Skip to main content
mediabuyer
Saved

Operated by

Company info pending

Operator graph

Operated by WILL BE UNINTERRUPTED OR ERROR-FREE. Limited · runs 7 domains across 2 networks

See operator profile →
Observed: Last seen: Days running: 26

Funnel

Capture in progress

We're still capturing the landing-page funnel for this creative. Check back in ~48h.

Landing page intelligence

brakeforit.com

Host

brakeforit.com

Path

/sports/in-hindsight-are-these-the-40-worst-trades-in-mlb-history-they-were-all-so-horrible/

Full URL

https://www.brakeforit.com/sports/in-hindsight-are-these-the-40-worst-trades-in-mlb-history-they-were-all-so-horrible/

Redirect chain

1 hop
  1. finalbrakeforit.com

Landing page snapshot

Landing page screenshot

Captured 2026-05-15

Tracking parameters

No query string on this URL.

Tracking setup · Taboola

Taboola passes site, site_id, campaign_id, campaign_item_id and click-id by default. Map those to your tracker's source/sub1-4 fields. Use {click_id} as your unique click identifier when posting back conversions.

?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}

Default Taboola setup template: ?site={site}&site_id={site_id}&campaign_id={campaign_id}&campaign_item_id={campaign_item_id}&click-id={click_id}

Landing page text

Show landing page text

Visible text extracted from the advertiser's landing page · last fetched 2026-05-13

In Hindsight, Are These The 40 Worst Trades In MLB History? They Were All So Horrible - Brake For It
Classic
Modern Auto
Culture
Search for:
Classic
Modern Auto
Culture
About
Contact
Copyright
Privacy
Terms
In Hindsight, Are These The 40 Worst Trades In MLB History? They Were All So Horrible
Todd Neikirk | Sports | 14 Apr 2026
Sometimes, a trade is successful and fair for both teams. But more often than not, one team will do better than the other as the result of a trade. Lopsided trades can happen for a number of reasons, and there have been many throughout the history of the MLB.
Keep reading for a list of the most one-sided trades of all time.
1910 - Joe Jackson To The Indians
Sporting News via Getty Images via Getty Images
Back in 1910, the Philadelphia Athletics gave up one of their most promising players. They traded their players Morrie Rath and Joe Jackson in exchange for the Cleveland Naps's (now renamed the Cleveland Indians) Bris Lord.
While Lord made a decent 6.6 WAR in three seasons, Jackson achieved .375, .441, and .542 in his six seasons with the Indians. In 1915, he joined the Chicago White Sox, where he helped them win the American League pennant and the World Series. Jackson is now nicknamed "Shoeless" Joe Jackson.
ADVERTISEMENT
1919 - Babe Ruth To The Yankees
ADVERTISEMENT
Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
The most famous lopsided trade in baseball history is also one of its oldest. Babe Ruth was a 2-way star as an Outfielder and a Pitcher, but Red Sox Owner Harry Frazee needed money to finance a theater production.
ADVERTISEMENT
He sold Ruth to the hated Yankees, which ended up paying off big for the team. Ruth led the Yanks to 4 World Series, and the Red Sox took 86 years to win their next one.
ADVERTISEMENT
1960 - Rocky Colavito To The Tigers
ADVERTISEMENT
Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
In 1959, outfielder Rocky Colavito hit four consecutive home runs in one game playing for the Cleveland Indians. The team decided to trade him for Harvey Kuenn the following year, and "The Colavito Curse" began. As a Tiger, Colavito smashed 159 home runs in four seasons.
ADVERTISEMENT
He was an All-Star for six seasons hit over 40 home runs for three seasons. On the other hand, the Indians sunk to the bottom half of the A.L. East and stayed there for a painful 30 seasons.
ADVERTISEMENT
1964 - Lou Brock To The Cardinals
ADVERTISEMENT
Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
In the early 1960s, Lou Brock was a promising right fielder who played for the Chicago Cubs. But after he only hit a .260 average over two seasons, they gave up on him. They traded Brock to the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for the National League player Ernie Broglio. Afterward, Broglio only managed 3.5 WAR and .689 OPS in four seasons.
ADVERTISEMENT
Four months after Brock joined the Cardinals, the team won the 1964 World Series. In 1974, he broke the record for the most stolen bases--118 in a single season. Throughout his 16 seasons with the Cardinals, Brock stole 888 bases with a .761 OPS and 41.6 WAR.
ADVERTISEMENT
1966 - Frank Robinson To The Orioles
ADVERTISEMENT
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
Despite many years of superstar production, the Reds thought Frank Robinson was getting long in the tooth. They traded the star to the Baltimore Orioles in 1966 for a package led by Milt Pappas. It turned out Robinson was far from done.
ADVERTISEMENT
Robinson continued to be a major star for the Orioles and Pappas never quite reached his supposed potential. The Outfielder became the leader for a Baltimore team that would capture the 1970 World Series.
ADVERTISEMENT
1971 - George Foster To The Reds
ADVERTISEMENT
Rich Pilling/MLB Photos via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
Left fielder George Foster was one of the best right-handed sluggers of his time, playing for the San Francisco Giants the same time as Willie Mays. Just as his third season with the Giants was starting, the team traded him to the Cincinnati Reds for shortstop Frank Duffy and pitcher Vern Geishert.
ADVERTISEMENT
As soon as he got to Cincinnati, their center fielder tore his Achilles and Foster joined the starting line-up. It took him some time for Foster to find his rhythm, but in 1976 he was hitting .343 and ended the season with 29 home runs and led the major league in RBIs at 121.
ADVERTISEMENT
1972 - Steve Carlton To The Phillies
ADVERTISEMENT
Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
Steve Carlton played for the St. Louis Cardinals in the late 1960s, including their 1967 World Series win. In 1971, Carlton was struggling with a salary dispute. The Cardinals traded Carlton for the Phillies' pitcher, Rick Wise. At the time, it made sense, but it's now considered one of the most lopsided trades in history.
ADVERTISEMENT
In his Phillies uniform, Carlton won four Cy Young Awards and ended up in the Baseball Hall of Fame. His pitching was so vicious that slugger Willie Stargell compared it to "trying to drink coffee with a fork." Wise, however, didn't stay with the Cardinals.
ADVERTISEMENT
1972 - Sparky Lyle To The Yankees
ADVERTISEMENT
Focus on Sport/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
The Boston Red Sox selected pitcher Sparky Lyle as a first-year draft pick in 1964, playing in the farm system. Once they called him up and made him a relief pitcher, Lyle saved 64 games over four years. In 1972, the Red Sox made the mistake of trading him to the Yankees.
ADVERTISEMENT
Pitching for the Yankees, Lyle established himself as one of the greatest relief pitchers of the '70s. He broke Hoyt Wilhelm's American League record of 154 career saves and claimed the Cy Young Award in 1977. The player they traded him for, Danny Carter, ended his career in 1976.
ADVERTISEMENT
1972 - Nolan Ryan To The Angels
ADVERTISEMENT
Bettmann/Contributor/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
The Mets of the late 60's and early 70's had a pitching staff that boasted tremendous talent including Nolan Ryan. The team figured they had enough pitching talent with Tom Seaver and Jon Matlack. Beside, Ryan could barely hit the broadside of a barn.
ADVERTISEMENT
Once he reached Los Angeles, though, Ryan began to harness his amazing stuff and became a superstar. He pitched for the Angels for eight seasons, made 5 All-Star games and recorded a boatload of strikeouts.
ADVERTISEMENT
1982 - Ryne Sandberg To The Cubs
ADVERTISEMENT
Tim DeFrisco/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
During the 1981 season, Philadelphia realized they had a raw prospect in Ryne Sandberg who didn't necessarily have a position. Wanting to acquire a more veteran player, the Phillies traded Sandberg to the Cubs for Ivan De Jesus.
ADVERTISEMENT
De Jesus was a decent fielding Shortstop with a light bat. Sandberg went over to Chicago, became a Second Baseman and an immediate superstar. Sandberg became a legendary player for the Cubs and was elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2005.
ADVERTISEMENT
1983 - Keith Hernandez To The Mets
ADVERTISEMENT
Al Pereira/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
Keith Hernandez was a star-level player who won an MVP Award and a World Series title in 1982 while in St. Louis. The First Baseman was traded to the Mets.
ADVERTISEMENT
In 1986, Hernandez captained the Mets to the World Series title. The best player St. Louis received in return, pitcher Neil Allen, had an unspectacular career and was gone from the Cardinals by 1985.
ADVERTISEMENT
1984 - Willie Hernandez To The Tigers
ADVERTISEMENT
Rich Pilling/MLB Photos via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT
In 1984, Willie Hernandez was an unremarkable relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies. The team traded him to the Detroit Tigers in exchange for Glenn Wilson and John Wockenfuss. In the Tigers uniform, Hernandez flourished.
ADVERTISEMENT
Hernandez helped the Tigers ascend to the 1984 world series. He won both Most Valuable Player and the American League Cy Young award that same year. Overall, he pitched 140.3 innings with 32 saves and 1.92 ERA. Meanwhile, the Phillies only managed 81-81 with 3.63 ERA from their players.
ADVERTISEMENT
1987 - John Smoltz To The B…
8,001 chars

Text scraped from the landing page for research purposes. © respective owners. This text is sourced from the advertiser's public landing page; for removal, contact dmca@luba.media.

Similar ads

Other creatives in Content Arb on Taboola

More from Brake For It

Brake For It native ad: Two And A Half Men: Charlie's Girlfriends, Ranked In Order · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola3417d
Two And A Half Men: Charlie's Girlfriends, Ranked In Order
Brake For It@brake

The Women Of ‘Two And A Half Men’ And Where They Are Now - Brake For It Classic…

+33 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: The Worst College Football Coaches Ever, Ranked In Order · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola3526d
The Worst College Football Coaches Ever, Ranked In Order
Brake For It@brake

These Are The Worst College Football Coaches Of All-Time - Brake For It Classic…

+34 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: 20 Unwritten Rules Of Major League Baseball · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola3428d
20 Unwritten Rules Of Major League Baseball
Brake For It@brake

40 Unwritten Rules Of Major League Baseball – These Are Almost Impossible To…

+33 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: Classic Cars That Are Pretty Much Worthless Today, Ranked In Order · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola3529dWordPress
Classic Cars That Are Pretty Much Worthless Today, Ranked In Order
Brake For It@brake

40 Classic Cars That Are Practically Worthless Today – See If You Own Any On…

+34 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: 17 Clothing Items That Make People Look Larger, Ranked In Order · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola2925dWordPress
17 Clothing Items That Make People Look Larger, Ranked In Order
Brake For It@brake

30 Clothing Items That Make People Look Larger – Avoid These Clothes At All…

+28 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: 21 Dog Breeds That Will Guard You With Their Life, Ranked In Order · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola3730dWordPress
21 Dog Breeds That Will Guard You With Their Life, Ranked In Order
Brake For It@brake

Here Are The Dog Breeds You Can Trust To Guard Your Home - Brake For It Classic…

+36 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: 23 Movies That Are So Good, They're Considered Perfect · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola2224dWordPress
23 Movies That Are So Good, They're Considered Perfect
Brake For It@brake

Movies That Are Considered To Be Almost Flawless - Brake For It Classic Modern…

+21 more
brakeforit.com
Visit
Brake For It native ad: 20 Odd Hells Angels Rules, Rule 10 Is Mandatory · Taboola
mediabuyer
Taboola3229dWordPress
20 Odd Hells Angels Rules, Rule 10 Is Mandatory
Brake For It@brake

Actual Requirements Hells Angels Have For Their Members (One Of Them Is Hard To…

+31 more
brakeforit.com
Visit