The San Diego Padres are on the hunt for starting pitching. The Boston Red Sox need a 2nd baseman and a lefty in the bullpen.
It just so happens Beantown has an excess of starters while America’s Finest City has an available second sacker and the deepest relief corps in the game.
When Padres president of baseball operations A.J. Preller talks about teams “lining up” on trade possibilities this sure seems like the kind of thing he’s talking about. In this particular situation, the money even lines up nicely, so let’s walk through a swap that is one of the rare occasions where both teams win. It looks like this:
PADRES GET:
RHP Brayan Bello
OF Nelly Taylor
RED SOX GET:
2B Jake Cronenworth
LHP Wandy Peralta (+ cash)
After trades for Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo, and the impending return of a few guys from injury, Boston suddenly has a glut of starting pitchers to stack behind ace Garrett Crochet. It came out recently the Red Sox were listening on trade offers for Bello, who’s become one of the game’s most consistent starters (157.0, 162.1, and 166.2 innings pitched over the last three years).
He’s also locked up through 2029 on a 6-year, $55 million contract that’s a bargain in today’s starting pitching market. That kind of affordable back-of-the-rotation consistency is exactly what San Diego is looking for. Taylor is Boston’s 15th-ranked prospect (via MLB Pipeline), an outfielder in high A-ball with some tools that need refining.
Boston has a major hole at 2nd base, which is why they’ve discussed trades with the Cardinals for Brendan Donovan and the Diamondbacks for Ketel Marte. Both come with fairly steep asking prices, making Cronenworth an intriguing option.
The two-time Padres All-Star isn’t a flashy player but he’s extremely consistent. Jake was a 2.9 fWAR player in 2025, which was 7th among all big league 2nd basemen and one tick better than Donovan. He has five years left on his 7-year, $80 million contract.
San Diego has Adrian Morejon, Yuki Matsui, and Peralta as lefties out of the ‘pen and Peralta is the one they would not mind losing. He’s due $4.45 million in 2026 so his inclusion actually makes financial sense for both clubs. Bello’s deal is backloaded while Cronenworth’s is a uniform yearly payment. If the Padres agree to pick up Peralta’s salary, which is what they got the Marlins to do with Luis Arraez in 2024 because it’s accounted for on their books anyways, then the Red Sox would only be on the hook for about $5 million in total.
This sure feels like a win-win situation, which is not something that comes along all that often.