The Guardians are in agreement with right-hander Pedro Avila on a one-year, split contract, according to Daniel Alvarez-Montes of El Extrabase. The deal is a split contract, though the exact salary figures he’ll make in the majors and minors are not yet known.
Avila, 29 next month, was designated for assignment by the Guardians less than a year ago. He caught on with the Yakult Swallows of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball not long after that, and went on to make 15 appearances for the Swallows in Central League play. Avila posted the results of a back-end starter in those outings, with a 4.04 ERA in 82 1/3 innings of work. While he struck out just 17.8% of his opponents, he generated a solid 43.9% ground ball rate and held opponents to an 8.7% walk rate. None of those numbers jump off the page on their own, but an impressive ability to limit home runs and hard contact allowed Avila to post a 3.09 FIP with a 3.38 xFIP during his time overseas.
Now that he’s returning stateside, Avila will get the opportunity to establish himself at the big league level. The righty signed with the Nationals out of Venezuela as an amateur back in 2015, but came up primarily through the Padres’ system and made his big league debut in San Diego back in 2019. He spent most of his career with the Padres, but didn’t get a significant look at the big league level until 2023, when he pitched to a solid 3.22 ERA with a 3.67 FIP in 50 1/3 innings of work as a swing man for San Diego. A rough start to the 2024 campaign saw the Padres cut Avila loose, however, and he was acquired by the Guardians in the middle of April 2024 as part of a minor trade.
Upon arriving in Cleveland, Avila served as a solid long relief option. The right-hander soaked up 74 2/3 innings of work across just 50 appearances with a 23.0% strikeout rate against a 9.4% walk rate. All told, his work in Cleveland was good for a 3.25 ERA and 3.76 FIP, and both those figures landed a solid amount above league average. That seemed likely to make Avila an easy choice to keep in the fold for 2025, but the Guardians made the surprising call to cut him loose last winter. Perhaps that was in part due to the fact that Avila was out of options, and as a result would have to be exposed to waivers in order to option him to the minor leagues.
This split contract offers a potential avenue towards using Avila as an up-and-down player this year despite his lack of options. By guaranteeing the right-hander a salary above the minor league rate and a larger sum of money for time in the majors, the Guardians make Avila a somewhat less attractive possible waiver claim for rival clubs. That should make Avila more likely to clear waivers if passed through, while also making Avila less likely to elect free agency if he successfully clears waivers. That’s because the right-hander would have to leave his guaranteed money with the Guardians on the table in order to depart via minor league free agency, something the righty is unlikely to be inclined towards doing. In other words, the split nature of the contract affords Avila a 40-man roster spot and a more significant salary than he otherwise would have made in both the major and minor leagues, while for the Guardians it creates additional roster flexibility that should be valuable to a club with a deep bullpen that lacks many candidates to be optioned.

Shouldn’t have let him go in the first place
Naturally, because the bullpen was SO awful in his absence.
This guy was pretty good in 2024. What happened to him in 2025, was he injured or something?
He was pitching in Japan, at least partially in the minor leagues over there as his Japanese major league performance wasn’t that great.
Just makes it more puzzling as to why they would cut him loose in the first place and then re-sign him later. I could see if he was injured. It would make total sense, but I don’t see anything else being logical with his good performance in 2024.
I admittedly do not follow the Guardians very closely and had never heard of this guy before today. But it just seems odd to me.
They went with Kolby Allard in that role last year with great results. I guess desiring more flexibility but not feeling that AAA arms like Burns, Leftwich, Mace, etc are ready to fill that role successfully.
As MLBTR notes, in 2025 Avila put up a 4.04 ERA in the extremely low-offense Japan league. Not exactly an inspiring performance, but the split deal gives Cleveland a little more bullpen depth at minimal cost. A typical move for a thrifty franchise.
It was surprising at the time when he signed in NPB after being an effective reliever.
Glory be!
This guy saved their butts more than a few times in 2024. Glad he’s back.
Kolby Allard did a pretty solid job as their long guy last year, but Avila was asked to cover a lot of innings and usually managed to get the job done.
Padres legend Pedro Avila!
Dolan’s price range – cheap.
Baseball is a weird sport. A pitcher is successful in his job but doesn’t have options left? Cut him loose.
When you need fresh arms in your bullpen over the course of a long season, you have to make difficult decisions
Great. We have a 19 man bullpen, but no new hitters. Running it back with a historically bad offense is … a choice.
Season doesnt untill late march 2026. They will get some offense help thru trades. You have the patience of a 5 year old !
Guys like BaseballRadio don’t get if you have no bullpen, you’ve got nothing. You have an excellent pen, nothing can actually be made to look like something.
It was remarkable the team not only survived, but manage to thrive despite losing Clase to scandal and Walters and Enright to injury, but the front office knows we got through that by the skin of our teeth, making building back bullpen depth job #1.
It’s a heck of a lot easier having to score once late to win games than it is having to constantly rally back from three or four.
You’d think by now this team would have earned the benefit of the doubt from fans, but noooooo, the whining and complaining never stops.
Baseball is the ultimate test of ones intellectual prowess
It never ends because they refuse to spend. Coming from someone who has split life between Cleveland and Dallas, there are so many similarities between Indians and rangers…. Then the rangers spent and won the WS…since then it’s like they forgot what got them there
Cleveland on the other hand, dumpster dives and somehow manages to put a team on the field that somehow makes the playoffs, mostly becuase the division is garbage.
Now it’s admirable they consistenly get to the playoffs. I’ll admit that… However, it sucks knowing they will never get to the WS getting through teams that will score. Most teams that win in October have a good offense. Yes pitching is important but if you can’t score you can’t win.
Imagine how good this team could be if they just spent a fraction… Not saying they need to be the Dodgers or mets, but imagine if they spent the same as say Baltimore. If they once in their life went and bought a big bat.
Right now it’s Jose, Kwan and the nobody’s… And Kwan will be gone, becuase they won’t pay him either. I feel bad for Jose. Dude took a paycut, and what have they done to build around him – nothing
Hey you obviously have a crystal ball and can see the future. Can you reveal who ended up being worse than what we had last year between a full season of DeLauter, Fry, Valera, and Kayfus? How did Bazzana do? Brito? Did Manzardo top 27 HRs?