The Blue Jays sent right-hander Joel Kuhnel outright to Triple-A Buffalo but he elected free agency instead, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. That indicates he cleared waivers after being designated for assignment last week. As a player with a previous career outright, he has the right to elect free agency instead of accepting another outright assignment and has exercised that right.
Kuhnel, 29, was only with the Blue Jays a short time and didn’t join the major league club. The righty was designated for assignment by the Astros at the end of April and then flipped to the Jays in early May for cash. The Jays kept Kuhnel on optional assignment for a few weeks, adding to their bullpen depth, before they acquired Ryan Burr and nudged Kuhnel off his roster spot. Kuhnel tossed 8 2/3 innings for Buffalo with a 1.04 earned run average during his brief time in the organization.
He will be able to market himself as a power arm, though one that generally gets more grounders than strikeouts. He has 85 2/3 innings of big league experience with a 6.30 ERA, with his fastball velocity averaging in the mid-90s. His 19% strikeout rate in that time is a few points below average but he has kept 52.2% of balls in play on the ground while also limiting walks to a 6.3% rate. Since the start of 2021, he’s also thrown 82 minor league innings with a 4.28 ERA, 15.7% strikeout rate and 6.5% walk rate while getting opponents to pound the ball into the ground about half the time.
The fact that Kuhnel cleared waivers suggests that no club was willing to give him a 40-man spot, but he should be able to land a minor league deal somewhere. If he eventually gets a roster spot again, he is in his final option year and will therefore have a bit of roster flexibility for the remainder of 2024. He will now head out to the open market and see what opportunities are available to him.
RussianFemboySportsFan!
:3
bestone
More cash wasted by this illustrious front office. Maybe need to sell a few more city connect jerseys to make up for the cash loss.
Instead of signing an impact bat last winter, this front office continues to court AAA players, and loses incremental cash.
terrymesmer
What cash, exactly? Kuhnel was in the minors and had 1.097 days of service time coming into the season.
bestone
Earlier, Kuhnel was acquired from the Astros for cash. I think Kevin was acquired years ago, and probably wouldn’t be released by the Rays.
Noah_YYZ
The cash considerations for Kuhnel mean absolutely nothing and this happens everywhere all the time
its_happening
Certainly does Noah. However, the Jays didn’t need to.