Mariners general manager Justin Hollander publicly admitted a few weeks back that the club would be looking for bullpen upgrades. Adam Jude of The Seattle Times reports that Seattle plans to add two relievers and hopes to have one locked down by the end of the Winter Meetings next week. Adding a lefty is a priority and Jude lists five names they are considering, with four of them being southpaws. They are Matt Strahm of the Phillies, JoJo Romero of the Cardinals, Jose A. Ferrer of the Nationals, as well as free agents Tyler Rogers and Hoby Milner. Rogers is the lone right-hander in that group. Jude also mentions that the Mariners had interest in right-hander Phil Maton before he signed with the Cubs.
Seattle had a decent bullpen group in 2025. Their relievers had a collective 3.72 earned run average, which was ninth in the majors. Andrés Muñoz is one of the better closers in the game. But just about any club can add an extra leverage arm or two and bump other guys down a peg. That’s particularly true for the Mariners from the left side, as Gabe Speier is their only established southpaw reliever at the moment. Robinson Ortiz is the other lefty reliever on the 40-man but he hasn’t yet made his major league debut.
It’s unlikely that the club will spend a lot on the relief group. President of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto suggested that the M’s will likely begin 2026 with a similar payroll to where they were at the end of 2025. RosterResource estimates that they are currently about $15MM shy of that target. They already re-signed Josh Naylor but could look to further bolster the infield by re-signing Jorge Polanco or Eugenio Suárez. Jude unsurprisingly suggests the M’s aren’t likely to go after a big name reliever like Edwin Díaz or Robert Suarez.
Strahm, 34, is the most established of the bunch. He now has ten big league seasons under his belt. Though he has pushed into his mid-30s, he has remained effective. He just tossed 62 1/3 innings for the Phils this year, allowing 2.74 earned runs per nine. His 7.8% walk rate was a bit better than average and his 27.3% strikeout rate was quite strong. He triggered a vesting option in his contract and will make $7.5MM next year.
All that makes him attractive for the Mariners but also valuable for the Phillies. It’s possible the Phils may be willing to move a lefty due to a relative surplus. They have reportedly received some trade interest since they have Strahm, José Alvarado and Tanner Banks. The Phils have a lot they want to accomplish this winter, including re-signing Kyle Schwarber and J.T. Realmuto while also remaking their outfield and perhaps bolstering the rotation. They have some money to spend but perhaps trading one of their lefties could leave them less reliant on spending their cash.
Romero, 29, is a much more straightforward trade candidate. The Cardinals are rebuilding and he is just one year away from free agency. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projects him for a salary of $4.4MM next year. Over the past three years, he has tossed 156 2/3 innings for the Cards with a 2.93 ERA, 22.9% strikeout rate, 8.5% walk rate and 53.3% ground ball rate.
Ferrer, 26 in March, is also on a rebuilding club. However, he’s under club control for four more years and hasn’t yet qualified for arbitration, so the Nats don’t really need to trade him anytime soon. They are surely hoping to return to contention within his window of control but they may be open to a trade anyway, given that a pitcher can get hurt at any time and reliever performance tends to be volatile.
In Ferrer’s career, he has an unimpressive 4.36 ERA but that might mask his true skills. He is a ground ball guy and the Nats have been one of the worst defensive clubs in recent years, so perhaps a change of scenery would help him unlock a new gear in terms of run prevention. In 76 1/3 innings for the Nats this year, his 21.9% strikeout rate was just shy of league average. His 4.9% walk rate and 62.6% ground ball rate were both excellent. His 4.48 ERA doesn’t look great but his 3.03 FIP and 2.85 SIERA provide more optimism about him thriving in a different environment.
Milner, 35 in January, has a somewhat similar grounder-heavy profile to Ferrer. He has logged at least 64 innings in four straight seasons now. Over that 2022-25 span, he has thrown 264 frames with a 3.55 ERA, 22.6% strikeout rate, 5.8% walk rate and 51.1% ground ball rate. Despite the solid track record, he was only able to secure a one-year, $2.5MM deal from Texas last winter. Perhaps he’ll have some extra earning power after finishing another solid season but he’s also a year older.
Rogers, 35 this month, is one of the most unique pitchers in the game. Not to be confused with his lefty brother Taylor, Tyler is the submarining righty. He doesn’t rack up strikeouts but he is one of the best in the game when it comes to staying healthy, avoiding walks and inducing grounders as well as soft contact. He has logged at least 70 innings in five straight campaigns. Dating back to the start of 2021, he has 378 1/3 innings with a 2.71 ERA, 17% strikeout rate, 4.4% walk rate, 56.3% ground ball rate and consistently strong numbers in terms of exit velocity allowed. He is a free agent for the first time and should be in high demand but some teams may be scared off by his age and lack of velocity, as he can barely even get into the 80s with his fastballs.
Photo courtesy of Jayne Kamin, Oncea-Imagn Images

I can’t really foresee the Phillies trading Strahm, but the Mariners are one of the few clubs that could force their hand with Harry Ford.
Ford’s a tough asset to price–all that club control and an awful lot of uncertainty. Certainly, he’s worth more than Strahm. The Phillies, for their part, would still need to re-sign JTR with Ford initially serving in a backup or minors role. They can’t pin their 2026 hopes on an unproven catcher–but Ford would (hopefully) solve a long-term issue for the club.
If the Phillies were to deal multiple relievers and maybe another prospect, then Ford might be the piece going back. But Philidaphia would have to some a lot of Seattle’s needs in order to get Ford.
Ford is a back up catcher in Seattle. He may not be catcher anywhere longterm. He really is more setup to okay CF. I would love him in Philly but as a CF,not catcher
@Joe S – Ford couldn’t cut it as a LF in AA in 2024 (three errors in eight games), tough to picture him as a CF in MLB.
This is an out-of-date take on his defense. He’s considered league-average or better overall with a premium arm. He’s also shown considerable year-over-year growth and is considered the sort of motivated, insightful player who should continue to improve.
I doubt Ford playing LF was anything more than Arkansas trying to keep his bat in the lineup while evaluating other catchers.
How is his take out of date? Ford didn’t play the outfield last year and played a whopping 8 games in left in 2024.
Having an arm is one thing, but there’s a lot more to fielding than just throwing, and though having a strong arm isn’t a necessity for center, CF is harder than than the corners.
He’s a catcher. If a team (Seattle included) wants to convert him, he’ll need a lot more minor-league seasoning. Nobody’s likely going to stick him in the OF with an 8-game sample.
Rockies might, because they’re the Rockies, but they have literally nothing the Mariners want or need.
Surprising since he couldn’t play left field at.
The easiest answer there is Bohm–Stott feels like a bridge too far in a deal that also involves Strahm. But, would the Mariners feel comfortable getting one year of two players for Ford? I imagine they’d want a longer answer, such as when the Phillies and Angels flipped Marsh and O’Hoppe.
It seems everyone has tied Bohm to Seattle for quite some time now, but with last offseason’s reported (and, for the record, BONKERS absurd) ask of Gilbert/Kirby in return, I can’t see them coming anywhere close to lining up on a trade involving Bohm.
Bohm wouldn’t be a bad get, but he’s definitely not worth a top prospect. Maybe a couple of lower tier prospects, at best.
I think Bohm can fetch a top 30 or a player who’s on the roster. Not Gilbert/Kirby
I rarely make definitive statements, but I think it’s fairly safe to say that there is a 99.9% chance Seattle would dismiss that suggestion without blinking.
The package would have to blow the doors off.
Seattle? They’re not giving up Ford for 1 year of control of a reliever..
Ah, you meant Philly. Yeah, I agree.
JoJo Romero would cost maybe a 10-20 prospect in the Seattle system.
Ford was as high as #4 on the M’s Farm, as they have 9 prospects in the Top 100.
He was their #1 prospect in 2023 via Pipeline.
Tai Peete for Jojo?
Cardinals say yes.
Tai Peete is the one name every Mariner fan is suggesting as a trade chip.
He has no value. He’s had two terrible seasons at the plate and he’s still in the lower-minors.
Brad Johnson—
Isn’t Strahm a Free agent and thus not Philadelphia’s “property:” to trade?
I’m hoping Giants sign him giving them two quality lefties in the pen (Strahm & Hentges) and allowing SF to trade Erik Miller.
Strahm is not a free agent.
Mariners would be morons to trade Ford, even with Cal being an MVP threat ahead of him, and it’s especially moronic to just trade him for a reliever. Cal is pushing 30 and has basically caught ~80% of Mariners games since 2022. His defensive peak was 2024 and I’m taking a hard stance that his peak as a hitter just happened. He’s going to plateau, at best, for the next couple of seasons before declining in some form or another, assuming he doesn’t break down from the wear and tear of being the everyday catcher. Ford has very high upside, probably the highest upside of any #2 C in baseball. I foresee him gradually working his way into more playing time as Cal ages out of the position. Teams can carry two good catchers.
If there was a glaring hole in the outfield or rotation, I wouldn’t have a problem trading Ford. But that isn’t the case.
The glaring needs are DH and leverage reliever(s), neither of which should cost Ford.
Maybe if they can pry a very good full time 3B from someone, I’d be open to them trading Ford. It’s just not at all likely to happen because the teams who have good 3Bs are positioned to at least try winning baseball games next year.
If you somehow magically get the other team to listen for like the best DH’s in the game. Then maybe.
Wow Jarred I’m really depressed right now after reading your post. And it’s already a really gray & dark day here in the PNW.
Can you stop with all the trade Ford scenarios…it ain’t gonna happen. We have NO other options at backup catcher with Garver gone, and when you have a guy like Ford with his bat at league minimum wage and club controlled for the next 6 years why are you thinking we should spend several more million on a backup Catcher when we have the Suarez/Polanco & 2 RPs to spend our money on.
Ford has the BEST mentor in the game, and I see the most potential catching duo in MLB with RALEIH AND Ford.
Your front office is run by Trader Jerry. The Mariners will trade Ford sometime in the next 15 months. And, if they don’t, it’s because he’s struggling too much to sell (in which, you’ll wish he’d been traded).
I thought it would take less than 15 months, but that was barely 15 hours…
Okay I’ll stop. I would feel pretty pissed if people started coming up with Parades and those other players like Pena trade scenarios. I’ll stop because I feel like you’re kind of unhappy.
John Denton of MLB.com thinks Donovan will get StL Bryan f’ing Woo?!? Why some people even have jobs is beyond my comprehension…
Ferrer has great stuff and a strong 2nd half with Washington. He could develop into a stud set-up guy with the Mariners.
That is why he will stay with the Nationals
I hope so, but the new front office and management is like a box of chocolates.
What if STL offered Jojo & Donovan? What could that get in return?
I would want Sloan, then you can fill in the blanks…
It would get a lot, but they certainly don’t need Ford. Sloan is borderline untouchable. Maybe Cijinte, Evans +
That would be a desirable duo for sure. Wouldn’t net Sloan though. Donovan may have already peaked. Still would get a good return.
Donovan is 28 years old, how in the world does that suggest he’s already peaked? Lmao
Thought he was 29 going on 30, my bad. What I meant to convey though is that he may have already established his career highs. It’s likely he still has a few strong seasons going forward though.
I think he is definitely in his prime years…that’s why this is a good trade for anybody and should hurt a little to get him…low salary and a great player…I also think you would see a rise in his home runs when he leaves Busch
I would do 2B Cole Young and one of Michael Morales, Tai Peete or Victor Labrada..
If at least Cijnjte isn’t included I don’t think the cardinals would do it…I understand Sloan is a long shot…but the cardinals have already said they aren’t getting rid of Donovan unless it’s meaningful…they still have two years of control with him
I’d be cool with Cijnjte and another piece for Donovan & Romero.
Just in case Seattle happens to look at the comments section to make sure they feel better about it after reading my comment, I’m gunna say Colt Emerson lol
I’m sorry what about Colt Emerson?
It would not cost Sloan. The M’s won’t trade him unless its for a marquee player that they desperately want.
They’ll just wait until they can find the right price for a reliever that fits their system. Sloan for THIS reliever is Delusional!
Jo Jo plus Donovan….You must have missed that part….
Didn’t miss anything. Won’t happen. Place your bet. Put your money where your mouth is!
Benjamin_davis6@yahoo.com
Please don’t miss this then…1-888-bets-off…I heard they have helped a lot of people…get a life dude
That’s what i thought
You also thought you should get a life….good for you
Two birds one stone.. go get Romero packaged with Brendan Donovan.
The M’s best chance to get to a WS is 2026. No lockout, SP contracts still $$ okay. This is the year, then, to blow the wad. Identify the prospect untouchables as Sloan, Anderson, Cijntje, and Emerson and go for it wth the rest. Would the Guardians take Montes for Kwan? Would the Cards take Arroyo, Celestin, Young, and Evans for Donovan and Romero? Would the Phillies go for a Ford+ for Strahm+ deal, and what would it take to pry Stott into the package?
It’s very unMarinerlike to go for it on several fronts, but this is the best year to try. Go M’s.
We just picked up Robinson Ortiz a left-handed relief pitcher from the Dodgers for next to nothing. The Dodgers have a great farm system. So, this kid can play. We need more of that. You don’t need to fill out the relievers by trading top prospects.
Jojo and Donovan for one of their top high-end controllable pitchers makes so much sense for both sides. Unlike what it seems Mariners fans think, I don’t think anyone is really going to be untouchable for Seattle if they are serious about trying to turn this window into a WS. 2026 may very well be the last year they’ve got to try.
I agree with needing bullpen pitchers but they need offense too. I feel like giving up a top 100 prospect for a bullpen arm of any sort is a massive overpay. Unless a quality hitter comes back too. Still need at least 2 quality hitters that don’t just rely on the single long ball and a strike out.