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Not all trades turn heads. Often, a team deals a player who is too expensive for its current context — payroll, chances of contention, depth of the organization, etc. — for a player or players who are less expensive and whose potential value mostly lies in the future.

But sometimes less-celebrated deals turn out to be more fun than we initially thought. We might not find that out until the next season is underway, when at that point all we can do is shrug our shoulders and say, “Who knew?”

Defining an under-the-radar deal is a subjective exercise but mostly, I just looked at the list of trade pickups since the end of last season with the players sorted by 2025 AXE ratings, which I use as the basis for my Awards Watch rankings. AXE ratings are calculated from a mix of leading value metrics. The higher the score the better, and 100 is league average. Then I looked to see what and how much we wrote about the deal at the time. Or, in a couple of cases, if we wrote about them at all.

With that as the basis, here are a few under-the-radar trade acquisitions who didn’t generate many headlines at the time but are paying unexpected dividends for teams as the 2025 season careens toward the heart of the postseason chase.


The hidden treasure

The trade: Acquired from the New York Yankees for RHP Elmer Rodriguez-Cruz on Dec. 11
What we said at the time: Nothing
2025 AXE: 117.8 (5th on Boston, 67th in MLB)

This trade came together in the waning hours of the winter meetings, in the aftermath of a much splashier deal. That was the one in which Boston acquired lefty ace Garrett Crochet for a package of prospects (more on that below) that included catcher Kyle Teel.

I pay some level of attention to every move since each one requires me to make some kind of update in my database, but I’ll be honest: I have zero recollection of learning when this deal went down, and it’s not one we graded.

Narvaez had been in the Yankees’ system since 2016, but didn’t debut in the majors until last season, when he went 3-for-13 in six games for New York. The Red Sox were collecting possible options to back up Connor Wong, and while GM Craig Breslow professed “excitement” about the deal to reporters, Narvaez entered spring training as just one of several possible options to break camp as Wong’s understudy.

Now? Only the Seattle Mariners’ Cal Raleigh owns a higher AXE rating than Narvaez among American League backstops, and Wong has a .431 OPS in 18 games when behind the plate.

Last weekend, Narvaez’s breakout went national, when he clubbed a three-run homer on “Sunday Night Baseball” against — you guessed it — the Yankees. Afterward, Aaron Judge answered our rhetorical question of “Who knew?” while addressing the postgame media scrum.

“Narvy is a hard worker, a great teammate, one of the best we ever had over here,” Judge said, adding, “He outworked everybody in this room. So it doesn’t surprise me he’s having the success he is this year.”

Who knew? Well, for one the reigning AL MVP knew.


Cheating a bit

The trade: Acquired by the Atlanta Braves from the Los Angeles Angels for DH Jorge Soler on Oct. 31, then released by the Braves on Nov. 22 and signed as a free agent by the Mets on Dec. 19
What we said: “Canning could at least be a No. 5 starter. He gives the Braves another rotation option if free agent Max Fried signs elsewhere — which is a strong possibility.”
2025 AXE: 107.8 (10th on New York, 194th in MLB)

As teased above, this is a bit of a cheat. Canning was indeed an under-the-radar trade acquisition over the winter, only the team that acquired him (Atlanta) didn’t keep him. Instead, the Braves, fearing what Canning might earn via the arbitration process, non-tendered him. Thus, Atlanta’s motivation for trading Soler turned out to be a straight salary dump.

Well, the Braves and the Angels could use Canning now. After signing Canning to a one-year, $4.25 million deal (plus bonuses he now seems likely to reach), the Mets have seen the 29-year-old righty become a fixture in their stable core-five rotation. Through 13 starts, he’s 6-2 with a 3.22 ERA.

Canning is the No. 5 starter in Flushing, but his numbers would slot him second in the rotations for both the Angels (behind Yusei Kikuchi) and Braves (behind Chris Sale).


Far from a throw-in

The trade: Acquired from the Red Sox with RHP Wikelman Gonzalez, OF Braden Montgomery and C Kyle Teel for LHP Garrett Crochet on Dec. 11
What we said: “Meidroth is a potential glue player with positional versatility and features excellent bat-on-ball skills and approach at the plate. His raw tools are mediocre, per [ESPN’s Kiley] McDaniel, and his upside is limited by a lack of power.”
2025 AXE: 112.2 (2nd on Chicago, 119th in MLB)

The Crochet trade generated plenty of buzz, but in the pecking order of prospects, many might have rated Meidroth at the bottom. Indeed, many still might. Teel just reached the majors and remains viewed as a possible All-Star catcher. It’s early days for Montgomery, but he has done nothing to diminish his prospect glow. Gonzalez is raw but flashes exciting stuff as a part of a loaded staff at Double-A Birmingham.

But Meidroth beat them all to the majors and has become a fixture at second base and in the upper slots of the lineup for the White Sox. He’s hitting .296/.385/.365 and has displayed the same kind of almost pathological patience at the dish as he showed as a minor leaguer. As suggested, his power is below average, but he has stolen eight bases and played (mostly) good defense.

Even better, when you combine Meidroth’s lack of power with his excellent bat-on-ball skills and off-the-charts plate discipline, it’s not hard to imagine him becoming the kind of player who has vanished from today’s game: the hitter with at least a .400 on-base percentage but a sub-.400 slugging percentage.

Such players used to be common in the majors, but they’ve gradually gone extinct. There hasn’t been a qualifying hitter to meet those parameters since Florida’s Luis Castillo in 2000, when he hit .334/.418/.388 over 626 plate appearances.


Making a name for himself

The trade: Acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates with LHP Michael Kennedy and Josh Hartle for IF Spencer Horwitz on Dec. 10
What we said: Almost nothing
2025 AXE: 102.7 (13th on Cleveland, 328th in MLB)

The only mention on our grades page about this trade was at the end of our write-up about the deal that sent Andres Gimenez from the Guardians to the Blue Jays and included Horwitz. We didn’t hand out any grades when Horwitz was subsequently flipped to Pittsburgh, even though it turned out to be the splashiest thing the Pirates did all winter. Who knew?

Ortiz hasn’t been an ace, but he’s second on Cleveland in starts and innings and leads the club in strikeouts. The Guardians’ pitching program has long been lauded for its ability to push hurlers to a higher level of production, and they’ve displayed that trait with Ortiz in vivid terms.

With Cleveland, Ortiz has cut back on use of his sinker, added velocity to his four-seamer and ramped up the frequency of what was a seldom-deployed changeup. The end result: Ortiz’s strikeout rate has soared from 19.2% to 25.2%.


The DFA merry-go-round

The trade: Acquired from the Philadelphia Phillies for cash on April 26
What we said: Nothing
2025 AXE: 105.5 (11th on Minnesota, 245th in MLB)

Hopefully, the Phillies did something fun with that money, because they sure could use the services of Clemens right about now.

OK, that’s not entirely fair. This deal, which went down about six weeks ago, came when the Phillies ran into a 40-man roster crunch and designated Clemens for assignment. Clemens had barely been used, and during his time with the Phillies, going back to 2023, he’d slashed .220/.265/.394. The Phillies are short now though with Bryce Harper battling wrist problems.

The Twins were in dire straits back in April because of a broken arm suffered by newly called-up infielder and touted prospect Luke Keaschall. Minnesota surely saw Clemens as the kind of stopgap solution that so many DFA-related moves turn out to be. Such players are the temp workers of MLB. Just ask frequent Mariner Casey Lawrence, who has been DFA’d six times (five by Seattle, once by Toronto) since the season began. It’s no way to live, even if it does pay really well for temp work.

Instead of joining Lawrence on the DFA merry-go-round, Clemens helped keep a struggling Minnesota team afloat until it got healthier and caught fire. Clemens has hit .236/.340/.517 for the Twins, who have gone 24-15 since he debuted for the team on April 28.


The bull who became a bear might be a bull again

Jesus Luzardo (SP, Philadelphia Phillies)

The trade: Acquired from the Marlins with C Paul McIntosh for OF Emaarion Boyd and SS Starlyn Caba on Dec. 22
What we said: “The Phillies now project to have arguably the best rotation in the majors, and the upgrade with Luzardo could be a difference-maker in what should be a three-team race with the Braves and Mets for the NL East title.”
2025 AXE: 119.5 (4th on Philadelphia, 53rd in MLB)

Luzardo was actually the inspiration for this piece. It’s not that the move was unnoticed. We wrote it up and David Schoenfield gave the Phillies a B+ for it. Luzardo, a longtime top prospect whose big league career has been more solid than spectacular, was a recognizable name.

Yet when he was brought in, it seemed like he was destined to be the Phillies’ No. 5 starter and perhaps might get bumped from the rotation altogether once Andrew Painter and/or Mick Abel ascended from the minors.

Instead, when I wrote the season’s first Awards Watch, Luzardo had emerged as the early front-runner for NL Cy Young. Who knew?

Luzardo still earns props for his early success, especially in lieu of Aaron Nola’s struggles with production and health this season. But the news for Luzardo since that Awards Watch turned sour, at least for a couple of starts. In two brutal outings, Luzardo was hammered for 20 runs in 5 2/3 innings, raising his ERA from 2.15 to 4.46.

Luzardo and the team reportedly diagnosed the issue as pitch tipping and apparently they were right. On Wednesday, Luzardo held the Cubs to a lone run over six innings and struck out 10. Luzardo isn’t the Cy Young frontrunner he was just two weeks ago, but his suddenly bearish season has once again gone bullish for a Phillies team going through some struggles.

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Panthers-Oilers Game 5 preview: Who’ll win a pivotal Game 5?

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Panthers-Oilers Game 5 preview: Who'll win a pivotal Game 5?

The 2025 Stanley Cup Final will last at least six games, as the Edmonton Oilers won another overtime thriller over the Florida Panthers in Game 4.

With the series tied 2-2 heading into Game 5, it’s now a best-of-three, making Saturday’s game all the more pivotal. Which team will move within one W of the greatest trophy in sports?

Here are notes on the matchup from ESPN Research, as well as betting intel from ESPN BET:

More from Game 4: Recap | Grades

Matchup notes

Florida Panthers at Edmonton Oilers
Game 5 | 8 p.m. ET | TNT/Max

What a difference a game makes! Heading into Game 4, the Panthers were -260 favorites to win the Cup, with the Oilers at +215. Now, the two teams are both -110. Sam Bennett (+150) and Connor McDavid (+240) remain atop the Conn Smythe leaderboard — but Connor’s teammate Leon Draisaitl has joined him at +240 after he tallied the OT game winner (his second of the series).

In history, when a Stanley Cup Final has been tied 2-2, the winner of Game 5 has gone on to win 19 out of 26 times (.731 win percentage).

The Panthers have won their last three series that were tied 2-2: 2022 first round vs. the Washington Capitals, 2024 conference finals vs. the New York Rangers and 2025 second round vs. the Toronto Maple Leafs. The Oilers have won their last three series when they were trailing 2-1: 2024 second round vs. the Vancouver Canucks, 2024 conference finals vs. the Dallas Stars, 2025 first round vs. the Los Angeles Kings.

The Oilers became the seventh team to overcome a three-goal deficit to win a Stanley Cup Final game, and the first since the Carolina Hurricanes did it to them in Game 1 of the 2006 finals. They are only the second team to accomplish this feat on the road, joining the 1919 Montreal Canadiens at the Seattle Metropolitans.

The two teams have combined to score 32 goals thus far, which is the fourth most through the first four games of a Stanley Cup Final in NHL history.

The OT game winner Draisaitl scored in Game 4 was his fourth such goal this postseason, setting a single-year record. He now owns the record for a single regular season (six, set in 2024-25) and a single postseason.

After coming in to replace Stuart Skinner to begin the second period, Calvin Pickard ran his record this postseason to 7-0. He is the first goalie to win a game in relief since Andrei Vasilevskiy picked up the W after replacing Ben Bishop on 2015.

Draisaitl and McDavid make it five players in NHL history to score 30 points or more in consecutive postseasons (2024 and 2025), joining Nikita Kucherov (2020 and 2021), Mario Lemieux (1991 and 1992) and Wayne Gretzky (1983 through 1985, plus 1987 and 1988).

Florida’s Matthew Tkachuk became the ninth player in Stanley Cup Final history to score two power-play goals in a period and the first since Tampa Bay’s Brad Richards in Game 6 of the 2004 finals.

After three strong games to start the finals, Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky faltered a bit in Game 4; his .857 save percentage was his lowest since Game 2 of the second-round series against the Maple Leafs (.800).

Brad Marchand scored four goals through the first three games of the series — including the game winner in double OT in Game 2 — but was held off of the scoresheet entirely in Game 4. Will the change of venue back to Edmonton result in his getting back on the board?


Scoring leaders

GP: 21 | G: 14 | A: 7

GP: 20 | G: 11 | A: 21

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Clutch gene, engage: How Leon Draisaitl reached an even higher level in the Cup Final

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Clutch gene, engage: How Leon Draisaitl reached an even higher level in the Cup Final

SUNRISE, Fla. — Leon Draisaitl is at his best when describing the Edmonton Oilers‘ worst moments.

They were “waxed” and “spanked” in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final by the Florida Panthers, when they lost 6-1. They “put us on our heels early and we were lollygagging around” in the first period of Game 4, when Florida built a 3-0 lead and chased starting goaltender Stuart Skinner for the second straight game.

“It’s certainly not the time to lollygag around, right?” Draisaitl asked rhetorically.

Indeed, it is not, which might be why Draisaitl didn’t let the Oilers linger in overtime too long before ending Game 4 with his 11th goal of the playoffs — shoving the puck towards the Panthers’ net, having it deflect off defenseman Niko Mikkola and behind Sergei Bobrovsky at 11:18. Edmonton won 5-4, tied the series at 2-2 and completely flushed any lingering embarrassment over that Game 3 “spanking.”

In the process, Draisaitl continued to rewrite the NHL record books and loudly stated his case as the Stanley Cup playoffs’ most valuable player.

As of Friday morning, Draisaitl had the second-best odds at winning the Conn Smythe Trophy, according to ESPN BET (+225), trailing Florida center Sam Bennett (+140) and ahead of teammate Connor McDavid (+260), who won the award in a losing effort last season.

Oilers defenseman Jake Walman believes that it’s not just Draisaitl’s scoring but his all-around game that’s what makes him such a driving force for the Oilers.

“He’s a beast who can do it all for us,” Walman said. “There have been stretches in this postseason when he’s played great defensively too.”

Edmonton has a plus-4 in goal differential with Draisaitl on the ice in the postseason.

“It’s incredible. He’s a horse out there for us,” said forward Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who has played with Draisaitl since the 29-year-old center was drafted third overall in 2014 by Edmonton. “We can always lean on him. He always finds a way to get those big [goals].”

The numbers make that statement undeniable. Draisaitl’s Game 4 winner was his fourth overtime goal of this postseason, setting a new single playoff year record in the NHL. Incredibly, Draisaitl also holds the single-season record for overtime goals in the regular season (six), which he also set this season.

Draisaitl is just the fifth player in NHL history to score multiple overtime goals in a Stanley Cup Final series. Maurice Richard holds the record with three OT goals.

“He’s one of the best players in the world for a reason. He not only says what he’s going to do, he backs it up with his play and his actions. That’s what makes him an amazing leader,” Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse said. “We get into overtime. In those tense moments, he has an ability to relax and just make plays. He gets rewarded for working hard.”

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Leon Draisaitl scores OT winner for Oilers in Game 4

Leon Draisaitl notches the game-winning goal with this one-handed effort in a pulsating Game 4 that levels the series for Oilers.

Draisaitl has been perhaps the NHL’s most dominant player when factoring in the regular season with the postseason. The Oilers star finished a close second to Winnipeg Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck in the voting for the Hart Trophy as league MVP, after a season in which Draisaitl led the NHL in goals (52) and was third overall in points (106). Draisaitl was the winner of the Hart in 2019-20, and this was the fourth season of 50 or more goals in Draisaitl’s 11-year NHL career.

Draisaitl is now second to Sam Bennett (14 goals) in postseason goals, after scoring his 11th in overtime of Game 4. He’s now tied with teammate Connor McDavid with 32 points in 20 playoff games to lead all scorers.

He has now reached 30 points in two straight postseasons, becoming only the fifth player in NHL history to accomplish that feat, along with McDavid (2024-2025), Nikita Kucherov (2020-2021), Mario Lemieux (1991-1992) and Wayne Gretzky (1987-1988 and 1983-1985). Draisaitl now has three 30-point playoff seasons in his career, tying him with McDavid and Hockey Hall of Famer Mark Messier for second all-time behind all-time leader Gretzky, who had six 30-point playoff campaigns.

It’s not just the amount of scoring for Draisaitl — it’s when he’s scoring. Consider that he has 16 points in the final two rounds of the playoffs, including a series-best seven points in the Stanley Cup Final. Draisaitl has points in 17 of 20 playoff games, and nine of his past 10 overall.

“He’s as clutch as it gets,” said goalie Calvin Pickard, also a Game 4 hero for Edmonton with 22 saves and a win in relief of Skinner. “He’s been playing great. Always scoring big goals at big times.”

In the case of his Game 4 performance, Draisaitl not only came through in the clutch but also did in a building that hasn’t been friendly to him. He hadn’t tallied a point in any of his previous five Stanley Cup Final games on the road against the Panthers. He didn’t even generate a shot on goal in Game 7 last season or in Game 3 this postseason. He also failed to generate a shot attempt in Game 3, marking just the second time in 93 career playoff games that this occurred for Draisaitl.

On Thursday, he made up for lost time with three points, assisting on goals by Nugent-Hopkins and Vasily Podkolzin before scoring one of his own in overtime.

Florida coach Paul Maurice believes his team has defended Draisaitl and McDavid “reasonably well” in the series at 5-on-5.

“I think they’re still going to generate some action,” the coach said. “I think the even-strength chances are pretty tight through four games.”

One of the differences for Edmonton this postseason, after losing to Florida in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final in 2024, is their confidence and comfort in playing in tight games and grinding series. If they get down, they don’t get flustered. If things aren’t clicking offensively, they’re patient.

“You just get comfortable in those situations knowing that you play one good game, you find a way to get a win on the road, and you go home and the series is tied. That’s really all it is,” Draisaitl said before Game 4. “Sometimes those games where you just get waxed a little bit, they’re almost easier to get out of, right? We didn’t play our best. They played their best. We weren’t even close to bringing our best. You park that, you move on.”

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Draisaitl comes up big with OT winner in Game 1

Leon Draisaitl nets the winning goal late in overtime to help the Oilers take Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.

For all the message-sending that the Panthers did in Game 3 — on the scoreboard, on the ice and with their mouths — the Oilers sent an important one about their resiliency with their Game 4 rally.

“It tells you that our group never quits. We believe that no matter how bad it is, if we get over that hump of adversity, we’re going to keep pushing, we’re going to keep coming, and eventually it’ll break,” Draisaitl said. “You don’t want to be in these situations too many times. But when they happen, I think we’re great at it.”

It helps to have someone like Leon Draisaitl scoring when it matters most.

“I don’t know what could convey what he means to our team,” Edmonton coach Kris Knoblauch said. “The leadership, the play. He has just elevated his game in the toughest moments.”

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Reds’ Miley denies wrongdoing in Skaggs case

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Reds' Miley denies wrongdoing in Skaggs case

Cincinnati Reds left-hander Wade Miley said Friday that he has not been accused of any wrongdoing, one day after reports stated a deposition from a lawsuit alleged he supplied Tyler Skaggs with drugs when both players were with the Arizona Diamondbacks.

The deposition is part of a motion for summary judgment filed by the Los Angeles Angels, requesting a lawsuit from the Skaggs family be dismissed.

The deposition from Ryan Hamill, Skaggs’ agent, contains testimony that he was concerned in 2013 about Skaggs’ drug use. Hamill said he and Skaggs’ family confronted Skaggs about his drug use. Skaggs was then in his second season as a teammate of Miley with the Diamondbacks.

“He came clean,” Hamill testified. “He said he had been using — I believe it was Percocets — and he said he got them through Wade Miley.”

Skaggs died on July 1, 2019, at age 27 in a Dallas-area hotel. The autopsy found fentanyl, oxycodone and alcohol in his system.

Miley briefly addressed the issue before Friday’s road game against the Detroit Tigers.

“I hate what happened to Tyler, it sucks. My thoughts are with his family and his friends,” Miley said. “But I’m not going to sit here and talk about things that someone might have said about me or whatnot. I was never a witness for any of this. I was never accused of any wrongdoing.”

Former Angels communications director Eric Kay is serving a 22-year prison sentence in Texas after being found guilty on two charges of providing drugs related on Skaggs’ overdose.

The Athletic reported that the criminal proceedings against Kay included a recorded phone conversation in which Kay told his mother that Miley was a drug source to Skaggs.

Asked if Major League Baseball has contacted him regarding the allegations, Miley said, “I’d rather just focus on the Cincinnati Reds right now and baseball and what I have to do moving forward. I’ve got to get ready for a game on Sunday.”

Miley was mentioned in Kay’s criminal case, but he was never charged with a crime.

Skaggs was traded to the Angels after the 2013 season. He went 28-38 with a 4.41 ERA in 96 career starts.

Miley, 38, is with his eighth big league team and attempting to revive his career after Tommy John surgery in 2024.

Miley has a career 109-99 mark with a 4.09 ERA in 319 games (311 starts) since making his major league debut in 2011. This is his second go-round with the Reds. He was with the team in the 2020 and 2021 seasons, going 12-10 with a 3.55 ERA in 177⅓ innings over 34 starts (32 innings).

The Skaggs family is suing the Angels, contending that high-level team officials, as well as other employees, knew Kay was a drug user and should have known he was Skaggs’ source.

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