What’s next for Triston Casas after the Willson Contreras trade?

This post was originally published on this site.

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I’ve been vocal about my love for Triston Casas, and my hopes for his emergence as a key part of the Red Sox roster for years to come. These hopes and dreams once seemed quite reasonable, based on early returns, but they’ve been dashed by significant injuries and questions about whether he can ever meet the physical demands of playing every day at an elite level.

It pains me to acknowledge these potential limitations, believe me. We all know that sometimes a player just catches your attention, your imagination, or your heart. Triston Casas was like that for me. I loved his on-field potential, his support as an ally for the gay community, his mental preparation, and the way he’s known for showing up for fans and teammates. I admired his poise and dignity when he was caught off-guard by a journalist’s tone-deaf question about his late mother. I like a little personality with my ballplayers, and Casas has that to spare.

As a fellow traveler on life’s Injured List right now, I’m really empathetic with what I know he’s working on, and working towards. It’s not easy, and he has all the good thoughts in the world from me.

His patellar rupture early last season didn’t change any of that for me, but it made it (more) obvious that maybe Triston is a player who would struggle with injuries. This injury was not only serious (like his last one), but it happened during a fairly routine moment (also like his last one).

In his absence, the adjustments that the Sox made to fill the hole in the roster weren’t enough in 2025 (respect to Romy Gonzalez and Abraham Toro’s brief, shining glory at first base). And the injury was significant enough that it’s not entirely clear if Triston will be ready by Opening Day 2026.

Until this trade, the Red Sox infield was so up-in-the-air that it could have been a hot-air balloon. It just got more stable, with the dual benefit of improving our defense (and offense), as well as taking some significant pressure off of Triston’s recovery. Although it might be hard for him to see how this trade is good for him in any way—and I get that—it allows him time to get all the rest he needs, to ramp up in a reasonable way, while also reducing the mental pressure of needing to be 100% by Opening Day. The trade is good for everyone right now.

I’m not sure what will happen to Triston; will he be in the running to win back a starting job? Will he become a platoon player, or come off the bench? I’m not sure that’s in his makeup; it will take a real mental realignment for those approaches to be successful. We’ll see how Contreras fares, how the deal ripens with age, and how Triston recovers, but we can’t know any of that now.

Right now, this is the right move.