The Yankees and Reds finalized a trade on Friday night that sends catcher Jose Trevino to Cincinnati for reliever Fernando Cruz and non-roster catcher Alex Jackson.
Trevino is on the move for the second time in his career. The Yankees landed him from the Rangers shortly after Opening Day 2022 in a deal that sent reliever Albert Abreu to Arlington. That was a win for the New York front office, as Trevino developed into a quality defensive catcher in the Bronx. Abreu, on the other hand, pitched seven times with the Rangers before they lost him on waivers.
The 2022 season has been Trevino’s best. He appeared in a career-high 115 games, hitting .248/.283/.388 through 353 plate appearances. Trevino led all catchers with 21 Defensive Runs Saved that season, earning an All-Star selection and a Gold Glove.
Trevino has opened each of the past two years as New York’s primary catcher. His playing time and offensive production have dropped, though he continues to grade very highly for his receiving skills. Trevino has only appeared in 129 games over the past two years. In 2023, that was largely the result of a ligament tear in his right wrist that necessitated season-ending surgery in July.
The 32-year-old stayed mostly heathy this past season. He missed a month between the All-Star Break and the middle of August because of a quad strain. Trevino was otherwise on the active roster but fell into a depth role. Rookie of the Year finalist Austin Wells is a superior offensive player who grades as an elite receiving catcher in his own right.
Trevino was limited to 62 starts behind the plate overall. He’d basically become a non-factor by the end of the year, as he appeared in just 14 games between his return from the injured list on August 15 and the end of the regular season. He only got two starts during the Yankees’ run to the World Series. He took 234 trips to the plate and hit .215/.288/.354 with eight home runs.
Part of the dip in playing time has been attributable to Trevino’s difficulty controlling the running game. According to Statcast, only Yasmani Grandal had a higher average pop time (throw time to second base on stolen base attempts) than Trevino’s 2.07 second mark. Opponents swiped 57 bases out of 70 attempts in his 544 1/3 innings. Trevino continues to grade exceptionally highly for his framing skills and blocking ability, so he remains a valuable defender, but the subpar arm strength has become an issue.
The Reds evidently placed a lot of value on those receiving skills. Trevino should back up Tyler Stephenson, who hit .258/.338/.444 with a career-high 19 homers this past season. Stephenson started 112 games and tallied a little more than 1000 innings. He didn’t play any first base in ’24 but has played there sporadically in prior seasons. Cincinnati could give Stephenson a few more modified rest days at first base or designated hitter if they’re comfortable with Trevino logging 70+ starts behind the dish.
Trevino has over five years of service time. MLTBR contributor Matt Swartz projects him for a $3.4MM salary during his last trip through the arbitration process. Taking that on pushes the team’s projected payroll to $104MM (courtesy of RosterResource). The Reds ended the ’23 campaign with a payroll around $100MM and have indicated they’re comfortable matching or exceeding that number.
Stephenson had been the only catcher on Cincinnati’s 40-man roster. They obviously needed to acquire a veteran backup, but it’s still surprising to see the Reds relinquish Cruz for one year of Trevino’s services. Cruz has been a fixture in Cincinnati’s bullpen for the last two years. He has scattershot command but elite bat-missing ability.
Cruz, a native of Puerto Rico, was drafted as an infielder back in 2007. He flamed out as a hitter and was out of affiliated ball entirely between 2016-21. Cruz converted to pitching in 2012 and continued to plug away, however, eventually catching the attention of Reds’ scouts in the independent ranks. He dominated Triple-A opponents in 2022 and earned his first major league call as a 32-year-old that September.
Typically, players who don’t reach the majors until they’re in their 30s are quickly dropped from the roster. Cruz pitched well in his late-season cameo, however, and the Reds kept him on their 40-man. He has topped 65 innings in each of the past two seasons, building from middle relief in 2023 to become one of David Bell’s more frequent leverage options in front of closer Alexis Díaz.
The bottom line results have not been great. Cruz has allowed nearly five earned runs per nine in both seasons. He owns a 4.52 ERA across 147 1/3 career innings. ERA estimators like FIP and SIERA find him significantly more interesting than the actual run prevention would suggest — a testament to his gaudy swing-and-miss numbers.
Cruz has fanned over 35% of opponents in each of the last two seasons. He carries a cumulative 36.5% strikeout rate over that stretch. Among pitchers with 100+ innings, only Josh Hader and Aroldis Chapman have posted a better mark. Spencer Strider, Kirby Yates, Garrett Crochet, Jeff Hoffman, Bryan Abreu, Paul Skenes and Tyler Glasnow round out the top 10. Cruz is similarly dominant on a per-pitch basis. His 16.7% swinging strike rate ranks fifth among that group — trailing Strider, Hader, Andrés Muñoz and Ryan Helsley.
Pitching isn’t solely about strikeouts, of course, but most pitchers who miss bats at those rates are impact arms. Cruz holds himself back to some extent by issuing too many free passes. He walked 12.2% of batters faced this year and has given out free passes to 11.4% of opponents in his career. That’s a concern, but it’s easy to see why the Yankees identified him as an upside play.
Cruz’s calling card is a low-80s splitter, which is one of the most effective pitches in the sport. Cruz used the offering a little more than 40% of the time this year. Opponents only made contact around 40% of the time they swung at it. Batters hit .116 against it. Cruz used it as the finishing pitch for 88 of his 109 strikeouts.
Exceptional as the splitter was, opponents teed off on his other two offerings — a 94 MPH four-seam fastball and a cutter that sits in the high 80s. Cruz has preferred to mix all three pitches rather than fully unleashing the splitter. Whether that’s because of his own comfort or the preference of Cincinnati’s coaching staff isn’t clear, though it wouldn’t be a surprise if the Yankees pushed him to lean more frequently on that pitch. New York allowed Tommy Kahnle to abandon his fastball and throw essentially all changeups for his entire playoff run, for instance.
Cruz has just over two years of big league service. He’s under club control for four seasons. The extended control window isn’t a huge factor for a pitcher who’ll turn 35 in March. It’s a boost in the short term, though, as the Yankees can plug him into the bullpen for around the league minimum salary in 2025.
Jackson, who turns 29 on Christmas, rounds out the return to backfill the catching depth. He signed a minor league contract with Cincinnati last month and will not occupy a 40-man roster spot. Jackson appeared in a career-high 58 games for the Rays last season, hitting .122 over 159 plate appearances. He’s a career .132/.224/.232 hitter over parts of five campaigns. Jackson should get a Spring Training invite, where he can compete with 29-year-old J.C. Escarra — who is on the 40-man roster but hasn’t appeared in the majors — for the backup job behind Wells.
Jon Heyman of the New York Post first reported that Trevino was being traded to Cincinnati. The Post’s Joel Sherman was first with the entire trade. Images courtesy of Imagn.
Blue Baron
Meh.
RobM
A Matt Blake special from the Yankees point of view. Cruz will hit another gear next year.
Trevino is one of the best pitch framers in the game, so he will help the Reds pitching staff quite a bit.
SODOMOJO
Should get Stephenson more reps at 1B and DH.
Vergil9000
I wonder what is the trade return? interesting
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
Yeah this is a weird trade I know I’m not a GM but it feels like a lose-lose
Reds paid one of their better relievers for a backup catcher that won’t play much and the Yankees traded their only other catcher (Ben rice will be used at first) besides wells
Yankees now have to dumpster dive for a backup… James McCann would work
YankeesBleacherCreature
Cashman has said he sees Rice as a catcher first.
KnicksFanCavsFan
@Yank
He also said that Rice had a chance to be the starting 1b. You don’t take one of your most promising bats and put him on as a backup platoon C.
Goetta
Cruz was one of their better relievers for the first 3 months of the season and then dropped off dramatically. He has a wicked splitter but it’s never a strike. His only other pitch is a fastball that is upper 90’s with movement. His stuff is nasty but he has trouble if hitters are patient. He’s basically a guy that was figured out halfway through the year and the reds were not using him in high leverage situations 2nd half of the year. He’s not bad, but people making him out to be even a set up pitcher… I’d be really wary.
Mynameisnoname
Sounds like Pittsburgh Clay Holmes.
I’m very excited to see what Blake can do with him.
Gasu1
Yankees had four catchers on the 40 man, NOT including Rice. Now they have the normal three, plus Rice. No dumpster diving required.
Degaz
Wow nice backup!
mlbnyyfan
Does Rice now make the team? Hopefully, they sign a decent catcher on a cheap deal.
Anthony maresca
Lmfao!!!! They traded Navearez to Sox who was $750K mlb minimum and Trevino at $3.5 million. You are not getting quality C for less so that means Rice likely the backup C and 1B in emergency unless one of their AAA depth makes the roster.
Salzilla
Why would anyone think this little money means anything to the Yanks???
DR2020
of course it does. I didn’t say it wasn’t a good move. They getting back something. They need a depth reliever and a back up catcher however they’re right up against the salary, cap, and every little bit of salary relief they can get, helps them move towards getting either a first baseman or an outfielder, which they need if not both
KnicksFanCavsFan
@Anthony
They are not wasting Rice as a backup that gets 6 or 7 at bats a week. Either he’s starting at 1b in the bigs or starting 1b in AAA 80% of the time. The quality of who we get to replace Trevino is the huge issue.
RynoScoobs
Rice will be backup catcher and also start occasionally at first. They’re probably looking at an older 1B like Goldschmidt and will give Rice playing time at both positions to make him a 4/5 game player. He caught 80% of his games at AAA.
On the flip side you get an elite velo/stuff flame thrower with a Blake adjustment. I’m actually okay with this.
Salzilla
Yeah I like the idea of Rice as a 2 position backup. Gives him more chances to get into games.
Atloriolesfan
AAA? Bad news. The Yankees only remaining AAA catcher is JC Escarra, who I know well as an Orioles MILB follower. When I saw him mentioned in a MLBTR article on Trevino being a possible trade I said “wait, JC was released by the Os and couple of years back and he was a 1B/DH.” Just checked it. He never caught in 4 years in the Os system. Not once. He caught a handful of games at SWB last year. Maybe it’s Rice, but two LH hitting catchers (JC would be a third. I don’t think they’re going with McCann, who will cost more than Trevino.
HOlY salary dump.
KnicksFanCavsFan
@Sal
better off playing endurance l every day in AAA.
Salzilla
I just don’t know if Rice is a viable every day starter right now. This might be his best role to prove his worth. I think it’s more valuable fir him to gain more MLB experience over every day at bats at a lesser league.
old elpaso
WS preview?
Salzilla
I like it. Cruz faded towards the end, but was pretty solid in the first half. Thanks, Jose!
Yankee Clipper
There has to be another move…. This, in a vacuum, does not make sense.
Salzilla
Why? We need relievers. Cruz is a high K’s, high leverage guy. Jose was just holding Wells back here. Wells was great till he came off the IL and Boone started messing with their duties.
Yankee Clipper
Just because they have no other MLB-level catcher right now.
Salzilla
It’s December. We’ll be fine.
Yankee Clipper
I didn’t say we wouldn’t. I just assume this is part of another planned move.
BronxBombers23
“Why? We need relievers“ I disagree. If there is one thing that the Yankees don’t need, it’s right handed relief pitching. They got more than enough high quality righties. If you can get someone like Cruz, ok, but it’s probably a salary dump in the first place.
larkraxm
That is true Clip. Alex Jackson, coming back in the trade, would be our starting catcher tomorrow if Wells got hurt or needed a day off. I, like you, think there has to be more moves coming. If Ben Rice is playing first, he isn’t catching and if he is catching, he can’t also play first. I think that he backs up both positions and we either add an outfielder and Bellinger is at first, or a first baseman and Bellinger is in the outfield.
RobM
I agree, but the Yankees clearly like Cruz and what he can contribute to the team more than Trevino. They plan to play Wells 2/3rds of the time, if not more, but they do need a strong second catcher. Do they believe in Rice that much?
RobM
Stop. We must panic on December 20th.
alwaysgo4two
Coming from a Rays fan, Alex Jackson is as close to an instant out as there is in baseball. Terrible combination of no contact no average. Just glad he’s not with the Rays now.
Salzilla
I keep repeating this here, but fellow fans, since when do we salary dump a 3.5 mil guy? A dominant pen is built on stuff like Cruz’. I’d rather have him than half the guys there now. This is a fantastic move. And yes we’ll get lefties, too, and possibly offload some righties, but be I’m shocked a lot y’all aren’t as happy about this as I am.
Salzilla
I’m pretty sure they’ll either get another catcher or give Rice a shot as a double back up to keep him on the roster. Personally I don’t see Rice as a starter right now so it either backup, triple A, and a trade before he loses value.
BronxBombers23
@Salzilla well, if the Yankees want to add 1-2 quality bats and stay under $301 mil, they probably have clear some money.
KnicksFanCavsFan
@Sal
Trevino wasn’t blocking Wells in any way. Wells was clearly the starting C. From a depth perspective, he was the perfect catcher.
Salzilla
Yeah, but it’s only a real dump if you are getting nothing back. Fernando Cruz legit is a nasty pitcher. Calling it just a salary dump belies the return, which is much more valuable than Jose Trevino on the field and in the coffers.
Personally I let the FO worry about the money. I’m only invested in the guys on the team. Cruz makes the pen better. A lesser costing backup catcher won’t be much different than Jose.
BronxBombers23
Yankees are at $266.5 mil I think. If they can trade Stro and safe let’s say 10 mil they would be at 256.5. They would have around 45 mil to spend…
Salzilla
I beg to disagree. Did you see how Boone used Jose after he came back from injury? Threw him right into multiple games and killed what was becoming a ROY season for the kid. Totally killed his momentum. Boone liked Jose enough to use him more than he should have.
BronxBombers23
Maybe they are planning to take Arenado‘s contract. I would much rather have him for 3 years than Bregman for 6-7 years.
Salzilla
Tbh, I kinda want Gleyber back more than both at this point, but yeah Arenado over Bregman for sure if we had to choose.
Goetta
Cruz isn’t a high leverage guy. He’s good but wasn’t even trusted with 7th inning duties the last half of the season. Nasty stuff but he needs hitters to chase to be effective. He’s was reliant on striking everyone out and when he couldn’t do that he got into a lot of trouble.
BronxBombers23
I’m not high on Gleyber, I don’t want him back. Very inconsistent, no hustle, often bad defense, no thx. And I don’t think they will bring him back.
BronxBombers23
If the Yankees could land Sasaki, they will probably flip Schmidt for a bat. Let’s try Schmidt + x for Ketel…
Salzilla
As I said he faded in the second half, but the ability is absolutely there.
SODOMOJO
Alex Jax will not die
TAKERDBACKS
Trevino is a solid catcher defensively nice little move.
harpatkel50
Aroldis Jr.
DR2020
probably a salary dump on our part, getting rid of Trevino salary, and filling out
filling out the bullpen with more depth
Salzilla
Yanks don’t salary dump a 3.5 mil dude. We’re getting back a high K reliever with experience in high leverage spots. I don’t see the issue.
RobM
I agree. They clearly believe Cruz will deliver more value to them than Trevino. I do think some Yankee fans are overthinking this.
KnicksFanCavsFan
I don’t like this deal. You ate a championship caliber team. You MUST build a bench that makes that “next man up” mentality viable by having a strong bench of proven vets or short talented kids. If Wells struggle are you really going to put your super starting 5 in the hands of a lesser catcher? Not too mention he was Cole’s preferred catcher? Why to save money? This guy’s has a great arm but you cab find those guys every winter. I don’t get this move.
Salzilla
Nah, money isn’t an issue here. We need Wells catching more often than not and Jose held him back a bit. We need relievers too and Cruz is a high K guy. This is a solid move. And we may get another backup, who knows. Or maybe Rice stays on the main roster as a 1b and C backup.
YanksPhan42
Trevy couldn’t throw anyone out this year and his bat was just meh. If anything, we should have kept Narvaez. I thought that was a dumb move. We get back a dude who struck out 109 in just 66 innings! Blake will make him better.
norcalblue
Cruz is actually a valuable asset!
Salzilla
Ding ding ding!
BronxBombers23
Salary dump and maybe more playing time for Rice.
Salzilla
Nope and maybe, but probably not.
Schlootle
Dude I saw a headline on youtube saying “Yankees trade for Cruz with the Reds!” and I immediately flew here to read the article only to find it wasn’t Elly
Bobcastelliniscat
It’s Elly De La Cruz not “Cruz”
isolatedpower
109 strikeouts is impressive for any reliever no matter how you slice it. The reds must love Trevino. Great move for the Yankees.
Stan "The Boy" Taylor
Cruz is a strikeout machine. Yankees are good at getting the most out of pitchers
mlbnyyfan
Do the Yankees think Agustin Ramirez is ready for the next step? Trevino was a solid backup interesting move but not completely against it.
Ronk325
The Yankees traded Ramirez to the Marlins for Jazz
mlb1225
Cruz looks like a prime breakout candidate. 104 Stuff+, 3.09 xFIP, 2.84 SIERA, and 3.05 FIP over the last two seasons. Might end up being a steal for the Yankees.
Bobcastelliniscat
Cruz is consistently inconsistent. He can be wild and loses his concentration quite frequently. When he is on he can be dominant, but he is rarely on.
Sorinotsori
Smooth move. Cruz is exactly the kind of reliever the Yankees and Blake have been getting the most out of. He’s got one of the nastiest pitches in the game, check his numbers. Not a salary dump, that implies the return is negligible. Cruz will absolutely contribute out of the pen next season. Yanks also had a disproportionate amount of catchers on the 40 man.
Salzilla
Somebody gets it.
Bobcastelliniscat
Cruz is hit or miss. I wouldn’t get too excited about him.
Salzilla
I had this cat I’m fantasy for K’s and holds, he was hit and miss, but the k’s were fantastic. I think Matt Blake will get the best out of him. Absolutely a great return for Trevino. Worth it.
BronxBombers23
Yankees got enough right handed rp, but not even one lefty…
Salzilla
We’ll get there. This makes us stronger and nastier.
YanksPhan42
109k’s in 66 innings? Watch for Matt Blake to turn him into another Clay Holmes.
Bobcastelliniscat
The Reds needed a back up catcher. Fernando Cruz is a good set up man when he pitches well, but is otherwise inconsistent.
mlbnyyfan
@Bronx I’m still waiting on the Tim Hill return
BronxBombers23
@mlbyyfan I like Hill, would be nice if they bring him back
billysbballz
Yeah they need to resign Hill and maybe Tanner Scott. Lots of bullpen arms but need lefties.
YankeesBleacherCreature
Scott won’t sign here as he probably wants to close and be paid like someone that does.
BrianCashmansBurner
Love this deal for the Yankees. Cruz is filthy.
Freddy_Sez
The Yanks’ bullpen couldn’t miss bats last year; and with numerous catchers Trevino likely not in their plans, this was the best they could get for him. They could do worse than a high K arm that likely won’t need to be a setup man that they can work with and addresses an issue from last year. Decent depth move.
Bdonnell
Reds selling high on Cruz. He’s 34 and struggles as often as he’s dominant. He has one quality pitch, a hard splitter/forkball, that he often can’t control. The splitter is like a fast knuckleball, in that no one knows where it’s going. When he has a feel for the pitch, he can dominate, but when it’s not working he’ll walk people at a high rate or instead throw BP fastballs. He’s a pretty fantastic human being, FWIW.
mrkinsm
They’re moving him for one year of a backup catcher who is making 5x the salary he does, how is that selling high? Selling high would be getting a league minimum player team controlled for multiple years.
TrillionaireTeamOperator
Trevino deserves another shot at starting or more equal platooning, despite likely plateauing and Austin Wells is clearly the superior (and more youthful) option and you can never have too much pitching.
Great trade all around.
johncal25
Nice of them to give Cruz one paragraph at the end. Couldn’t even bother to include some of Cruz’s stats.
LFGMets (Metsin7) #BannedForBeingABaseballExpertAGAIN)
Its kind of sad that Trevino won a platinum glove just because he caught for the Yankees. In no world should he be winning one when hes playing in the same league with guys like Matt Chapman, Marcus Semien, Mike Trout, etc. The media always gives Yankee players the edge
Cincyfan85
Lol @ Yankees fans complaining about this. The Reds gave up 4 years of team control of one of the top strikeout guys in baseball for a backup catcher with 1 year of control…
mrkinsm
A minor trade, but a win for the Yankees. The Reds had plenty of opportunity to get a backup via FA and failed, now they have to give up a player they planned on using next year.
Clammy
Correct take here. Reds were desperate for a backup C. They are betting on the young arms to step up. Cruz is older, but started pitching later in his career. 4 years of control could be a steal (not quite Chapman steal.) If the Reds make a run, I’m sure Trevino will be a useful cog to start 60 – 70 games. If not, betting on the Yankees getting the best on this deal.
websoulsurfer
There was a saying we had about guys like Cruz that throw hard with little control. Straight in, straight out. Its why his HR% keeps climbing.
YankeesBleacherCreature
His career 3.06 FIP is awesome. I suspect that’s why he was dealt for. The only issue is that he’ll be 35 on Opening Day albeit with 4 more years of control.
DrDick
Ooooo… Yankees save a million $
LaBellaVita
Thus concludes the trade of catchers between the Yankees and the Rays – Ben Rortvedt for Alex Jackson.
(Sarcasm mode.)
TrillionaireTeamOperator
I honestly thought Rortvedt would display more power than he did in his first full season.
I have noticed that the Yankees preview a ton of catching prospects with high upside and supposedly monster power potential only to immediately release or trade them and virtually none of those guys amount to much, so I am happy to see Rortvedt get a legitimate full season of playing and actually produce slightly above average.
LaBellaVita
The Rays didn’t expect much in terms of his bat. Fortunately, he got lucky and did pretty darn well against RHP. But boy, did he struggle against LHP.
That said, it is his glove and ability to deceive the umpire to steal strikes that have made him valuable. By FG, he was nearly a 6 fWAR600 player last year. He is still young enough to have some quality seasons in the future.
Alex Jackson… the odds are against him. In 2024, the bat was as expected, as in worthless. But he did learn the system of catcher deception. Who knows what NYY receive in the end.
GarryHarris
I have no doubt that the Yankees have a plan to acquire a catcher. It’s early in the offseason.
Rsox
I imagine the Yankees make another move to bring in a backup Catcher as Jackson was awful last season, unless they plan on using Rice as a 1B/C option
Whiskey and leather balls
Ahhhh another day another robbery by the spankees for nothing. Money must be changing hands behind the scenes
octavian8
The Reds definitely checked another roster box with a quality backup catcher that was badly needed. Now let’s find a quality outfielder with some pop to complete the non pitching side of the roster. Not crazy about losing Cruz but a bullpen arm is easier to replace than a catcher who will be on the field about a third of the games. Maybe Ashcraft replaces Cruz in the pen.
dasit
yankees learned the hard way that low-k relievers are at the mercy of babip. easy to root for a guy who was out of the game for 5 years and refused to give up