Credit where it’s due: Zach Pressnell of Sports Illustrated may have just sketched out the kind of practical, win-now move the New York Yankees should be sprinting to the phone about. His idea—sending pitching prospects Kyle Carr and Brock Selvidge to the St. Louis Cardinals for left-handed reliever JoJo Romero—is one of those trades that makes so much sense you almost wonder why it hasn’t already happened.
Romero is exactly the kind of arm the Yankees’ bullpen currently lacks: a proven, high-leverage lefty who can handle the eighth inning and keep dangerous left-handed hitters quiet when the game tightens up. The Yankees do have left-handed options, but they’re more matchup specialists than late-inning stoppers. Romero would immediately slide into a setup role and give the bullpen the kind of October-ready depth contenders need.
Pressnell’s logic is refreshingly straightforward. The Yankees would be turning two intriguing but unproven prospects into a reliever who’s already shown he can thrive under major-league pressure. Prospects are baseball’s favorite lottery tickets—fun to dream about, occasionally life-changing, but far from guaranteed. Romero, on the other hand, is the reliable appliance that works every day.
For the Cardinals, moving Romero wouldn’t derail their long-term plans, and adding arms like Carr and Selvidge gives them developmental upside. For the Yankees, it’s an immediate upgrade for a bullpen that has lost key pieces like Devin Williams and Luke Weaver and still needs a stabilizing presence late in games.
In other words, it's clean. Fair for both sides and perfectly aligned with the Yankees’ win-now mentality. The only real mystery is why the Yankees’ front office hasn’t already picked up the phone. Sometimes the best ideas in baseball are the obvious ones—and this feels like one of them.


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