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Rangers Sign Austin Gomber To Minor League Deal

By Nick Deeds | January 25, 2026 at 2:56pm CDT

The Rangers have signed left-hander Austin Gomber to a minor league deal, according to Aram Leighton of Just Baseball. Gomber’s deal includes an invite to MLB Spring Training next month.

Gomber, 32, was a fourth-round pick by the Cardinals back in 2014. He made his big league debut with the team in 2018 but was traded to the Rockies in the deal that sent Nolan Arenado to St. Louis and has spent most of his MLB career in Colorado at this point. At the time of the trade, Gomber had the look of a solid enough swing man who could potentially fit into a contending rotation. He posted a 3.72 ERA with a 3.89 FIP in his 104 innings of work for St. Louis, and at the time of his trade to Colorado the Rockies were surely hoping he could become a reliable #4 starter for the club alongside existing arms like German Marquez and Kyle Freeland.

The results of Gomber’s time in Colorado were mixed. His 4.53 ERA (good for a 106 ERA+) in 23 starts for the Rockies in his debut season with the club was perfectly solid, but he took a step back in 2022 and ’23 before creeping back up to roughly league average numbers in 2024. A big part of that step backwards was a drop in strikeout rate. Gomber punched out 23.2% of his opponents while walking 8.4% in 2021. Over his next three seasons, he’d manage to shave two points off that walk rate, lowering it to a tidy 6.3%, but that came at the expensive of a much greater dip in strikeouts. From 2022-24, Gomber struck out just 16.3% of his opponents, a nearly seven-point drop relative to 2021. Gomber’s ground ball rate also dipped from a strong 44.3% to a somewhat more pedestrian 40.5%.

While he’s struggled to live up to his solid 2021 season over the past few years, the wheels really came off in 2025. Gomber’s strikeout rate plummeted to just 12.5%, his ground ball rate dropped to 33.2%, and his barrel rate reached an untenable 14.5%. That left the southpaw to get shelled across 12 starts for the Rockies, and he surrendered a 7.49 ERA with a 6.50 FIP across his 57 2/3 innings of work. It was a disastrous display and led the Rockies to release Gomber back in August. He signed with the Cubs on a minor league deal for the stretch run and looked good at Triple-A Iowa for the club, posting an impressive 0.47 ERA in 19 innings of work across four outings (three starts).

That late season success in a new organization creates some reason for optimism, though Gomber was never going to land more than a minor league pact given the 2025 campaign he had at the big league level. That pact has now come in Texas, and Gomber should provide some much-needed rotation depth for a Rangers club in clear need of it even after trading for MacKenzie Gore. A rotation that could feature Gore, Jacob deGrom, Nathan Eovaldi, Jack Leiter, and Kumar Rocker looks incredible strong on paper, but Eovaldi and deGrom both come with substantial injury risk while Rocker has yet to prove himself as a capable MLB regular.

This spring, Gomber could compete with Rocker and swing man Jacob Latz for the fifth and final spot in the Rangers’ rotation. Gomber appears to be the least likely choice to emerge from that camp battle with a rotation spot, and other pitchers could be brought in who would further complicate matters. Even so, however, Gomber still appears fairly well positioned to enter the season with a real shot at breaking into the rotation, whether that comes by way of beating out other potential fifth starters or due to an injury creating an opening at some point during the season.

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Texas Rangers Transactions Austin Gomber

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Reds Sign Davis Daniel, Anthony Misiewicz To Minor League Deals

By Nick Deeds | January 25, 2026 at 12:19pm CDT

The Reds have signed right-hander Davis Daniel and southpaw Anthony Misiewicz to minor league deals, according to the transactions trackers on their respective MLB.com player pages.

Misiewicz, 31, is the more experienced of the two in the majors. An 18th-round pick by the Mariners back in 2015, Misiewicz was in the Seattle bullpen for the shortened 2020 season. The lefty turned in 21 solid appearances in that first season as a big leaguer, posting a 4.05 ERA with a 30.1% strikeout rate and a 3.04 FIP. That’s a solid start for a rookie, but over the next two years he was unable to turn those solid peripherals into better results. By the end of the 2022 campaign, Misiewicz had been shipped off to the Royals and posted a 4.52 ERA over the past two seasons despite a solid 3.88 FIP and a 22.4% strikeout rate.

In the years since 2022, Misiewicz has made only occasional MLB appearances. He bounced between the Diamondbacks, Tigers, Yankees, and Twins over the past three years, and in doing so compiled a 7.56 ERA across 16 2/3 innings of work with nearly as many walks (11) as strikeouts (14). Each of those years has been spent primarily in the minor leagues, however, and he’s fared much better there. While pitching at Triple-A St. Paul last season, Misiewicz posted a 3.82 ERA in 33 innings of work while punching out 23.8% of his opponents. There’s certainly reason to believe, given his past contributions in Seattle and more recent success at Triple-A, that Misiewicz could be a solid middle relief arm for the Reds this year. Sam Moll, Brock Burke, and Caleb Ferguson are all ahead of him on the depth chart when it comes to southpaws, but the season-long churn of a typical bullpen should still provide Misiewicz with opportunities to break into the majors with good enough performance.

As for Daniel, the Angels’ 7th-round pick back in 2019 made his debut with Anaheim back in 2023. Over his first two years in the majors, Daniel made nine appearances (six starts) and pitched to a 5.06 ERA with a 4.41 FIP in 42 2/3 innings of work. His 19.9% strikeout rate and 8.1% walk rate were nothing to write home about, but he did have the look of a potentially useful swing option during those seasons with the Halos. He was squeezed off the club’s roster last offseason and found himself traded to Atlanta, where he was leaned on for a couple of spot starts throughout 2025 amid a series of injuries to the team’s primary rotation options.

With the Braves, Daniel posted a 5.40 ERA and 5.04 FIP across ten innings. That’s mostly more of the same for the right-hander, and he figures to offer that same slightly below-average production as a non-roster depth option for the Reds headed into the 2026 campaign. Cincinnati has a deep rotation headlined by Hunter Greene and Andrew Abbott, but the idea of trading a pitcher has percolated throughout the team’s offseason. Brady Singer is the most frequently discussed name when it comes to trade candidates, and if the Reds did wind up moving Singer or another pitcher that would force the team to lean on youngsters like Rhett Lowder and Chase Petty in the rotation with little depth behind them. That’s where a player like Daniel could come in handy, helping to plug holes in the rotation as they come up throughout the year due to injuries.

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Cincinnati Reds Transactions Anthony Misiewicz Davis Daniel

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Blue Jays Sign Connor Seabold To Minor League Deal

By Nick Deeds | January 25, 2026 at 10:36am CDT

The Blue Jays have signed right-hander Connor Seabold to a minor league deal, according to the transactions tracker at MLB.com.

A third-round pick by the Phillies back in 2017, the 30-year-old Seabold made his big league debut back in 2021 and has collected 119 big league innings across parts of four seasons in the majors. Though he began his MLB career with two years in an up-and-down role with Boston, the majority of Seabold’s time in the majors came as a member of the Rockies in 2023. The righty served as a swingman for the Rockies that year, and while he managed 87 1/3 innings of work between 13 starts and 14 relief outings, Seabold’s numbers were far from impressive.

The righty struggled to a ghastly 7.52 ERA with Colorado. As if often the case when it comes to Rockies pitchers, that bloated ERA doesn’t tell the full story. An elevated .338 BABIP and a strand rate of just 60.3% indicate that Seabold had some poor fortune when it came to batted balls and sequencing, though that hardly excuses a 16.4% strikeout rate and a 10.1% barrel rate. Those underlying numbers suggest severe deficiencies in Seabold’s game even after accounting for bad luck, and that’s backed up by his 5.75 FIP and 5.03 SIERA that year.

Seabold didn’t appear in the majors in 2024, as he headed to the KBO to pitch for the Samsung Lions. He made 28 starts for the Lions and looked good doing it, with a 3.43 ERA in 160 innings. That allowed him to catch on with the Rays last year, and he appeared for seven appearances with Tampa and Atlanta. Unfortunately, this was more of the same for the right-hander. While he combined for a 4.35 ERA and 4.20 FIP this year, a 12.5% walk rate and a 15.6% barrel rate both suggested that he was fortunate to surrender so little damage. A lackluster 6.07 ERA at the Triple-A level between the Rays’ Durham affiliate and Atlanta’s Gwinnett affiliate only further underscores his struggles last year.

Of course, even with those flaws it still remains true that Seabold has only ever gotten a significant look at the big league level in the difficult pitching environment of Colorado. Perhaps he’ll find a way to earn a more significant role with the Jays this year, though he’s surely being signed purely as a depth option given their wide array of starting options. Dylan Cease was signed to lead the rotation at the outset of the offseason. He and Cody Ponce will join existing starters Kevin Gausman, Shane Bieber, Trey Yesavage, and Jose Berrios in the mix of starts entering the year, with Bowden Francis, Eric Lauer, and Yariel Rodriguez among the organization’s depth options. Top prospect Ricky Tiedemann could also break into the majors this year. Such a deep cache of starters could leave Seabold without a clear path to the majors this year without a large number of injuries or a move to the bullpen.

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Toronto Blue Jays Transactions Connor Seabold

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Guardians Agree To Extension With Jose Ramirez

By Mark Polishuk | January 24, 2026 at 11:05pm CDT

Longtime Guardians star Jose Ramirez has agreed to another extension with the team, keeping the star third baseman in Cleveland through his age-39 season in 2032.  The new deal (which will be official pending a physical) both restructures the three years and $69MM remaining on Ramirez’s previous contract, and adds $106MM in new money covering the 2029-32 seasons.  Ramirez is represented by Republik Sports.

The biggest new wrinkle in the extension is $70MM in deferred money.  Ramirez will earn $25MM in each of the seven seasons from 2026-32, but with $10MM in deferrals each year.  This means that the $69MM Ramirez was initially slated to earn from 2026-28 has now been bumped down to $45MM in upfront money, giving the Guardians some extra flexibility to perhaps make other short-term roster additions.  The new deal also includes increased incentive bonuses, such as $500K for an MVP award.

Assuming the extension is finalized, it should ensure that Ramirez remains in a Guards uniform throughout the entirety of his career, only further cementing his place as a Cleveland baseball legend.  Ramirez signed with the organization as an international free agent in 2009 at age 17, and has gone on to hit .279/.353/.504 with 285 home runs and 287 steals (out of 349 chances) over 6759 plate appearances.  Between his strong offense and impressive glovework at third base, Ramirez has amassed 57.6 bWAR over his career — the fifth-highest total of any player in Indians/Guardians history.

Ramirez turned 33 last September but doesn’t appear to be slowing down, as he hit .283/.360/.503 with 30 homers and a career-best 44 steals over 673 PA.  These big numbers and his leading role in the Guardians’ late-season surge to the AL Central title helped Ramirez earn a third-place finish in AL MVP voting.  While the MVP trophy continues to elude Ramirez, he has now recorded a second-place finish (in 2020), three thirds, and three other top-six placements during his outstanding career.

While Ramirez continues to deliver elite production, committing $106MM to a player (especially through his age 36-39 seasons) is no small matter for a lower-payroll team like the Guardians.  The new money included in Ramirez’s extension represents the third-highest guarantee Cleveland has ever given to a player, behind just Ramirez’s previous extension and their seven-year, $106.5MM extension with the since-traded Andres Gimenez in 2023.  That said, the $70MM worth of deferred money will lower the current-day price tag of the extension, and allow some extra payroll flexibility for the front office.

This is the third extension Ramirez has signed with Cleveland, as his first multi-year pact with the team was a five-year, $26MM deal covering the 2017-2021 seasons that included a pair of club options.  Obviously Ramirez vastly outperformed his paycheck in that deal, and after exercising their 2022 option to retain Ramirez, the Guardians and the third baseman worked out the second extension that saw five years and $124MM in new money added in April 2022.

It was known that the Guardians explored trade scenarios involving Ramirez prior to that 2022 extension, as it has long been the organization’s habit to trade star players before reaching free agency.  While not every deal of a star has worked out, the Guards have hit on enough of these trades to replenish their system with younger (and cheaper) talent while avoiding the higher price tags associated with players nearing the end of their arbitration control.

Ramirez is the exception to the rule.  The seven-time All-Star has been open about how much he enjoys playing in Cleveland, and he has backed up that stance by leaving tens of millions of dollars on the table to re-up with the Guards not once, but now twice.  Of course, it remains to be seen how productive Ramirez will still be by the end of the 2028 season, yet this added $106MM could be viewed as something of a thank-you to a star player for his years of service, as well an investment in the idea that Ramirez will continue delivering big numbers.

The timing of the extension is interesting, as there was seemingly no huge rush to tack more years onto a deal that already ran through 2028.  However, the Guards may have wanted to get something done in advance of the next collective bargaining agreement, as rumors persist that the league (as part of their overall desire to curb playing spending) may at least look into some kinds of restrictions against deferred money in contracts.  The Dodgers have most famously included deferrals in many of their high-priced deals in recent years, though Cleveland’s new pact with Ramirez is the latest example of how both big-market and small-market teams frequently use deferred money to complete contracts.

Z101 Digital’s Hector Gomez was the first to report about the agreement and described it as complete, though Jon Heyman of the New York Post added that Ramirez and the Guardians were still “working on” the agreement.  Gomez reported the $106MM in new money, Heyman added the detail about the $70MM in deferrals, and The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal had the year-to-year financial breakdown over the seven years.  ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported that the deal had been agreed upon, pending a physical.

Inset image courtesy of Matt Krohn – Imagn Images

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Cleveland Guardians Newsstand Transactions Jose Ramirez

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Mets To Sign Craig Kimbrel To Minor League Deal

By Charlie Wright | January 24, 2026 at 7:19pm CDT

The Mets are expected to sign reliever Craig Kimbrel to a minor league deal, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post. The agreement includes an invitation to MLB Spring Training. Kimbrel will earn a $2.5MM base salary if he makes the team, notes Will Sammon of The Athletic. The veteran right-hander is represented by SportsMeter.

Kimbrel returned to the Braves on a minor league deal last season, but only made one appearance with the team. He latched on with the Rangers for a bit before landing in Houston. Kimbrel turned back the clock with the Astros, posting a 2.25 ERA with a 34.8% strikeout rate over 11 innings. He went back on the market at the conclusion of the season.

The 2025 campaign was Kimbrel’s first without an MLB save in his illustrious 16-year career. It ended a streak of four straight seasons with 20+ saves, an impressive run for a reliever in his mid-30s. He ranks fifth on the all-time saves leaderboard. Kimbrel’s legendary career hit a snag in 2024, when he stumbled to a 5.33 ERA across 57 appearances in Baltimore. He coughed up the closer’s role midway through the year and was released before the season ended. Kimbrel didn’t draw much attention on the market heading into this past season, as he didn’t sign with the Braves until the final week of Spring Training.

If Kimbrel gets into a game with the Mets, they’ll be his 10th MLB club. He’s pitched for seven different teams since 2021. Kimbrel has relied on a fastball/curveball combo to put together one of the most decorated reliever careers this century. The nine-time All-Star has a stellar 2.29 SIERA and a massive 38.8% strikeout rate at the big-league level.

Kimbrel’s lengthy track record includes a handful of disastrous stretches after he entered his 30s. He came to the Cubs in 2019 and scuffled to a 6.53 ERA in 20 2/3 innings. He put up a 5.09 ERA in the second half of 2021 with the White Sox, who acquired him at the trade deadline from the cross-town rival Cubs. There was the aforementioned season with Baltimore, which led to mostly minor league work in 2025. Kimbrel has often recovered from these ruts, and he did show glimpses of his old self last year.

Kimbrel made an All-Star team as recently as 2023 with the Phillies. The 37-year-old has lost a few ticks on his fastball since then, but he still got whiffs at a near-30% clip last season. Free passes were the big issue with the Orioles, as Kimbrel struggled to a 13.4% walk rate. That number remained high (14.3%) in his brief stint with the Astros.

Given the landing spot, Kimbrel will have a tough time adding to his 440 career saves. New York brought in Devin Williams to serve as closer, then added Luke Weaver to be the primary setup man. A.J. Minter should be back at some point to operate as the left-handed setup option. It’ll be a difficult depth chart for Kimbrel to climb, even if he makes the team. Kenley Jansen and his 476 saves are probably safe at fourth on the leaderboard.

Photo courtesy of Nick Turchiaro, Imagn Images

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New York Mets Transactions Craig Kimbrel

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Padres Sign Samad Taylor To Minors Contract

By AJ Eustace | January 24, 2026 at 6:55pm CDT

The Padres have signed infielder Samad Taylor to a minor-league deal with an invitation to Spring Training, according to Chris Cotillo of MassLive. Taylor was designated for assignment by the Mariners last week and elected free agency prior to signing this new deal.

Taylor, 27, was a tenth-round draft pick by Cleveland in 2016 and spent 2016-22 in the minors with them and the Blue Jays. He reached the Triple-A level in 2022, batting .258/.337/.426 with a 104 wRC+ in 280 plate appearances. He showed solid on-base ability with a 10.0% walk rate and also showed off his speed by stealing 23 bases. He also cut his strikeout rate down to 22.1% after sitting at 29.4% in Double-A in 2021. In August 2022, he was traded to the Royals alongside right-hander Max Castillo as part of the deal sending Whit Merrifield to Toronto.

After starting 2023 at Triple-A, Taylor was called up by the Royals in mid-June for his big-league debut. In a 69-PA cup of coffee, he batted .200/.279/.267 with a wRC+ of just 50, although he maintained his strong walk rate (10.1%) and speed (eight stolen bases). That stands as his most significant big-league playing time to date. Taylor was traded to the Mariners for a player to be named later in January 2024, but made just five big-league plate appearances that year and just nine in 2025.

He performed decently at Triple-A from 2024-25. Although he was 9% below average by wRC+ in 2024, he got on base at a 35.2% clip and remained a threat on the basepaths with 50 stolen bases in 136 games. In 2025, he maintained his on-base ability and speed while upping his slugging percentage to .461 and cutting his strikeout rate to 18.7%. That brought his 2025 batting line up to .296/.378/.461, which was 14% better than average by wRC+.

Taylor has less than a year of big-league service time and is out of minor-league options. For the Padres, there’s no harm in keeping him in Triple-A as a depth piece. The club has Manny Machado, Xander Bogaerts, and Jake Cronenworth entrenched at three infield spots. Newcomer Sung Mun Song is slated for time around the infield and potentially the outfield, though he could start the year on the injured list following an oblique injury. An infielder by trade, Taylor spent 1,136 innings in the outfield in the minors from 2023-25 and profiles as a utility depth piece.

Photo courtesy of Stephen Brashear, Imagn Images

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San Diego Padres Transactions Samad Taylor

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Yankees Sign Dylan Coleman To Minors Contract

By Mark Polishuk | January 24, 2026 at 10:45am CDT

The Yankees signed right-hander Dylan Coleman to a minor league deal last week, according to Coleman’s MLB.com profile page.  It wasn’t specified if the contract included an invitation to New York’s Major League spring camp.

Sixty-eight of Coleman’s 93 2/3 career innings in the majors came as a member of the Royals bullpen in 2022, when the righty posted a 2.78 ERA, 24.6% strikeout rate, and 12.8% walk rate.  These promising numbers drastically went south in 2023, as Coleman has an 8.84 ERA and a walk rate that ballooned to 19.8%, almost eclipsing his 21.9K%.

Kansas City traded Coleman to the Astros during the 2023-24 offseason, and he tossed just a single MLB inning for Houston in 2024 before being released in August.  That remains Coleman’s most recent trip to the Show, as a minor league deal with the Orioles last offseason only led to more struggles.  Coleman posted a 4.91 ERA over 14 2/3 innings in Baltimore’s farm system with as many walks (14) as strikeouts, and the Orioles released him in May.

Since that time, Coleman has been overhauling his mechanics with the Feole Pitching training workshop, and as per a recent post from Feole’s Instagram account, Coleman has added a cutter and power sinker to his repertoire, and his fastball velocity is up to 100mph.  Coleman averaged over 98mph on his fastball when he debuted with the Royals in 2021, but that velo dropped to 95.2mph by the 2023 season.

Any team would be intrigued by triple digits on the radar gun, and there’s no risk for the Yankees in taking a first-hand look at the revamped Coleman, and also seeing what their own pitching development crew can add to his approach.  All of the stuff in the world won’t help a pitcher who can’t get the ball over the plate, of course, and it remains to be seen if Coleman’s fixes extend to his extreme control problems of the last few years.

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New York Yankees Transactions Dylan Coleman

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Blue Jays Sign CJ Stubbs To Minor League Contract

By Mark Polishuk | January 24, 2026 at 7:44am CDT

The Blue Jays have signed CJ Stubbs to a minor league deal, as per the catcher’s MLB.com profile page.  The contract apparently doesn’t contain an invitation to Toronto’s big league Spring Training camp, as Stubbs wasn’t included on the Jays’ list of spring invites released earlier this week.

A tenth-round pick for the Astros in the 2019 draft, Stubbs was cut loose by Houston in May 2024, and he then quickly inked a new minor league deal with the Nationals.  This stint in the Nats organization resulted in Stubbs’ first taste of Major League action, albeit a small one.  Stubbs’ MLB resume consists of a single game, as he went 0-for-3 while starting behind the plate in the Nationals’ 2-0 win over the Marlins on September 1.  Starter Andrew Alvarez was also making his big league debut, and Stubbs guided Alvarez (over five innings) and four Nats relievers to a two-hit shutout.

This noteworthy game didn’t result in any more playing time for Stubbs, and he elected minor league free agency after being outrighted off Washington’s 40-man roster in late October.  Alejandro Kirk and Tyler Heineman are locked into the Blue Jays’ catching duties, but Stubbs’ cup of coffee in the Show is still enough to make him the only other catcher in the organization with any MLB experience.  Depending on whether or not the Jays add any other catching help on a minors deal, Stubbs currently projects as the first call-up if Kirk or Heineman got injured.

The 29-year-old Stubbs doesn’t have a ton of experience even at Triple-A, as he has 45 games and 145 plate appearances over parts of three seasons with the Astros’ and Nationals’ top affiliates.  He has hit .222/.366/.453 with six homers over that small Triple-A sample, and Stubbs has a career minor league slash line of .206/.315/.396 over 1854 PA.  Stubbs has hit 72 homers in the minors and even stolen 52 bases (out of 20 attempts), but he has struck out in 648 of his 1854 PA.

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Toronto Blue Jays Transactions CJ Stubbs

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White Sox To Sign Seranthony Domínguez

By Darragh McDonald | January 23, 2026 at 11:59pm CDT

The White Sox and right-hander Seranthony Domínguez are in agreement on a two-year, $20MM deal, reports Jeff Passan of ESPN. Passan adds that the Epitome Sports Management is expected to be the closer for the Sox. Chicago has a full 40-man roster and will need a corresponding move to make this official.

Domínguez, 31, has mostly been an effective setup guy in his career. He debuted with the Phillies in 2018 and tossed 58 innings with a 2.95 earned run average. His 9.5% walk rate was a bit high but he struck out 32% of batters faced while inducing grounders on 55.7% of balls in play.

He missed most of the next three seasons due to injury, including a Tommy John surgery in 2020. Over the past four years, he has been back on track and his production has had a somewhat similar shape to his 2018 season. He has thrown at least 50 innings in each of those four campaigns. Put together, he tossed 222 1/3 innings for the Phillies, Orioles and Blue Jays with a combined ERA of 3.60, a 27% strikeout rate, 10.7% walk rate and 41.9% ground ball rate. He racked up 24 saves and 55 holds.

In 2025, he changed up his arsenal. He still featured a four-seamer and sinker in the upper 90s with a sweeper as one of his breaking balls, but he switched out his changeup and slider for a splitter and a curveball. That led to a career-high walk rate of 13.8% but his 30.3% strikeout rate was his best in a full season since his rookie debut. He became one of the top setup guys in Toronto’s bullpen, making 12 postseason appearances as part of that club’s run to the World Series. He had a 3.18 ERA in those, though with more walks than strikeouts.

It’s a bit of a volatile profile but the stuff is tantalizing and his results have mostly been good. Coming into the winter, there was a clear top tier of free agent closers which included Edwin Díaz, Devin Williams and Robert Suarez. Domínguez was in the next tier of solid setup guys, including Tyler Rogers, Luke Weaver, Brad Keller and others. MLBTR predicted Domínguez for a two-year deal worth $18MM and he has come in just a hair above that.

Domínguez was connected to clubs like the Red Sox and Twins in reported rumors but presumably had interest from other clubs as well. The White Sox are an interesting landing spot for him. The club is clearly in rebuild mode, having just finished their third straight 100-loss season. However, a few of their prospects had nice breakout seasons in 2025, including Colson Montgomery and Kyle Teel.

The Sox have responded with a somewhat active offseason. They bolstered their rotation by giving Anthony Kay $12MM over two years and Sean Newcomb $4.5MM on a one-year deal. Munetaka Murakami seemingly fell into their laps when no one else wanted to give him a long-term deal, so they signed him for $34MM over two years.

They did subtract Luis Robert Jr. this week, trading him to the Mets for Luisangel Acuña and pitching prospect Truman Pauley, but general manager Chris Getz said that the money saved from that deal would be reinvested in the team. Robert was set to make a $20MM salary this year, with a $2MM buyout on his $20MM option for 2027. Assuming the Domínguez deal is equally spread out across the two seasons, then he’ll be taking half of the money that was slated for Robert’s salary in 2026.

No one is likely to pick the White Sox to win the Central this year but the club is at least trying to make the roster more respectable, which is commendable. Perhaps there’s a scenario where things go especially well and they hover in the race for a few months. If not, all of their pickups have been for one or two years, keeping the long-term payroll wide open for whenever they do return to contention. Of the signees, anyone who plays well could be on the trade block this summer if the Sox are behind the pack.

For Domínguez, it’s possible he may have preferred a more surefire contender but landing in Chicago gives him a chance to close. As mentioned earlier, he has picked up a few saves in his career but has mostly been a setup guy. If he fares well in the ninth-inning job, perhaps that will help him land with a contender via trade and it could help his earning power when he returns to the open market two years from now.

He immediately becomes easily the most experienced arm in the bullpen. Newcomb, who will have a chance to earn a rotation job, is the only other pitcher on the roster with even three years of big league service time.

Last year, eight different pitchers recorded a save for the Sox. Jordan Leasure led the pack with seven, followed by Grant Taylor with six. Those two both have live arms but are still pretty inexperienced. They can work setup roles with Domínguez in the ninth. If the younger guys take a step forward or Domínguez ends up traded, then the roles could change over the course of a long season. It’s also possible the Sox make another move if Getz still has some powder dry.

With Domínguez now off the board, the relief market gets a bit more barren. Díaz, Suarez, Williams, Rogers, Weaver, Keller, Ryan Helsley, Emilio Pagán, Kyle Finnegan, Raisel Iglesias, Phil Maton, Pete Fairbanks, Kenley Jansen, Gregory Soto and others have all come off the board. The group of guys still available includes Danny Coulombe, Justin Wilson, Andrew Chafin, Evan Phillips, Scott Barlow and more.

Photo courtesy of Nick Turchiaro, Mitch Stringer, Imagn Images

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Chicago White Sox Newsstand Transactions Seranthony Dominguez

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Braves, Luke Williams Agree To Minor League Deal

By Anthony Franco | January 23, 2026 at 11:14pm CDT

The Braves reunited with utility player Luke Williams on a minor league contract, according to the MiLB.com transaction log. He had elected minor league free agency upon being outrighted off Atlanta’s roster at the end of the season.

Williams is back for what’d be his third full season with the organization. The Braves claimed him off waivers from the Dodgers halfway through the 2023 season. They shuttled him on and off the MLB roster over the next couple years. He has generally been the last man off the bench, working as a multi-positional substitute and their usual position player pitcher in mop-up spots.

A former third-round pick of the Phillies, Williams has played parts of five seasons in the majors. He got into 39 contests last year but was only penciled into the starting lineup four times. He batted .129 with a couple doubles in 31 at-bats. The righty-hitting Williams is now a .212/.270/.280 hitter over 349 MLB plate appearances. He owns a .255/.334/.400 slash over five years in Triple-A.

The Braves clearly appreciate Williams’ willingness to play any role off the bench. They signed Jorge Mateo to a $1MM deal to work as a backup infielder behind Mauricio Dubón while Ha-Seong Kim is on the injured list. Sean Murphy and Drake Baldwin will split the catching duties. Fifth outfielder Eli White is out of options. If the Braves don’t want to expose him to waivers, they’d have one bench spot available. Nacho Alvarez Jr. has the inside track as the only other backup position player on the 40-man roster.

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Atlanta Braves Transactions Luke Williams

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