After the Yankees finalized the trade on Tuesday to acquire LHP Ryan Weathers from the Marlins for four prospects, it was clear the Yankees offseason was getting started. Weathers is a good start to adding external players to the MLB roster, but the Yankees need more.
The New York Yankees today announced that they have acquired left-handed pitcher Ryan Weathers from the Miami Marlins in exchange for minor league outfielders Dillon Lewis and Brendan Jones, and minor league infielders Dylan Jasso and Juan Matheus.
— Yankees PR Dept. (@YankeesPR) January 14, 2026
Weathers’ Flexibility
Adding Weathers provides the Yankees with vital insurance for a rotation on the mend. Gerrit Cole (Tommy John recovery) and Carlos Rodón (elbow surgery) are both sidelined to start the season. Weathers — a 26-year-old lefty with a mid-90s fastball — slots in immediately. Also, he has one minor league option remaining, which could prove pivotal.
Beyond the rotation, Weathers addresses a long-standing need for high-velocity left-handed depth in the bullpen. Once Cole and Rodón are healthy, Weathers can transition into a super-utility relief role. This will be similar to what the Yankees did with Michael King before he became a starter. Weathers’ ability to hit 97 mph and his 40% whiff rate on secondary pitches suggest he could be even more effective in short stints.
Under team control through 2028, Weathers represents more than just a temporary patch. He is a cost-effective, multi-year weapon that allows the Yankees to protect their veteran aces from being rushed back while simultaneously reinforcing a bullpen that has lacked a dominant southpaw presence.
Some Ryan Weathers Highlights:#Yankees #RepBX pic.twitter.com/HjTGokd2XT
— Matthew Nethercott (@mnethercott_) January 14, 2026
Belli Still in Play?
The Yankees and Bellinger are progressing towards a deal. Nothing is done yet, or final, but progress has been made from where the sides were late last week. The Yankees are said to be holding firm with a five-year deal, with an AAV over $30 Million. Bellinger’s camp still wants more. The thought is the Yankees can add some opt-outs to the deal,. They could also possibly an opt-in to add an extra year at the end of the deal.
Both sides need each other. The Yankees need Bellinger’s defensive versatility and veteran presence. Bellinger needs Yankee Stadium for his home games. It was a match made in heaven. The two sides need to end this saga and move on.
Are the Yankees planning something bigger?
Despite the package sent to Miami for Weathers, the Yankees’ farm system remains remarkably deep, allowing Brian Cashman to stay aggressive in the trade market. The Yankees and Brewers are reportedly still engaged in trade talks surrounding right-handed ace Freddy Peralta.
While adding Weathers provided much-needed floor and versatility, Peralta represents a significant ceiling raise as a proven strikeout artist coming off a career-best 2025 season. Because Peralta is entering the final year of his contract at a modest $8 million, the Brewers are weighing offers from several contenders, but the Yankees remain the perceived frontrunners due to their surplus of young, controllable arms like Luis Gil and Will Warren. Securing Peralta would transform the Yankees’ pitching staff from a patchwork unit into a formidable postseason force. It would become, at full health, the best staff in the American League.
The clock is ticking for the Yankees, now it’s time to make some moves.
Top Image Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images
