MacKenzie Gore traded to the
Rangers from the Nationals for 5 prospects
[January 23, 2026]
By HOWARD FENDRICH
WASHINGTON (AP) — All-Star left-hander MacKenzie Gore is headed to
the Texas Rangers in a trade that sent five prospects back to the
Nationals on Thursday in the biggest move of new Washington
president of baseball operations Paul Toboni's roster-rebuilding
efforts.
Gore gives the 2023 World Series champions a starter who should be
able to help the front end of their rotation along with Jacob deGrom
— a two-time Cy Young Award winner who was the American League
Comeback Player of the Year in 2025 — and Nathan Eovaldi, who dealt
with a rotator cuff strain and had surgery for a sports hernia after
compiling a 1.73 ERA in 22 starts.
“We’re at a moment right now in time where we have a team we believe
is capable of winning, and winning a championship,” Rangers general
manager Ross Fenstermaker said. "And when you add a player of
MacKenzie Gore’s status, it’s not that you look past what you’re
giving up, but you’re excited on what you’re bringing in and what
that does to the clubhouse, what this does for our fan base, what
this does for excitement around the club.”
Gore is under team control for the next two seasons; he can't become
a free agent until after the 2027 World Series. He is scheduled to
make $5.6 million in 2026 after agreeing to a one-year deal with the
Nationals that avoided arbitration.
Gore, who turns 27 next month, is 26-41 with a 4.19 ERA in four
major league seasons, the past three with Washington. He was an NL
All-Star last season, but he faded in the second half and ended up
going 5-15 with a 4.17 ERA and a career-best 185 strikeouts in 30
appearances, all starts.

“Our goal is to help him put together a complete season," Rangers
president of baseball operations Chris Young said. "But we
anticipate, with knowing the person, the competitor, the desire to
be great, he fits all the criteria of great starting pitchers and
we’re excited to help him.”
Gore was the No. 3 overall pick in the 2017 amateur draft by the San
Diego Padres and was sent to the Nationals in the 2022 trade that
included Juan Soto.
The players Washington is receiving from Texas are Yeremy Cabrera,
Gavin Fien, Devin Fitz-Gerald, Abimelec Ortiz and Alejandro Rosario.
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Washington Nationals starting pitcher MacKenzie Gore (1) throws
during the second baseball game of a doubleheader against the
Atlanta Braves, Sept. 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass,
File)

“We see high-end talent with this return, but we
also see intriguing depth,” Toboni said. “We did see untapped
potential with MacKenzie, so we baked that into basically the level
of return that we wanted.”
Fien is an 18-year-old shortstop taken out of high school in the
first round of last year's amateur draft.
“Getting a player of this caliber that’s young, has the upside that
he has — I don’t think any of these players are sure-fire bets,”
Toboni said, “but we’re really excited to be bringing him into the
system.”
Rosario is a 24-year-old right-hander who missed all of last season
and is slated to have Tommy John reconstructive elbow surgery soon.
Toboni said the Nationals hope he'll be ready to play at the start
of the 2027 season.
Fitz-Gerald is a 20-year-old infielder, Cabrera is a 20-year-old
outfielder and Ortiz is a 23-year-old first baseman and outfielder.
Fien, Fitz-Gerald and Cabrera played in Class A ball last year, and
Ortiz spent time at Double-A and Triple-A.
All five are considered among the top 20 prospects in the Rangers'
system.
“What we’re hopefully doing is raising our ceiling as a farm system,
but then also increasing the depth,” said Toboni, who replaced fired
president and GM Mike Rizzo. “You can't predict perfectly, kind of,
what these guys are going to turn out to be, right? But the more
shots you take on goal, the more goals you’re hopefully going to
have.”
Note: The Nationals also claimed RHP Gus Varland off waivers from
the Arizona Diamondbacks and designated C Riley Adams for
assignment.
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