USA TODAY Sports

The Boston Red Sox certainly don't sound like they're done making moves. 

Boston finally added a new middle infielder Tuesday afternoon as it dealt left-handed reliever, Josh Taylor, to the Kansas City Royals in exchange for shortstop Adalberto Mondesi and a player to be named later.

With Taylor on the move, it leaves the Red Sox with Joely Rodriguez as the only left-handed relief pitcher on the team's 40-man roster. There have been rumblings that the team may move James Paxton to the bullpen, but he has never made a relief appearance in his nine-year Major League Baseball career so adding another lefty may be a good idea. There still are some solid names left on the open market and one player the Red Sox have been linked to is former New York Yankees lefty Zack Britton, according to The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal. 

"Britton, 35, is in a different category, possessing the longest and most impressive track record," Rosenthal said. He recovered from Tommy John surgery in time to pitch in three games for the Yankees near the end of the season, but the team shut him down before the start of the playoffs citing shoulder fatigue. He is healthy again and seeking a one-year deal. 

"According to sources with knowledge of the market but unauthorized to speak publicly, the team with varying interest in left-handed relievers and varying amounts to spend include the Rangers, Angels, and Astros in the AL West; Yankees, Red Sox, and Blue Jays in the AL East; and Brewers, Cardinals, and Cubs in the NL Central." 

Britton is a two-time All-Star and has had a very solid career, but hasn't appeared in more than 22 games since 2019. The longtime Baltimore Oriole missed much of the 2021 and 2022 seasons after undergoing Tommy John surgery but was healthy in 2020 and impressed. Britton compiled a 1.89 ERA across 20 games in the COVID-shortened 60-game season. The lefty arguably was even more impressive in 2019 with a 1.91 ERA in 66 games pitched. 

There's no way for sure to know what Britton will look like in 2023. He's 35 years old and is returning from major surgery, but has an impressive track record. If Boston were to ink the lefty to a deal, he wouldn't necessarily need to be the Britton of old. The Red Sox's bullpen already has been greatly improved this offseason so if Britton were able to even just be a back-of-the-bullpen guy it would give the team an extra left-handed option. 

He wouldn't need to be the Red Sox's go-to guy but could have an extremely high upside. Britton likely won't command a massive deal and is only looking for a one-year deal. If he were to turn back the clock and look like 2019's version of himself that would be great, but even if he was just okay, a deal wouldn't hurt Boston. 

Whether the Red Sox come to terms on a deal, at the very least it appears as though the team isn't done making additions. 

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Three takeaways as Panthers eliminate Rangers, advance to Stanley Cup Final
Corey Heim dominates at Gateway for fourth Truck Series win of 2024 season
Mets honor Darryl Strawberry in fitting fashion during number retirement ceremony
Phillies ace leaves game after taking 106 mph comebacker to hand
Real Madrid defeats Borussia Dortmund 2-0 to win Champions League
Marvin Lewis opens up about about return to NFL coaching
Celtics HC shares Kristaps Porzingis update ahead of NBA Finals
Jalen Brunson claps back at tiredness narrative after Knicks' playoff exit
Red Sox lose yet another player to injury
Former NFL GM has huge praise for Packers QB Jordan Love
Drake Maye reportedly being treated as Patriots' QB3
Veteran 1B rejects outright assignment, elects free agency
Giannis Antetokounmpo to play for Greece in Olympic qualifier
Padres lose two top pitchers to injured list on same day
Fever announce remarkable attendance milestone in fifth 2024 home game
Senators reportedly undecided on qualifying defenseman
Lamar Jackson's curious offseason decision costing him significant money
Blue Jays two-time All-Star pitcher lands on IL for second time this season
Lakers set to benefit from Pelicans’ NBA Draft decision
One rookie quarterback is showing 'elite downfield accuracy' during OTAs

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.