Jerar Encarnacion Clears Waivers, Elects Free Agency

TODAY: Encarnacion has cleared waivers and elected free agency, per Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle.

May 4: The Giants announced that outfielder Jerar Encarnacion has been designated for assignment and fellow outfielder Will Brennan has been optioned to Triple-A Sacramento. Those are the corresponding moves for the recalls of Bryce Eldridge and Jesús Rodríguez, moves that were reported yesterday. The Giants also recalled right-hander Trevor McDonald and placed left-hander Erik Miller on the 15-day injured list with a low back strain, retroactive to May 1st.

Encarnacion signed a minor league deal with the Giants in May of 2024. At that time, he had just come off a massive .366/.439/.989 showing in 26 Mexican League games. That’s a hitter-friendly league but that line was impressive regardless. He then put up a .352/.438/.616 showing in Triple-A and got added to the big league roster in August.

He has been on the 40-man ever since. Due to him being out of options, he has also been on the active roster that whole time, apart from IL stints. He spent a lot of 2025 on the IL, with stints due to a hand fracture, an oblique strain and a hamstring strain.

His numbers against major league hitting haven’t been nearly as impressive as his work in the minors or in Mexico. He has stepped to the plate 210 times as a Giant. His 3.3% walk rate and 27.1% strikeout rate in that time are both poor numbers. His .223/.248/.371 line in the sample leads to a wRC+ of 71, indicating he’s been 29% below league average overall. That includes a dismal .176/.200/.206 line here in 2026.

The San Francisco offense as a whole has been underwhelming. Encarnacion has been just a small part of that but he is the casualty for the club trying to shake things up. Since he’s out of options, he’s been bumped into DFA limbo, which can last as long as a week. The waiver process takes 48 hours, so the Giants could take five days to field trade interest, but they could also put him on waivers sooner than that.

Based on how much he’s been struggling, it seems fair to expect him to clear waivers. He has flashed talent in the past but not in the majors. Even the exciting numbers he put up in Mexico and in the minors are two years old at this point. He has a previous career outright and would therefore have the right to elect free agency if he is outrighted again in the coming days.

Turning to the pitching moves, it’s unclear how long Miller will need to be shelved, but the Giants lose one of their more interesting relievers. Miller walks too many batters but has high-90s velocity and can get guys out. His 35.4% strikeout rate and 56% ground ball rate this year are both huge, though he has given free passes to 12.5% of opponents. With Miller out, the Giants are down to Matt Gage and Ryan Borucki as their southpaw relievers.

McDonald is starting tonight’s game and it appears to be a spot start. The Giants had to play a doubleheader on Thursday, with Logan Webb and Adrian Houser starting the two contests. Then Robbie Ray, Landen Roupp and Tyler Mahle started the three subsequent games. No one in that quintet would be available on regular rest tonight. After McDonald starts tonight’s game, it’s possible he gets sent back down to the minors, with a fresh arm coming up to join the bullpen.

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Orioles Claim Christian Roa

The Orioles have claimed right-hander Christian Roa off waivers from the Twins and optioned him to Triple-A, according to Roch Kubatko of MASN Sports. With the transaction, Roa takes the 40-man roster spot of Lou Trivino, who was designated for assignment earlier in the day.

The Twins designated Roa for assignment on Wednesday to clear space on their 40-man roster for Yoendrys Gómez. He had been with the Astros prior to being claimed by Minnesota on April 23rd. As the Orioles have now done, the Twins optioned Roa to Triple-A immediately after claiming him, so his seven big league appearances in 2026 have all come with the Astros. Roa has a 5.19 ERA in 8 2/3 innings in those games, walking more hitters than he’s struck out and posting expected numbers that are even higher than his ERA. In total, Roa has only thrown 11 2/3 innings in the Majors between the Marlins and Astros from 2025-26.

He had some success in the minors last year. In 60 1/3 innings with the Marlins’ top affiliate, Roa had a 2.83 ERA. His 26.1% strikeout rate was solid, though he also walked 11.4% of hitters and gave up an unsustainably low .224 batting average in balls in play. In terms of stuff, Roa averages in the mid-90s on his four-seamer and sinker, while he uses an upper-80s slider about a third of the time. His age and limited big league track record make him a fringe reliever at this point, albeit one with decent velocity.

Roa has less than a year of service time and comes with two remaining option years. He can be brought up if the Orioles need a fresh arm and then sent back down without needing to be designated for assignment. Roa has been outrighted before, so if he is designated anyway and clears waivers, he would have the option to reject an outright assignment in favor of free agency.

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Phillies Claim Jackson Rutledge

The Phillies have claimed right-hander Jackson Rutledge off waivers from the Nationals, according to a team announcement. Rutledge has been optioned to Triple-A.

The Nationals designated Rutledge for assignment on Tuesday as part of a move to clear space for Max Kranick. In 2025, Rutledge threw 73 1/3 innings with a 5.77 ERA, a subpar 19.7% strikeout rate, and nearly two home runs allowed per nine innings. Under normal circumstances, he never would have lasted the year in the Majors, but the rebuilding Nationals could afford to give him reps. This year, Rutledge allowed seven earned runs on six hits in just 1 1/3 innings in his only appearance on April 13th. The club optioned him to Triple-A afterwards and kept him there until designating him for assignment.

Rutledge was a first-round pick by the Nationals in 2019 and has spent his entire career before today in their system. He has a 6.29 ERA in 103 big league innings from 2023-26. Rutledge’s recent minor league track record isn’t much to speak of either. He made 27 starts at Triple-A in 2024 but had a 6.40 ERA and a 13.7% walk rate. After spending most of last year in the Majors, Rutledge has a 3.38 ERA in 13 1/3 innings at Triple-A this year, albeit with middling peripherals including a mere 1.7% K-BB rate. He relies on his cutter as the primary fastball, also mixing in a splitter and sinker with pretty average velocity.

The Phillies are off to a middling 18-22 start, but their bullpen is a strong suit overall. The group’s 5.3 combined fWAR is tied for fifth in the Majors. Meanwhile, their 4.68 ERA is over a run higher than their 3.66 xERA, signaling positive regression in the future. Orion Kerkering and Chase Shugart both have ERAs under 2.00, while Jhoan Duran, Brad Keller, and José Alvarado remain a formidable back-end unit (ugly initial results from Alvarado notwithstanding). Rutledge obviously can’t compete with those arms, but there’s no harm in keeping him in Triple-A as a depth option. He has just over a year of service time and one option remaining, so he can be brought up and shuffled out if the club needs a fresh arm for a day.

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Dodgers Select Wyatt Mills, Transfer Edwin Diaz To 60-Day Injured List

The Dodgers are planning to select the contract of right-hander Wyatt Mills, according to Sonja Chen of MLB.com. Paul Gervase is being optioned to clear space on the active roster. Closer Edwin Diaz is being transferred to the 60-day injured list to make room on the 40-man roster, according to Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register.

More to come.

Angels Sign Rob Kaminsky To Minor League Deal

The Angels have signed lefty reliever Rob Kaminsky to a minor league contract, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today. The deal gives the Halos a no-risk depth option for their bullpen.

Kaminsky began his career in the Cardinals’ system. He was drafted by St. Louis in the first round back in 2013 and was traded to Cleveland two years later in a deal for Brandon Moss. Kaminsky worked his way up to Triple-A with Cleveland in 2019 before electing minor league free agency. He went back to the Cardinals on a non-roster pact during the pandemic season. Kaminsky appeared in five games in the Majors in 2020, allowing one earned run in 4 2/3 innings and recording three strikeouts. Those are his only big league appearances as of now.

Kaminsky spent 2021 in the Phillies’ system, then 2022-24 with the Mariners. He returned to the Cardinals’ system once more in 2025 but only threw four innings across two levels. Apart from that, Kaminsky also pitched in the independent American League in 2024-25 as well as the World Baseball Classic in 2023 and 2026. He doesn’t strike out many hitters, but he has posted groundball rates in the 50-60% range at most levels in the minors. Kaminsky has well-below-average velocity, running a 90.1 MPH four-seamer in 2024. Given that limitation, if Kaminsky eventually returns to the Majors, his ability to induce grounders will be the key to his success.

For the Angels, there is zero risk in bringing Kaminsky into the organization as a depth flier. The club’s bullpen is one of the worst in the Majors with a 5.42 combined ERA. Jordan Romano was the nominal closer before being released and signing with the Rockies on a minors pact. Among the remaining arms, Ryan Zeferjahn is arguably the most valuable. He has a 4.58 ERA in 19 2/3 innings, though his 2.14 xERA and 2.72 FIP suggest he’s due for positive regression. Brent Suter and Sam Bachman both have ERAs under 4.00, as well as groundball rates over 50%. Kaminsky fits into the latter mold as a groundball specialist. It wouldn’t be totally out of the blue to see him called up at some point by the rebuilding Angels.

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Orioles Designate Lou Trivino For Assignment, Recall Jose Espada

The Orioles have designated right-hander Lou Trivino for assignment, according to Roch Kubatko of MASN Sports. Right-hander Jose Espada is being recalled from Triple-A in a corresponding active roster move. With this news, the club’s 40-man roster is at 39 players.

Trivino had only signed a major league deal with Baltimore six days ago. He appeared in two games with radically different results. On May 4th against the Yankees, Trivino got lit up for six earned runs on four hits and three walks while recording just two outs. He was much better yesterday against the Athletics, striking out three hitters in 2 1/3 scoreless innings. Trivino’s designation suggests that the club was only looking for a short-term solution in the bullpen, or that they were not confident in his abilities after the May 4th blow-up. In any case, the move allows Baltimore to swap out Trivino for a fresh arm in Espada.

Trivino has well over seven years of service time and has been designated for assignment in the past. If he clears waivers, he is likely to reject an outright assignment in favor of free agency. That would continue Trivino’s journeyman pattern from 2025. He pitched for the Athletics and Yankees from 2018-22, but he did not appear in the Majors from 2023-24 while recovering from Tommy John surgery. Trivino split last year between the Giants, Dodgers, and Phillies, posting a decent 3.97 ERA with middling peripherals. The Phillies re-signed Trivino to a minor league pact in February, and he opted out on May 1. He had pitched well with the Phillies’ Triple-A affiliate, which led the Orioles to give Trivino a major league deal. If and when he clears waivers, Trivino figures to land another opportunity on a minors deal.

The Orioles’ bullpen has been a mixed bag this year. Their 4.56 ERA puts the group in the bottom ten in the Majors, although their 3.87 xERA paints a slightly more favorable picture. Rico Garcia and Yennier Cano both have ERAs below 1.50, while Grant Wolfram has a shiny 0.98 FIP and may be due for positive regression on his 4.85 ERA. The group is generally devoid of difference-makers, though, and the addition of Espada won’t change that. The 29-year-old has only thrown five innings in the Majors from 2023-26. In 12 2/3 innings at Triple-A in 2026, Espada has a 5.68 ERA and is walking more hitters than he’s striking out. He has two options remaining and can be sent down when the Orioles need a fresh arm.

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Yankees Reinstate Carlos Rodón From Injured List

The Yankees have announced that they have activated Carlos Rodón off the 15-day injured list. Right-hander Kervin Castro was optioned to Triple-A in a corresponding move. Rodón will start today’s game against the Brewers.

Rodón underwent surgery to remove loose bodies in his elbow in October and opened this season on the injured list to finish his recovery. He made his first rehab start near the end of April and was projected for two more before making his return to the Majors. That has now come to pass. Rodón built up to 6 1/3 innings in his most recent appearance with the Yankees’ Triple-A affiliate, so he is at more or less full strength. He now steps into New York’s rotation in a mid-rotation role behind Max Fried and Cam Schlittler.

The 2025 season was Rodón’s third with the Yankees. It was easily his best with the club, as he pitched to a 3.09 ERA over 195 1/3 innings with 203 strikeouts. Rodón also increased his groundball rate by about 10% and cut back on home runs, allowing just over one per nine innings after surrendering 31 homers the year before. Altogether, Rodón’s contributions were worth 3.2 fWAR and re-established his reputation among Yankees fans following injuries and underperformance in 2023-24.

Rodón won’t be expected to pitch at his 2025 levels right away, nor is that a grave need for the Yankees. Despite the absences of Rodón and Gerrit Cole, New York’s rotation has been the best in the league. The group’s 3.01 ERA leads the Majors, as does their combined 5.2 fWAR. Fried and Schlittler have both been excellent, with Schlittler’s 1.35 ERA leading the pack among qualified starters. Will Warren is striking out more hitters and issuing fewer walks than last year. Ryan Weathers has also done well as a complementary piece. It’s only a quarter of the way into the season, but those four are all performing as expected or within reasonable projections. The return of Rodón figures to make the group even stronger.

Former Rookie of the Year Luis Gil was recently optioned to Triple-A after struggling in four starts. He was later shut down with shoulder inflammation, so he won’t be returning any time soon. Paul Blackburn got a spot start in the meantime, though he will stick to his familiar long relief role going forward. The open rotation spot allows Rodón to step in without demoting another starter for now. Cole is still a few rehab starts from returning, so the next rotation move will probably come at that point, barring an injury.

Meanwhile, Castro is heading back to Triple-A after making an appearance on Friday in the series opener. In two innings, he allowed one earned run on two hits and struck out two hitters. Though unremarkable on its own, it was a personal milestone for Castro, as it marked his first appearance in the Majors since 2022 with the Cubs. He spent 2023 in the Tigers’ system but only made 10 appearances, and he missed all of 2024 while recovering from his second Tommy John surgery. Castro’s demotion returns the Yankees’ bullpen from nine players to eight. As for Castro himself, he’ll stick around at Triple-A and could get another call when needed.

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Mets Sign Xzavion Curry To Minor League Deal

The Mets have added right-hander Xzavion Curry on a minor league agreement, according to his MLB transaction tracker. The veteran appeared briefly with the Marlins last year. He opened this season with Tigres de Quintana Roo of the Mexican League.

Curry has pitched in parts of the past four seasons with the Guardians and Marlins. He joined the Rockies’ organization midway through 2025 on a minor league deal, but didn’t reach the majors. Curry stumbled to a 7.97 ERA over eight starts with Triple-A Albuquerque.

Cleveland took Curry in the seventh round of the 2019 draft out of Georgia Tech. The righty missed all of 2019 with injury, then didn’t pitch in 2020 with the minor league season getting canceled. He would finally make his pro debut in 2021. Curry made quick work of the lower levels of the minors and reached the big leagues by 2022. He struggled in two starts that year, but emerged as a reliable member of the bullpen the following season. Curry posted a 4.07 across 95 innings in a swingman role.

Miami nabbed Curry off waivers in August 2024. He pitched well in nine appearances (one start), allowing six earned runs over 18 innings. Curry didn’t break camp with the club last season, but was called up in late March. He gave up a couple of runs over three frames and was sent back to Jacksonville in early April.

Curry’s pitch mix has shifted over his time in the big leagues, but the consistent theme has been a wide arsenal. He’s primarily relied on a four-seamer and two breaking balls. The veteran has also shown a changeup, splitter, and the occasional sweeper. Curry has an underwhelming 8.7% swinging-strike rate for his career. He’s struck out just 15.5% of the big leaguers he’s faced. Curry’s 4.38 career ERA comes with an xFIP and SIERA above 5.00.

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Giants Place Logan Webb On 15-Day IL, Recall Trevor McDonald

Giants right-hander Logan Webb is heading to the injured list with right knee bursitis, the team announced. Fellow righty Trevor McDonald is coming back up to the big leagues. The Webb move is retroactive to May 6. San Francisco expects the ace to return when he’s first eligible, per Alex Pavlovic of NBC Sports.

The Padres pounded Webb for six earned runs over four innings in his most recent start. The two-time All-Star was forced to depart after the knee injury flared up. I’ve dealt with it for a little while, but it’s still no excuse,” Webb told reporters, including Henry Schulman of MLB.com. Webb will now get a couple of weeks to recover from the issue. 

Webb has been one of the more durable starters in the league since becoming a permanent member of the Giants’ rotation. He’s made at least 32 starts in each of the past four seasons. The righty has paced the National League in innings for three straight years. Webb’s last IL stint was back in 2021, when he missed time with shoulder and back injuries.

The volume has been there for Webb this year, but the production has been underwhelming, even before the rough showing against San Diego. He’s posted a 5.06 ERA across eight starts. Webb’s strikeout rate has ticked down to a below-average 20.2%. A 7.2% walk rate would be a solid outcome for a lot of pitchers, though it’s Webb’s worst mark since the shortened 2020 season. The veteran is still getting groundballs at a massive clip (58.5%). His xFIP and SIERA are right around 3.50, which suggests Webb has pitched better than his results.

McDonald was sent down after his lone start on Monday. He’s right back with the Giants after a few days at Triple-A. McDonald is lined up to make his next appearance against the Dodgers in a series that kicks off on Monday. San Francisco was off on Thursday, so Webb wasn’t scheduled to pitch again this week.

The 25-year-old McDonald has excelled in his brief big-league chances. He tossed three hitless innings in his 2024 debut. The righty delivered a 3.60 ERA over three appearances last season. In his two starts, he held the Dodgers to a run over six innings, then piled up 10 strikeouts against the Rockies. The strong close to the year wasn’t enough to earn McDonald a roster spot out of camp. A 6.94 ERA in Spring Training didn’t help matters. McDonald will now get a couple of starts to make his case to stay in the majors.

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Dodgers Claim Charlie Barnes

The Dodgers announced the claim of left-hander Charlie Barnes off the Cubs’ waiver wire.  Chicago designated Barnes for assignment earlier this week.  To create room on the 40-man roster, Los Angeles shifted Tommy Edman to the 60-day injured list.

Barnes had been up and down a couple of times with the Cubs. He’s made one big-league appearance this season, covering the final three innings of a blowout loss against the Phillies in early April. It marked his first MLB outing in five years.

The 30-year-old Barnes didn’t stick long after debuting with the Twins in 2021, but he put together several solid seasons in the Korea Baseball Organization. Barnes delivered 25+ starts of a low to mid-3.00s ERA in three consecutive seasons with the Lotte Giants from 2022 to 2024. The 2025 campaign didn’t go as smoothly, as Barnes made just eight starts. He posted a 5.32 ERA with his worst strikeout rate and highest walk rate during his time in the KBO.

Barnes showed a slightly different arsenal in his return to the majors. He was sinker-first during his stint with the Twins, followed by a changeup and slider. Barnes only threw a handful of four-seamers during his 38 innings in Minnesota. This time around, he led with the heater. Barnes’ fastball averages under 90 mph, but he used it more than 40% of the time in his outing against Philadelphia. He also mixed in the sinker/changeup/slider trio, while debuting a sweeper.

Edman is working his way back from offseason ankle surgery. He faced live pitching for the first time in early April, stepping into the box against teammate Blake Snell during a simulated game. Manager Dave Roberts has maintained that the club doesn’t expect Edman back until the end of May. The move to the 60-day IL doesn’t come as a surprise.

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