It has been a bad 72 hours for Texas Rangers fans. First Jonah Heim, then Adolis Garcia and now Marcus Semien.   

The Rangers and the Mets have agreed on a trade that would send Gold Glove second baseman Marcus Semien to New York in exchange for outfielder Brandon Nimmo.

A person with direct knowledge of the deal confirmed that agreement Sunday. That person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the deal hadn’t been finalized or announced. The same source confirms that Nimmo has agreed to waive a no-trade provision in his deal.

Nimmo, who has played all 10 of his big league seasons with the Mets, just completed the third season of the $162 million, eight-year contract he got after becoming a free agent for the first time after the 2022 season. The 32-year-old left-handed hitter is due annual salaries of $20.25 million each season through 2030.

Semien has three seasons and $72 million remaining on the $175 million, seven-year contract he signed with the Rangers in December 2021. That was at the same time they, also in free agency, added MVP shortstop Corey Seager on a $325 million, 10-year contract.

That half-billion-dollar middle infield helped the Rangers win their only World Series title in 2023. But that was the only winning record the past nine seasons for the team that this year finished .500 (81-81) for the first time in franchise history.

It has been a bad 72 hours for Rangers fans  

Slugging outfielder Adolis García, switch-hitting catcher Jonah Heim and right-handed reliever Josh Sborz, three other players who had significant roles in the World Series championship, all became free agents Friday when the Rangers didn’t tender any of them contracts for 2026.

The 35-year-old Semien won his second Gold Glove this season, even though he missed the final 5 1/2 weeks, not playing again after fouling a pitch off his foot Aug. 20. That was only the second time in his 13 big league seasons he has been on the injured list.

Before that injury, Semien had missed only six of the Rangers’ 615 games since joining them before the 2022 season. He hit .230 with 15 homers, 62 RBIs and 62 runs in 127 games this year, and .249 with 93 homers and 319 RBIs in his four seasons in Texas.

In 1,629 career games with the Chicago White Sox (2013-14), Oakland (2015-20), Toronto (2021) and Texas, he has a .253 batting average with 253 homers and 801 RBIs. He set career highs with 45 homers and 102 RBIs in his only season with Blue Jays before going to Texas in free agency.

Nimmo has a .364 career on-base percentage, including 583 starts as a leadoff hitter. He has scored at least 81 runs in each of the past three seasons since a career-best 102 in 2022.

Most of his at-bats this season were from the middle of the batting order, and he hit .262 — the same as his career average — with single-season highs of 25 homers and 92 RBIs in 155 games. He has 135 homers and 463 RBIs in his 1,066 games.

Adolis Garcia 

Rangers President Chris Young’s dismantling of the 2023 World Series Championship roster continued when the team allowed 2023 American League Championship Series Most Valuable Player Adolis Garcia to become a free agent. 

The 32-year-old Garcia became a postseason hero for Texas when he drove in a playoff record 15 runs in an epic 7-game ALCS win over the rival Houston Astros in 2023. However, Garcia’s play declined over the past two seasons, as he batted just .225 and averaged only 22 homers and 80 runs batted in 2024-25. 

A fan favorite during the club’s title run, Garcia signed a 2-year, $14 million contract extension after the World Championship season; however, he hasn’t been able to match his power numbers since then, and the Rangers have decided to move on rather than tender Garcia a contract offer before Friday’s deadline. 

Jonah Heim 

Another primary player on the Rangers’ 2023 World Series Champion team is moving on from Texas. 

Catcher Jonah Heim, who made the American League All-Star team two years ago, was also allowed to become a free agent. 

The 30-year-old Heim had a breakout season in 2023 when he hit .258 with 18 home runs and 95 runs batted in, not only making the All-Star team but also winning his first American League Gold Glove Award. 

However, Heim’s batting average plummeted more than 40 points to .217 over the past two seasons. His power numbers also declined, averaging only 12 HRs and 51 RBIs in 2024-25. 

The Rangers had faced a Friday deadline on whether to tender Heim a contract offer for the 2026 season, which would have made him salary arbitration-eligible.   

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