The D-backs have bolstered their rotation mix this winter by agreeing to a two-year reunion with Merrill Kelly and bringing Michael Soroka in on a one-year deal, but the bullpen remains largely untouched. Taylor Clarke’s low-cost, one-year deal is the only addition of any real note. General manager Mike Hazen emphasized to Nick Piecoro of the Arizona Republic that he still plans to add to his relief corps, but the focus for much of the winter was on the rotation.
“The bullpen market isn’t done,” Hazen told Piecoro over the weekend. “There’s trades out there. … There are still active conversations all over the place in this area.”
While that doesn’t necessarily mean that the D-backs are lock to trade for an established reliever rather than sign one of the remaining free agent arms, it at least lends some credence to the belief that the trade market is the preferred route. Diamondbacks brass has been candid about the fact that payroll will be reduced in 2026 even as the team keeps aiming to contend. Hazen implied to Piecoro that if he’d signed a more prominent, established reliever in free agency, that doing so would have come at the expense of being able to re-sign Kelly, who commanded a two-year, $40MM contract.
Pinning down viable trade candidates, particularly in the bullpen, is often a tricky endeavor — particularly at this point of the offseason when many names have already moved. Cardinals lefty JoJo Romero is an obvious trade candidate, but the D-backs and Cards already pulled off one notable deal (Nolan Arenado) and clearly didn’t line up on a way to include Romero in that deal. The Rockies have some young, controllable relievers who’ve garnered interest (e.g. Victor Vodnik, Seth Halvorsen, Juan Mejia), but trading with a division foe is always a bit more complicated. Milwaukee’s Trevor Megill was in trade rumblings earlier in the winter, but the Brewers might not feel as urgent to shed his salary after trading a more expensive Freddy Peralta to the Mets.
However it shakes out, Hazen’s comment aren’t the lone indicator that the Diamondbacks could prefer the trade market as an avenue to bolster manager Torey Lovullo’s relief options. John Gambadoro of 98.7 FM Arizona Sports suggested last week (prior to Hazen’s comments) that adding more bullpen help, specifically via the trade market, and bringing in a righty-hitting first baseman were likely goals for the front office.
A righty-hitting first baseman is a natural target. Arizona hoped to be adding just that last summer when scooping up former top prospect Tyler Locklear from the Mariners as part of the Eugenio Suarez return, but Locklear suffered a torn ligament in his left elbow and injured the labrum in his left shoulder on a collision at first base in September. He underwent season-ending surgery shortly thereafter and isn’t a lock to be ready for the early portion of the season. The 25-year-old Locklear has yet to hit in 165 big league plate appearances, but he bashed Triple-A pitching at a .316/.401/.542 pace last year (136 wRC+) and logged strong offensive performances in 2024 (131 wRC+ between Double-A, Triple-A) and in 2023 (145 wRC+ between High-A and Double-A).
As it stands, Arizona has Pavin Smith penciled in for the majority of work at first base. He’s a career .253/.333/.439 hitter against righties (111 wRC+) but has been considerably better across the past two seasons, albeit while battling some notable injuries that have limited his time on the field. Still, the late-blooming Smith has posted a big .271/.359/.493 slash (134 wRC+) with 16 home runs, 26 doubles and a triple in 399 plate appearances against righties across the past two seasons. Unfortunately, he’s a career .222/.296/.301 hitter against fellow lefties, which only underscores the need for a platoon partner.
There’s been plenty of speculation among D-backs fans about a reunion with Paul Goldschmidt, who of course starred for Arizona for the first eight seasons of his career before being traded to St. Louis in the 2018-19 offseason. The 38-year-old’s .274/.328/.403 slash with the Yankees last year was about league average, but he did nearly all of his damage against lefties, hitting them at a .336/.411/.570 clip compared to just .247/.289/.329 against fellow righties. If Goldschmidt is amenable to a limited role coupled with a Phoenix homecoming, he’d indeed be a fine fit. Speculative alternatives on the free agent market include Rhys Hoskins, Ty France and Justin Turner.

Get Goldschmidt now!
Seems like a natural fit in a platoon
How much would Goldschmidt cost? Will Arizona spend the money.
Can’t be that expensive at his age
Less than 12.5 million he got last year with the Yankees. Probably around 6 million would be my guess.
Obviously a Goldschmidt reunion/farewell tour would be the ideal scenario Ty France makes a lot of sense. Cost at this point may be about the same.
Hazen hasn’t completely ignored the bullpen as the article suggests. Isaiah Campbell, Shawn Dubin, Junior Fernandez, and Jonathan Loaisiga have all been added on minor league deals and i could see at least two of then breaking camp with the team
Very good addition to the article, Rsox. You are right.
Can somebody tell me why Hoskins has just been given up on? I really don’t understand, I know he missed time last year but the guy is a proven pretty solid hitter, when the Brewers left him out of the playoffs completely, I was shocked, I thought they really could have used his bat
The thing is he’s not a ‘proven pretty solid hitter’ anymore.
His last good season with the bat was ’22. He missed ’23 and the last two seasons he’s been barely above league average at the plate while providing similarly league average defense at first.
His batting average has never been great, his walk rate has dropped off and his power has also lessened.
If he was a glove first shortstop, centerfielder, or catcher his offense would be fine. As a 1B/DH, that bat isn’t good enough.
Someone will no doubt pick him up at some point, but he’s not what he used to be.
It would be pretty cool to see Goldy come back to Arizona to possibly end his career where he started.
Everyone keeps writing off Justin Turner cuz of his age and numbers, but he’s still a useful bat vs lefty pitchers. Over his career and including 2025, he continues to show solid production. Against eighties, he is unplayable .
But look, in addition to what he brings with his splits, he’s a tremendous guy in the clubhouse. PCA for one, said how much Turner meant to him last season. And he hit very poorly in Wrigley Field last year so he would get a bump going elsewhere.