The Royals announced the signing of infielder Kevin Newman and reliever Jose Cuas to minor league contracts. The team only officially announced a non-roster invite to Spring Training for Newman.
Newman, 32, was a regular shortstop for the Pirates early in his career. He has played on different teams in each of the past four seasons, settling in as a light-hitting utility player. Newman batted .278 over 111 games with the Diamondbacks in 2024. That earned him a major league contract from the Angels last offseason, but he mustered only a .202/.209/.272 showing over 116 trips to the plate. The Halos designated him for assignment when they took a flier on former top prospect Oswald Peraza at the trade deadline.
The right-handed hitting Newman finished the season in Triple-A with the Tigers. He hit .296 with a .377 on-base percentage over 15 games but didn’t get an MLB look with Detroit. Newman puts the ball in play but rarely with any authority. He doesn’t walk very often and grades as a slightly below-average defender around the infield. He’ll try to win a bench spot in Spring Training behind Jonathan India, Bobby Witt Jr. and the newly-extended Maikel Garcia.
Cuas returns to Kansas City, where he first reached the majors in 2022. The righty turned in a 3.58 ERA across 37 2/3 innings as a rookie. An early-season spike in strikeout rate the following year caught the attention of the Cubs. The Royals dealt him to Chicago in a swap for young outfielder Nelson Velazquez. It didn’t work for either team, as both players struggled in their new environment. The Cubs waived Cuas less than a year after the trade, and he spent the 2025 season in the minors. He divided his time between the Phillies’ top affiliate and Atlanta’s Double-A club, posting a combined 5.20 ERA over 27 2/3 innings.

He’s back
cue the Seinfeld jokes…
*Kevin New Man
Didn’t figure he would be back with the Angels, but this makes it official. Yay.
They signed Jose just cuas
newman’s trash
One man’s trash is the Royals treasure
Leave it to the Royals….
Thus, minor league deal.
I doubt he beats either Nick Loftin or Tyler Tolbert for a utility job but you never know. Worst case some depth and a chance to audition for other teams
Those guys would still be in the league
The Pirates being good and spending money doesn’t create more players, it just moves better players to the Pirates and worse players to other teams
And they’re not going to want to do that so I still remain skeptical that the pirates and other low payroll teams want a cap because they don’t want a floor. They’re content to keep getting 48 percent of gates pooled. It’s not a coincidence that it’s the bigger market teams who bring up spending. And the smaller market owners haven’t really said much of anything.