The New York Mets and Texas Rangers have agreed to a blockbuster trade sending outfielder Brandon Nimmo and $5 million to Texas in exchange for second baseman Marcus Semien. The deal, reported on November 23, 2025, requires Nimmo to waive his no-trade clause and awaits MLB approval. This move aims to bolster the Mets' defense while addressing the Rangers' outfield needs.
The trade marks a significant shift for both teams after missing the 2025 playoffs. For the Mets, acquiring 35-year-old Semien addresses their defensive shortcomings, as emphasized by president of baseball operations David Stearns. "We're going to need our current group of players to play better defense," Stearns said earlier this month. Semien, who won his second Gold Glove in 2025 with +7 outs above average, provides an upgrade at second base over options like Jeff McNeil. In 127 games last season, Semien hit .230/.305/.364 with 15 home runs, 62 RBIs, and 11 stolen bases, posting a 97 OPS+—his lowest in a full season since 2018.
Nimmo, the Mets' longest-tenured player since his 2011 first-round draft selection, ends a 10-year career in New York. The 32-year-old left fielder batted .262/.324/.436 in 155 games in 2025, setting career highs with 25 home runs and 92 RBIs while stealing 13 bases. His defense had regressed, with -1 outs above average, prompting the Mets to explore replacements like prospect Carson Benge or free agents Kyle Tucker and Cody Bellinger.
For the Rangers, Nimmo joins former Mets teammate Jacob deGrom and bolsters an outfield thinned by the non-tendering of Adolis García. Texas ranked 22nd in runs scored (684) and 25th in wRC+ (92) in 2025. Nimmo has $102.5 million remaining on his eight-year, $162 million contract through 2030, while Semien's seven-year, $175 million deal leaves $72 million over three years. Semien reflected on recent Rangers changes, saying, "The business of baseball was cruel to us today," after the non-tender deadline.
Both teams, top-7 in payroll in 2025, seek to rebound from underperformance—the Mets after an NLCS run in 2024, the Rangers post-2023 World Series title.