part about the Las Vegas Raiders offense has to be the offensive line, a position group that the Raiders didn't address really at all outside of the 2025 NFL Draft, and even those two draft picks aren't seeing the field. The offensive line hasn't been great at pass blocking for former Seattle Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith, but that isn't the worst part of the unit's game. They can't run block at all, which is why Ashton Jeanty isn't having much success. And that could be due to the changes the Raiders staff made to the offensive line. The right guys aren't playing. "We want to see JPJ [Jackson Powers-Johnson] come back to action and get back involved. In all phases of it, we have to get off the football better and make more of the running game. There's not enough happening there to act on the play pass game, and we're just not getting enough. So, we just got to keep working it. We got the guys we got, and we need to keep developing and keep building on it. We're working at the right guard spot. Our young guys, they'll get their turn sometime, but they're not ready yet. So, we have what we have, and we've got to make our guys do better, and we've got to fit it together better than we have." The Raiders' offensive line has much deeper issues at hand JPJ didn't start the game against the Washington Commanders this last week, despite being healthy and recovered from his concussion. Carroll noted that the decision between him and Cappa came down to the continuity and that the Raiders were on a short week. But Cappa is not very good. The former Cincinnati Bengals guard led the league in blown blocks with 40 and led the league in pressures allowed last season. Last year, Jackson Powers-Johnson was one of the best young centers in the league. He had his rookie moments, but by the end of the season, he had some moments where he was pancaking defenders in the second level on run plays. His move to center last season is when he really started to take over, rather than when he was playing guard. This offseason, the Raiders decided to not only move him away from the center position but to put him in a position battle at the guard spot. JPJ may be the second-best offensive lineman on the team, and yet, the Raiders have something weird going on with him. Yes, he was hurt, but he recovered, and there is no reason why he shouldn't have started. By the end of last season, the Raiders' offensive line really started to put things together. So, why would Pete Carroll's son, Brennan Carroll, mess all of that up as the offensive line coach? Something's going on with the offensive line, and it's truly affecting the entire offense. Yes, the unit isn't very good, but they are making it even harder on themselves by playing the wrong players. When your defense is bad, offense is bad, and special teams are bad, it's hard to beat anyone. Add that into the fact that the offensive line is atrocious and winning football games looks impossible, despite the fact they've already won one against the New England Patriots. window.addEventListener('message', function (event) {if (event.data.totalpoll event.data.totalpoll.action === 'resizeHeight') {document.querySelector('#totalpoll-iframe-365').height = event.data.totalpoll.value;}}, false);document.querySelector('#totalpoll-iframe-365').contentWindow.postMessage({totalpoll: {action: 'requestHeight'}}, '*');
The Green Bay Packers were guilty of 14 penalties during Sunday’s loss to the Cleveland Browns, the most during coach Matt LaFleur’s tenure. The penalties bothered LaFleur, whose teams typically have played with excellent discipline, but they didn’t surprise him. “Yeah, I’ve seen it,” LaFleur said on Monday, a day after a shocking 13-10 defeat. “It’s been happening more than we’d like. You see it in practice, it’s hard not to expect it in a game. We have got to dial in better. We have to have better focus and concentration.” Dialing in isn’t only about Sundays. With another road game coming up on Sunday night at Dallas, the focus has to start when the team walks onto the practice field on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Sunday’s game was the 103rd of LaFleur’s career. His team had been flagged more than 10 times in just three games, with the previous worst being 12 penalties against the Lions in 2020. Guilty of only two false-start infractions in the first two games, the Packers were flagged five times against the Browns. “Some of those are brutal,” LaFleur said. “We had two on third down. One was on that third-and-4 [by Jordan Morgan in the red zone]. We had one [by Morgan] on the short-yardage situation when we tried to bring Tuck(er Kraft) in there and run the quarterback sneak. Third-and-1, you can’t have that. “The other one [by Rasheed Walker] was a third-and-10 late in the game when we’re trying to set up for a field goal; that pushed us back 5 yards. Yeah, you can’t have them. Those are killer penalties. Another one was on second-and-1 [by Walker], now it’s second-and-6. You can’t have them because they are killer.” There were so many false starts that LaFleur couldn’t remember them all. No. 5 was by receiver Malik Heath, which helped knock a promising possession out of field-goal range in the secon quarter. “And then conversely on the defensive side,” LaFleur continued, “we had a bunch of penalties on third down that extended drives. I remember one specifically, third-and-9, [defensive holding by Javon Bullard] and we had another third-and-goal [pass interference by Keisean Nixon]. “They didn’t kill us in those situations – we ended up overcoming them and moving them back, and they ended up settling for a field goal – but we have got to be better just with our details, our fundamentals and then utilizing the techniques that we practice on a daily basis.” Pending the Monday night game between the Lions and Ravens, the Packers were guilty of 28 penalties, tied for the fourth-most in the league. The yardage was more manageable with 192 yards, which ranked 12th. Only the Saints (eight) have been guilty of more false starts. “I feel like we were hurting ourselves more than anything with some of the penalties and the little things,” quarterback Jordan Love said after the game. “I felt like we were putting some good drives together but, at the end of the day, I feel like we just hurt ourselves a little too much.” It’s early in the season, but no team has been penalized more than Green Bay was against Cleveland. That came on the heels of 10 accepted penalties against Washington in Week 2. The 14 penalties vs. Cleveland were the most for the Packers since they were guilty of a franchise-record 18 in a loss at Chicago in 2020. In the Super Bowl era, there’s only been one other occasion in which Green Bay was flagged more than 14 times, according to Stathead. From 2019 through 2024 – the first six seasons of the LaFleur era – the Packers were guilty of the sixth-fewest penalties, according to Stathead. Including offsetting and declined penalties, Green Bay was flagged 17 times on Sunday. Incredibly, 10 came in the fourth quarter, capped by Nixon jumping offside on the game-ending field goal. “It’s discipline. It’s every facet of this game,” said defensive end Micah Parsons, who was flagged twice for offside. “Every detail – kickoff, field goal, defense, being in our right position, our right leverage. It’s everything. “Discipline will beat talent every day of the week. We were more talented. Like I said, we played better the first three quarters. We got to play better in the fourth quarter, including me. It goes for everyone.”