The Braves have reunited with old friend Charlie Morton. They signed him to a major league deal today. He had been designated for assignment by the Tigers but evidently cleared waivers and became a free agent. Atlanta optioned right-hander Jhancarlos Lara and designated righty Carson Ragsdale for assignment as corresponding moves. Manager Brian Snitker previously shared the news with Mark Bowman of MLB.com, Gabe Burns of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and David O’Brien of The Athletic. Bowman suggests it’s possible the club has brought Morton aboard to retire as a Brave. It’s undetermined whether he will pitch for the club in the remainder of the season.
Morton, 41, hasn’t said that he is retiring but it wouldn’t be a shock if that was his plan. He has flirted with the possibility for years now. “It could be this year, next year, but I’m not going to keep playing for a long time,” he said way back in April of 2018. “I can promise you that. I’m not going to keep playing four, five, six, seven more years.”
Of course, that was over seven years ago now. Since then, Morton has seemingly made a conscious choice to not overly commit to anything. He has repeatedly signed a series of short-term deals, apparently content to keep playing as long as he stayed effective.
After a so-so 2024 season in which he posted a 4.19 earned run average, he decided to give it another go in 2025. He signed a one-year, $15MM deal with the Orioles. “I remember walking off the field and just this like sinking feeling in my stomach — it just didn’t feel right,” Morton said shortly after signing with the O’s. “I’m sure a lot of guys toward the end of their careers, they think about retiring, shutting it down, and you really want to walk off the field the last time and feel good about it. And a lot of guys don’t get that opportunity. I just didn’t feel good about it. I felt like I could have done better. I felt like I still had the tools to be a good pitcher in the big leagues.”
Unfortunately, this season has been even more challenging than the last one. He posted a 10.89 ERA through five starts and got moved to the bullpen before the end of April. He posted some decent results working in relief and got his rotation spot back, then performed pretty well in the summer. He had a 3.88 ERA in 11 starts from late May to the trade deadline, which gave him enough value for the Orioles to trade him and some cash to the Tigers for minor league lefty Micah Ashman.
His first four starts with Detroit were fine, as he put up a 3.63 ERA in those, but things took a disastrous turn from there. He didn’t go more than four innings in any of his final four outings as a Tiger. He seemed to completely lose the zone, walking 19.7% of batters faced in those four games with a 12.75 ERA in that span. In his final outing as a Tiger, he didn’t make it out of the second inning and was booed off the field by a frustrated fan base as the club’s recent skid has become disastrous. The Tigers, desperately trying to avoid a situation where they miss the playoffs, cut him loose.
Atlanta doesn’t have any use for Morton in a competitive sense. Their season was a lost cause long ago and they are officially eliminated from making the playoffs this year. Bringing Morton aboard is a sentimental choice, one that allows him to finish the season with a club that he had a lot of success with.
Morton was originally drafted by Atlanta back in 2002 and debuted for them in 2008. From there, he bounced around, spending many years with the Pirates, Astros and Rays. He returned to Atlanta in 2021 and stayed there through 2024. In those four recent seasons with Atlanta, he made at least 30 starts in each one. Overall, he gave the club 686 1/3 innings with a 3.87 ERA.
As mentioned, it’s unclear if Morton is actually retiring or if he will take the mound in the final week of the season. But it seems possible that he is planning on heading towards the sunset. If that’s the case and he wants to climb the hill one last time, perhaps he can engineer a better final act than his most recent appearance as a Tiger.
Ragsdale, 27, was just claimed off waivers from the Orioles a few days ago. He was optioned to Triple-A Gwinnett and made one appearance for the Stripers. Since the trade deadline has long passed, he’ll be back on waivers in the coming days.
His minor league track record is still quite small, consisting of just one appearance for the O’s this year wherein he allowed eight earned runs in three innings. His minor league work also hasn’t been great this year, with a 5.22 ERA in 89 2/3 innings, but he was better a year ago. In 2024, he logged 120 2/3 innings on the farm with a 4.18 ERA, 29.1% strikeout rate and 11.3% walk rate.
He doesn’t have three years of big league service time nor a previous career outright. That means he does not have the right to reject outright assignments in favor of electing free agency. He also doesn’t have seven years of minor league experience, meaning he shouldn’t be eligible for minor league free agency at season’s end either.
Photos courtesy of Jim Rassol, Dale Zanine, Imagn Images


If this is it, hat tip to Ground Chuck. His 2nd act in the Majors truly was quite impressive.
I totally called it in the Morton was released article! HAHAHA!
Proud of you
I couldn’t have done it without your support.
They should let him take the field one more time as a Brave. Giving him 1 inning of work just so he can say goodbye at this point in the year for the Braves isn’t going to hurt.
Not many would pour out their heart to reporters like he did after that last Detroit game. Seems a solid person. Hope he does get in some good last throws.
Speaking of which, perhaps maybe consider thinking about possibly making that “last inning” a last out, unless Rick Kranitz can fix him in the next 10 minutes. That last inning was a tough watch.
morton was originally drafted by atlanta in 2002
some of you probly werent even born yet
I’m older than Morton. Hah
They probably weren’t born yet, but they’re still probably more mature than you, “chandlerbing”
I read that in Janice’s voice Steinbrenner
The Pirates getting him for McLouth was one deal the Pirates actually won
McLouth was coming off a 3.6 bWAR season, was an All-Star (fwiw) and GG winner, while even taking in MVP votes. Morton played quite a few seasons with PIT, but didn’t really breakout until HOU at 33 y/o. PHI really helped him. Gorkys Hernandez/Jeff Locke didn’t do anything, so I wouldn’t really say PIT won that trade based on obtaining a guy that matured greatly after getting out of Steel City.
Getting rid of McLouth when they did was addition by subtraction in itself. They added 3 players who combined made a fraction of what he would earn in 2010 and although Morton had a rough start in PIT it was slightly less bad then McLouth went on to be for far cheaper. 2011 those savings increased and the trade netted them far more positive value at a position that is more expensive to fill. The trade was easily a win for PIT.
Pirates won vast majority of their trades past 15 years. At least didn’t lose many.
AI GM, we found Nutting and Cherington’s burner.
What trades did they lose? Maybe Archer but that’s more Pirates coaching and injury that hurt that trade. He was a mid rotation starter when they got him. Paid too much. Fans will say Josh Bell thinking they should have got a great return for a very average dh. Or Taillon coming off 2nd tj surgery. Weak trades but were more about dumping salary and improving draft position.
AI GM: Then why do they suck as they do?
@Blue The manager lost the team and they brought him back and waited too long to fire him.
More importantly hitting development has been terrible until recently and just in minors.
The drafts that would be the foundation for the current team 2020 2021 2022 were weak.
They didn’t have any elite trade chips.
They traded for players they had little to no chance at developing.
They don’t spend $ on payroll.
Their marketing stinks so attendance doesn’t go up so they would have more $ to spend.
Their analytics department is awful.
Other than that they are great
Aramis Ramirez. Many felt Pittsburgh gave him to the cubs for nothing
Citizen1: Did you just seriously bring up a trade from 2003? That was 22 years ago. Think maybe it’s slightly past time to get over it?
I agree 100 percent on Ramirez!!!!!
Fans use hindsight and can find many trades that didn’t work out but weren’t bad. Musgrove was a fair trade. Endy didn’t work out. Had injuries. Head was a good talent. 3m signing bonus largest in history for 3rd round pick at time. Had arm bar. Bad idea for Pittsburgh to think they could fix it? Even worse they didn’t even try or he didn’t want to. Bad trade value though no. Malone solid mid rotation starter. Peguero solid everyday ss even above average. Didn’t work out but fair value for a old expensive ped good not great player. Malone got hurt and hurt and hurt. Contreras for some reason no one was able to figure out stopped throwing hard. Just bad luck. Bad player development. And they weren’t trading Scherzer Turner Schwarber Soto. Huntington between Bay and Archer was one of the best traders baseball has ever seen. Yeah that Ramirez trade was awful though.
AI GM: But again, it was 22 years ago. Why don’t you whine about the Ralph Kiner trade while you’re at it?
I agree. Shows how good the trades have been if you have to go back that long. And they can’t read either because I said last 15 years.
It would be interesting to see the demographics of this site.
Judging by most of the comments i’d say majority of folks here are under the age of 16
Or atleast act like it
You gotta be kidding me……
As a pirate fan never figured this one out. He was not good in Pittsburgh. He went to Houston and his velocity gained 3 MPH. With that said congrats on a long successful career. Class move on part of Braves
It’s easy to figure out. Pirates are one of the dumber teams so when pitchers go to a smarter team they do better. Cole Glasnow Priester Keller. Other teams have real coaches and analytics departments. Morton was child’s play easy to improve. Take this spider tack and throw 4 seamers.
Lights didn’t really come on in ATL, either. He credits his work with Bob McClure and asst PC Rick Kranitz in PHI (who is current ATL PC) for his transformation.
I wasn’t aware Keller was no longer a Pirate and found better success elsewhere. Maybe it’s his spirit pitching now for the Pirates. Wait a minute, PNC Park is the new Field of Dreams! If they build it, we will come! As for Morton and Cole, they showed flashes while in Pittsburgh. Ray Searage tried to make Cole a contact pitcher instead of blowing guys away. Once he left Pittsburgh, he was able to be himself and pitch. Morton, they did the same thing too. I didn’t agree with it then, but I am just a fan with no say in these decisions.
Glasnow and Priester have consistency issues even after leaving Pittsburgh. Glasnow has been injured more often than pitching. Priester started off well, but has come back down to his career average. Brewers is his 3rd team in 2 years and hasn’t taken off like you like to believe. One year with Brewers and he has a decent season, hardly suggests he has figured it out. Give Priester 2 more seasons before claiming he is a bonafide top or mid rotation arm. As for Glasnow, he spent 3-4 months on the injury list this season. Dodgers have a surplus of SP for a reason. Majority of their rotation ends up on the injured list. He is pitching ok, but hasn’t taken off either. Several healthy seasons, would clarify his legitimacy. Right now both guys have proven they are any better out of Pittsburgh.
Keller like Priester will instantly improve if traded to a team who knows what they are doing. Priester didn’t need to figure out anything. He was just as good now as he was with pirates talent wise. The Brewers just figured out how to use him. All Cherington had to do was take my analytics 101 course. After the first 1 hour class he would have been able to easily figure out Priester.
Glasnow has absolutely been better outside of PIT. Yeah, he has been inconsistent health-wise but the numbers speak for themselves:
ERA:
PIT: 5.79
LAD: 3.42
TBR: 3.20
WAR:
PIT: -1.7
LAD: 3.6
TBR: 8.7
He walked the world in PIT but drastically improved after leaving. There’s no real case that he hasn’t been any better outside of PIT.
I can’t take you seriously AI GM after stating Keller is elsewhere and not in Pittsburgh. Keller is fine in Pittsburgh and eats innings. He’s Top 15 in innings pitched. His ERA shows him no justice for being the anchor of this rotation. Better defense behind him, would lower that era .5 to 1 point from his current 4.22 era. They have Cruz in center and his UZR is one of the worst in the league. That defense alignment for the Pirates is a nightmare. Not a single starter has a winning record, including CY Young favorite Paul Skenes. The defense let down these pitchers like the offense has. Until there is an improvement, guys like Keller and Skenes will suffer.
@toptimrubies to be fair, Pirates gave up on Glasnow too quickly. He played 1.5 seasons in Pittsburgh before that dreadful trade. You can throw numbers out to attempt to back up your “insight” on Glasnow, but reality is, every pitcher has their ups and downs in their first 3-5 years. Keller was in the same position as Glasnow was in his earlier years. Priester was the same way for 2.5 years before he was traded. We seen glimpses of their talent, but it never clicked right away. Luis Ortiz is another who spent 3 years in Pittsburgh before starting to catch fire while in Pittsburgh. Once he got traded, wheels came off.
Again, a better defense alignment in Pittsburgh, would improve these pitchers overall performance. They lack the confidence behind them and try to strikeout every batter they face. If Skenes doesn’t have a TJ in a few years, I’d be surprised.
it’s not “insight,” they’re the actual stats. it is actually you who is adding “insight” to illustrate your already existing opinion.
It is straight facts without some wild numbers that people like you base these things as credible. It is proven fact that it takes 3 to 5 years for a pitcher to develop or flop at a serviceable starting pitcher. Very rare do you get a pitcher like Skenes or Strasberg that comes in immediately with success. It took guys like Kershaw, Verlander, Cole, or even Kerry Wood several years to become legit pitchers.
A side note, numbers don’t teach you baseball. Numbers are another watered down system that has disrupted careers and made plenty of “one year wonders”. Trusting in their abilities, trusting instincts, and learning players body languages, is what separated good, bad, and legendary players. Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, CY Young, Roberto Clemente, Willie Mays, Bob Gibson, Ty Law, and others in this great history of the game of baseball, didn’t need numbers or computer to be great. Something you people rely on, numbers. And that has watered down the game and people wonder why it’s normal for hitters to hit around .210 or starting pitchers tossing 5 innings now. Numbers are misleading and that is a fact
“it took Kershaw several years to become a legit pitcher” says it all about your credibility. good day to you, enjoy your cave.
baseball-reference.com/players/k/kershcl01.shtml
oh, wait I guess the stats lie…
Old dum dum. Get off my lawn numbers then gives you numbers lol. Can’t make this stuff up.
yeah, but at least he mentioned the immortal Ty Law.
Heck of a defensive back.
Charlie can walk off with his head held high playing for the team that drafted him. Good job, Charlie!
Great song
Hey, Alex Anthopoulos! (if you’re stalking the MLBTR comment section to see how we’d react to this predictable signing of yours!)
I thought I recall reading someone saying the Braves were going to swoop in on Morton. He should buy a lottery ticket. (Probably a better investment. Oh!)
Congrats on a long career, long distance cousin.
It’s good to know that no matter what, if you’re a pitcher, the braves are interested
How fitting going back to where it began for him. Congrats, Charlie.
Here’s a funny full circle moment too good baseball fans.
Sammy Sosa played full circle too. It’s easy to forget he was drafted by The Texas Rangers
More to come.
How much more to come?
Why the Tigers gave up on him, he could have been used in the bullpen!!!
Or Morton could have gone to the Mets and try to help the Mets find their mojo in the last full week
Oh well, whatever…… I liked him with the Orioles and appreciated him
He stunk at first and then turned it around,,,,,, I just could never figure out as to why he was so inconsistent
It was always pretty clear to me. If he couldn’t spin his curveball he’d have to attempt to nibble with the rest of his arsenal. He’d walk too many and then serve one up down the middle. His curve wasn’t working at all for the first 7-8 starts or whatever it was.
@ Lefty… Mets have been a lost cause for a while now. You could bring back Nolan Ryan with Tom Seaver and they’d still be circling the drain. October baseball is only for teams with a heart beat. No heart = no playoffs.
Inconsistent has been his middle name these last few years. The way he talked last year he didn’t seem to understand why he would lose his ability to locate for long stretches or what he was doing right when it returned.
Yay
He pitched well for the Braves, so they will let him go out with a good taste in his mouth. Maybe he can take some equipment down to Northport for them to have ready for Spring training and save them a few bucks.
There are 3 constants in life
Death
Taxes
Alex anthopoulos bringing back an old friend
Welcome back
A̶d̶a̶m̶ ̶D̶u̶v̶a̶l̶l̶
̶E̶d̶d̶i̶e̶ ̶R̶o̶s̶a̶r̶i̶o̶
̶J̶e̶s̶s̶e̶ ̶C̶h̶a̶v̶e̶z̶
Charlie Morton!
PLUNCLE CHUCK LIVES TO HIT ANOTHER BATTER!!!
Let him pitch the final game of the year and go as long as he can. Uncle Charlie is always gonna be a Brave.
After his last start against Atlanta, I predict that noogies will be applied when he shows up in the clubhouse.
Give “em Hell, Ground Chuck!
The Braves love them sum Charlie Morton. When they let him go after last year, it was a sure sign to the other teams that he was truly done.
Morton Chavez Estates…
A lovely retirement community..
North of Atlanta…
With plenty of room for
Brian 👩🦲 Snitker!!!
Ground Chuck gave the Braves some fantastic years.
A little Peaches and Herb for Charlie and AA:
🎶Reunited and it feels so good,
Reunited and it’s understood….🎶
If Morton starts, Jesse Chavez better throw out the first pitch.
In related news, the Atlanta braves sign Jesse Chavez.
I think the Astros should’ve picked him up so he could bang a trash can for a week.
I don’t want to work, I want to bang on the can all day…
Farewell start?
Drafted the same year as Khalil Green and Prince Fielder among many others. Jesse Orosco was still pitching and Julio Franco still had 5 years left.
Braves sign Glavine, Maddux and Smoltz!
Greg Maddux could probably still be effective. Watching Clayton Kershaw fool batters this season with his top shelf 88 mph fastball would indicate there is a place for a smart pitcher who can locate the ball.
I personally would love to watch it. Watch the clip of retired Maddux pranking Bryant on YouTube. It’s a few years old but showed he could still go in a pinch.
That would be pretty funny.
How did I know this was going to happen? Good Grief.
Me thinks this sounds familiar somehow.
Going to retire as a Brave? Why? He pitched 750 innings for them. I remember when 1 day contracts to retire a franchise legend used to be a cool event. This is dumb
You expected him to retire as a Pirate, maybe? He only pitched 40 more innings for them, and didn’t win a WS.
Why does he need to have a special retirement? He’s not a franchise icon for any team. Just go home
He was a fan favorite in Atlanta. That’s why.
It’s his career and prerogative. ATL, PIT, TB, HOU… all the same to me with whichever team he chooses.
He played a major role in sinking the Orioles’ 2025 season, but I still hope he gets one last start with the Braves and goes out on a high note.
Either way though, heck of a career.
Orioles were way overrated. The assumption that all those relatively young rookies would tear it up and all have career years. Morton was not the reason they didnt do well. How much do you expect from a 41 yr old dude? Verlander said the same thing. Show me the cash. That guy is 3-11.
I didn’t say it was exclusively his fault, I said that he was a major factor in sinking the season, because he clearly was. We went like 0-9 in games he pitched in to start the season, which contributed significantly to what proved to be an insurmountable 16-34 deficit through our first 50 games (57-49 since though).
And no one was expecting every young player to “have career years,” just like no one was expecting to have like a dozen guys on the IL by the end of April, including our #1 and #2 SPs, 3 or 4 everyday position players, our top setup guy, and several of our top backup options.
A very nice man, very fan friendly and a calm demeanor. It sounds as if it might be time to hang up the cleats. Thanks for your time with the Tampa Bay Rays. It was a pleasure to meet and chat with him, happy trails Chuck..
I think the Tigers will regret trading away LRP Micah Ashman. He’s got good SO:BB numbers as a LH pitcher.
What’s Adam LaRoche doing these days?
Thats a good one!
Classy move by Double A bringing Charlie back.
One that Pittsburg or Houston might have done except they have no class.
For 15 million he decided to take the money. Sure. Anyone would do that.