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The New York Yankees have reached the second week of June right where a contender wants to be, firmly in the American League East race and good enough to justify an aggressive trade-deadline swing. At 38-26, New York is even with the Tampa Bay Rays in the games-back column, trailing only by percentage points atop the division.
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The Yankees are not trying to stay relevant. They are trying to separate.
Brian Cashman should start by calling the Miami Marlins. New York needs a meaningful upgrade, not a marginal addition or a depth piece. The Yankees need a move that can strengthen their roster for October. Sandy Alcantara fits that need.
The framework is simple. The Yankees would receive Alcantara. The Marlins would receive infielder George Lombard Jr., right-hander Will Warren, and right-hander Carlos Lagrange.
The cost would sting. It should. Miami has no reason to move a healthy, controllable former Cy Young Award winner without landing a serious return. Alcantara reinforced his value Sunday by shutting down the Rays over seven strong innings, showing the velocity, command, and game control that once made him one of baseball’s most dominant arms.
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Why Sandy Alcantara Fits the Yankees
For the Yankees, the upside is obvious. A postseason rotation featuring Gerrit Cole, Max Fried, Alcantara, and Carlos Rodon would give the Pinstripes a championship-caliber staff built to overwhelm opposing lineups. Warren has been excellent, and moving him would hurt. But when a promising internal starter can help land a proven ace, the Yankees have to focus on the larger prize.
Alcantara’s contract strengthens the fit. He is owed a significant but manageable salary in 2026, and his 2027 club option gives New York more than a rental. For a team already carrying a massive payroll, that matters. The Yankees would add ace-level upside without taking on another long-term, free-agent-style commitment.
What the Marlins Would Get in Return
Lombard would headline the return for Miami. The Marlins need premium position-player talent, and Lombard gives them a potential long-term answer at shortstop. The Yankees should not move him lightly. He is their best high-end prospect chip. For Miami, he could become a foundational piece.
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New York can afford to think practically. Anthony Volpe remains part of the shortstop picture. Jazz Chisholm Jr. is a major piece of the infield. Ryan McMahon is under contract at third base. Lombard still has a path, but not an open lane. Moving him for Alcantara would be aggressive, not reckless.
Warren provides the Marlins immediate value. Miami cannot trade Alcantara for projection alone. Warren can step directly into the rotation, provide controllable innings, and offer enough upside to be more than a placeholder.
Lagrange adds the high-upside arm needed to complete the package. His triple-digit fastball gives Miami a premium development play, whether he remains a starter or shifts into a late-inning role. Arms with that kind of raw power are worth betting on, especially for a club with room to develop them.
Why the Yankees Should Act Early
The Marlins are not buried, but they are not clear buyers either. That puts them in the uncomfortable middle, where smart front offices have to make difficult decisions before the market fully forms. Waiting until late July could create more bidders, but it also brings risk. Injuries, performance swings, and uncertainty could change everything.
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The Yankees should not wait for the market to define their ambition. They have the record. They have the roster. They have urgency. What they need is one more arm capable of turning a strong team into the American League’s most dangerous October threat.
The Cost Is High, But So Is the Upside
Lombard, Warren, and Lagrange would be an expensive package. Alcantara warrants one. He is not a back-end rental or a temporary patch. He is a ceiling-changer.
Miami would receive a premium prospect, an immediate starter, and a high-octane arm. New York would receive the ace-level reinforcement needed to chase a championship.
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If Cashman wants the clearest path from very good to truly dangerous, Alcantara is the call.
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