The San Diego Padres have acquired two-time batting champion Luis Arráez from the Miami Marlins, the team announced on Saturday morning.
The Marlins will receive RHP Woo-Suk Go, 1B Nathan Martorella, OF Dillon Head and OF Jakob Marsee in return for the second baseman.
Marlins also are getting OF Jacob Marsee in return in the deal per source. It is a 4 for 1 trade with Head being the headliner. No pun intended.
— Craig Mish (@CraigMish) May 4, 2024
A two-time All-Star, Arráez won a league batting title each of the past two seasons. He slashed .354/.393/.469 with 10 home runs and 69 RBI in Miami last season, all career highs. Before that, he won the AL batting title in 2022 with a .316/.375/.420 slash line while playing for the Minnesota Twins.
In 33 games so far this season, Arráez is slashing .299/.347/.372 with five RBI and zero home runs.
Arráez joins a Padres team with an established infield featuring veterans Jake Cronenworth, Ha-Seong Kim, Xander Bogaerts and Manny Machado. He could split time between designated hitter and rotating into the San Diego infield. He’ll leave Miami after spending a season-plus with the Marlins. He played his first four MLB seasons with the Twins before being traded to the Marlins in January 2023.
The Padres are off to a 17-18 start that’s good for second in the NL West, and they sit 4.5 games behind the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers. The arrival of Arráez bolsters their lineup as they project to compete for an NL wild-card berth.
Meanwhile, the Marlins are off to one of the worst starts in baseball at 9-25. They’ll add four pieces for the future with little hope of competing this season.
What are the Padres adding with Arráez?
Is anyone remotely surprised that AJ Preller was the GM willing to take a big swing on a win-now trade months before the deadline? Or that the Marlins, off to a terrible start and heading full-steam toward a rebuild, would jump at the opportunity to flip a veteran for a package of prospects? No and no. The players involved in this rare May blockbuster, however, are certainly intriguing.
For starters, why exactly do the Padres need Arráez? Over the season’s first month, San Diego has looked far weaker on the mound (22nd in ERA+) than in the lineup, where the Padres are top-10 in MLB in both runs per game and OPS+. That said, with Manny Machado seemingly ready to return to third base full-time after offseason elbow surgery, the DH spot he has occupied for much of April has opened up without an obvious candidates to fill it.
And while this offense has looked strong at times, it could use another lefty stick — that Juan Soto fella isn’t around anymore, remember? Arráez is a fascinating bat to acquire, but he won’t provide even a fraction of the power that Soto did — Arráez currently leads all of MLB as the hitter with the most plate appearances with zero homers — but the 27-year-old unquestionably possesses an elite offensive skill in his ability to make an exceptional amount of contact. This is already an area in which San Diego excels at as a team, and Arráez will accentuate that further.
Wherever manager Mike Shildt chooses to slot him in the lineup, Arráez will be an added headache for opposing pitchers already tasked with navigating around legitimate star bats such as Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. Even if he barely slugs, I think Arráez will make this lineup markedly more challenging for opponents. With him under contract through next season, it’s hard to know quite how Arráez fits into the Padres’ already super-crowded infield plans, but 2025 means little right now. This is about adding a good big-league hitter and raising the floor of the roster by any means necessary — in this case, by trading away players who could certainly help Miami someday.
What did the Marlins receive in return?
The first thing to acknowledge about the Marlins’ side of this trade is that a lot has changed since Miami acquired Arráez from Minnesota for…
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