The Colorado Rockies look to be ready to make a deadline splash, and they may have eyes on a major upgrade behind the plate.

Colorado has reportedly shown interest in Texas Rangers catcher Jonathan Lucroy, according to T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com.

No deal is imminent and it's not known if the two teams have had any trade discussions, per Sullivan.

Lucroy is one of several veterans Texas is reportedly willing to discuss moving ahead of the July 31 trade deadline. The possibility of the team dealing some of its veterans is growing by the day. Texas entered play Tuesday 3 1/2 games back of the final American League playoff spot, just a season removed from winning a second consecutive AL West title.

The 31-year-old Lucroy is in his first full season with the Rangers and is currently mired in the worst year of his big-league career. He's hitting just .240/.293/.339 with four homers and has only contributed 0.2 wins above replacement in 74 games. In addition, his renowned pitch-framing skills behind the plate have noticeably declined.

Still, Lucroy's subpar season would actually represent a major upgrade for the Rockies, who could use a boost at catcher as they try to keep pace in the NL West. As a unit this year, the Rockies' backstops have been the club's Achilles' heel, combining for a wRC+ of just 45 - the lowest mark in the majors - as well as a .628 OPS, .271 wOBA, and minus-0.5 WAR.

Tony Wolters, the club's everyday catcher, has hit zero home runs in 217 plate appearances this year. All told, Rockies catchers have blasted only three long balls in 2017 despite playing in the hitter-friendly environment of Coors Field.

Lucroy is earning $5.25-million this season and will become a free agent in the winter. His limited no-trade clause allows him to block deals to eight clubs, but the Rockies were not on his no-trade list during the 2016 season, according to Cot's Baseball Contracts.

Colorado has also reportedly shown interest in two other veteran backstops in the Tigers' Alex Avila, and Atlanta's Kurt Suzuki, per MLB.com's Thomas Harding.