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The Mariners acquired first baseman Josh Naylor from the Diamondbacks Thursday night, thwarting Brewers fans who had started hoping for Naylor to be among the team's upgrades in the runup to the trade deadline. The good news is that there are still a great many deals left between now and next Thursday afternoon. To figure out where the Brewers might (and perhaps, where they should) turn next, here's a ranking of the 105 players I regard as most plausible trade candidates.
This is not meant to be an entirely exhaustive list, and it's not based on the likelihood of being dealt. Nor does it expressly bake in team control, although that's an indirect factor. The goal is to rank players from most to least impactful on the pursuit of a World Series in 2025. However, roster flexibility still matters to teams when they trade for players in such a pursuit, and salary is always a major constraint in trade considerations. The closer a player is to free agency, the less roster flexibility they're likely to offer, and the more money they are likely to be making. Thus, all else equal, players with more (affordable) team control will still crawl ahead of some who might be equal or better players.
For what it's worth, I would have ranked Naylor in the second half of the 20s on the list below. Maybe you'll vehemently disagree, with that or other rankings. Let's find out.
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Joe Ryan, RHP, Twins
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Eugenio Suárez, 3B, Diamondbacks: It would be uncharacteristic for the Brewers to trade a major haul for a rental player. That's what Suárez is, and it's what it would take to acquire him. That said, doesn't it feel like this year, this team, and this fit are unique? In such a case, maybe something uncharacteristic can fairly be expected.
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Dylan Cease, RHP, Padres
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Emmanuel Clase, RHP, Guardians
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Jhoan Duran, RHP, Twins
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Edward Cabrera, RHP, Marlins
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Jacob deGrom, RHP, Rangers
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Nathan Eovaldi, RHP, Rangers
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MacKenzie Gore, LHP, Nationals
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Jarren Duran, OF, Red Sox
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Seth Lugo, RHP, Royals
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David Bednar, RHP, Pirates
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Ryan O’Hearn, 1B/OF/DH, Orioles: Again, it would just be an engagement of a few months. Whereas Suárez is inciting a bidding war that will push the price tag up to an uncomfortable place, though, O'Hearn feels gettable. He'd be an utterly inarguable upgrade over Jake Bauers, and could make the worrying over whether Andrew Vaughn can keep this up or Rhys Hoskins can return at full strength largely moot. He'd also be good insurance against further injury to Sal Frelick, Christian Yelich, or William Contreras, in that he's a very capable DH who could fill in there when Hoskins or Vaughn is in the lineup.
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Merrill Kelly, RHP, Diamondbacks
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Kris Bubic, LHP, Royals
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Sandy Alcántara, RHP, Marlins
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Jesús Sánchez, RF, Marlins
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Cade Smith, RHP, Guardians
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Robert Suarez, RHP, Padres
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Ryan Helsley, RHP, Cardinals
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Griffin Jax, RHP, Twins
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Willi Castro, UTIL, Twins: Talk about a guy who's a fit for almost everyone. Castro is a switch-hitter with power and some improved plate discipline. He brings a little speed and a lot of defensive versatility, and he's a plus-plus clubhouse guy. The price tag wouldn't be huge, and the upside could be; Castro can help all over the infield.
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Drew Rasmussen, RHP, Rays
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Taylor Ward, OF, Angels: Right-handed power is the top need for this team, and Ward offers it. Unlike Suárez, he doesn't play a position of apparent need for the team, but unlike Suárez, he's also under team control for 2026. The Angels front office is one the Brewers are comfortable working with, too.
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Zac Gallen, RHP, Diamondbacks
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Pete Fairbanks, RHP, Rays
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Harrison Bader, OF, Twins
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Carlos Santana, 1B, Guardians: If it's a dramatic improvement in defense at the cold corner you want, Santana brings it. He's been part of this team and clubhouse before. He's a solid veteran and switch-hitter. He'd be a low-grade addition, perhaps, but it'd be a joyous reunion, and he might shore up the defense a bit.
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Sonny Gray, RHP, Cardinals
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Ryan Jeffers, C, Twins
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Yandy Díaz, 1B, Rays
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Mitch Keller, RHP, Pirates
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Ryan McMahon, 3B, Rockies: This remains an interesting potential fit, but it's not clear that the Brewers will want to allocate the amount of money owed to McMahon to a player like him for the next two-plus years. For that matter, it's still not clear that the Rockies will be willing to trade him.
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Charlie Morton, RHP, Orioles
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Trevor Larnach, OF, Twins
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Cedric Mullins, OF, Orioles
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Luis Severino, RHP, Athletics
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Aaron Bummer, LHP, Team from Near Atlanta
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Ramón Laureano, OF, Orioles
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Kyle Freeland, LHP, Rockies
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Zack Littell, RHP, Rays
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Adrian Houser, RHP, White Sox
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Danny Coulombe, LHP, Twins
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John Schreiber, RHP, Royals: Two righty relievers in the middle of this list got significant bumps up on the basis of their roster flexibility. Schreiber is one. He can still be optioned to the minors, so though the team control isn't long-term and the sheer stuff is more seventh inning than ninth, he's a fantastic candidate to add to a team hoping that improved health will give them ample depth come September and October.
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Anthony Bender, RHP, Marlins: Bender is the other guy who gets the "still optionable" bump here. Both guys would have been in the 50s, anyway, but it's important to have the ability to shuttle fresh arms into the roster late in a season, with a close race on for the division crown.
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Nathaniel Lowe, 1B, Nationals: It's been a down year for Lowe, which opens the door a crack for the Brewers to buy low on him. His approach has gotten much worse; he usually controls the strike zone exceptionally well. Team Swing Decisions could probably fix that in a jiffy, and unlike O'Hearn, Lowe is under team control for 2026.
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Carlos Estévez, RHP, Royals
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Dennis Santana, RHP, Pirates
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Brock Burke, LHP, Angels: There are few things the Brewers need less than another lefty reliever, but Burke (who's under team control for 2026, too) gets ground balls and has some interesting 'unlocks' lurking, as teams like to code such things. The Crew could target him and turn him into a slightly different, much better hitter in short order.
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Adolis García, OF, Rangers: More right-handed power with team control for 2026, García also comes with some awesome postseason bona fides. He's having a down year, too, though, and it's not quite as clear as with Lowe that it would be a quick fix.
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Michael Soroka, RHP, Nationals
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Luis Robert Jr., OF, White Sox
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Phil Maton, RHP, Cardinals
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Andrew Kittredge, RHP, Orioles
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Yoán Moncada, 3B, Angels: Over the winter, the Brewers were unwilling to make a medium-sized bet on the health and the needed skill recovery on which hinged any hope of a Moncada renaissance. Now, though, he's stayed healthy enough and enjoyed enough of that restoration to open some eyes. The Crew could make use of the both-sides pop he's shown in Anaheim.
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Amed Rosario, IF, Nationals: An even lower-cost alternative to Moncada, Rosario also offers the ability to at least stop a short-term gap at shortstop, second base or in the outfield. He's not a natural platoon partner to Caleb Durbin and he can't play short with any regularity anymore, but Rosario would be a clear upgrade to the bench and a fine part-time contributor.
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JoJo Romero, LHP, Cardinals
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Gregory Soto, LHP, Orioles
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Jose Quintana, LHP, Brewers: Hey, we know him!
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Nestor Cortes, LHP, Brewers: Him too!
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Taj Bradley, RHP, Rays
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Pierce Johnson, RHP, Suburbanites
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Jeffrey Springs, LHP, Athletics
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Dane Myers, OF, Marlins
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Randal Grichuk, OF, Diamondbacks
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Brock Stewart, RHP, Twins
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Kevin Ginkel, RHP, Diamondbacks
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Sam Haggerty, OF, Rangers
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Seranthony Dominguez, RHP, Orioles
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JP Sears, LHP, Athletics
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Kyle Finnegan, RHP, Nationals
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Isiah Kiner-Falefa, SS, Pirates: While he doesn't offer the same impact or upside as Moncada or Rosario, Kiner-Falefa is a better fit for the Brewers than either of them. He could take over for Joey Ortiz and play shortstop as much as they want or need him to, down the stretch. He's a very good defender who also offers some versatility.
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Jake Cronenworth, IF, Padres
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Wandy Peralta, LHP, Padres
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Tommy Pham, OF, Pirates
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Zach Eflin, RHP, Orioles
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Raisel Iglesias, RHP, Highwaymen
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Jorge Soler, DH/OF, Angels
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Josh Bell, 1B/DH, Nationals
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Royce Lewis, 3B, Twins
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Michael A. Taylor, OF, White Sox
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Caleb Ferguson, LHP, Pirates
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Mike Tauchman, OF, White Sox
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Chris Paddack, RHP, Twins
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Tyler Kinley, RHP, Rockies: The Brewers rescued one guy whose breaking ball they adored from the thin air of Coors Field, when they dealt for Nick Mears last year. Might they do it again, with the slider-spamming Kinley?
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Kenley Jansen, RHP, Angels
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Ke’Bryan Hayes, 3B, Pirates
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Miguel Andujar, 4C, Athletics: As unsexy as his profile is (impending free agent, poor defense, low walk rate and even less power), what Andujar does well, he does very well. Mostly, that means putting the ball in play, and using the middle of the field. The Brewers would probably like that bundle of skills, assuming it doesn't cost them much to acquire it.
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Ramón Urías, 3B, Orioles: Both members of the Urías family can be found atop the Ideal Attack Angle leaderboard for MLB. Ramón is a below-average overall hitter, but his approach and contact profile fit what the Brewers like, and he'd provide Durbin insurance on the infield.
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Luis Rengifo, IF, Angels
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Austin Slater, OF, White Sox
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Enyel De Los Santos, RHP, A Team from Georgia
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Luis Urías, 2B, Athletics
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Christian Vázquez, C, Twins
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Ty France, 1B, Twins
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Andrew Chafin, LHP, Nationals
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Aaron Civale, RHP, White Sox: Civale is an intere.... gotcha.
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Nolan Arenado, 3B, Cardinals
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Andrew Heaney, LHP, Pirates
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Jakob Junis, RHP, Guardians: If you're searching for a pitcher who can give you multiple innings per outing in the bullpen, you could do a lot wor.... gotcha again.
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Kyle Hendricks, RHP, Angels
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Sean Newcomb, LHP, Athletics
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Tomoyuki Sugano, RHP, Orioles
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Luis Garcia, RHP, Nationals
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Tyler Anderson, LHP, Angels
The scary truth, of course, is that some players beyond even this very long list will be traded. On the other hand, many, many players on this list will not be dealt. The sole purpose here was to sketch out a hierarchy of possible targets, by situatiing them within the wider context of the market as a whole—not just what suits the needs or capacities of the Brewers.
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