2:13pm: Yates is guaranteed $5MM, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post.
1:17pm: The Angels have agreed to a one-year contract with free agent reliever Kirby Yates, reports Ari Alexander of 7News. The right-hander’s agreement is still pending a physical. Yates is represented by the Beverly Hills Sports Council.
Yates gives the Angels yet another veteran reliever with some closing experience who’s in need of a rebound — in his case, ahead of what’ll be his age-39 season. The Halos will hope to finally get a full workload out of Robert Stephenson in the final season of his three-year, $33MM contract. They’ve also signed former Jays closer Jordan Romano and veteran reliever Drew Pomeranz to low-cost, one-year contracts this offseason as well.
If healthy — a major caveat, given the injury history in question here — Yates could be the best of the bunch. The two-time All-Star led the NL with 41 saves back in 2019 and has twice posted full seasons with an ERA shy of 1.20, including as recently as the 2024 season with Texas.
Since an age-30 breakout with the Padres, the late-blooming Yates has pitched 355 innings with a 2.84 earned run average, 97 saves, 65 holds and only 13 blown save opportunities. He’s fanned a whopping 35.1% of his opponents along the way (backed by a huge 15.7% swinging-strike rate) and walked 9.6% of the batters he’s faced. Coincidentally enough, the Angels were the team from which the Padres claimed Yates off waivers. They’d picked Yates up themselves via waivers the prior October. He pitched only one inning as an Angel and was tagged for two runs.
Yates now returns for a second stint with the Angels. The signing reunites him with veteran pitching coach Mike Maddux, who was Yates’ pitching coach with the ’24 Rangers. Yates saved 33 games and posted an immaculate 1.17 ERA with a 36% strikeout rate that season.
That performance was enough to land him a hearty $13MM guarantee on a one-year deal with the Dodgers. But while Yates landed the first World Series ring of his career, the marriage didn’t go particularly well. He was thrice placed on the injured list — twice for hamstring strains and once due to a lower back injury — and pitched only 41 1/3 innings. The veteran righty’s 5.23 earned run average was one of the worst marks of his career, and his 92.8 mph average four-seam velocity was his lowest since 2013. Yates still punched out an excellent 29.6% of his opponents, but he was doomed by home runs, yielding an average of 1.96 round-trippers per nine frames.
While Yates has typically been excellent when healthy, he’s had his share of injuries. He pitched only 4 1/3 innings in 2020 due to bone spurs in his elbow. He signed with the Blue Jays in free agency that offseason but never pitched an inning for Toronto. He required Tommy John surgery at the end of spring training. From 2020-22, Yates pitched only 11 1/3 innings in the majors.
The Angels will bet on Yates’ track record and hope for better help. Between Yates, Stephenson, Romano and Pomeranz, they certainly aren’t lacking talent at the back end of the bullpen — but there’s a clear lack of consistency and durability. They’ll hope to add flamethrower Ben Joyce to that mix at some point this season, though his timetable for a return from last May’s surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right shoulder remains murky.
It’s not entirely clear where the Yates signing takes the Angels’ payroll. RosterResource projected them for a payroll around $172MM this morning, but that was before the Angels and Anthony Rendon agreed to defer the payment of the final year and $38MM on his contract for a reported three to five seasons. Details surrounding that still-fresh arrangement have yet to surface in full, but it’s clear that the Angels are quite a bit south of the roughly $206MM payroll figure at which they ended the 2025 campaign.


Good for the Angels. A veteran reliever is good for any team! I like this pickup for the Halos.
Old vet relievers can actually be some of the worst money spent. Lot of near 8 figure salaries on overly used cars that good teams can roster/reload with younger options close to league minimum.
He’s reuniting with Maddux. Despite his high home run rate, his strike rate.And walk rate were very healthy. This has the potential to be good value deal
The two words in everything Angels article: “If healthy”.
Kirby would only consider joining if Rendon was gone
Source? I made it up
You called it.
Credible source!
It was a joke post, but someone called the angels signing Yates
That account belongs to Perry. He gave us a little sneak peek of his next signing. (I’m joking of course)
@orange2001. Yeah im guessing it’s a cheap deal. it was three guys instead of kenley. Heck I would’ve been fine with pressly
gold called the Yates signing 8 days ago
@gold. Yeah you did, I dont think that was on anyone’s bingo card. I guess the angels went with three relievers instead of kenley hoping they hit on one.
Could be a nice sleeper pick up.
Going from a championship in LA to baseball purgatory might end his career but at least he gets to be in the same location
Can’t really blame the guy. Since there wasn’t room on the Varsity squad may as well play for the JV team.
Work is work.
Perry is addicted to over the hill pitchers
Arte is only signing 1-yr deals….
Suzuki treatment
He was horrible this past season. I thought he retired?
Really like this for the Angels. Reunites with Maddux
I’m fine with it. He gets to complete the SoCal circuit.
@james. He was on the angels.
Crap that’s right I forgot before the Padres. Speaking of coming back to the Angels, they need Hud back in the booth.
@james. He’s still with the royals announcing. I saw him on foul territory a couple weeks ago. Probably not on good terms with the angels i think he got fired for the herb.
This makes me happy as a Padres fan. I can root for him again
He seems like a good guy. Apparently he was injured last season and fans didn’t know? Regardless, I hope he has a good year with the Angels.
The Yavapai connection continues.
Correcting a horrible wrong when the previous regime cut him loose in 2017.
Over/under on 4 million for the one year? Dodgers majorly overpaid, but they can afford anything with their 330 million/yr Charter Cable contract..
I’m guessing $5MM.
@Orange2001. 2.5 is my guess
5 it is. I wasn’t too far off, and that’s still not a lot for a one year relief arm, so its fine.
@kellin. So it was getting three pitchers instead of kenley. I guess it was fine if one hits. I have a feeling kenley will regress.
Wonder if that has any “relation” to how they got Moore two years in a row and he fell off a cliff that second season.
Thing is, Kenley has had 15 years of proven ability. Im only looking at his bref stats, but he had a really solid ERA+, and WHIP, but his FIP was a bit high, compared to previous years..
Does this indicate signs of falling off? I don’t really know. Is Yates the team’s new closer? I guess we’ll see. I don’t mind the extra arms, the team could always use them – but are any of the bullpen arms currently signed capable of really being a solid closer…
Such a great signing..
I’m just waiting for the Dodgers to sign Super Smash Bros Brawl Meta-Knight.
Not gonna get my hopes up on the bully, but a couple of nice moves so far. Now get a couple more, another starter like Gallen, a 3rd baseman that can stay healthy, and a cf who can play the field and hit just a little bit until Rada is ready. Oh and trade Soler for a lottery ticket arm even if the guy makes more than Soler.
Another Blue Jays legend.
So predictable for the Angels to go out and pay for the veterans no one else wants. But its a name people have heard! Never seen a team so adept at handcuffing themselves every single year.
A true gray beard.
Don’t let him near Romano. He’s toxicity bad.
Hello, Tatsuya Imai (and Yoan Moncada).