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Braves should take advantage of Astros’ dysfunction at trade deadline and here’s how

Alright, lets get weird.
Jul 8, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Houston Astros third baseman Isaac Paredes (15) reacts after hitting a double against the Washington Nationals during the fourth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images
Jul 8, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Houston Astros third baseman Isaac Paredes (15) reacts after hitting a double against the Washington Nationals during the fourth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images | IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

When it comes to the trade deadline, the Atlanta Braves' first order of business has to be to figure out who is actually going to be available to them to address their roster needs. Some years, the sellers are easily identifiable, and talks can begin in earnest early on, but the amount of uncertainty in the standings (particularly in the AL) has made figuring out which teams will even be selling at all very tricky. However, the Braves may have an interesting trade partner available to them that could work regardless of what direction that team decides to go.

By all accounts, things with the Houston Astros are very messy at the moment. In the early portions of the season, the Astros looked like they were destined to be sellers at the trade deadline. However, Houston finished the second half strong, and general manager/old friend Dana Brown probably needs the team to make a playoff run to keep his job.

Thankfully, there does seem to be a move that could give the Braves the righty bat they need and help the Astros achieve their goals, and it involves trading for Isaac Paredes.

Braves and Astros match up weirdly well on a trade for Isaac Paredes at the deadline

Now, Paredes is not a perfect solution for Atlanta, but there are precious few genuinely good options when it comes to right-handed bats on the trade market anyway. At minimum, Paredes hits for some power, draws plenty of walks, and can play multiple positions or DH. For a team that really just needs the ability to play match-ups against opposing southpaws better, Paredes could be an interesting solution. It doesn't hurt that Paredes has a $13.35 club option for 2027 if things work out.

As for why Houston would actually do it, it actually isn't all that complicated. If the Astros decide that selling is the correct path forward, getting some salary relief by trading Paredes while getting some prospect talent in return would be good. If the Astros are buyers, trading Paredes to the Braves for a pitching prospect that is MLB-ready would address a roster need while also freeing up money and a roster spot to be aggressive in adding a left-handed bat.

In an ideal world. Paredes would be able to play left field in Atlanta, but we don't actually know if he can. He has played all over the infield (which might matter if Austin Riley continues his collapse or if someone gets hurt again), but he has not been tried out in the grass. However, even having a right-handed DH option with power and the ability to get on base would be worth it if Brown is even remotely reasonable with the asking price for Paredes.

Paredes may not be the best option for the Braves, and even getting the Astros to play ball could be tricky, but this is the kind of creativity Alex Anthopoulos is going to have to employ if the Braves are going to have a successful trade deadline. The trade market does not have obvious solutions available this year, and the Braves have real roster issues, so the front office will have to expand their search to less-obvious targets to get the job done.

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