Rays acquire OF Dylan Carlson in trade with Cards

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ST. PETERSBURG -- After jump-starting the Trade Deadline frenzy with a quartet of major moves over the weekend, the Rays pulled off a pair of lower-profile deals on Tuesday.

Tampa Bay acquired outfielder from St. Louis in exchange for reliever Shawn Armstrong. The Rays also dealt reliever Tyler Zuber to the Mets for Minor League right-hander Paul Gervase before the 6 p.m. ET Deadline.

Carlson, 25, is a prime candidate for a fresh start in a new place to potentially revive his stagnant career.

TRADE DETAILS
Rays receive: OF Dylan Carlson, cash
Cardinals receive: RHP

Rays receive: Minor League RHP Paul Gervase
Mets receive: RHP

Carlson was the No. 1-ranked player in the St. Louis organization as recently as 2020 and finished third in the voting for the 2021 NL Rookie of the Year Award. However, a series of injuries -- to his shoulder, ankle and wrist -- conspired to knock him out of the regular outfield rotation.

The Cardinals fielded a series of trade offers for Carlson in 2022 and ’23, but they resisted dealing him because of the immense level of talent he still has when healthy. That changed at this Deadline, with their outfield picture on more solid standing.

Carlson was arguably the Cardinals’ best player in Spring Training, but he had his legs knocked out from under him while chasing a fly ball and he sprained the AC joint in his left shoulder two days before the start of the regular season.

Carlson is arbitration eligible in 2025 and doesn’t hit free agency until 2027.

It’s a classic buy-low move for the Rays, and it came at a relatively low cost. Armstrong has been an effective pitcher, filling a variety of roles from opener to late-inning relief, and is highly respected inside the clubhouse.

But Armstrong will be a free agent at the end of the season, so Tampa Bay turned two months of his services into years of a high-upside outfielder.

In the short term, Carlson could fill the hole left by the decision to trade Randy Arozarena to Seattle -- perhaps coincidentally another former Cardinals outfield prospect, who never got a chance to reach his potential in St. Louis.