The Braves announced today that right-hander Ian Anderson has been sent outright to Triple-A Gwinnett. That indicates he passed through waivers unclaimed after being designated for assignment earlier this week.
Anderson came into the year out of options, due to a few factors. Though he found much success in 2020 and 2021, he struggled in 2022 and was optioned in August of that year. An oblique strain prevented him from returning late in the season. Going into 2023, he didn’t re-earn a big league job and was optioned before the start of the season. He then required Tommy John surgery in April, which put him out of action for an extended period of time. Since he underwent that surgery while in the minors, he burned through his final two options while recovering.
He came into camp this year looking to hold onto a roster spot, perhaps as a long reliever. Atlanta traded him to the Angels just before Opening Day, a one-for-one swap which sent José Suarez the other way. Both out-of-options pitchers struggled with their new clubs and were DFA’d after a few appearances. Atlanta passed Suarez through waivers unclaimed and also claimed Anderson back from the Angels. Now Anderson has cleared as well and will join Suarez in Gwinnett.
Although Anderson debuted way back in 2020, he has just over two years of major league service time. As mentioned, he has been in the minor leagues for the past two-plus years, spending most of that time recovering from his surgery. He wasn’t collecting any big league service during that stretch. That’s now notable because players need three years of service, or a previous career outright, in order to have the right to reject an outright assignment and elect free agency. Anderson is shy of that line and therefore has to accept this assignment.
Presumably, he and Atlanta will use this opportunity to get him stretched out and back on track. He’s a former third overall pick and top prospect with past success in the majors as well. Over 2020 and 2021, he logged 160 2/3 innings with a 3.25 earned run average. His 10% walk rate was a tad high but he punched out 24.5% of opponents and got grounders at a 49.9% clip. He also made four postseason starts in each of those seasons, with a 0.96 ERA in 2020 and a 1.59 ERA in 2021, helping the club win the World Series in the latter campaign.
As mentioned, it’s been tough sledding since then. He had an ERA of 5.00 in 2022, getting nudged to the minors. He has largely been derailed by injuries since. After recovering from his surgery, he made 15 minor league starts last year with a 3.44 ERA, 23.8% strikeout rate, 10.1% walk rate and 51.9% ground ball rate.
Atlanta currently has Reynaldo López and Spencer Strider on the injured list, with López potentially done for the year. Their current rotation consists of Chris Sale, Spencer Schwellenbach, Grant Holmes, Bryce Elder and AJ Smith-Shawver. Schwellenbach is the only guy in that group with an ERA below 4.26 at the moment. Hurston Waldrep and Dylan Dodd are on the 40-man roster but each has an ERA above 6.00 at Triple-A this year.
If Anderson could get in a groove and start to look like the version he showed a few years back, he could quickly jump back up the depth chart. Despite the twists and turns in his career, he’s still only 26 years old, turning 27 tomorrow.
Photo courtesy of Sam Navarro, Imagn Images
Welcome back, my friends, to the show that never ends…
Um…yours is no disgrace..
Um …my humps, my humps, my lovely lady humps!
I’ll take prog rock keyboardists for $500?
Are the braves the best pitching factory in a sense that they have a guy break out like every year to become a star only to fade away into obscurity within 2 seasons
He hasn’t been the same since going on the IL with aqua lung.
i’m not, but i feel old when the article says “way back in 2020”
First De La Soul, and now Jethro Tull? Tough musical day for the Braves.
Went from sitting on the park bench to waivers.
I guess they really don’t mind if he sits this one out.
eyeing little AAA batters with bad intent
And his flute as well?
If Spencer Strider injures his driving leg, does he become Spencer Stretch?
Man, I was WAY too late for the clever Jethro Tull references. Who knew that the Venn diagram of prog rock fans and fantasy baseball fans was a perfect circle?