Example Trades That Get Accepted

These are sample outputs. The goal is realism: balanced deals, clear fit, and a pitch message that feels fair.

Most Likely to Be Accepted
You get
  • Matt Olson
They get
  • Ozzie Albies
Why this works for both sides

You’re trading from middle infield depth, while your opponent needs power. Both sides address a real need without overreaching.

Ready-to-send pitch message
Hey — noticed you’re light at 2B and have extra power. Albies gives you a stable everyday infielder, and I get a power bat in Olson. Feels pretty balanced for both sides.
Depth for Star (Manager Psychology Friendly)
You get
  • Freddie Freeman
They get
  • Christian Encarnacion-Strand
  • Nico Hoerner
Why this works for both sides

Some managers prefer depth and flexibility over one star. This gives them two everyday starters across categories, while you consolidate into an elite bat.

Ready-to-send pitch message
Freeman’s been great, but this gives you two everyday starters — Hoerner for speed/OBP and CES for power. Thought this might fit how you’ve been building depth.
Pitching Surplus for Hitting Need
You get
  • Randy Arozarena
They get
  • George Kirby
Why this works for both sides

You’re deep at SP, while your opponent needs pitching stability. They get a steady arm; you improve your OF with a power/speed profile.

Ready-to-send pitch message
You’ve been streaming SP a bit, so Kirby could stabilize things. I could use OF help. This felt like a clean swap based on needs.
Deadline-Style Fair Swap
You get
  • Josh Naylor
They get
  • Logan Gilbert
Why this works for both sides

A classic deadline move: swap from strength to fix one clear weakness. Both sides get an everyday contributor without forcing a rebuild-type trade.

Ready-to-send pitch message
Naylor helps me replace some lost power, and Gilbert gives you another dependable arm. Felt like a fair deadline-style move.
Two-for-One With Name Value
You get
  • Luis Robert Jr.
They get
  • Teoscar Hernández
  • Jeff McNeil
Why this works for both sides

Some managers prefer two reliable everyday bats rather than one volatile upside play. You take the risk; they get steadier coverage across categories.

Ready-to-send pitch message
This gives you two everyday bats instead of one volatile piece. Teoscar adds power, McNeil helps average/OBP. I take the risk on upside.