The Rays’ recent slump has seen them go 7-13, including a four-game sweep at Yankee Stadium, thus dropping them down the standings in the AL East rather precipitously. Tampa Bay had a half-game lead over New York as recently as June 10, but the Rays suddenly face a seven-game deficit in the division. As such, the team has had to “back off its trade pursuits,” Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reports (subscription required). Tampa Bay still holds a Wild Card position in the AL, so it’s not as if the team will operate as a seller this month, but teams are often less aggressive at the deadline when they believe they’re playing for a one-game playoff as opposed to a guaranteed berth in the division series. Giants closer Will Smith had been a “primary target” for the Rays, Rosenthal adds, but it’s not clear if they’ll aggressively pursue him now.
Tampa Bay faces a critical stretch of games over the next few weeks, as they’ll play the eight times Yankees and the hapless Orioles seven times in their next 15 games. That’ll provide ample opportunity to either climb back into the division race but could also create a near-insurmountable gap if New York once again dominates the series. The outcome of the Rays’ next stretch of games will likely go a long way in dictating how strongly they’ll pursue bullpen upgrades in trade talks with the Giants and other sellers.
More on the Rays…
- Top prospect Brendan McKay opened his Major League career with five perfect innings this weekend, which was (obviously) enough to earn him another start at the big league level. MLB.com’s Juan Toribio writes that the Rays will make a decision after that game whether to keep McKay in the Majors or send him back to Triple-A Durham. It’s possible that Tampa Bay could option McKay to get a fresh arm for the final couple of games leading into the All-Star break, even if the plan is to recall him shortly after the break and plug him right back into the rotation. The former No. 4 overall pick doesn’t look like he has much left to prove in the minors after posting a combined 1.22 ERA in 66 1/3 innings of Double-A and Triple-A work, but his workload figures to be closely monitored; McKay has thrown 72 1/3 innings in 2019 after tossing just 78 1/3 innings in all of 2018.
- The Rays’ proposed timeshare between St. Petersburg and Montreal was met with a heavy dose of skepticism and negative fan reaction, but Rays leadership remains committed to the idea, writes Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times. Rays owner Stuart Sternberg and president Brian Auld feel that split-city arrangements will eventually become more commonplace in professional sports. President Matthew Silverman also spoke of how the still-theoretical alignment would impact the team’s payroll, believing it could push the Rays to a middle-of-the-pack organization in that regard. “If this comes to fruition, we’re going to have more resources, and more resources means a higher payroll, and a higher payroll is good for all players within baseball,” said Silverman. There are still innumerable hurdles to be cleared, but as Topkin examines at length, the proposal appears to be more a plan that genuinely intrigues Rays leadership than a ploy to increase leverage in preexisting stadium talks.
T.T.P.
Feels like every contender is looking to trade for Will Smith. He could probably a decent return and net a top 75 prospect based off how many teams want to trade for him.
Rich Hill’s Elbow
That seems like way too much imo, more likely they land a fringe top 100 prospect, but I wouldn’t bank on that either for a rental reliever.
excusemeflo
I would bet on him bringing in a top 75 prospect for sure. When you have basically half the league’s interest, someone is bound to pony up, even for a rental.
jbigz12
You guys realize there’s not much of a difference between a top 75 and a top 100? The guy ranked 60 isn’t necessarily everyone’s #60 prospect. He could be #96 or 106 on another teams. Seems like you’re really splitting hairs here
mlb1225
I don’t know, sometimes teams will give up a fairly sizable return for a rental if they’re desperate enough.
ayrbhoy
Houston sent RP Josh Fields to LAD for Yordan Alvarez in a trade deadline deal in 2016- SF Giants fans would love something similar! Alvarez looks like a beast!
rangerslegend34107
Yes, but Yordan was not a top 75 prospect at the time
king beas
McKay shoved no doubt but how is 6 innings worth almost half a war?
Captain Dunsel
It’s the second half of the war that matters most.
DarkSide830
because WAR for pitchers makes no sense and is overall useless as a stat.
its_happening
So Tampa will benefit from at least 1 series against the Blue Jays along with 1 series against Boston and another against the New York Yankees. Three teams with fans willing to take the road trip to support Montreal. In essence Tampa would be treated like a road team despite having home field.
Those 3 teams are the only guaranteed draw in Montreal.
jd396
…which is what happens in Tampa anyway.
its_happening
Yep. Maybe not Blue Jays. Still….
frankiegxiii
How long does it take to drive from New York to Montreal including time to cross the border?
Phanatic 2022
6-8 hours
Senioreditor
Will the Union sign off on it? I doubt it without significant compensation and then what’s the point? I suggest they break the lease, pay damages and move on from Florida. It’s a disaster down there. Maybe Vegas, San Antonio, Portland, Louisville or Indianapolis?
jd396
I don’t really see what reason the union would have to object to this.
wkkortas
State income tax in Florida–0%
Provincial income tax in Quebec on 10 mil– 25.6%
That could come into play.
rangerslegend34107
Tax reasons as mentioned and also they would not have a true home. Right now players can keep a residence somewhere because half of their games are at home. If this comes to fruition, they really won’t have a home because a quarter of their games will be in Florida, and a quarter in Canada. Plus they travel the rest of the time. The Union will 100% fight this.
bjupton100
Why break it now. Give them the last eight years especially since the team is going to be good and then when they lose the team, no one has to listen to them b####.
KingBong
I agree that Las Vegas, Indianapolis and San Antonio should have teams. If Montreal wants one, they need to prove they will support the team, they certainly didn’t with the Expos. They would need dedicated ownership. I could see Portland with a team, too, perhaps.
What boggles my mind is we’re discussing a team (Rays) not being supported in Tampa Bay. That is not reasonable. There is no reason that the cities of St. Petersburg & Tampa can’t hold a team down. If they can’t, there are reasons other than lack of interest. If there is a lack of interest, maybe it’s because ownership needs to $h*t or get off the pot. They are always riding the fence. Either tear down, rebuild, and go for it on a dime, or put some money into the team. Fans are tired of the indecisiveness. The exact indecisiveness they are exhibiting right now. They also need a new stadium. Tropicana Field just doesn’t cut it.
I, for one, hope baseball remains in Tampa Bay. They should have baseball there. While we’re talking expansion, Jacksonville should also have a team.
Strike Four
Really wish people would stop acting like Portland cares about sports: it’s not a sports town, never was, never will be. Zero casual fans there. They barely support the blazers even when they’re good, baseball doesn’t belong there.
Vegas however, is a big baseball town. They deserve a team that isn’t the A’s.
bjupton100
They’re not realigning all of baseball to send an MLB team to sin City. If Vegas wants a team it will be Oakland’s most likely.
Steven Chinwood
Portland has a huge Soccer fan base. I don’t know where you’re drawing this about Portland not being a sports town.
66TheNumberOfTheBest
This implies that soccer and sports are related in any way.
PopeMarley
#1
WarkMohlers
The Blazers were #7 in terms of attendance this last year, higher than a number of larger cities. Between the blazers and the timbers, Portland teams draw fans. The Diamond Project seems to be doing quite a bit to bring an MLB team to PDX.
Vegas can’t even get attendance numbers in the upper half of the NHL even though it’s their main team. Also if Florida is a full of transplants Vegas is in the same boat.
mcjjr19
Agreed on the Portland situation. Besides, riots and protests & assaults happening daily in Portland, don’t know if it’s the best place to put a team until stuff blows over.
bobtillman
It’s a less bizarre idea than people think. You’ve got two cities with questionable ability to support attendance numbers, but the same two with admirable TV/streaming capabilities. And that’s the real source of revenue growth now anyway.
The only question is whether MLB wants to sacrifice Montreal as a potential expansion city. If they don’t, the idea is dead. But if they do, all the other “obstacles” can be overcome.
The ONLY other solution is to find an owner willing to privately finance a stadium, with the real expectation that, even with it, he’s going to be a poor relation. BUT that allows expansion/realignment, which will get them away from NY and Boston. The Rays in a division with Miami, Atlanta and Charlotte (?) could be financially viable.
mrperkins
Bring back the multi-city team idea! When I wear my Kansas City-Omaha Kings hat people just look at me confusedly.
Steven Chinwood
Too much carbon emissions to get AOC’s approval.
bobtillman
AOC would realize that the real issue isn’t that the big boys can have twice (three times?) the payroll the Rays have, but Boston, NY et al could EASILY double those payrolls and still make real dollars. Whereas the Rays could triple attendance (under terms of their current lease), double local TV revenue, and still need Revenue Sharing to survive.
Re-aligning a 32 team league along revenue guidelines isn’t a panacea, and it would cause its own particular weirdness. But there’s a middle ground. I’m old enough to remember the Braves in the NL West, and the NFL has always had bizarre geographical layouts; back in the day, Rozelle knew geography was only a piece of the puzzle.