The Cubs are among the teams with interest in Ryan Helsley, reports Patrick Mooney of The Athletic. Chicago joins the Tigers as known suitors, but it seems Helsley has heard from half the league. The Athletic’s Katie Woo writes that around 15 clubs have been in contact with the righty’s camp to express interest.
Detroit has pursued Helsley as a starting pitcher. That’s a surprise even in a league that has become more willing to gamble on reliever to starter conversions over the past couple years. Helsley has never started a game in the majors and has not been a full-time starting pitcher since the 2018 season divided between Double-A and Triple-A. It doesn’t seem that Helsley is demanding a rotation role. The 31-year-old told Woo that while he’s open to starting, he’s quite comfortable pitching at the end of games.
“I missed starting probably the first half of my career, but once I really started closing, I didn’t think about it as much,” Helsley said. “Learning a new pitch would be something I could pick up, obviously, but it’d be a learning curve throughout this first year to figure out how to be a major league starting pitcher.” Helsley said he “(knows what he’s) capable of as a reliever,” even as he expressed confidence that he could be a starter.
As he pointed out, he’d certainly need to expand his repertoire to start. Helsley has been almost exclusively fastball-slider against hitters of either handedness. He sporadically mixes in a curveball but has never thrown a changeup or cutter with regularity. He’d probably need to add one of those offerings to keep left-handed hitters off balance. Helsley has done a good job against lefties over the course of his career, but that’d be a lot more challenging if needs to navigate a lineup multiple times with lesser stuff than he can throw when he’s only working one inning.
The quality of the stuff is a big selling point for Helsley, who hit free agency coming off one of the worst stretches of his career. Opposing hitters tattooed him for a 7.20 earned run average while batting .301/.379/.554 in 95 plate appearances after a deadline trade from St. Louis to the Mets. The raw stuff was as impressive as ever. Helsley’s fastball sat in the 99-100 MPH range and his upper-80s slider remained an excellent pitch. The heater played well below its velocity, though, as opponents turned it around for four home runs and five doubles in the final two months of the season.
Helsley said he has identified a pitch-tipping issue with his hand positioning that explains why hitters were so comfortable against him down the stretch. Based on the seemingly robust interest, it appears teams agree he can at least get back to being an All-Star caliber reliever (if not expanding his role). From the start of 2022 through the time of the trade, Helsley pitched to a 2.03 ERA while striking out 32.9% of batters faced in 203 2/3 innings. He’s seventh in MLB with 103 saves over the past four seasons — despite not collecting any saves for a Mets team that already had Edwin Díaz in the ninth inning.
Mooney doesn’t specify whether the Cubs’ interest in Helsley is as a starter or in relief. The Cubs need help in both areas, though they’ve already brought in his former St. Louis teammate Phil Maton on a two-year deal. It’d make more sense for Chicago to pursue Helsley as a reliever and aim for an established rotation upgrade. Shota Imanaga is back after accepting a qualifying offer. He slots behind Cade Horton and alongside Matthew Boyd, Jameson Taillon and eventually Justin Steele in the rotation. Colin Rea and Javier Assad are in the mix at the back of the rotation or long relief. The Cubs need another starter, but they should be after someone who can pitch alongside Horton in the upper half of the rotation.
MLBTR predicted Helsley to receive a two-year, $24MM contract. Woo writes that he has discussed multi-year arrangements with more than one team, so it seems he’s on track to at least command two years.

I imagine most teams without a true closer have an interest, but I am guessing only one of the big market boys will sign him.
Not two?
Hopefully three so he can complain more.
Let him be depressed and whine about Bob Castellini’s cheapness while blaming big markets.
3-way time share. First 1/3 of season Yankees get him, Second 1/3 of season Dodgers get him, Final 1/3 of season Cubs get him. Let’s get creative!!
I’m sure that you’ll soon learn that the Blue Jays are one of the BIG market boys- they have an entire 49-million person fan base!!! They’re better than the Cubs, and have moved comfortably ahead of the Yankees !!
Au Contraire!!! Being a Mariners fan, I saw that Canadian team up close & personal…and just have to say George Springer is a very very bad man and should not have hit that 3-run HR when he did…very rude of him since we were the guests and everything.
I could get down with this (as a potential closer)
I agree.
By the way, Adbert Alzolay is slated to pitch in Venezuela next week as he gets ready to pitch for the Mets in 2026.
I think that Pitch Lab could help him out.. Lord knows, they sure helped, Pomeranzce, Thielbar and Keller last season.
I’ve never seen someone so lost. He should sign a one year Rand recoup.
Cubs use to hammer this guy on St Louis. Not impressed with his profile long term
Refreshing to hear it’s not Helsley’s idea to start Per se but Detroit wanting to make him one. This can be a guy to pair with Hodge and Palencia and to be there in case of bad things happening. It’s not a bad idea. Is he still an A-1 Closer anymore? IDK. Can’t hurt. He can’t be any worse than Pressley or Neris I would think.
As a starter, correct?
“This one belongs to the Big Markets”
Having picked Helsley to the Cubs in the FA prediction contest, I’m on board with this. Haha.
This would be a classic Scott Harris move. Always trying to catch lightning in a bottle. It doesn’t work.
It certainly can’t hurt, would prefer him to stay as a reliever though.
Would Palencia still Close?
If the Cubs signed Helsley (as a reliever) then I’d have to imagine the closer’s job would be his to lose, with Palencia next up should his struggles continue.
As frustrating as Hoyer’s bullpen philosophy can be, the Cubs are pretty good at finding undervalued relievers who step up. And Helsley’s time in NY shows how fickle relievers can be… Hoyer made a large offer to Scott last winter and dodged a bullet when he signed w LA.
Tipping pitches happens more often than you think. The good thing (and bad if opponents look at video) in this age is you can pick it up faster, and correct if it is you.
Also, agreed dude needs to stay a reliever.
Did we really believe that hoyer would be that aggressive pursuing a cease or any big name bat or pitcher this early? He’ll end up with 3rd 4th or 5th choice and more importantly at his price!
The Cubs need to get together with the White Sox on a trade for Luis Robert and Shane Smith.
White Sox should see what they can get for Smith and look at Brock Porter in the Rule 5 draft.
CUBS:
Miguel Amaya (C)
Jonathan Long (LF/3B)
Christian Hernandez (SS)
Jostin Florentino (P)
Nazier Mule (P)
–for–
SOX:
Luis Robert (CF)
Shane Smith (SP)
Edgar Quero (C)
Would be a great trade.