Twins Release Gio Urshela, Andrew Chafin

The Twins announced they’ve granted releases to infielder Gio Urshela and reliever Andrew Chafin. Both players were in camp on minor league deals and had been informed they wouldn’t make the Opening Day roster. Minnesota also granted Liam Hendriks his release from a minor league contract this morning.

As MLBTR’s Steve Adams noted this week, Chafin and Hendriks were among more than two dozen veteran players whose deals contained an automatic opt-out opportunity under the collective bargaining agreement. Infielder Orlando Arcia also fits that bill, though the Twins haven’t announced whether he’ll trigger his own out. Urshela didn’t have an automatic opt-out under the CBA, but Dan Hayes of The Athletic suggests his camp negotiated one into his deal.

Urshela was an above-average everyday player for the Twins back in 2022. He hasn’t had the same level of success since Minnesota traded him to the Angels at the end of that season. Urshela suffered a pelvic fracture in ’23 and has been a light-hitting utility player over the past two years. He returned to the Twins on an offseason minor league contract but hit only .208 with one extra-base knock (a double) in 24 at-bats.

Chafin, a 35-year-old southpaw, pitched six innings of two-run ball. He struck out five while walking three. Statcast had Chafin’s average fastball in the 86 mph range, four ticks below last year’s regular season mark. It’s common for pitchers to work with diminished velocity early in camp as they build arm strength, but it’s hardly a surprise the Twins opted not to carry him in the Opening Day bullpen. Lefties Taylor RogersKody Funderburk and Anthony Banda are all likely to begin the year in Derek Shelton’s relief corps.

Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript

Anthony Franco

  • Good afternoon, hope all is well!
  • News is starting to pick up and we're a little behind schedule to finish the Offseason Review Series before Thursday, so I'll have to keep this one around an hour
  • Let's get it going

Save harry the K’s

  • Justin Crawford hasn’t exactly hit the cover off the ball this spring. What are the chances we see more Marsh in CF and Kemp/someone else in left if that continues?

Anthony Franco

  • I assume Crawford's got at least two months as an everyday player before the Phillies go there. Marsh is a little stretched in center, they don't have any great alternatives in left, and Crawford doesn't get much out of going back to Triple-A
  • Can argue they should've been more aggressive in shoring up the outfield depth but they weren't, and it some point, they do need to give Crawford to work through things at the MLB level

Gavin

  • Preller has to trade for a starter right?  Or is content riding the elite bullpen til Musgrove and Canning are ready?
  • Unlock Subscriber-Exclusive Articles Like This One With a Trade Rumors Front Office Subscription

    BENEFITS
    • Access weekly subscriber-only articles by Tim Dierkes, Steve Adams, and Anthony Franco.
    • Join exclusive weekly live chats with Anthony.
    • Remove ads and support our writers.
    • Access GM-caliber tools like our MLB Contract Tracker

Yankees Notes: Weathers, Lagrange

Ryan Weathers was knocked around in today’s Grapefruit League loss. The new Yankees southpaw allowed seven runs on eight hits in three innings. He’s up to 16 earned runs over 12 1/3 frames across four starts this spring.

The struggles haven’t jeopardized Weathers’ hold on a rotation spot. Manager Aaron Boone confirmed the lefty will open the season in the starting five (relayed by Bryan Hoch of MLB.com). Boone noted that he’s more focused on the pitcher’s raw stuff than results in exhibition play.

Despite being hit around, Weathers has shown a promising arsenal. His fastball is up above 98 mph on average, a tick higher than his 97 mph heater during last year’s regular season with Miami. Weathers has picked up 17 strikeouts while missing bats on more than 14% of his offerings. It’s certainly an ugly ERA, but the velocity and whiffs are encouraging.

Max FriedCam SchlittlerWill WarrenLuis Gil and Weathers will comprise the season-opening rotation. Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón are each opening on the injured list. Cole threw an inning in his first Spring Training appearance on Wednesday. Rodón hasn’t pitched this spring but could be ready for regular season action by the end of April.

Weathers and Gil each have a minor league option remaining. They’ll have a few starts to try to ensure they stick in the rotation once Rodón and/or Cole are healthy. It’d be crowded if everyone is available, but the Yankees don’t have much experienced depth in the short term. Osvaldo Bido is out of options and could find himself back on waivers next week. Swingmen Ryan Yarbrough and Paul Blackburn and prospect Elmer Rodríguez (who has yet to pitch in the big leagues) are the other healthy rotation options on the 40-man roster.

Among the team’s non-roster invitees, no one turned more heads this spring than righty Carlos Lagrange. The 22-year-old fireballer reeled off 13 2/3 innings of one-run ball while recording 13 strikeouts. He was routinely pumping triple digit fastballs with wipeout secondary stuff. There was some thought that Lagrange might even be pitching his way into the Opening Day conversation, but the Yankees reassigned him to minor league camp this afternoon.

Boone acknowledged that Lagrange looked much nearer to MLB readiness than he’d anticipated coming into the spring. “I don’t know if we were ever going to break [camp] with him, but I would say we’ve at least talked about it,” he told Greg Joyce of The New York Post. “What he’s done the last six weeks definitely made us think maybe he’s closer than we think.”

Lagrange’s arsenal would probably play in the big league bullpen already. It’s potential top-of-the-rotation stuff, so the Yankees will continue developing him as a starter in the minors to work on his command. Lagrange was around the zone this spring, only issuing four walks with one hit batter. That’s obviously a small body of work. His strike-throwing has been the big question in the minors. Lagrange walked more than 12% of opponents in his 120 innings between High-A and Double-A last year. He’ll need to be added to the 40-man roster to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft next offseason, and it seems likely he’ll debut at some point this year.

Brewers Option Logan Henderson, Blake Perkins

The Brewers made a few camp cuts on Thursday. Starter Logan Henderson, outfielder Blake Perkins, and corner bat Tyler Black were all sent out and will open the season with Triple-A Nashville.

Two weeks ago, Henderson had seemingly been well positioned for a spot in the Opening Day rotation. There are at least two jobs up for grabs after the Freddy Peralta trade and with Quinn Priester beginning the season on the injured list. The Brewers have rotation roles committed to Jacob MisiorowskiChad Patrick and (assuming he’s fully built up) Brandon Woodruff.

The 24-year-old Henderson was firmly in the mix after impressing over his first five MLB starts a year ago. His odds of breaking camp were set back when he reported minor elbow soreness last week. Henderson had finished the 2025 season on the injured list with elbow inflammation. The team didn’t consider this recent flareup especially alarming — he’s already throwing again — but he hasn’t appeared in a Spring Training game in two weeks.

Skipper Pat Murphy indicated the demotion is largely about giving Henderson a chance to build his workload in the minors. “Part of this move is to make sure he can go post regularly,” Murphy told reporters (link via Adam McCalvy of MLB.com). “We’re not going to immediately build him up to five innings. We’re going to let him go two innings and see how he responds, two innings and see how he responds. Just make sure he’s responding each time because he’s had (an injury) history.”

This probably paves the way for Brandon Sproat and Kyle Harrison to round out the rotation. Harrison left yesterday’s appearance with a blister, but it’s not expected to be an issue moving forward. Robert Gasser and Shane Drohan are also still in the mix, with Drohan having the far more impressive camp of those two.

Acquired from the Red Sox in the Caleb Durbin trade, Harrison has allowed 12 runs (eight earned) across 9 2/3 spring innings. That’s obviously not ideal, but he has struck out 15 opponents while averaging 95 mph on his fastball. Sproat came over from the Mets as part of the Peralta return. He has allowed five runs with a 10:2 strikeout-to-walk ratio over nine innings.

In any case, the Brewers will lean heavily on their bullpen while frequently shuttling starters up and down from Nashville. There’s more clarity on the position player side, which is down to 14 a week before Opening Day. The final camp cut will almost certainly be third catcher Reese McGuire, a non-roster invitee.

McCalvy notes that the Perkins option means Brandon Lockridge is heading north with the club. The speedster won the fourth outfield role by hitting .314 with four homers and three steals in 12 games this spring. He’ll join Gary SánchezJake Bauers and utility infielder David Hamilton on the season-opening bench.

Dodgers, Logan Allen Agree To Minor League Deal

The Dodgers are in agreement with left-hander Logan Allen on a minor league contract, reports Shi Davidi of Sportsnet. Allen, 28, spent last season in Korea and is fresh off representing Canada in the World Baseball Classic.

A namesake of a current Guardians starter (who also pitched in the WBC as a member of Team Panama), this Logan Allen is a former Cleveland pitcher. Allen also suited up with the Padres, Orioles and Diamondbacks in an MLB career which has spanned parts of five seasons. His most recent big league experience came with Arizona two years ago. Allen allowed a 5.46 earned run average over 28 innings.

He signed with the KBO’s NC Dinos last winter. Allen took the ball 32 times and logged 173 innings but didn’t have great rate production. He allowed a 4.53 ERA in the pitcher-friendly league. That ranked 28th among the 38 KBO pitchers who reached 100 innings. Allen was 25th among the group with a 19.4% strikeout rate.

KBO teams are limited to four foreign-born pitchers, one of whom must be from Australia or elsewhere in Asia. Given that restriction, it’s not surprising the Dinos went in a different direction after Allen’s middling season. They re-signed Matt Davidson, former Cubs minor leaguer Riley Thompson and added Curtis Taylor (who spent last year in Triple-A with the Cardinals) as Allen’s replacement. Japanese-born Natsuki Toda is their Asian-born international player.

Davidi writes that Allen was set to sign with a Mexican League team for 2026. He got the WBC nod and pitched twice for Team Canada, working 3 1/3 innings of one-run ball. He impressed Dodgers evaluators enough to instead land a new affiliated ball opportunity. He’ll begin the season as rotation or long relief depth for Triple-A Oklahoma City.

Giants Option Bryce Eldridge

The Giants optioned rookie first baseman Bryce Eldridge, the team informed reporters (including Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle). San Francisco also optioned second baseman Tyler Fitzgerald and outfielder Grant McCray.

Eldridge will open the season in the minors after finishing the ’25 season on the MLB roster. The 21-year-old top prospect made his big league debut in September. He played in 10 games and took 37 plate appearances, batting .107 without a home run. Eldridge took seven walks but struck out 13 times.

A 6’7″ power bat, Eldridge popped 25 homers in the upper minors last year. He combined for a .260/.333/.510 batting line across 433 trips. Eldridge spent the majority of the year as one of the youngest players in Triple-A. There’s immense physical upside, but he’s clearly far from a finished product. Eldridge struck out in more than 29% of his minor league plate appearances.

The whiffs have remained an issue this spring. Eldridge has fanned in 19 of his 50 exhibition plate appearances. He’s second (behind former Giants first-round pick James Tibbs III) in strikeouts among Spring Training hitters. It’s understandable the team feels he’d benefit from more reps against Triple-A pitching.

While Eldridge is surely disappointed not to have made his first Opening Day roster, it’s not exactly a career setback. Most hitters his age aren’t in consideration to break camp. He’ll very likely be back up at some point this season.

The demotion will probably have service time implications. He has 14 days of big league time, meaning he’d need to spend 158 days on the MLB roster to reach one year of service at season’s end. That won’t happen unless he’s called up before the end of April. It’s not a case of service time manipulation, to be clear. If the Giants were primarily concerned with that, they wouldn’t have promoted him last season (earlier than they needed to select him onto the 40-man roster).

The Giants are likely bypassing the chance at getting a Prospect Promotion Incentive draft pick, though it’d technically still be in play if they recall him within the first couple weeks. The PPI pick is conditional on awards voting, though, and Eldridge’s strikeout rates are concerning enough that he’d have an uphill path to winning Rookie of the Year. The primary focus is what the team thinks best for his development.

Rafael Devers will be the primary first baseman. The Giants don’t have a set designated hitter with Eldridge in the minors. There’s now more of a path to carrying both Luis Matos and Jerar Encarnación on the active roster. Both players are out of options and would otherwise need to be traded or exposed to waivers.

Casey Schmitt and a backup catcher (likely Rule 5 draftee Daniel Susac) are going to have bench spots. That’d leave one position player spot available between Will BrennanDrew GilbertChristian Koss or a non-roster invitee. Corner bat Victor Bericoto and speedy outfielder Jared Oliva are among the minor league invites who have impressed this spring.

Astros’ Bennett Sousa To Begin Season On Injured List

Astros reliever Bennett Sousa will begin the season on the 15-day injured list, manager Joe Espada tells reporters (including Brian McTaggart of MLB.com). The southpaw suffered a left oblique strain last week and is back in Houston for testing.

It certainly seems like it’ll be more than a minimal injured list stay. Espada declined to specify a timeline but noted it’d be “a while.” Sousa is shut down entirely until he’s able to throw without pain. He’ll join Josh Hader as key bullpen arms starting the season on the shelf.

Losing Sousa obviously isn’t as impactful as beginning the season without Hader, but it’s nevertheless a real blow to Espada’s relief corps. A waiver claim at the end of the ’23 campaign, Sousa quietly developed into a key bullpen piece last year. He fired 50 2/3 innings of 2.84 ERA ball while striking out almost 30% of batters faced. By the second half, no Houston pitcher was being called upon in higher-leverage situations on average.

Sousa has struggled to stay healthy over the past few years. He missed the entire 2024 season due to thoracic outlet surgery. Sousa came back stronger than ever but went down at the end of August with elbow inflammation — ultimately ending his season. He had tossed three innings of one-run ball this spring.

Hader’s absence means Bryan Abreu will begin the season as the primary closer. Bryan King and Steven Okert still give the Astros a pair of quality left-handed setup arms. The bullpen is much less imposing from the right side, especially if they’re reluctant to use Abreu earlier in games.

Enyel De Los Santos, himself questionable for Opening Day after battling a right knee issue, could be set for important innings. Rule 5 pick Roddery Muñoz has had a fantastic Spring Training and should break camp. AJ Blubaugh and Kai-Wei Teng could pitch multiple innings if they make the team, while Ryan Weiss will either be part of a six-man rotation or in long relief. Minor league signee Christian Roa has pitched very well (8 2/3 innings of one-run ball with 12 strikeouts) and seems to have a clear path to an Opening Day roster spot.

Offseason In Review: Los Angeles Angels

The Angels made a managerial change and overhauled the coaching staff. They otherwise did little to improve a 90-loss roster and again enter the season as one of the American League’s worst teams on paper.

Major League Signings

2026 spending: $18.2MM
Total future spending: $18.2MM

Trades and Claims

Option Decisions

  • None

Extensions

  • None

Notable Minor League Signings

Notable Losses

At the end of their 10th straight losing season, the Angels announced they were making a managerial change. Neither Ron Washington nor interim skipper Ray Montgomery — who took over in the second half while Washington recovered from bypass surgery — would be back. Montgomery remained in the organization in a front office role, while Washington would land in San Francisco as infield coach on Tony Vitello’s first MLB staff.

Albert Pujols was the early frontrunner. Talks fizzled out a couple weeks later, reportedly after Pujols and owner Arte Moreno couldn’t agree on coaches and financial terms. The Halos also interviewed longtime center fielder Torii Hunter before landing on former catcher Kurt Suzuki as their new manager. Suzuki was highly respected as a player and has spent three seasons with the organization in a special assistant role, though he has no prior coaching or managerial experience.

Suzuki signed a one-year contract, which is rare. Most teams tend to give their top front office personnel and their manager multi-year security. Suzuki evidently didn’t have that kind of bargaining power. There’s nothing inherently wrong with a one-year contract, but that didn’t lead to much optimism that Moreno would be willing to spend on a roster littered with holes — especially after talks had collapsed with the candidate whom they initially targeted.

General manager Perry Minasian is entering the final guaranteed year of his contract, which has a club option for 2027. Moreno may be keeping his options open for wholesale changes next winter. There’s also some thought that the owner may be averse to any kind of multi-year commitments when the ’27 season could be impacted by a lockout.

In the interim, the front office and coaching staff can only try to make the best of the situation. Suzuki made a handful of noteworthy coaching hires. He tabbed John Gibbons as bench coach. They hired well-respected pitching coach Mike Maddux away from the Rangers.

The boldest hire was to bring in three-time All-Star Brady Anderson as hitting coach. Anderson is a first-time hitting coach who hadn’t worked in affiliated ball since 2020, but he clearly has a wealth of playing experience from which to draw. Recently retired players Adam Eaton and Max Stassi also joined the staff as first base and catching coach, respectively.

They’re going to have their work cut out for them. The managerial process indeed foreshadowed a quiet offseason. Like many teams, the Angels found themselves with broadcast revenue uncertainty after their renegotiated TV deal with Main Street Sports collapsed. The Halos wound up creating their own network and streaming arrangement, but they’re no longer working with fixed rights payments. Their revenue will be tied to subscriptions.

That provided a simple justification to more or less eschew free agency. They spent a total of $18.2MM over six one-year contracts, none of which exceeded $5MM. That’s despite a pair of moves that created plenty of short-term cash savings.

The first, their most significant transaction of the winter, was the Taylor Ward trade. The Angels had one too many right-handed hitting corner outfielders. Playing Jo Adell as a regular center fielder isn’t viable. Mike Trout wanted to return to playing defense. Jorge Soler will get a rebound opportunity between DH and right field.

Trading one of Ward or Adell for starting pitching felt like a must. The Angels lined up a one-for-one swap sending Ward to the Orioles for righty Grayson Rodriguez. Once the top pitching prospect in MLB, Rodriguez pitched pretty well between 2023-24 before elbow and shoulder injuries threw his career off track.

The Angels control the 26-year-old Rodriguez for at least four seasons. He also has a pair of minor league options that give the team some flexibility if he struggles after a lost ’25 campaign. There’s risk given the health history, but this is the kind of upside play the Angels should be taking. They’ll need a lot of players to hit the higher end of their realistic range of outcomes to be competitive. Rodriguez has a ceiling that few of their internal arms possess. His command has understandably been erratic this spring, but he’s averaging 95 mph on the fastball and should open the season in the rotation.

It comes at a cost, of course. Ward hit 36 home runs a year ago. He has been an above-average offensive player in five consecutive seasons. Still, this was the one area of MLB depth the Angels could leverage in a trade. Ward’s general profile — a righty power bat with middling on-base marks — is also one the Angels had in abundance.

They ranked fourth in MLB last year in home runs and easily led the league with 188 homers from righty batters. No team struck out more often or had a lower batting average, while only the Rockies and Guardians had a worse on-base percentage. There’s something to be said for breaking up that redundancy, at least once the opportunity to acquire a talented starting pitcher with cost control presented itself.

They also cleared nearly $12MM between Ward’s final arbitration salary and Rodriguez’s pre-arbitration sum. They saved more money in the short term by closing the book on Anthony Rendon’s tenure. The Angels and Rendon negotiated a buyout to defer his $38MM salary at $7.6MM annually over the next five years. Rendon will still get paid in the long run, but the buyout reduces the net present value while shifting more than $30MM of the team’s commitments from this year to future seasons.

Tyler Anderson ($13MM), Kenley Jansen ($10MM), Evan White ($8MM), Luis Rengifo ($5.95MM) and Kyle Hendricks ($2.5MM) all came off the books as free agents. Some of those savings would be reallocated to raises among the arbitration class, but the Angels would have had a lot of spending capacity if ownership were willing to match last year’s level.

Instead, the rest of the offseason featured lower-ceiling moves. Alek Manoah’s third-place Cy Young finish in 2022 might make his signing seem like an upside play, but there’s not much reason for optimism he’ll get close to that level again.

Manoah’s stuff hasn’t returned since he battled elbow injuries that required Tommy John surgery in 2024. A fastball that once averaged around 94 mph is in the 91-92 range this spring. Pitching-starved clubs like the Rockies and Nationals passed on the chance to claim Manoah off waivers last fall. The Braves, whose lack of rotation depth decimated them last year and remains an issue, declined to tender him an arbitration contract in the $2-3MM range. Teams clearly don’t have much optimism.

The Angels signed Manoah for $1.95MM, so it’s not as if the deal itself is going to cripple them. The problem is the Angels didn’t make any other moves to add a clearer upgrade at the back of the rotation. Manoah entered camp as the projected fifth starter. A rough Spring Training (16 runs with 14 walks over 15 1/3 innings) might push him back to Triple-A.

Manoah as a seventh or eighth starter would be fine. It doesn’t work as well for a team that was counting on him to win a season-opening rotation spot. José Soriano and Yusei Kikuchi return as the team’s top two starters, with the former tabbed for his first career Opening Day assignment. Reid Detmers is moving back to the rotation after a strong season in relief. He’s the third starter, likely followed by Rodriguez.

If they send Manoah down, the last spot falls to one of Jack KochanowiczSam Aldegheri or an aggressive promotion for a prospect like George Klassen or Ryan Johnson. Jeff Fletcher of The Orange County Register wrote yesterday that Kochanowicz and Johnson appear to have pulled ahead.

Kochanowicz had a near-7.00 ERA across 23 MLB starts a year ago. Johnson, a 2024 second-rounder, broke camp as a reliever last season without previously pitching in a minor league game. He struggled and was demoted all the way to High-A in May. He built back up as a starter and turned in a 2.05 ERA with a near-30% strikeout rate across 57 1/3 innings. He’s a good prospect who is having an impressive spring, but he hasn’t started a game above A-ball.

Shaky as the rotation depth seems, the bullpen might be in worse shape. None of last year’s three best relievers are returning to the late innings. Jansen signed an $11MM free agent deal with the Tigers. Detmers is back in the rotation. They traded Brock Burke to the Reds in a three-team deal to acquire outfielder Josh Lowe from Tampa Bay.

The Angels added four veteran relievers via cheap free agent contracts. Kirby YatesDrew PomeranzBrent Suter and Jordan Romano all signed one-year deals. Yates and Romano are former All-Star closers who are reclamation projects. The soft-tossing Suter had a career-high 4.52 ERA over 67 2/3 innings with Cincinnati. Pomeranz was easily the best of this group last year, tossing 49 2/3 innings of 2.17 ERA ball with a 28% strikeout rate for the Cubs. He’s also 37 years old, has an extensive injury history, and didn’t pitch in MLB between 2022-24.

That magnified the importance of getting Ben Joyce and Robert Stephenson back in high-leverage situations. Joyce underwent shoulder surgery last May and will open the season on the injured list, but he’s throwing bullpen sessions and could be back a few weeks into the year.

Stephenson’s first two seasons with the Halos were ruined by elbow issues and a bout with thoracic outlet syndrome. He seemingly entered camp healthy but unfortunately suffered yet another elbow injury last week. The team hasn’t announced a diagnosis, but the right-hander acknowledged the brutal news that he’s dealing with more ligament damage. He’s evaluating his treatment options and another season-ending surgery seems possible.

Suzuki suggested the Angels will open the season with a closer committee between Yates, Romano and Pomeranz. It’s less than ideal. They’ll hope for the flamethrower Joyce to take the job midseason. The middle relief group is wide open. Minor league signees Hunter Strickland and Nick Sandlin are competing with holdovers Ryan ZeferjahnChase Silseth and Sam Bachman.

There wasn’t a ton of turnover on the position player side. Lowe replaces Ward in the outfield mix, adding some balance by bringing in a lefty bat. Lowe has fought oblique issues for a couple seasons and is coming off a tough year, hitting .220/.283/.366 over 435 plate appearances. He had a 20-30 campaign with the Rays back in 2023 and is under arbitration control for three seasons. The Angels parted with a solid middle reliever in Burke and a mid-tier pitching prospect (Chris Clark) to see if they can get Lowe back on track.

Although Minasian said the Halos were comfortable using Lowe in center field, he’s better served replacing Ward in left. It certainly looks like Trout will be back in center. The Angels moved the three-time MVP to right field last year, hoping it’d reduce the physical toll he has taken. Trout sustained a bone bruise in his left knee by the end of April anyway. He missed a month and was a full-time designated hitter for the rest of the season.

Trout said last month he wants to return to center field. The Angels are open to the idea and have started him in center seven times this spring. He has played four games as a DH and twice in left field — a position he hasn’t played in the regular season since 2013. It seems safe to assume Trout isn’t starting 140 games as a center fielder, but he’ll be out there more often than not for as long as he’s healthy. They’ll have a corner pairing of Lowe and Adell while occasionally starting Soler in a corner and using Trout as a DH.

Two spots on the infield were locked in. Nolan Schanuel and Zach Neto will play almost every day at first base and shortstop, respectively. The Halos opted for stability at the hot corner, re-signing Yoán Moncada to a $4MM deal. The switch-hitter hasn’t topped 104 games in a season since 2022. He was reasonably productive when healthy last year, though, batting .234/.336/.448 in around half a season of playing time.

Moncada will begin the season at third base. There’s a decent chance they’ll need players to fill in there throughout the year given his injury history. Second base was wide open with Rengifo hitting free agency and certainly not coming back after a tough season.

The Angels took a flier on Vaughn Grissom, who is out of options. Grissom is a former highly-regarded prospect whom the Red Sox acquired from the Braves for Chris Sale. It turned out to be one of the most lopsided trades in years, as Grissom hit .190 without a home run in 31 games in a Boston uniform. He didn’t appear in MLB last season, batting .270/.342/.441 across 418 Triple-A plate appearances.

It’s a fine change-of-scenery move that echoes last summer’s deadline trade for Oswald Peraza. The prospect cost was minimal. They sent last year’s eighth-round pick, Isaiah Jackson, to Boston. Grissom is in his mid-20s and battled injuries throughout his Red Sox tenure. He had a pair of hamstring strains in 2024 and missed the final month last year with plantar fasciitis. He has been banged up again this spring, recently receiving a cortisone shot for a left hand issue.

The Angels already optioned Christian Moore, taking him out of consideration for the season-opening second base job. Peraza and Grissom each need to be on the MLB roster or injured list if the Angels don’t want to expose them to waivers. Adam FrazierJeimer Candelario and Chris Taylor are all in camp on minor league contracts. Frazier seems likeliest to make the team, largely because he’s a left-handed contact bat in a lineup that doesn’t have many of those.

Behind the plate, it’ll be a Logan O’Hoppe/Travis d’Arnaud combination for a second straight year. O’Hoppe’s performance on both sides of the ball took a major step back last season. There’s not much to do but hope for a rebound from the 26-year-old catcher, whom the Halos control for another three seasons.

As Spring Training got underway, Moreno met with the media to attempt to justify the quiet offseason. He pointed to the TV revenue drop as necessitating the payroll cut while rhetorically asking whether “one or two players substantially (changes)” the team’s record. It’s almost certainly true that the Angels are more than one player away from being competitive, but that’s in large part because Moreno’s own impatience has kept the team from building the kind of minor league pipeline needed for consistent success.

Ironically, those were Moreno’s less irksome comments. He also claimed that “winning is not in (fans’) top five” priorities when attending a game. That’s clearly not true of the entire fanbase, even if there are surely some whose only concern is a fun day at the park. It wouldn’t be a surprise if some players or coaches privately bristled at the comment as well.

It leaves the Angels in a similar spot as they’re in almost every year. They have a few talented players but one of the thinnest rosters in the American League. FanGraphs projects them for 72 wins with roughly 5% playoff odds. Baseball Prospectus is even more bearish, with a 66-win forecast that has them as the worst projected team in the AL (better only than the Rockies overall). They don’t look any closer to snapping an 11-year playoff drought.

How would you grade the Angels' offseason?

Vote to see results

 

Nationals Option Josiah Gray, Robert Hassell III

The Nationals announced a trio of camp cuts this morning. Starter Josiah Gray, outfielder Robert Hassell III and reliever Julian Fernández will all begin the season in the minors.

Gray was an All-Star in 2023 after making 30 starts with a 3.91 ERA. He was hit hard over two starts the following season and underwent UCL surgery in July. Gray didn’t pitch in MLB last year as he rehabbed the injury. He made a trio of abbreviated starts in the minors to at least get some game action in before the offseason began.

The 28-year-old has taken the ball twice in camp. He pitched 4 2/3 frames of one-run ball with five strikeouts. The Nationals will continue his buildup as a depth starter at Triple-A Rochester. Mitchell ParkerAndrew Alvarez and Jake Eder are also on the 40-man roster but beginning the season in the minors.

Gray’s demotion seemingly positions Jake Irvin as Washington’s fifth starter. Cade Cavalli will take the ball on Opening Day against Matthew Boyd and the Cubs. Miles MikolasFoster Griffin and Zack Littell signed one-year free agent deals that should lock them into the rotation.

Irvin led the team with 180 innings last season, but he was tagged for an ugly 5.70 ERA while striking out fewer than 16% of opponents. That left him to compete for a rotation role this spring. To his credit, the 29-year-old righty has had an excellent camp. Irvin has allowed just two runs while striking out 15 across 13 1/3 innings. He has toyed with a deeper pitch mix, throwing more cutters and sliders after leaning mostly on his fastballs and curveball last year.

Hassell, a former top 10 pick who came over from San Diego in the Juan Soto trade, hit .223/.257/.315 over his first 70 MLB games last year. He struck out nine times while walking just once in 29 spring plate appearances. Hassell heads back to Triple-A, where he had a strong season (.310/.383/.456 in 76 games) a year ago.

The Nationals have James WoodJacob Young and Daylen Lile assured of spots in the MLB outfield. Dylan Crews will presumably be in there as well, though it’s at least conceivable that the Nats could determine he’d benefit from Triple-A reps. The former second overall pick limped to a .208/.280/.352 showing in his first full MLB season. He has only picked up three hits while striking out 10 times in 32 plate appearances this spring. Offseason waiver pickup Joey Wiemer has also had a rough camp and still has an option remaining.

Cardinals Option Richard Fitts

The Cardinals optioned Richard Fitts on Wednesday, seemingly finalizing their season-opening rotation. Fitts was trying to win a spot at the back end over Michael McGreevy or Andre Pallante.

The latter two righties seem set to round out a rotation led by Matthew LiberatoreDustin May and Kyle Leahy. The Cardinals announced Wednesday that Liberatore will take the ball for the season opener opposite Drew Rasmussen and the Rays. It’ll be the 26-year-old southpaw’s first Opening Day assignment.

Fitts landed with St. Louis in the November trade that sent Sonny Gray to Boston. The Cards acquired A-ball pitching prospect Brandon Clarke as the headliner. Fitts was more of a secondary piece but is a controllable starter with good velocity and a pair of minor league options who should factor in over the course of the season.

A 26-year-old righty, Fitts made 15 MLB appearances for the Red Sox between 2024-25. He managed a 3.97 earned run average but only struck out 17.5% of opponents while struggling with the home run ball. He took the ball three times this spring, giving up six runs on nine hits and three walks across 9 1/3 frames. He struck out nine of 39 batters faced while working with an impressive 97 mph fastball on average.

He’ll head back to Triple-A, where he has a 4.13 ERA over 143 2/3 innings. There’s a good chance Fitts is the first man up if an injury or extended stretch of the schedule opens a rotation spot. He’s the only depth starter on the 40-man roster who has any MLB experience.

Liberatore and May were assured of rotation spots. The Cardinals intended to give Leahy a chance to start after he tossed 88 innings of 3.07 ERA ball in a long relief role last season. He has been a little homer-prone this spring but leads the team with 20 strikeouts over 17 2/3 innings to solidify his starting job. It’ll be his first rotation work since he was in Double-A four years ago.

Pallante and McGreevy seemed on shakier ground at the start of camp. Pallante took 31 starts and logged 162 2/3 innings a year ago, but he mustered only a 5.31 ERA. McGreevy allowed 4.42 earned runs per nine over 95 2/3 innings. Both pitchers ranked near the bottom of the league in strikeout rate. They’ve each managed a sub-3.00 ERA despite modest strikeout totals this spring.