Veteran reliever Daniel Bard is ending his comeback bid and will retire, reports WEEI’s Rob Bradford. The 40-year-old Bard signed a minor league contract with the Mariners earlier this summer and had pitched well in a limited look with Seattle’s Triple-A affiliate in Tacoma, allowing two runs on six hits and a walk with nine punchouts in 5 2/3 innings.
Originally a first-round pick by the Red Sox back in 2006, Bard made his big league debut in 2009 and quickly became a star reliever in Boston. In his first three seasons, the righty pitched 197 innings of 2.88 ERA ball and piled up 79 holds and five saves. Along the way, he fanned nearly 27% of his opponents. That’d be a strong mark even in today’s game, but at the time, the league-average strikeout rate sat around 18% (compared to this year’s 21.9%). Bard ranked 21st among all relievers in strikeout rate over that three-year period and, despite not debuting until mid-May in ’09, tallied the third-most holds in MLB from ’09-’11.
In 2012, the Red Sox tried moving Bard into the rotation, hoping some of that single-inning dominance would carry over to lengthier stretches. It didn’t pan out. Bard made ten starts and was hit hard, yielding a 5.30 ERA in 54 1/3 innings and showing some alarming command troubles. The lanky right-hander walked more hitters (36) than he struck out (34) and plunked eight batters. He was moved back into the bullpen later in the season.
Bard’s command struggles had actually begun in September of 2011. They continued in 2012 during that shift to the rotation, and reached a tipping point the following season. Bard pitched just one major league inning in 2013, plus another 15 1/3 frames in the minors — during which he walked one-third of the batters he faced and threw 11 wild pitches. Bard would eventually learn that he’d also been pitching with an undiagnosed case of thoracic outlet syndrome — he underwent surgery in 2014 — and he’s also been candid throughout his career about his ongoing battle with anxiety.
A series of minor league deals with the Rangers, Cubs, Pirates, Cardinals and Mets didn’t pan out, and by 2017 Bard had opted to call it a career and move onto the next phase of his baseball journey. He took a job with the D-backs, serving as a player mentor/mental skills coach who worked with young players throughout the organization. Bard held that position for a couple years but found that with some time off, his velocity, command and desire to pitch all returned. He worked out for clubs ahead of the 2020 season, signed a minor league deal with the Rockies and embarked on one of the more improbable comebacks in recent memory.
Bard was heading into his age-35 season and hadn’t pitched in the majors for seven years when he went to camp with the Rockies. He wound up not only earning a spot on the roster in the shortened 2020 season — he was named National League Comeback Player of the Year. Bard pitched 24 2/3 innings with the Rockies that season and logged a 3.65 ERA with a 25.5% strikeout rate, 9.4% walk rate, six saves and two holds. His fastball, which had sat 93-94 in 2012-13 while he was unknowingly pitching with thoracic outlet syndrome, averaged a hearty 97.3 mph.
Bard had a tough 2021 season but was brilliant in 2022 when he saved 34 games and pitched to a 1.79 earned run average. The Rockies signed him to a two-year, $19MM extension that summer rather than ship him out when he would’ve been one of the most popular rental arms on the trade market. That contract didn’t work out, as Bard struggled again in 2023 and missed the 2024 season recovering from a pair of surgeries: one to repair a torn meniscus and another to repair a torn flexor tendon. He’d hoped to make one final run in the majors, but he’ll now wrap up one of the more interesting career arcs this generation of baseball has seen.
All told, Bard pitched in parts of five seasons with the Red Sox and four with the Rockies — plus minor league appearances with the Rangers, Cardinals and Mets. He pitched 457 1/3 big league innings, saved 66 games, tallied 91 holds and recorded a 3.74 ERA. Bard set down just over 24% of the hitters he faced on strikes over the course of his career, and he earned more than $31MM in salary, thanks largely to that late-career extension in Colorado.
Bard has already taken one non-playing job with the Diamondbacks. It stands to reason that plenty of clubs would welcome someone with Bard’s background to their organization, be it in a coaching role, a player development role or a baseball operations role — should he choose to again look for new opportunities to stay involved in the game.
Bard was doing well with the Mariners AAA. He shouldn’t have paused just yet.
He was striking out tons of guys in a hitter friendly AAA. Someone give him a call! The velocity is still there. One more year!
He did end his career on the 7 day IL in AAA so I can’t help but wonder if he has an injury that caused him to retire
This man is the definition of perseverance. Props to him for all the work he did to chase his dream!
Hats off to him. I remember when the Rockies called him up in 2020 seeing the announcement and thinking to myself SURELY this can’t be the same Daniel Bard from the Red Sox, right? Lo and behold he was. To come back and in 2022 show the league that same Daniel Bard was in there with an electric season out of the pen? Not many can do that.
Congrats on retirement, Daniel, and good luck in your second career!
Great career, and a guy whose experience should be valuable to whoever has him.
Bobby Valentine ruined Daniel Bard.
Overcame the yips and had an abnormal season in 2022. Never really had another good season after that, but what a journey for him. Good luck in retirement.
Daniel Bard’s come back in 2020 allowed him to make another $21,000,000, so he not only achieved his dream of returning to the MLB, but it was very profitable as well.
I remember watching him at Fenway 4 seats from the field by the on deck circle. That’s when he was setting up for Papelbon. The ball exploded out of his hand, and you could hear the seams even at that distance. It always made me so sad how things went for him. Happy trails DB
I vaguely remember when he came up with Boston and he seemed like he way going to be a menace in the AL East for a long time along with their other stud reliever, Jonathan Papelbon.
When the control issues got really bad and he went down to the minors it seemed like that would be the end of the story, Just a guy who looked really good and then lost it, never to be heard of again. It was really cool to see him come back with the Rockies. His 2022 season was definitely something really awesome to see.
Best of luck in retirement, it’s well deserved.
He was an outstanding reliever, but he decided that he wanted to be a starter because they get paid more (which is true). The Sox acquiesced and it was the beginning of a long, disastrous road for him. If he had stayed a reliever, who knows what kind of a career he would have had?
If he changes his mind in the off season, it will be A Winter’s Tale.
For now a Midsummers night dream
Alas, poor Daniel. I knew him well, Horatio.
To my knowledge, Bard was one of the few to overcome the dreaded “Steve Blass Disease”. His path back to Major League success is equal parts anomalous and amazing.
Looks like this Bard has played his last lullaby. Congrats on a solid career!
Good Luck Daniel!
All the world’s a stage!
Best of luck on the next journey. He had a nice career and lasted til 40.
I don’t think I have ever heard of a player coming back and making it back to The Show after being retired for so long. Good on Bard.
This is the guy who injured Jose Altuve in the WBC with totally reckless control during that whole appearance.
I hope the Red Sox find a way to sign him to a one day contract so he can retire as a Red Sox