The 2021 MLB trade deadline is approaching fast, with front offices weighing their biggest needs before 4 p.m. ET on July 30 arrives.
Will the Chicago Cubs deal away some of their best-known players, including Kris Bryant, Craig Kimbrel, Javier Baez and Anthony Rizzo, before they hit the free-agent market this winter? Are the Minnesota Twins ready to make blockbuster trades sending away Byron Buxton, Josh Donaldson, Nelson Cruz and Jose Berrios after a disappointing first half of the season? Could All-Stars Joey Gallo, Max Scherzer and Eduardo Escobar be on new teams by the end of the month?
Which of the New York Mets, Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres and Philadelphia Phillies will be among the teams that add a big-name star to their rosters? And what will the New York Yankees decide to do in the midst of an up-and-down season in the Bronx?
Whether your favorite club is looking to add or subtract -- or stands somewhere in between -- here's the freshest intel we're hearing, reaction to completed deals and what to know for every team as trade season unfolds.
MLB trade deadline buzz
July 21 updates
Scouts flock to Cubs-Cardinals series: There were a half-dozen scouts watching the Cubs and Cardinals on Tuesday night, including two from the White Sox. They are in search of some relief help and saw Cubs right-hander Ryan Tepera pitch a clean seventh inning just as White Sox right-hander Ryan Burr was giving up a lead to the Minnesota Twins. Tepera could be on Chicago's radar as could left-hander Andrew Chafin -- though their need is more from the right side than left. The Mets and Phillies were in attendance to see Kris Bryant.
On the other side, St. Louis is less likely to subtract from their team despite being in the same position in the standings as the Cubs. Trading for Nolan Arenado meant competing not retooling. Getting healthy on the mound is No.1 on the Cardinals' minds. -- Jesse Rogers
Three California contenders looking for pitching: Sources indicate its an arms race in California. From Oakland to San Diego to Los Angeles, contenders are looking for pitching. Cubs starter Zach Davies could end up back on the West Coast ,where he pitched for the Padres last season. Expect all three of the Padres, A's and Dodgers to add both starters and relievers by the 30th.
Rest of NL East could be aggressive as Mets struggle: This has been noted by rival executives: The three teams chasing the New York Mets in the National League East -- the Philadelphia Phillies, the Atlanta Braves and the Washington Nationals -- are all led by baseball ops chiefs who are historically aggressive in adding to their rosters in-season.
Alex Anthopoulos, the Braves' GM, has already added outfielder Joc Pederson and catcher Stephen Vogt, and knows that catcher Travis d'Arnaud and pitcher Huascar Ynoa will be back in the middle of August. The Phillies' Dave Dombrowski has a long history of deal-making in his years with the Expos, Marlins, Tigers and Red Sox -- and typically, a lot of his in-season trades have worked out for his teams, like the Tigers' acquisition of Doug Fister. And the Nationals are fronted by Mike Rizzo, whose bullpen additions helped to turn his 2019 team from an early-season disaster to the world champions.
One evaluator said: "They can all see how [vulnerable] the Mets are." -- Buster Olney
Why the Reds could add at the deadline: According to Fangraphs, the Cincinnati Reds have less than a 20% chance of making the playoffs, the sort of numbers that would dissuade some teams from reinvesting in their players. But the Reds' Bob Castellini is not your typical owner: He's hypercompetitive and doesn't make a habit of giving up, and while Cincinnati faces a sizable gap in the NL Central race, it is currently in the market seeking bullpen help. Something that could help the Reds' chances down the stretch: They appear to have a favorable schedule ahead, with 13 of their final 67 games -- and nine of their final 18 -- against the Pittsburgh Pirates. -- Olney
What Cleveland could do at the deadline: At a time when Cleveland is far behind in the AL Central, the front office may fix its focus to 2022 -- and that could mean addressing a catching crunch right now. Roberto Perez, 32, is under contract for $7 million for 2022, and Austin Hedges, 28, will be arbitration-eligible this winter before reaching free agency in the fall. They are similar as players, perceived as defense-first, and so the Indians are open to discussing a deal for either player. Other teams believe that the Indians will also move at least one reliever -- and an obvious candidate is Bryan Shaw, the veteran right-hander who has pitched effectively this season and is making minimum wage. -- Olney
Mets looking for starting pitching: No team is more desperate for starting pitching right now than the Mets. Acting general manager Zack Scott was on the "Big Time Baseball" podcast Tuesday and confirmed, "That's definitely our priority and has been for a while."
The Mets have used 15 starting pitchers already, Jacob deGrom is back on the IL, fill-in starter Robert Stock left his Tuesday start after one inning after injuring himself running to first base, and Carlos Carrasco's rehab start in Triple-A was a disaster. He walked three and allowed three home runs in 1⅔ innings. -- David Schoenfield
MLB trade deadline analysis
Passan: The biggest stars available and teams looking to add
Five teams with toughest trade deadline decision to make
Rogers: How MLB All-Stars are dealing with trade deadline uncertainty
How unique standings will impact this MLB trade deadline
Schoenfield: One player all 30 MLB teams should trade for -- or away
Doolittle: MLB trade deadline goals for all 30 teams
Completed trade tracker
Cubs trade Joc Pederson to Braves for 1B prospect