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Red Sox Reportedly Rejected White Sox Offer for Triston Casas Replacement
David Butler II-Imagn Images

The Boston Red Sox had a clear need at first base in the wake of the Triston Casas injruy. With Casas done for the year, and potentially into 2026, the Red Sox needed to find a solution in the short and long term at first base.

Shortly after the Casas injury, one of the previous Red Sox first basemen became available. The Chicago White Sox designated Bobby Dalbec for assignment. According to Sean McAdam of Mass Live, the Red Sox turned down the White Sox's offer of acquiring Dalbec before he was officially DFA'd.

McAdam wrote, "Prior to designating Bobby Dalbec for assignment... the White Sox checked in with the Red Sox to see if they had any interest in their former corner infielder. They [Red Sox] did not."

With the Red Sox having a clear need at first base, they declined the White Sox's offer to bring back a familiar face. For the Red Sox, that decision likely wasn't too difficult.

In his first season with the White Sox, Dalbec played in 7 games, making 21 plate appearances. Across those 21 plate appearances, he had four hits, two runs, one double, one RBI, three walks, and six strikeouts. Dalbec had a .222 batting average, with a .611 OPS and a 78 OPS+.

He struggled to make his mark offensively, and was let go less than 10 games into his White Sox career. Dalbec struggled in the major leagues with the Red Sox, especially in 2024 when he hit .133 in 83 at-bats.

After a disappointing stint in Chicago and the Red Sox not making a move despite having a need at his position, Dalbec joined the Milwaukee Brewers' minor league system.

Boston, meanwhile, will continue to scour the market for first base options, even after the addition of Ryan Noda and the call-up of Abraham Toro.

This article first appeared on Athlon Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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