The Boston Red Sox landed a major heist when acquiring Carlos Narváez from the New York Yankees last offseason. At this point, the Yankees can only hope their acquisition turns a regrettable deal into a win-win.

Last December, the Yankees sent Narváez to the Red Sox for Elmer Rodriguez-Cruz. While Boston certainly has no complaints over its return, the 21-year-old pitching prospect has also shown promise in New York’s farm system.

Rodriguez-Cruz took one step closer to the Bronx on Friday. The Yankees promoted him to Double-A Somerset.

Boston drafted Rodriguez-Cruz with the No. 105 overall pick in 2021, and he posted a 2.92 ERA in 89 2/3 innings last season. He’s pitched even better in 2025, registering a 2.26 ERA and 99 strikeouts in 83 2/3 innings for High-A Hudson Valley.

The 6-foot-3 hurler has allowed three combined earned runs (and four unearned) over his last six starts, including five scoreless innings against the Red Sox’s Greenville affiliate on June 13. Rodriguez-Cruz compiled eight strikeouts over seven shutout frames during his last start on July 5.

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MLB.com ranks Rodriguez-Cruz sixth among Yankees prospects, but shortstop George Lombard (No. 36) is the only one to crack the recently updated overall top 100. The scouting report says the 160-pound pitcher has a “mid-rotation starter ceiling if he develops average control.”

The strike zone has often eluded Rodriguez-Cruz, who has a career 4.1 walks per nine innings. Despite his recent dominance, he’s worked around 12 free passes in his past four outings.

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Perhaps the Red Sox would have second thoughts about trading Rodriguez-Cruz if not for Narváez’s breakout.

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Narváez played just six games for the Yankees before beginning the 2025 season as a backup to Connor Wong. The 26-year-old now ranks fourth in WAR (2.9) among all catchers, batting .275/.349/.445 with the most defensive runs saved (13) at the position.

Narváez missed out on an All-Star selection behind Cal Raleigh and Alejandro Kirk, but he could keep making the Yankees pay for sending him to their rival.

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Featured image via Eric Canha/Imagn Images