Top 10 most valuable trade assets ahead of MLB deadline, from Luis Arráez to Tarik Skubal
When it comes to conversations about the trade deadline, a term you often hear is “value.” What is the value of the player being traded? And what is the value of the return for the player or players in a trade? Both are important questions that have to be answered to make a deal happen.
As we look ahead to this year’s trade deadline, there are a few players who are extremely valuable based on a few factors. Those factors include their production so far this season, their contract status and salary, and even their years of club control remaining. The players below might not all be traded this summer, but they are prized potential trade chips for their current teams.
Here are the 10 most valuable trade assets ahead of this year’s deadline.
10. Luis Arráez, 2B, San Francisco Giants
Arráez can roll out of bed and deliver a team two hits without striking out. In a season when teams are struggling to hit league-wide, Arráez provides plenty of value at this year’s trade deadline. The Giants’ second baseman, who’s hitting .326 with 84 hits and a 122 wRC+, is having a resurgent year offensively and playing on a one-year deal,
9. Willson Contreras, 1B, Boston Red Sox
Right-handed power is a valuable commodity, and it’s one of the things that makes Contreras stand out at this year’s deadline. So far this season, he has been one of the only Red Sox hitters who has had success, leading Boston in nearly every offensive category. The first baseman is currently hitting .288 with 13 homers and a .906 OPS in 63 games. And in what is looking like a season in which Boston has to sell, making the most of Contreras’ value and getting valuable pieces for the future in return might be in the Sox’s best interest.
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8. Michael Soroka, SP, Arizona Diamondbacks
A year ago, Soroka was a trade-deadline acquisition by the Cubs. Thanks to an injury suffered in his first start in Chicago and a lengthy stay on the injured list,
Once again, he has put himself in position to be on the move if Arizona decides to sell. Soroka, who signed a one-year, $7.5 million deal in the offseason, would be one of the rental arms on the market. For a team looking for a quality rotation addition for the stretch run, Soroka fills that need.
6 and 7. Michael Wacha and Seth Lugo, SP, Kansas City Royals
If there’s one thing both Wacha and Lugo have brought to the Royals’ rotation over the past three seasons, it’s consistency. Wacha (4-4, 3.44 ERA) and Lugo (2-4, 3.91 ERA) have been two of the American League’s best starters in recent years, and with both having one more year of club control after this season, they could be intriguing targets for teams looking for rotation help for both this season and next season.
Kansas City’s moves the past few seasons have just not worked out the way the team had hoped. But starting pitching has been an area of strength for the Royals lately. Moving one or both of their better arms could be the key to injecting some much-needed life into both the farm system and the big-league roster, while knowing the rotation has quality arms such as Cole Ragans and Noah Cameron to build around in the future.

5. Freddy Peralta, SP, New York Mets
It seems hard to believe that just
4. Aroldis Chapman, RP, Boston Red Sox
Ten years ago, Chapman was a premier trade-deadline acquisition for the 2016 Chicago Cubs, who went on to win the World Series. And 10 years later, still throwing harder than 100 mph in the ninth inning, the Red Sox’s closer is once again a coveted trade-deadline target. Chapman, who at 38 years old has a 0.46 ERA and 13 saves, will be the best bullpen arm available this summer, and
3. Joe Ryan, SP, Minnesota Twins
Ryan’s name has been swirling in trade rumors for some time, and things will be no different at this year’s deadline. The 30-year-old righty has been one of the American League’s most consistent starters the past several seasons and is once again proving he’s a frontline arm, with a 4-3 record and a 3.07 ERA through 14 starts this season. The extra appeal for any team looking to acquire a frontline starter is that the Twins’ ace has an additional year of club control after this season. That also gives Minnesota more leverage to get a strong return.
2. Yordan Álvarez, DH/LF, Houston Astros
Álvarez is the least likely player on this list to be traded, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t an extremely valuable trade asset. The Astros’ slugger is putting together an MVP-worthy first half
So why would Houston entertain trading him? For a decade, the Astros were perennial World Series contenders, and when you’re always in win-now mode, you use your prospect capital to address needs at the major-league level. Houston was extremely successful in doing that, but at this point, it has left the farm system depleted. Álvarez has two more years of club control after this season, and when you combine that with his otherworldly talent, the haul the Astros could get in return for him would be massive — even more than it would take to get the final superstar on this list.
1. Tarik Skubal, SP, Detroit Tigers
This wasn’t a hard choice. Skubal is
Prior to going on the injured list, the back-to-back AL Cy Young Award winner, who is a free agent at season’s end, was doing what he usually does, with a 2.70 ERA and 45 strikeouts in his first seven starts. A player of this caliber is rarely available even as a two-month rental. Skubal would be an extremely valuable final piece for any contender trying to make a push to win the World Series.
