The whispers have been everywhere. In front offices. On talk radio. Across social media feeds that refresh by the minute. For weeks, Steven Kwan’s name has lived in the center of MLB’s rumor mill, attached to contenders searching for contact hitting, on-base reliability, and a player who seems built for October baseball. Now, according to multiple insiders, the Cleveland Guardians have made a firm internal call on Kwan — and it’s a decision that reaches far beyond trade value.
“This has been decided internally,” one league source said. “There’s no ongoing debate anymore.”
That sentence alone sent shockwaves through a fanbase conditioned to expect uncertainty. In an offseason defined by restraint, hesitation, and questions about urgency, clarity is rare in Cleveland. And yet, clarity is exactly what the Guardians believe they’ve reached regarding one of their most recognizable players.

Steven Kwan is not the loudest star in baseball. He doesn’t dominate headlines with exit velocity or contract drama. What he does is show up, get on base, control at-bats, and embody the style of baseball Cleveland has built its modern identity around. That’s precisely why his name has drawn interest from rival teams — and precisely why the Guardians’ decision carries so much weight.
According to insiders, Cleveland’s stance on Kwan is not rooted solely in analytics or contract projections. It’s philosophical. It’s about who the Guardians believe they are in an era where power-heavy lineups dominate the sport. “This isn’t just about what Steven gives you statistically,” one source explained. “It’s about what he represents.”
That perspective helps explain why trade conversations, while persistent externally, never truly advanced internally. Teams have called. They’ve asked. Some have dangled intriguing packages. But Cleveland, according to those familiar with the situation, never moved off its position. The front office views Kwan as a pillar, not a chip — a tone-setter in a lineup often criticized for lacking star power beyond JosĂ© RamĂrez.
And that’s where this decision becomes controversial.
Around the league, some executives privately question whether Cleveland can afford to treat anyone as untouchable. The Guardians’ offense has struggled to consistently support RamĂrez, and critics argue that moving a high-value asset like Kwan could have been a path toward acquiring the middle-of-the-order bat the team so clearly lacks. From that angle, standing firm looks less like conviction and more like stubbornness.
Fans are split — sharply.

For some, the idea of trading Kwan felt like crossing a line. He’s homegrown. He plays the game “the right way.” He represents continuity in a franchise that has seen too much churn. For others, the skepticism runs deep. They’ve seen “firm decisions” change before. They’ve watched Cleveland draw lines in the sand only to erase them when circumstances shift.
That’s why the phrase “firm call” is being dissected so intensely. Does it mean Kwan is truly off-limits? Or does it simply mean Cleveland isn’t ready — yet?
Insiders insist the current stance is genuine. The Guardians believe Kwan is central to how they want to compete, especially as younger hitters continue to develop. They see him as a stabilizing presence at the top of the order, someone who reduces pressure on the rest of the lineup rather than adding to it. In their view, removing Kwan would create a hole that no prospect package could immediately fill.
But baseball has a way of testing convictions.
The Guardians are entering a critical stretch as spring training approaches. Pressure is mounting on the front office to justify an offseason that many around the league have labeled underwhelming. Every quiet day amplifies scrutiny. Every rumor reignites doubt. And every decision — especially one involving a player as visible as Kwan — becomes symbolic.
One rival executive put it bluntly: “If you’re saying no on Steven Kwan, then you’re saying yes to a very specific vision. And now you have to prove that vision works.”
That’s the risk Cleveland is taking.

By drawing a line now, the Guardians are telling their players, their fans, and the league that identity matters as much as upside. That contact, discipline, and approach are not placeholders until something flashier comes along — they are the plan.
Whether that plan is enough remains the unanswered question.
For now, the rumors have cooled. The calls have slowed. Steven Kwan remains a Guardian. But in a league where situations evolve quickly and certainty rarely lasts, even a “firm call” feels provisional.
Cleveland says it knows who it is. The season ahead will decide whether that belief was strength — or simply another pause before the next twist.