Right-hander José Ureña has cleared waivers and elected free agency, reports Dan Hayes of The Athletic. The righty had been designated for assignment by the Twins a few days ago when they recalled Mick Abel.
Ureña, 33, is a well-known commodity at this point in his career. He throws hard but doesn’t get a ton of strikeouts. He will keep the ball both in the strike zone and on the ground at a decent clip. The results won’t be astounding but he can take the ball and eat some innings. He hasn’t had a stint on the injured list longer than a couple of weeks since 2021.
A team usually grabs him when they need a fresh arm, either because they are facing a few injuries or a tough part of the schedule, but it’s rare for him to stick with one club for long. As a veteran with years of experience, he has the right to reject outright assignments and elect free agency, a right he is clearly willing to exercise. From the start of 2022 to the present, he has leaned into journeyman mode, pitching for the Brewers, Rockies, White Sox, Rangers, Mets, Blue Jays, Dodgers and Twins. Those last four clubs were all this year.
From 2019 to the present, he has logged 495 1/3 innings with a 5.09 earned run average. His 14.9% strikeout rate in that span is well below average but his 9.1% walk rate is right around par. His ground ball rate is down to 31.7% here in 2025 but he usually has that figure around 50%.
Teams won’t be super excited by Ureña but he should land somewhere. The fact that he cleared waivers likely suggests he’ll be limited to minor league offers. Teams always want depth, especially in this age of frequent pitching injuries. With the trade deadline having passed, it’s harder to find external additions.
Photo courtesy of Matt Krohn, Imagn Images
It would be interesting if the Braves signed him.
Never happening.
Why not? AA’s been dumpster diving since the offseason.
Urena famously hit Acuna early in their careers.
Welcome to the dodgers
He’s already been there once this season.
They sent his uniform the cleaners but it never came back.
Dude needs to change his delivery. Throws hard but with zero deception.
Teams will be excited, just not super excited.
Interesting to me that he’s never attempted a role in the pen as a single inning guy.
Even when he hasn’t started he always pitched in a bulk role.
Have to think that 100mph fastball could play up in 15-20 pitches per inning.
He’s running out of chances otherwise
i looked it up and do not have any context outside of what baseball reference has. It looks like for his career in relief he has not done well in anything 2 or under days of rest. If he is doing one inning at a time i would assume he would regularly be under 2 days of rest. Even at 3 days rest when he was slightly better he was at 5ERA and BA of around 3o0. Its not a lengthy history based on how long but 50+ games. Again no context other than stats.
He’s done.
I am available for depth. I was a catcher but I pitched one game in LL that we needed to win to make the playoffs. CG shutout. I was the only other one that could throw straight. Ahhhhhh….1978!