In some unspecified time in the future, the Colorado Rockies should cease clinging to the previous. Buying and selling third baseman Ryan McMahon isn’t only a deadline transfer — it’s a long-overdue breakup.
McMahon was part of one of the vital hyped Rockies lineups up to now 20 years, led by future Corridor of Famer — and arguably the best participant in franchise historical past — Nolan Arenado. That core additionally included Trevor Story, Charlie Blackmon, Ian Desmond, Raimel Tapia and others.
That staff was speculated to take over baseball. It didn’t.
And now, McMahon is the final one left.
At 29, he’s hitting simply .210 with a .687 OPS on the season, even with the good thing about having hitter-friendly Coors Area as his residence ballpark. That’s not going to chop it. His protection stays elite — he ranks prime 5 in defensive runs saved (DRS) at third base — however the Rockies aren’t constructing round protection. They’re rebuilding. Or at the least, they need to be.
But Colorado’s entrance workplace retains clinging to “homegrown guys” like uncommon collectibles. McMahon is an efficient participant, not a franchise cornerstone. He’s signed by way of 2027 at a manageable $16 million per yr — a contract that ought to improve his worth and provides the Rockies leverage in commerce talks.
There’s a marketplace for regular gloves with 20-homer energy and strong bat pace. The Cincinnati Reds, for instance, simply designated Jeimer Candelario for project and are biking by way of a carousel at third base. Groups like that must be calling.
That is the place Colorado should show it has realized from its errors. The franchise received burned romanticizing its farm system. It’s why Arenado walked. It’s why Story wasn’t dealt in time. And it’s why the Rockies are caught in baseball purgatory each July — not adequate to contend, not daring sufficient to rebuild.
Buying and selling McMahon doesn’t sign failure. It indicators consciousness. He deserves a shot with a contender. Colorado deserves a clear slate.
It’s time.
