Who saw this trade coming? Freddy Fermin wasn’t exactly at the top of anyone’s trade speculation list, but here we are. The Kansas City Royals and San Diego Padres decided to spice up the deadline with a move that has baseball fans analyzing every angle. Here is the breakdown.
Freddy Fermin, a name most casual fans might just vaguely recognize as “the other Royals catcher,” is catching a flight to San Diego. Why? The Padres were desperate to upgrade their catching situation. And Fermin? Well, he does bring something to the table.
The Royals had Salvador “Franchise Icon” Perez splitting duties with Fermin this season, and Fermin has made a case for being more than a backup. His .648 OPS isn’t jaw-dropping, but compared to the black hole of offense the Padres’ catching tandem (Elias Díaz and Martin Maldonado) has been producing, he looks like prime Mike Piazza.
On the flip side, K.C. managed to snag a couple of right-handed arms for the rebuild grind. Stephen Kolek and Ryan Bergert might not be household names, but they might soon find a home in Kansas City’s rotation.
Bergert has a fresh 2.78 ERA this season with 34 strikeouts over 35.2 innings. Are we saying he’s the next Jacob deGrom? Then there is Kolek, who has a 4.18 ERA and a knack for eating innings. He is a stabilizer. Not flashy, not sensational, but the sort of guy you’re grateful for when your bullpen is already putting in overtime before July.
Plus, both pitchers come with some good news for Royals fans crying into their team gear at the thought of long rebuild timelines. Kolek is under team control until 2029, and Bergert is locked in until 2031. And as we all know in MLB, control = value.
For the Padres, the move is a calculated shot at improving their catching struggles while keeping the door open for additional trade-deadline moves. Fermin is under control through 2029, meaning he’s not just a half-season rental. He provides stability to a team clearly teetering on the frustrating line between potential and underachievement in 2025. The pitching logjam in their minor league system might have made letting Kolek and Bergert go a bit easier.
For the Royals, this signals another step in the eternal project of getting better. They are a team perpetually “building for the future.” They need pitching depth, and they got exactly that. It is a move that does not make headlines but should pay dividends as more rookies get their shot in Kansas City.
This trade leaves a gap in Kansas City’s lineup. With Fermin out, one obvious question looms large for Royals fans: Who partners with Perez now? Suddenly, top catching prospect, Carter Jensen’s name is buzzing. Could the Royals decide to call him up and throw him into the fire of MLB pitching? Or will they go for a short-term veteran to fill in while Jensen continues developing? Either way, it is another storyline fans will follow closely.
This trade isn’t going to break Twitter or send shockwaves through MLB talk shows. But it is the kind of under-the-radar deadline deal that could yield sneaky value for both teams. The Padres get a reliable backstop, an area they desperately needed to address, while the Royals nab some long-term pitching depth that could help stabilize their staff for years to come.
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