February 6th: The Angels officially announced their signing of Suter today. It’s a $1.25MM deal, according to a report from The Associated Press.
February 5th: The Angels are closing in on a major league deal with free agent left-hander Brent Suter, reports Chris Cotillo of MassLive.com. The Diamond Sports Management client would be the fourth veteran bullpen signing of the offseason for the Halos.
The 36-year-old Suter is a throwback in many ways — a soft-tossing, rubber-armed lefty who relies more on command and soft contact while often pitching multiple innings per outing. Last year’s 87.3 mph was the second-highest average velocity he’s posted on his four-seamer in any of his 10 big league seasons. His 89.1 mph average sinker was a career-high.
Obviously, Suter isn’t going to blow any hitters away with power stuff. However, he’s walked only 6.1% of his career opponents (6.2% in 2025) and perennially posts some of the league’s lowest exit velocity and hard-hit rates. Suter can still pick up some punchouts, but last year’s 18.2% mark was four percentage points shy of average. He hasn’t posted a league-average strikeout rate since 2021 and has an overall 18.8% mark in the four seasons since.
That hasn’t stopped Suter from being a generally effective relief option. Last year’s 4.52 ERA was a career-worst mark but was in part inflated by an abnormally low 69% strand rate. Playing his home games at Cincinnati’s Great American Ball Park didn’t help, as the 1.42 HR/9 he’s averaged over the past two seasons with the Reds is substantially higher than the 1.07 mark he carried into the 2024 season. That was surely a worthwhile trade-off for the Cincinnati native, who reportedly turned down some better offers to pitch for his hometown club the past couple seasons, but a move to Angel Stadium should bode well for the southpaw in terms of getting his home run rate back down.
Over the past seasons, Suter ranks 12th among all relief pitchers in innings pitched. He’s had just two IL stints along the way — three weeks for an oblique strain in ’23 and six weeks for a teres major strain in ’24 — and has logged a collective 3.76 ERA in that time. He’s typically been more of a long man or middle reliever but does have three saves and 24 holds in his career. He worked more than one inning in 22 of his 48 appearances with the Reds in 2025, topping out at 3 2/3 innings for his longest appearance of the season.
Despite restructuring the final season of Anthony Rendon‘s contract such that it’ll defer his remaining salary over a five-year period, it’s been a quiet offseason for the Angels. They’ve added four relievers — Suter, Jordan Romano, Drew Pomeranz, Kirby Yates — on low-cost, one-year contracts. Yates ($5MM), Pomeranz ($4MM) and Romano ($2MM) will earn a combined $11MM. Suter’s deal is even cheaper than those already affordable pacts. The team’s other moves include a buy-low trade of Rays outfielder Josh Lowe and re-signing Yoan Moncada for a year and $4MM.
That Lowe trade cost the Angels southpaw reliever Brock Burke. Signing Suter again gives the Angels a second lefty to pair with Pomeranz in a patchwork bullpen where the average reliever within is now about 33 and a half years old. Suter, Pomeranz, Yates and Romano will be joined by Robert Stephenson, Ryan Zeferjahn and out-of-options righty Chase Silseth. Recent waiver claim Kaleb Ort is out of options as well, so he’ll be in the Opening Day group unless he’s designated for assignment before that point; the Angels, notably, will need a 40-man move for Suter unless they wait until camp opens so they can move the aforementioned Rendon to the 60-day IL.


Look out baseball world. Angels just guaranteed themselves the post season!
Totally not a water treading depth move!
I thought he was a retired hockey player…
Never mind. That was Brett Sutter.
There’s also semi-retired NHL defenseman, Ryan Suter.
You mean St. Louis Cardinal and Chicago Cub legend. AI has fed you false info again.
What’s funny is that local reporters think the Angels have a chance at the playoffs. Therefore this could be icing on the cake. Honestly this team would be lucky to win 70 games
I’ve not seen one local reporter come remotely close to mentioning the Angels having a chance at the playoffs. Who are you referencing?
@NGC. Omar the troll must be the local reporter.
Fletcher mentioned the other dah that the Angels could sniff .500 if they signed a starter like Valdez, Gallen, or Bassitt and that could give a chance at surprise contention. That’s the closest I’ve seen.
I saw that local reporter. It was Bobby Valentine with sunglasses and a mustache.
@cybertron. Pecota had them at 76 wins, and it was 72. Maybe 80 if the young guys take a leap.
You need a higher bar for funny big dog.
You lie, Omar.
Omar
“local reporters think the Angels have a chance at the playoffs.”
Fangraphs gives the Angels a 6% chance
Or a trade to a contender by Aug 2
I thought it said Suture. Had me in stitches!
I like the picture they picked. Good photo.
They should have had the video that goes with it. 🙂
Looks like he’s doing the “Single Ladies” dance.
They should have a picture of him backing up third base.
Pants off dance off. You likey that?
Always suspected he’d end up back with the Reds but Bob probably locked up the wallet now.
Good luck, Brent. Good clubhouse guy.
At least he can use his sleeves belt & stirrups from last year
I guess he’s the second lefty out of the pen.
He’s a fine pitcher and pretty funny guy, you could do worse
Love the Raptor. One of the great guys and personalities in baseball.
Suter. Nice pickup.
Fear the Raptor!
Man, I miss Brent Suter. Such a good dude.
Going to be an amazing manger if he chooses once he calls it a career
Remember watching him homer off Corey Kluber back in 2018. His reaction while running the bases had the look of someone wanting to get in the dugout before he woke up from the dream.
Good luck to a good guy.
Jamie Moyer approves this deal
Former 12 game winner!
Angels get rocked up for one of these type relievers every year, its the punxsutawney phil moment of every offseason that means spring (training) is close.
@bkbk. They have two now, sandlin is a side armer
His avg sinker velo was higher than his four seamer? Isn’t that unusual or am I mistaken?
Velo is higher than his sinker. Same for Mark Leiter, Jr. last season.
But the story states his four seam velo avg was 87.3 and his sinker was 89.1. That’s why I’m confused. Or maybe I’m misunderstanding your comment.
You’re not. Yankee Bleacher Creature uses chatgpt and is an echo chamber of himself
Definitely a quality guy to have in the clubhouse.
I also thought he’d sign with the Reds, but it was the trade for Brook Burke not money that determined his fate. Not sure he’d winthe 3rd lefty reliever over Moll with the Reds. Great guy. Wish him and the Angels the best.
Waiting for soccer_ref’s take…
you mean “the check list”? LOL
Soccer_ref is
Currently on a two week snowmobile trip and tour of NHL arenas in Alberta and Manitoba then I head to Milan for the winter games for work next week. This and all the claims and DFA’ed will summed up upon my return
The advertisement for that taco is really working out.
banner ads, total ad blindness but that taco in the comments, thats a home run.
@doritos. Will it say sing or sign this time
All I know is the checkmarks will be ✅
I was looking for the paragraph that lists his massive injury history but couldn’t find it. What gives?
Brent “the Raptor” Suter is a Rockies legend! Him and Dinger got along good in the mile high.
The Suter Gamble Makes Sense At 36, Brent Suter has been a Swiss Army knife out of the bullpen for years, and honestly why not take another shot on an arm like that.
A change of scenery alone could be the unlock.
Going from Cincinnati’s friendly dimensions to the deeper, heavier air of Angel Stadium If Suter’s stuff plays the way it has in the past, this could quietly pay dividends
And at this point, with the Angels collecting bullpen pieces like coupons at the checkout line, adding a durable lefty who can give you multiple innings isn’t the worst idea in the world.
Low risk.
The angels also traded Taylor Ward for Grayson .
Halos stalking the Doyers.
I guess no shot at a Big Country reunion now?
@orange2001. Someone was saying he only wants to play on the east coast. Makes sense why the last 3-4 years he doesn’t get signed til the end of spring training. He waits it out.
Gotta be the most universally likable player in MLB, at least by fans…
Meanwhile @ Angel Stadium in the office of Perry Minasian….
Receptionist Perry, Arte is on line one can I put him thru?
Perry- Absoultely!
Perry- Hey Arte I guess you’re calling about the pitcher Brent Suter?
Arte- Actually I was calling about you acquiring Johnnie Walker.
Perry- Give me a minute Arte.
Arte- Sure
Perry-Arte I’m back. I don’t see any player named Johnnie Walker on the free agent list or on any list that’s available.by that name.
Arte- I knew that. I’m referring to the case of Johnnie Walker I ordered on the BevMo website.
Perry- I suppose you want me to go pick it up?
Arte-If you don’t mind. I’m kinda tied up at the moment. I’m trying to get the Playboy Channel to carry our games this season.
Perry- The Playboy Channel no longer exist.
Arte- Hmmmmm. Well that explains why they don’t return my calls. We’ll get going to BevMo. While you’re there. Get yourself a soda.
Perry- Gee thanks.
Arte- I gotta scoot. There’s gotta be a network I can put the games on
That’s some good stuff you picked up this time eh?
Meanwhile Riley Pint just signed with the Padres.
Suter is decent. He’ll definitely be the best long reliever in their pen.
That was a quick announcement. Angels, are you willing to make a rare in division trade involving Jake?
The LA Angels’ lack of activity this offseason has been met with predictable outrage. But if we’re being honest, the real problem isn’t who the Angels didn’t sign — it’s who is still making the decisions.
Adding one or even two top free agents was never going to fix this roster. The flaws are structural: years of short-term thinking, top-heavy spending, neglected pitching development, and a farm system constantly asked to bail out front-office mistakes. Another expensive free agent under Arte Moreno wouldn’t represent progress — it would just be the next bad contract fans are defending for the wrong reasons.
This organization doesn’t have a talent problem as much as it has a process problem, and that starts at the top.
There’s also an uncomfortable truth hovering over the league that the Angels seem uniquely unequipped to navigate: the 2027 season. With the current CBA expiring after 2026, there’s a legitimate chance 2027 is disrupted or partially lost to labor negotiations. Smart organizations are planning for that uncertainty. The Angels, historically, have ignored it — overspending at the wrong time, chasing optics instead of outcomes.
Under Arte Moreno, the team has consistently confused activity with direction.
The most realistic path forward is the one fans don’t want to hear: do nothing, protect flexibility, and stop pretending this team is one signing away. Let the books clear. Let the young players develop without being rushed to justify another PR-driven move. And yes — hope Arte sells the team after the next CBA so a new ownership group can finally rebuild this franchise with modern priorities.
The Angels aren’t close. They haven’t been for a while. The next real chance to contend isn’t 2026 — it’s 2028 or 2029, assuming the organization survives its own worst instincts long enough to get there. Until then, a quiet offseason isn’t failure.
It’s just another reminder that nothing truly changes until ownership does.
If you are going to sign a pitcher like this, you do it a week or two before pitchers and catchers report, not a week or two before Christmas.
Well Perry has at least learned something in five years…not a lot, but something.
I remember watching him play for the Blackhawks
What a mouthful of a sentence:
“Recent waiver claim Kaleb Ort is out of options as well, so he’ll be in the Opening Day group unless he’s designated for assignment before that point; the Angels, notably, will need a 40-man move for Suter unless they wait until camp opens so they can move the aforementioned Rendon to the 60-day IL.”
Split it into two sentences. No reason to talk about Ort and a 40-man move in one long thought. And you’ve interrupted the flow by sticking “notably”—a word that adds really nothing of value—between subject and verb. If you’re going to use it, it has to be either “notably, the Angels will need a 40-man move for Suter unless they wait until camp opens so they can move the aforementioned Rendon to the 60-day IL.” or “the Angels will notably need a 40-man move for Suter unless they wait until camp opens so they can move the aforementioned Rendon to the 60-day IL.”