Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (2024)

Every MLB fan base is looking for the move that will change everything — the late-July trade that pushes a team into the postseason, into a pennant, into a parade. You just need to look back a year ago at the aggressive moves made by the Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks to see how much a well-executed trade deadline can alter the landscape of a season.

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Often, we think of deadline moves individually — the one trade that made a difference. But a team’s activity at the trade deadline is almost always more than a single move, and its attempt at improvement comprises everything it does in late July. Those moves can help over the next two to three months, or over the next two to three years. A team can have a good deadline buying, it can have a good deadline selling, and it can have a good deadline straddling the line between the two.

With the help of colleagues and a collection of executives across the sport, I’ve ranked the 10 best trade deadlines for teams over the last decade. Which teams best took advantage of the opportunity to better themselves, either in the present or future, at the trade deadline?

For what it’s worth, the honorable mentions include the 2023 Rangers, 2022 Nationals, 2021 Cardinals, 2018 Red Sox, 2016 Astros and 2015 Rangers.

10. 2016 New York Yankees

  • Acquired Adam Warren, Gleyber Torres, Billy McKinney and Rashad Crawford from the Cubs for Aroldis Chapman
  • Acquired Clint Frazier, Justus Sheffield, Ben Heller and J.P. Feyereisen from Cleveland for Andrew Miller
  • Acquired Nick Green, Erik Swanson and Dillon Tate from Texas for Carlos Beltrán
  • Acquired Tyler Clippard from Arizona for Vicente Campos

Universally lauded at the time, the Yankees’ pivot to selling in 2016 has lost some luster in the intervening years. Of all the prospects they received, only Torres emerged as a contributor, let alone an everyday player, and even he has fallen shy of expectations over the years. Surely the Yankees could have used a postseason weapon like Miller in the final two years of his contract more than what they received back from Cleveland. Sometimes good processes don’t lead to the best results.

That said, deadlines have to be judged not just by what teams do, but also by what they don’t do. The Yankees hadn’t sold in a generation, and the decision was not clear-cut in a relatively open American League. New York had some pretty good prospects it could have dealt to improve the present. Had the Yankees taken that route, the Baby Bombers that have fueled a longer run of contention in the years since would not have coalesced the same way.

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9. 2022 Cincinnati Reds

  • Acquired Spencer Steer, Christian Encarnacion-Strand and Steven Hajjar from Minnesota for Tyler Mahle
  • Acquired Noelvi Marte, Edwin Arroyo, Levi Stoudt and Andrew Moore from Seattle for Luis Castillo
  • Acquired José Acuña and Hector Rodríguez from the Mets for Tyler Naquin and Phillip Diehl
  • Acquired Victor Acosta from San Diego for Brandon Drury
  • Acquired Nicholas Northcut from Boston for Tommy Pham
  • Acquired Austin Romine from St. Louis for cash

A sell-off takes years to fully evaluate, and this ranking of the Reds’ haul two summers ago might eventually look foolish in either direction.

For now, the trades of Mahle and Castillo have started to pay major-league dividends. Steer has become an integral part of the Reds’ lineup, being voted the team MVP in 2023. Marte entered the season as a top-20 prospect in the sport, Arroyo as a top-100 guy. Encarnacion-Strand looked like a useful big-league piece as well before an injury earlier this year. Even the unheralded fliers they landed from the Mets for a fourth outfielder and minor-league reliever look more promising now than they did then.

8. 2015 Toronto Blue Jays

  • Acquired David Price from Detroit for Daniel Norris, Matthew Boyd and Jairo Labourt
  • Acquired Troy Tulowitzki and LaTroy Hawkins from Colorado for José Reyes, Miguel Castro, Jeff Hoffman and Jesus Tinoco
  • Acquired Ben Revere from Philadelphia for Jimmy Cordero and Alberto Tirado
  • Acquired Mark Lowe from Seattle for Nick Wells, Jake Brentz and Rob Rasmussen

Going into the 2015 trade deadline, the Blue Jays sat seventh in the American League, consistently lingering around .500, trailing the Yankees in the East by seven games. But Alex Anthopoulos looked less at Toronto’s record than at a run differential of plus-100 — tops in the AL. And so the Blue Jays added aggressively, bringing in Price amid Detroit’s last-second sell-off and upgrading high-priced shortstops from Reyes to Tulowitzki.

With Price going 9-1 for his new team, the Jays won 42 of their last 60 games, not only finding the postseason but also chasing down New York to win the AL East for the first time in 22 years.

7. 2020 Seattle Mariners

  • Acquired Ty France, Andres Muñoz, Luis Torrens and Taylor Trammell from San Diego for Austin Nola, Austin Adams and Dan Altavilla
  • Acquired Matt Brash from San Diego for Taylor Williams
  • Acquired Alberto Rodriguez from Toronto for Taijuan Walker

Seattle’s maneuvering at the anomalous 2020 deadline was not top of mind when I started this exercise. When an executive mentioned it, I had to ask what the Mariners gave up and what they got in return. But you have to give them bonus points for the degree of difficulty here. The 2020 trade deadline came at the end of August after about 35 games, when most every team was within a game or two of the expanded postseason tournament. As a result, almost nobody made moves of note.

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And yet, in two separate deals with a Padres team that acted uniquely as an aggressive buyer that summer, Jerry Dipoto and the Mariners landed two everyday players, a future closer, a future setup man and a prospect of note. In exchange, they gave up three relievers and a catcher in the midst of a career season. You could make a case pretty swiftly that Seattle received the four best players in these two deals.

6. 2016 Cleveland Indians

Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (2)

Andrew Miller notches a strikeout in Game 2 of the 2016 ALCS. (Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

  • Acquired Andrew Miller from the Yankees for Clint Frazier, Justus Sheffield, Ben Heller and J.P Feyereisen
  • Acquired Brandon Guyer from Tampa Bay for Nathan Lukes and Jhonleider Salinas

In the final weeks of September, it looked as if Cleveland’s bold move for Miller wasn’t going to bear fruit in 2016. Injuries to Carlos Carrasco and Danny Salazar had diminished Cleveland’s strength, leaving it to count on a three-man rotation in October.

And then, in Game 1 of the Division Series against the favored Red Sox, manager Terry Francona summoned Miller in the fifth inning of a one-run game — and a blueprint was established. While the Royals had relied on their bullpen the previous two autumns, no team had put as big a burden on a single reliever as Cleveland did on Miller. The lefty threw 19 1/3 innings out of the bullpen that postseason — the most in history — and brought Cleveland within a win of ending its championship drought. He remained a vital piece for two additional seasons in Cleveland.

Guyer, for what it’s worth, nearly pushed Cleveland over the edge in that World Series, in which he led the team in OPS and delivered the RBI double directly ahead of Rajai Davis’ memorable game-tying home run in Game 7.

5. 2021 Los Angeles Dodgers

  • Acquired Max Scherzer and Trea Turner from Washington for Keibert Ruiz, Josiah Gray, Gerardo Carrillo and Donovan Casey
  • Acquired Danny Duffy from Kansas City for Zach Willeman
  • Acquired Billy McKinney from the Mets for Carlos Rincon

For the most part, I’m keeping the emphasis on the entire body of work for a team at the deadline, instead of focusing on individual trades. But, I mean, the Dodgers got Max Scherzer and Trea Turner!

A trade that looked like a coup the day it was made only got better as the season transpired. Scherzer put his name alongside 1998 Randy Johnson and 2008 CC Sabathia as one of the best deadline rotation additions ever. Turner contributed more than 2.5 wins above replacement (according to FanGraphs) in the last two months of the season. While the Dodgers still couldn’t track down the Giants in maybe the last great divisional race we’ll ever see, they enacted revenge with a five-game victory in the Division Series — closed out, of course, by Scherzer.

4. 2015 Kansas City Royals

Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (3)

Johnny Cueto reacts after his Game 2 win over the Mets in the 2015 World Series. (David J. Phillip / Associated Press)

  • Acquired Ben Zobrist from Oakland for Sean Manaea and Aaron Brooks
  • Acquired Johnny Cueto from Cincinnati for Brandon Finnegan, John Lamb and Cody Reed

The Royals had built off their surprising pennant run in 2014 to reach the trade deadline the following season with the best record in the American League. They had two clear needs at second base and the top of the rotation, and they filled them with two of the best options possible.

Zobrist was a perfect fit for a lineup that built rallies around contact and base running. And while Cueto labored through the final two months of the regular season, he delivered in the most meaningful game of all, twirling a two-hit complete game in Game 2 of the World Series against the Mets.

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You can’t say this for many teams on this list: The Royals won the World Series because of what they did at the deadline.

3. 2018 Tampa Bay Rays

  • Acquired Tyler Glasnow, Austin Meadows and Shane Baz from Pittsburgh for Chris Archer
  • Acquired Tommy Pham from St. Louis for Génesis Cabrera, Justin Williams and Roel Ramírez
  • Acquired Jalen Beeks from Boston for Nathan Eovaldi
  • Acquired Michael Perez and Brain Shaffer from Arizona for Matt Andriese

Few 11-game winning streaks have ever been as disastrous as the one that compelled the Pirates to pull the trigger on the deal here for Archer. While Archer would be below-league-average as a starter for Pittsburgh, Glasnow put it together to become a front-line pitcher with Tampa Bay. Meadows made an All-Star team (and was traded for current contributor Isaac Paredes), and Baz is back to being an integral part of the Rays’ rotation.

While that’s the bulk of the reason for this ranking, don’t overlook the deal for Pham, who was months removed from getting MVP votes when St. Louis traded him with multiple years of team control remaining. He raked while a Ray, and then was moved to San Diego in a trade that didn’t work out as well for Tampa Bay.

2. 2015 New York Mets

Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (4)

Yoenis Céspedes, pictured in 2016, posted a .942 post-trade OPS with the Mets the prior year. (Adam Hunger / USA Today)

  • Acquired Yoenis Céspedes from Detroit for Michael Fulmer and Luis Cessa
  • Acquired Tyler Clippard from Oakland for Casey Meisner
  • Acquired Juan Uribe and Kelly Johnson from Atlanta for John Gant and Rob Whalen

Look, regional sports networks don’t make documentaries about trade deadlines that flop, and few teams have endured a deadline as operatic as New York’s in 2015. A trade that would have sent Zack Wheeler and Wilmer Flores to Milwaukee for Carlos Gómez fell through — only after Flores cried on the field thinking he’d been dealt — and opened the door for the Mets to acquire Céspedes. The outfielder’s power transformed the New York offense; after averaging 3.5 runs per game through July, the Mets scored 5.4 per game after the trade. Clippard and the August waiver addition of Addison Reed bolstered the bullpen, completing a metamorphosis from a run-of-the-mill .500 team to an all-around powerhouse capable of speeding past the Nationals in the division and beating the Dodgers and Cubs en route to the pennant.

Yes, it is weird to rank this deadline ahead of the one executed by the Royals team that beat the Mets in the World Series that season. However, Kansas City entered the deadline with the best record in the AL and a healthy run differential, while New York was barely above .500 and had been outscored on the season. The Mets’ moves improved the roster more — not to mention how hanging on to Flores and in particular Wheeler helped the team in future years.

1. 2021 Atlanta Braves

  • Acquired Joc Pederson from the Cubs for Bryce Ball
  • Acquired Adam Duvall from Miami for Alex Jackson
  • Acquired Jorge Soler from Kansas City for Kasey Kalich
  • Acquired Eddie Rosario from Cleveland for Pablo Sandoval
  • Acquired Richard Rodríguez from Pittsburgh for Bryse Wilson and Ricky DeVito

The gold standard in recent deadlines derived from a quantity-over-quality approach that hit the jackpot. To replace the injured Ronald Acuña Jr., Alex Anthopoulos and Atlanta brought in a quartet of outfielders and hoped one or two would work out. Instead, all four did, combining to hit 44 home runs and deliver an .827 OPS — which is basically a Kyle Schwarber season. That helped Atlanta chase down a Mets team that had started flagging in the NL East, to get into the dance. Once there, Rosario went off to win NLCS MVP in an upset of the Dodgers and Soler took home World Series MVP honors in a six-game defeat of the Astros. All that for very little talent going the other way.

Ironically, on deadline day the acquisition of Rodríguez loomed largest. However, the right-hander, who had an additional year of team control, didn’t make the postseason roster and was non-tendered in the fall. Which, as one executive pointed out with a shrug, shows you how random the deadline can be.

(Top photo of Jorge Soler and Eddie Rosario during the 2021 World Series: Elsa / Getty Images)

Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (5)Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (6)

Tim Britton is a senior writer for The Athletic covering the New York Mets. He has covered Major League Baseball since 2009 and the Mets since 2018. Prior to joining The Athletic, he spent seven seasons on the Red Sox beat for the Providence Journal. He has also contributed to Baseball Prospectus, NBC Sports Boston, MLB.com and Yahoo Sports. Follow Tim on Twitter @TimBritton

Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade (2024)

FAQs

Ranking the 10 best MLB trade deadlines for teams over the last decade? ›

A busy Trade Deadline season wrapped up Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET, with a number of contenders and playoff hopefuls making an effort to bolster their rosters ahead of the stretch run.

Is the MLB trade deadline over? ›

A busy Trade Deadline season wrapped up Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET, with a number of contenders and playoff hopefuls making an effort to bolster their rosters ahead of the stretch run.

Can MLB teams make trades after the trade deadline? ›

Rosters are mostly set as teams begin their playoff pushes

The MLB trade deadline has officially passed. There will be no more trades in baseball until the winter. While we didn't have many trades for superstars, contenders made many trades to boost their teams for the playoffs.

What is the greatest trade in MLB history? ›

Over a three week span in 1954, the Baltimore Orioles and New York Yankees pulled off a seventeen player trade. The trade began on November 14 and was announced on November 18. The Orioles sent three players to the Yankees for six others.

How many trade deadlines are there in baseball? ›

As of 2019, there's only one Trade Deadline. Players may still be placed and claimed on outright waivers, but trades will no longer be permitted after that date.

When was the first MLB trade deadline? ›

The traditional Major League Baseball (MLB) trade deadline of July 31 has been in effect since the 1986 Basic Agreement which resulted from the resolution of the 1985 MLB strike.

Who did the Dodgers get at the trade deadline? ›

Jack Flaherty: A Frontline Ace

Amid much speculation, the Dodgers have landed the best pitcher available at this year's trade deadline. Right-hander Jack Flaherty joins the rotation with a stellar 2.95 ERA over 18 starts this season.

Can an MLB player refuse to be traded? ›

If a player has been on an active major league roster for 10 full seasons and on one team for the last five, he may not be traded to another team without his consent (known as the 10 & 5 rule). Additionally, some players negotiate to have no-trade clauses in their contracts that have the same effect.

How many times can a player be sent to the minors? ›

Only one Minor League option is used per season, regardless of how many times a player is optioned to and from the Minors over the course of a given season. (Players may only be optioned five times per season; after that, it requires outright assignment waivers to assign the player to the Minor Leagues.)

Can teams add players after trade deadline? ›

Does that mean teams can no longer acquire new players or address injuries as they arise? No, but their avenues to do so are substantially narrower. Here's a look at how Major League front offices can still augment their roster now that the “true” trade deadline has passed: 1.

Who has the richest deal in MLB history? ›

After six seasons with the Angels, during which he made three All-Star teams, won the 2018 AL Rookie of the Year Award and took home MVP honors in 2021 and 2023, Ohtani signed a 10-year deal worth $700 million, which is the most lucrative contract in Major League Baseball history, almost doubling the value of the ...

What is the greatest single trade of all time? ›

George Soros: Betting Against the British Pound

Known as the “Man Who Broke the Bank of England,” Soros' audacious bet against the British pound stands as one of the most legendary trades in history.

What MLB player has been traded the most? ›

He's played in less than 15 seasons and, after being dealt to the Angels on Tuesday, has been traded 10 times -- including twice this year. He's won a World Series, he's played in every division and he's probably played for your favorite team. He is 38-year-old bespectacled reliever Jesse Chavez.

Who won the trade deadline in MLB? ›

Tampa Bay Rays

The Rays, who were just two games out of a wild-card spot when they began their firesale, traded nine players before the deadline, acquiring 14 prospects and three position players, while saving $15 million this year and about $40 million in 2025.

Why do leagues have trade deadlines? ›

The “trade deadline” setting determines if the league uses a deadline for trading players between teams. This option is offered to prevent teams from sandbagging their team at the end of the season by trading blue-chip players for average players.

When can MLB teams start trading players? ›

Trades involving players signed to Major League contracts are prohibited from the Trade Deadline to the conclusion of the World Series. The trade market opens up again the day after the World Series finale.

What time is trade deadline over? ›

This year's trade deadline is Tuesday, July 30 at 6 p.m. ET.

Who did the Yankees acquire at the trade deadline today? ›

On deadline day, they brought in righty relievers Mark Leiter Jr. and Enyel De Los Santos, and sent lefty Caleb Ferguson packing. An infield bat and a bat-missing reliever was the minimum for the Yankees at the deadline and they acquired just that in Chisholm, Leiter and De Los Santos.

When can MLB trades start? ›

Trades. Teams may trade only players currently under contract. Trades between two or more major-league teams may freely occur at any time during a window that opens two days after the starting date of the final game of the most recent World Series and closes at 4 pm Eastern Daylight Time (UTC 2000) on July 31.

What channel is the MLB trade deadline on? ›

What channel is MLB trade deadline coverage on? The MLB channel will begin over 12 hours of trade deadline coverage at 8 a.m. CT and ESPN has a special starting at 3 p.m. CT.

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