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What next for store that once dominated city?

What next for store that once dominated city?

Yahoo09-03-2025
In the heart of Londonderry, on a prime city centre corner, stands the building once home to the world's oldest independent department store.
In 1830 - some 20 years before Harrods of London began trading and more than a quarter of a century before Macy's of New York opened its doors - Thomas Austin came to Derry and opened a drapery shop on a city centre corner.
Over the next 180 years Austins would become synonymous with shopping in Derry.
Since the shutters came down in 2016, the grand building has lain empty – now that is set to change.
On Wednesday Communities Minister Gordon Lyons said a grant of £1.2m from his department would allow Derry's Inner City Trust to complete the purchase of the building.
So what next for the former department store building?
"Well that's the question isn't it?," the Venerable Robert Miller, chairman of the trust, told BBC Radio Foyle.
"Nothing is ruled out or ruled in. We have saved a building, we have rescued it, now the next stage is to work to revitalising it."
Spread over five storeys and 25,000 sq ft, the Austins building dominates its corner of the Diamond.
For generations it dominated the city's retail landscape too.
Archdeacon Miller said it was a building people in Derry feel an affinity with.
Liz Doherty remembers school day lemon meringue pies in Austins café and trips to see her cousin who worked in the ladies fashion department for more than 30 years.
When Austins was in its heyday, she loved "the style of the building, the ladies fashion, the old radiators and the staircase".
"It had a beautiful atmosphere, it was so different to anywhere else. Whatever they decide to do next, like maybe a hotel, I hope they keep its old structure," she told BBC News NI.
"It really is a fantastic building, with such a sense of history to it."
Conor Green owns a coffee shop close to the building and told BBC News NI it has been empty for far too long.
"Whatever goes in there, I hope helps attract a lot more people, a lot more businesses into the city centre," he said.
He wants the old department store to be given a new lease of life.
"I'm thinking restaurants, cafés, maybe even a cinema," he said.
"Things that will draw people in and where they can enjoy themselves."
Archdeacon Miller said the trust knows how important the building is to the city.
"We are all mindful everyone is watching… that's good, whatever goes into it will encourage wider growth and development," he said.
Founded in the 1970s, with the then-Church of Ireland Bishop of Derry James Mehaffey and Catholic Bishop of Derry Edward Daly among its founding trustees, the Inner City Trust was designed to inject commercial and social life into the city centre after a decade of the Troubles.
It has, in the decades since, developed some of the city's most recognisable buildings, including the Tower Museum, the Tower Hotel, the Bishop's Gate Hotel.
"One of our principles at the Inner City Trust is to diversify our portfolio to ensure risk is mitigated as much as possible.
"But obviously it needs to be commercially productive…and benefit the community," Archdeacon Miller said, adding that work would begin almost straight away.
"The first element of it is stabilising the building, that gives us time in our conversations as to what might come next, on the next chapter because that will affect what it looks like inside," he said.
"It is not a case of saying 'who would like to come?' It is much more strategic than that."
As shopping habits changed in the early part of the new century, Austins came under pressure, posting significant losses in 2011 and 2012.
In November 2014 the listed building was sold to the City Hotel Group.
The receiver then sold the trading side of the business.
When it closed in 2016 more than 50 workers lost their jobs.
Conservation architect Karl Pedersen told BBC Radio Foyle's Mark Patterson Show the challenge that lay ahead was a "joyful one".
The building, he added, had been "caught just in the nick of time".
"There is a lot of the detail we will be able to restore and salvage and preserve," he said.
Stormont to fund purchase of Austins building
Austins staff 'devastated' at job losses
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MLB trade grades: Who won the biggest deals on deadline day?
MLB trade grades: Who won the biggest deals on deadline day?

USA Today

time8 hours ago

  • USA Today

MLB trade grades: Who won the biggest deals on deadline day?

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Eugenio Suárez trade grades Seattle Mariners receive 3B Eugenio Suarez; Arizona Diamondbacks receive 1B Tyler Locklear, RHP Juan Burgos and RHP Hunter Cranton. They got the top hitter available and it's telling that the Mariners liked Suárez enough to bring him back after less than two years apart – despite his struggles in Seattle. That puts a ton of pressure on the slugger who is a free agent after the season. Mariners third basemen have totaled just five home runs and 35 RBIs this season, bottom-five in the majors in both categories, so it's a move they had to make. Pretty good return, plucking three of Seattle's top 20 prospects in Locklear (No. 9), Cranton (16) and Burgos (17). Locklear, 24, will likely find himself getting a run-out in Arizona's lineup sooner rather than later. The first baseman made his big-league debut last season and has nothing left to prove in the minors (.316/.401/.552, 19 HR, 82 RBis in Class AAA). 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It's naive to believe the Pirates will seriously reinvest the Hayes savings into winning games in the years to come, but the club cleared itself of a long-term deal with a guy who didn't turn out to be what they expected. Credit where it's due for Pittsburgh investing in Hayes with an eight-year, $70 million extension back in 2022 – and maybe they're giving up too early on the 28-year-old at a low annual cost – but the deal nets $36 million in savings after the 2025 season. That said, the Pirates probably could have gotten a better return this winter. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

Padres leaning towards keeping Suarez: Sources
Padres leaning towards keeping Suarez: Sources

New York Times

time17 hours ago

  • New York Times

Padres leaning towards keeping Suarez: Sources

The 2025 MLB trade deadline arrives at 6 p.m. (ET) today. Join us for live updates and analysis on trades around the league. Getty Images Getty Images The Padres, even after acquiring A's closer Mason Miller, are leaning toward keeping incumbent closer Robert Suarez as part of what might be the deepest big-league bullpen in years, sources familiar with the team's thinking tell me and The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal. Suarez, 34, is expected to opt out of his five-year, $46 million contract after the World Series, but barring a big trade offer before Thursday's 6 p.m. ET deadline, the Padres are inclined to keep the major-league saves leader. A bullpen with Suarez, Miller, Jason Adam, Adrian Morejon and Jeremiah Estrada projects to have an unparalleled ability to shorten games, especially in October. Meanwhile, with the top of San Diego's system depleted by the agreement to acquire Miller and lefty starter JP Sears, the Padres are continuing to discuss pending-free-agent starter Dylan Cease with interested teams. Trading Cease could help the Padres acquire enough capital to address their remaining needs in left field and at catcher. Getty Images Phillies are sending outfielder Hendry Mendez and righty Geremy Villoria to Twins for outfielder Harrison Bader, according to sources. With a losing record and 12.4 percent playoff odds on FanGraphs, the Royals don't seem to be going anywhere this season. Yet, their biggest moves of the past week have been to extend 35-year-old Seth Lugo and trade for 33-year-old outfielder Randal Grichuk. Are they buying? Are they treading water? Are they trying to thread the needle? Getty Images In Kyle Finnegan, the Detroit Tigers get another marginal bullpen upgrade they hope can get hot down the stretch. It's an interesting approach. But Finnegan is the best of their acquisitions so far. Detroit sent pitching prospects RJ Sales and Josh Randall to the Washington Nationals in exchange for Finnegan on Thursday, a team source confirmed to The Athletic . Finnegan is not exactly a swing-and-miss monster. He ranks in only the 24th percentile in whiff rate this season. The right-hander is tough on lefties and throws a splitter the Tigers tend to like. Rather than add elite stuff, the Tigers here get a player with closer experience — he saved 38 games for the Nationals this season — and projectable groundball rates. Finnegan's 4.38 ERA suggests a down year, but his 3.51 xERA helps make him another buy-low option for the Tigers. In Randall and Sales, the Tigers give up two low-level pitching prospects. Randall was ranked as the No. 15 Tigers prospect, per MLB Pipeline, and had a 4.18 ERA at Class A Lakeland. He was recently promoted to High-A West Michigan. Sales has a 2.71 ERA in 16 games, 15 of them starts, at Class A. So far, the Tigers have added Finnegan, Rafael Montero and an injured Paul Sewald to their bullpen. Although they have seemingly been unwilling to part with the prospects necessary for a bigger splash, Detroit has both added depth and perhaps improved the overall quality of a bullpen that has had an ERA above 5.00 since June 1. Their lack of interest in a bigger splash is sure to draw criticism. But this is how the Tigers operate, and it's worked for them before. Getty Images The Tigers made an early move for back-end starter Chris Paddack (basically replacing injured Reese Olson), and they've since added a few veteran relievers including Kyle Finnegan just minutes ago. But the Tigers have not added to the roster in a way you'd expect for a team that, for a while, had the best record in baseball this season. Is there a major upgrade coming, or are the Tigers simply reinforcing their depth? Getty Images If Shane Bieber can go, why not Steven Kwan? Obviously, Kwan's younger with more years of control, but that only raises his value in a market that's relatively light on offensive impact. Guardians fans recognize that the team is in a rebuild. Kwan's a tough piece to trade — it would be another blow after the Emmanuel Clase news and the Bieber deal — but it's possible a needy team could convince the Guardians to make the move to rebuild with force. After trading closer Jhoan Duran to the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday, the Minnesota Twins are not ruling out dealing top setup man Griffin Jax as well. The activity on Jax has increased Thursday, according to a source familiar with the Twins' discussions. It remains to be seen, however, whether one of the potential suitors can meet the Twins' price. Jax, like Duran, is under club control for two additional seasons. The Twins continue to listen on their two of their other relievers - lefty Danny Coulombe, who would be a rental, and right-hander Brock Stewart, who is earning barely above the minimum at $870,000 and is under club control for two additional seasons. Getty Images Trading Chris Paddack was one thing (a back end starter heading for free agency isn't hard to deal), but trading closer Jhoan Duran put the Twins among the deadline's most aggressive sellers. They could still easily trade outfielder Harrison Bader, infielder Willi Castro and reliever Danny Coulombe — all potential free agents at the end of the year — but could they be tempted to stay aggressive with a compelling offer for either Joe Ryan or Pablo López? And there's another big name Minnesota is still talking about, per our Ken Rosenthal ... Getty Images Pulled from a scheduled start earlier this week, it seems clear that Adrian Houser is readily available for teams looking to add rotation depth. But what's a breakout season worth? Houser has a 2.10 ERA through 11 starts with the White Sox. It's a career year (though he was also pretty good with the Brewers in 2021). How much can the White Sox get for such a pitcher, especially with so many starters still on the market? Now let's take a look at one lingering question for each AL Central team... Getty Images The Yankees are still searching for bullpen help before the deadline passes. But Yankees manager Aaron Boone said it should not be overlooked that the club will return Mark Leiter Jr., Fernando Cruz and Luis Gil from the injured list in the coming days and weeks. With Gil slated to start Sunday against the Miami Marlins, Boone was asked if Cam Schlittler, who's currently in the rotation, could transition to the bullpen. Boone said they have not had those conversations yet, but he did not rule it completely out. Schlittler would make sense for the Yankees in the bullpen, with his 100 mph fastball and middling secondary pitches. Jayson's post earlier sent me down a little rabbit hole of Preller trades over the last four years, and I found one I had completely forgotten about. In 2022, Preller sent Brent Rooker — acquired from Minnesota as part of the Chris Paddack trade — to the Royals for catcher Cam Gallagher. It makes sense that it didn't register at the time. Gallagher never played a game in the big leagues for San Diego, was claimed on waivers by the Orioles that September. He bounced around from the Guardians to Phillies and has been out of baseball since last July. Preller wasn't alone in fumbling the bag on Rooker, though. The Royals let him depart on waivers that November to the A's, where he has been a two-time All-Star, a top-10 MVP vote-getter and a Silver Slugger winner. It's a reminder that trades are difficult and there's always the inherent risk of getting Rookered. Getty Images On Monday, we released version 3.0 of our Trade Deadline Urgency Index. The San Diego Padres were definitely not ranked in our top 5. But they went and got Mason Miller anyway. With the deadline approaching, let's fine tune Monday's rankings to see who has the most bullpen work to do today. Removed from our previous top-5: the second-ranked Philadelphia Phillies, who along with the honorable-mention New York Mets overhauled their relief corps on Wednesday. Relievers: New York Yankees: With Devin Williams and Luke Weaver free agents after this season, the Yankees need long-term help in the bullpen. But even with those two, the Yankees could really use another leverage arm to strengthen their late-inning options. They are a mess in middle relief, too. Los Angeles Dodgers: Yes, even after all that offseason work to build a robust bullpen, the Dodgers need more arms. A couple of them. Detroit Tigers: They've traded for three guys who could pitch in relief — the injured Paul Sewald, Rafael Montero and starter-for-now Chris Paddack — but badly need a shutdown late-innings arm. They are an ideal match for Pirates closer David Bednar. Toronto Blue Jays: Seranthony Dominguez will help matters in Toronto, but with closer Jeff Hoffman delivering inconsistent production this season the Jays would feel far better if they have another leverage reliever in October. Seattle Mariners: Now that they've spruced up the lineup with Josh Naylor and Eugenio Suarez, the Mariners need another impact reliever to add to the late-inning mix alongside Andrés Muñoz and Matt Brash. Getty Images The Tigers are acquiring right-handed reliever Kyle Finnegan from the Nationals, a league source tells The Athletic . Getty Images The Blue Jays reachd the trade deadline tied for the most wins in baseball. They've climbed to the top of the AL East and FanGraphs gives them a 95.9 percent chance of making the playoffs with a 7.3 percent chance of winning the World Series. That's the seventh-best World Series odds in baseball and fourth-best in the American League. After adding a starter (Shane Bieber) and a reliever (Seranthony Domínguez), can the Blue Jays make the kind of addition that leaves them as the overall favorite in the American League? Getty Images The Rays have swapped one catcher for another, and they've tapped into their rotation depth to send Zach Littell to the Reds. They're considering whether to trade closer Pete Fairbanks. But would they trade either second baseman Brandon Lowe or first baseman Yandy Diaz, because those two fill holes where the market is a bit thinner. Getty Images The Yankees acted early to address their infield issues, and they grabbed a right-handed hitter to solidify their outfield, but the Yankees still need help in the bullpen. Some of the biggest deadline deals have been for closers. Will the Yankees get in on the action (in a kind of re-do of their offseason deal for Devin Williams)? Getty Images In his first year as head of baseball operations, Breslow made a series of ill-fated deadline deals that did nothing to keep the Red Sox in contention. It didn't cost him a ton, but the additions fell flat, and the Red Sox missed the playoffs. So far this year, he's added swingman Seth Lugo and remains in the market for a starter and a first baseman. Can Breslow make a move that gets the Red Sox to October?

Eflin heads to IL, still could get traded
Eflin heads to IL, still could get traded

New York Times

time19 hours ago

  • New York Times

Eflin heads to IL, still could get traded

The 2025 MLB trade deadline arrives at 6 p.m. (ET) today. Join us for live updates and analysis on trades around the league. Getty Images Getty Images Baltimore Orioles right-hander Zach Eflin is going on the injured list, according to sources briefed on the matter. It is still 'very possible' he will be traded, one source said. Eflin's injury is not arm-related and he is expected back during the regular season. In a market already saturated with elite relievers, it seems Athletics closer Mason Miller is another name very much in play as the trade deadline approaches. Yesterday afternoon, Ken Rosenthal reported that the A's were discussing Miller in negotiations for young pitching, and that both New York teams — the Yankees and Mets — were involved. Later, Rosenthal and Dennis Lin reported that the Padres were among the teams eyeing Miller. According to that report: ✍️ Miller, who started six games as a rookie in 2023, appeals to San Diego as a pitcher who could be stretched out next season, if not before then. Another top Padres starter, Michael King, is expected to test free agency this winter. In recent years, the Padres have converted several former relievers to full-time starters, including King, Seth Lugo and Stephen Kolek. Last night, A's manager Mark Kotsay told reporters that Miller was 'unavailable' without explaining why, a situation that suggests a trade could be in the works. So, even after Jhoan Duran and Ryan Helsley have changed teams, the closer market includes Miller, Pete Fairbanks, David Bednar, Carlos Estevez, Camilo Doval, Kyle Finnegan and possibly Robert Suarez. Despite such supply, reporting suggests the prices remain high. Getty Images Tigers: D Guardians: C This is fine. Sewald has a track record, and he'd pitched well after returning from the IL in early July, only to end up right back on the IL. For a player to be named or cash, it's a low-cost addition of a pitcher who could supplement the Tigers bullpen down the stretch, when they might be grateful to have the depth. Fine. Do it. Why not? But the Tigers were, for a while, the best team in baseball this season. They fell hard this month and have since recovered. They've got a chance to do something this October, but so far they've added only a back-end starter (Chris Paddack) and a couple of used-to-be-good relievers (Sewald and Rafael Montero). On its own, this trade is a low-risk attempt to add some depth. But until the Tigers make a move to actually get better in the here and now, it's hard to see this as a worthwhile priority. Getty Images By Ken Rosenthal and Dennis Lin Baltimore Orioles right-hander Charlie Morton is one starting pitcher the San Diego Padres are pursuing as a potential backup plan if they trade right-hander Dylan Cease, according to sources briefed on the discussions. The Padres are involved in multiple talks with multiple teams. Meanwhile, as many as 10 teams are pursuing Morton. The Guardians are sending reliever Paul Sewald, who's on the injured list with a strain in the back of his shoulder, to the Detroit Tigers, in exchange for cash considerations or a player to be named later. Sewald, 35, has made only 18 appearances this season because of a pair of shoulder injuries. Since 2021, he owns a 3.28 ERA. It's the second time in three years that Sewald has been dealt at the deadline, and on both occasions, he was confident he wouldn't be traded. In 2023, the Mariners blitzed through their July schedule to climb back into the race, but they still traded Sewald to the Arizona Diamondbacks, who stormed to the World Series. Just last week, he told The Athletic he thought his injury would keep him from being dealt. Instead, he's headed to the division rival Tigers, who sit atop the AL Central. An MLB source confirms to The Athletic that the Tigers are acquiring right-handed reliever Paul Sewald from Guardians. The Detroit News first reported the deal. Getty Images Shane Bieber was set to be one of the more intriguing trade candidates at the 2023 deadline. And then he suffered an injury. The Guardians hung onto him that winter and had plans to deal him at the 2024 deadline if the season went awry. And then he needed Tommy John surgery (and the season did not, in fact, go awry). Even then, the union persisted between the unanimous 2020 AL Cy Young Award winner and the organization that aided his development from a soft-tossing, unheralded prospect. In December, Bieber signed a one-year, $10 million deal with the Guardians that included a $16 million player option for 2026 or a $4 million buyout. He liked the idea of sticking with the trainers and doctors and coaches who had guided him through his rehab process. Now that the rehab process is nearly over, he's headed to Toronto. Bieber threw 57 pitches over four sharp innings on Tuesday. He should be ready to return to a big-league mound in the next two weeks. For most of the season, the starting rotation seemed like Toronto's obvious area of improvement at the trade deadline. Max Scherzer's thumb cost him months. Eric Lauer had yet to break out. But, as of deadline week, the Jays' rotation group is healthy and seemingly stable. Acquiring Shane Bieber allows Toronto to inject more depth and upside to that group without stealing a spot from one of the current five starters. The Jays also used their financial flexibility in this deal, as Bieber has a $16 million player option for next year. If healthy and flourishing down the stretch, he'll likely opt out. Another injury could force him to take the 2026 guarantee. It's the type of creative move the Jays were looking for this deadline, adding rotation insurance and upside without upsetting the status quo that has Toronto positioned at the top of the American League East. GO FURTHER Blue Jays to bolster rotation with former Cy Young winner Shane Bieber in trade with Guardians: Source Getty Images After acquiring Shane Bieber, Toronto continues to aim high in the bullpen market. The Jays were in on the Minnesota Twins' Jhoan Duran and are also among the teams pursuing the Athletics' Mason Miller, according to sources briefed on their discussions. The San Diego Padres are believed to be mounting the most aggressive pursuit of Miller. It's unclear whether the Jays would part with the package necessary to land a closer who would come with four additional years of control. The frenzied run on relievers that began Wednesday should continue up to the deadline, considering the number of teams in need and the number of late-inning arms still available. The Detroit Tigers are perhaps the team under the most pressure to act. Ranking 28th in the majors in bullpen strikeout rate, the Tigers' acquisition of righty Rafael Montero from the Atlanta Braves on Wednesday was a modest first step, at best. In the AL East alone, the New York Yankees are seeking multiple relievers. The Toronto Blue Jays are still looking for more help after acquiring righty Seranthony Domínguez. The Boston Red Sox might not be done after adding lefty Steven Matz. The Seattle Mariners, a team reported to be heavily in the mix for Jhoan Duran before his trade to the Philadelphia Phillies, are also still looking, along with the Texas Rangers, Milwaukee Brewers, Los Angeles Dodgers and others. Among the relievers still in play, beyond the Athletics' Miller, Twins' Coulombe and Padres' Suarez: the Tampa Bay Rays' Pete Fairbanks; Pittsburgh Pirates' David Bednar and Dennis Santana; St. Louis Cardinals' Phil Maton; Colorado Rockies' Jake Bird, Seth Halvorsen and Victor Vodnik; and Twins' Brock Stewart. GO FURTHER The 8 biggest storylines to watch for on MLB trade deadline day Getty Images The Toronto Blue Jays are in agreement with the Cleveland Guardians on a trade for right-hander Shane Bieber, pending a medical review, sources tell The Athletic . Getty Images The Marlins are a team to watch today for several reasons, including what happens with starters Sandy Alcantara (pictured) and Edward Cabrera, two of the splashiest names on the market. The interest in both Alcantara and Cabrera is very high, league sources said. Two other Miami pitchers to keep in mind: Ronny Henriquez and Calvin Faucher. Miami is fielding interest in both players, people briefed on the situation said. In particular, multiple teams are looking to acquire Faucher, league sources said. Of the two pitchers, he is more likely to get traded. Faucher, 29, has 10 saves with a 3.73 ERA and 41 strikeouts in 41 innings. Henriquez, 25, has a 2.96 ERA in 51 2/3 innings with 71 strikeouts. Both pitchers are under club control for multiple seasons. Teams are also continuing to show interest in the Marlins' outfielders Jesus Sanchez and Dane Myers, league sources said. Getty Images Kepner: Hey Chad! Maybe it's because I just got back from Cooperstown and had a fun conversation with Randy Johnson — Did you know he has Kid Nichols' autograph? Now you do! — but for favorite deals, I've got to go with the Mariners in 1997 and 1998. The first year, they were clumsy buyers. The next, to everyone's surprise, they were shrewd sellers. It turned out that 1997 was their only season with a healthy Johnson, Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez all together as full-time stars. And everyone knew they'd have no chance without upgrading their bullpen. This need crystallized on July 30, when they blew a 7-2 lead in the eighth inning and lost to the Red Sox at Fenway Park. What did they do? Panic! In separate deals, the Mariners acquired three veteran relievers – Paul Spoljaric and Mike Timlin from Toronto and Heathcliff Slocumb from Boston. That's quite a haul, but it came at quite a cost: Jose Cruz Jr. to the Blue Jays and Derek Lowe and Jason Varitek to the Red Sox. Those players would spend a collective 44 seasons in the majors, compiling 76 bWAR. Cruz became a 30-30 guy for the Jays. Lowe and Varitek became core players on the Red Sox curse-breakers of 2004. The Mariners' relief trio, meanwhile, worked 4 ⅓ innings in a 1997 division series loss to Baltimore, allowing 10 hits and 5 earned runs. And when things went sour for the M's in 1998, the team decided to trade Johnson rather than lose him in free agency. (The new team in Arizona, where Johnson lived in the off-season, was expected to make an aggressive push for him, and that's exactly what happened.) In trading Johnson at the 1998 deadline, the Mariners made a terrific deal, though few could have known at the time. Fans expected a haul of recognizable names who could help right away. Instead, the Mariners got pitchers Freddy Garcia and John Halama and infielder Carlos Guillen. The return seemed underwhelming, but all made a near-immediate impact: in 2000, Guillen's walk-off bunt lifted the Mariners to the ALCS, where Garcia and Halama started four games against the Yankees with a 2.14 ERA. All three were part of the ALCS roster again in 2001. Seattle lost both series, but in an indirect way, the Johnson trade paid off for years to come: Garcia became the favorite player of a young pitching prospect in their native Venezuelan named Felix Hernandez, who chose to sign with the Mariners in part because of that connection. Hernandez wore Garcia's No. 34 while becoming the franchise's leader in wins, innings and strikeouts while winning a Cy Young Award and tossing a perfect game. Getty Images Among the relievers the Rangers are pursuing, according to a source briefed on their discussions: The St. Louis Cardinals' Phil Maton and Kansas City Royals' Hunter Harvey. They also like the Pittsburgh Pirates' David Bednar, but believe the price will be too steep. The Colorado Rockies' Jake Bird is another possibility. One of the great things about working at The Athletic is that some of our most impactful and influential writers — Ken Rosenthal , Jayson Stark , Tyler Kepner , etc. — are also among the most generous and passionate in the industry, and those qualities really help in a moment like this. It helps, in part, because they don't mind getting a text message or an email asking a question or looking for help. So, I messaged Kepner with both a question and a request. Jennings: Hi Tyler! How was Cooperstown? Actually, don't answer that! I know how you feel about Cooperstown, and if you get started on that topic, you'll never have time to answer my actual question. What I really want to know is, do you have an all-time favorite trade deadline deal? And is there another that stands out as the best deadline deal in baseball history? Obviously, this trade deadline has been a bit slow to develop, defined largely by uncertainty and, apparently, indecision. It does not seem to be a market loaded with massive difference makers — CC Sabathia ain't walking through that door — but who knows? One of these relievers could change teams and end up getting the last three outs of the World Series. What's at the highest end of your own trade deadline measuring stick? Is there one trade that stands out as the best ever, and is there another that's a personal favorite for whatever reason? Stay tuned for Tyler's response. Getty Images Not every team has officially declared its trade deadline intentions — some haven't made a move, and others have made moves so minor they could still go either way — but here's an attempt to put each team into a bucket based on what we've seen and what we suspect. Aggressively buying Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets, Cincinnati Reds, Seattle Mariners The Phillies have made the biggest splash so far, and the Mets have aggressively overhauled their bullpen with three separate additions. Each team still needs a bat. The surprise here is the Reds who traded for third baseman Ke'Bryan Hayes yesterday afternoon, then followed with a late-night deal for starter Zack Littell. They're going for it. So are the Mariners, who also made a late-night deal to further address their desperate need for offense. Definitely buying Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees, Milwaukee Brewers, Chicago Cubs, Boston Red Sox We've seen these teams make moves to add to their roster. The Brewers might not add much — they've so far added catcher Danny Jansen — but they're clearly on the buy side. The other teams here have a chance to be aggressive buyers by the end of the day. Presumably buying Detroit Tigers, Houston Astros, Texas Rangers, Los Angeles Dodgers We're still waiting for these teams to make big moves, but all signs point to them eventually buying, and maybe buying in a meaningful way. The Astros have added a third baseman, but they could end up doing quite a bit more. Doing Padres things A.J. Preller gets his own bucket. He could trade away Dylan Cease and also trade for Steven Kwan. Anything and everything seems to be on the table, but the net result is probably going to be more buying than selling. Are they really buying? Did the Angels really trade for a couple of relievers in their late 30s? What's going on here? Are they setting up to trade away some other relievers? Hard to know what's going on out there. Maybe threading the needle The Royals have added Randal Grichuk and extended Seth Lugo, but would you really be shocked if they also sold a player or two? Regardless, they're probably not going to move aggressively either direction. Selling (but it's kind of masked as buying) Technically, the Braves have added, but it's been a bunch of unwanted pitchers for mostly salary relief. They're adding, but not really. They still have pieces to sell and should sell them. It started last night with Rafael Montero. Probably selling Tampa Bay Rays, San Francisco Giants The Rays seemed to signal their direction last night when they traded Zack Littell, but they have enough pitching depth to perhaps still think of themselves as threading the needle rather than truly selling. What they do with Pete Fairbanks and Brandon Lowe might determine just how far they go to the sell side. The Giants have traded a reliever but haven't (yet) ripped apart their bullpen. Presumably selling Miami Marlins, Cleveland Guardians, Athletics No huge moves for these teams, but the Guardians are at least considering trading Steven Kwan, and neither the Marlins or A's are in position to do anything but sell. Selling at least a little bit The Pirates traded away Ke'Bryan Hayes, but that doesn't necessarily mean they're also going to trade Mitch Keller or David Bednar. They're probably not buying, but are they fully selling? Definitely selling Colorado Rockies, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox, Washington Nationals, St. Louis Cardinals At least one of these teams — the Orioles — could be among the most aggressive sellers in the final hours. So far, though, the Orioles sold without moving nearly all of their obvious pieces. The Cardinals have been fairly aggressive, but they've only moved pending free agents out of their bullpen. Aggressively selling Minnesota Twins, Arizona Diamondbacks The Twins have been the most aggressive sellers. It started with Chris Paddack and jumped to a whole other level with Jhoan Duran, who was traded with multiple years of remaining control. The Twins are definitely selling. They have some obvious pieces still to move — Willi Castro, Harrison Bader, etc. — and could get even more aggressive if they're convinced to trade Joe Ryan. The Diamondbacks have also been fairly aggressive, but the real test will be what they do with Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly. Getty Images When mapping out the Pittsburgh Pirates' options as sellers last week, I considered it highly likely they would go into all-out sell mode with their pitchers, and quite likely they'd use this opportunity to bail on the Ke'Bryan Hayes contract as well. The arms sale still could be the path they choose. But the Buccos' first big move of the deadline was sending Hayes across the division to Cincinnati. Now focus returns to their controllable pitchers: starter Mitch Keller and relievers David Bednar and Dennis Santana. The relief market is hot, and the assumption is that the Pirates will move at least one of their leverage relievers. Despite being a hometown guy, Bednar seems to be a perfect trade candidate, as he's bounced back from a bad 2024 season and early-season 2025 demotion to Triple A to regain his trade value. With Jhoan Duran traded and Emmanuel Clase taken off the board, Bednar could be the best closer available. The Chicago Cubs, Toronto Blue Jays and Detroit Tigers would love to have him. Same for the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees. And on and on. Packaging Bednar and Santana together could get Pirates the multiple top-10 prospects that they, according to rival evaluators, had been seeking for Bednar alone in recent days. The starting pitching market is starting to move, but Keller? He may stay. Ken Rosenthal reported Wednesday night that, barring a seismic change, the Pirates will keep Keller. A rival exec told Rosenthal that the Pirates were so reluctant to seriously engage on Keller that his team didn't even bother. Keller is the fifth-best starter available on The Athletic's trade deadline Big Board (which omitted Dylan Cease, so you could consider Keller sixth). Keller is durable and dependable, a middle-of-the-rotation starter on a nice extension. The Pirates certainly could use him. But what they could use more is a couple big bats. The club's first few trades — moving Adam Frazier, Hayes and Caleb Ferguson — have done nothing to make the 2026 lineup better. Moving Keller would help with that. But if he's staying, they'll be even more likely to move Bednar and Santana. Getty Images The San Diego Padres have yet to make a big move, and their record suggests they're struck somewhere between buying and selling. But the Padres' president of baseball operations is A.J. Preller, which means they surely won't be stuck for long. Preller likes to make moves, and The Athletic has reported that he's in the market for some of the biggest fish available: Athletics closer Mason Miller, Guardians outfielder Steven Kwan, and Red Sox outfielder Jarren Duran. It's possible none of those three will be traded, but if that's the case, it won't be because Preller didn't try. From Dennis Lin and Ken Rosenthal: ✍️ Considering the top-heavy state of the Padres farm system, Preller might need to part with elite shortstop prospect Leo De Vries or well-regarded catching prospect Ethan Salas to acquire any of the above players. Indications are, the executive is willing to at least discuss them. Preller could try to thread the needle by acquiring controllable talent — like any of the names previously mentioned — while trading away one or two of his own pending free agents, most notably Dylan Cease or (perhaps less likely) Robert Suarez.

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