Astros To Place Yainer Diaz On Injured List
A left oblique injury will send Astros catcher Yainer Diaz to the 10-day injured list, manager Joe Espada tells the Houston beat (relayed by Chandler Rome of The Athletic). Houston called up César Salazar this evening with Diaz unavailable, so they probably won’t bring up another catcher when the IL stint is finalized tomorrow.
Zach Dezenzo and Shay Whitcomb — the latter of whom was optioned tonight as the corresponding move for Salazar’s selection — are the only healthy position players on optional assignment to Triple-A. Teams ordinarily cannot recall an optioned hitter for at least 10 days, but an exception is made when they’re called back up to replace an injured player.
Diaz will be the sixth hitter to land on Houston’s injured list. He joins Jeremy Peña and Jake Meyers as regulars who are out of action. They’re also down six starting pitchers — including three of their projected top four arms in Hunter Brown, Tatsuya Imai and Cristian Javier — and have been without closer Josh Hader all season.
The injury continues what has been an ugly start for Diaz. The 27-year-old has been one of the better offensive catchers in MLB over his three-plus seasons. His numbers gradually trended down each year from a fantastic rookie campaign, though, and he has really struggled offensively through the first six weeks. Diaz is hitting .248/.264/.356 with a pair of home runs through 106 plate appearances.
One of the most aggressive hitters in the league, Diaz has always had a low on-base floor. He has generally hit for solid averages and ranked fourth among catchers (behind Cal Raleigh, Shea Langeliers and Salvador Perez) with 59 homers between 2023-25. Diaz’s ground-balls are up and his hard contact rate way down in the early going.
It’s nevertheless a sizable hit to Houston’s lineup. Christian Vázquez has hit very well (.316/.371/.491) in the early going, but he had one of the game’s lightest bats in each of the last three seasons. The Astros are surely pleased with what they’ve gotten from Vázquez’s minor league contract. Still, he’s probably miscast for a primary catching job at this stage of his career. The Astros have given Salazar limited MLB opportunities over the past few years.
Espada didn’t specify a timeline for Diaz’s return. There’s a wide range of outcomes on oblique injuries depending on the severity of a strain. Even moderate strains tend to cost hitters a few weeks to a month.
Orioles Outright Albert Suárez
The Orioles announced this evening that righty Albert Suárez accepted an outright assignment to Triple-A Norfolk. He cleared waivers after being designated for assignment on Saturday. Suárez has the service time and previous outright to elect free agency but decided to remain with the O’s as non-roster rotation or long relief depth.
This is Suárez’s third season with the organization. He was a nice find as a minor league signee who had spent the 2019-23 campaigns in Asia. Suárez surprisingly held a rotation spot for a good chunk of the ’24 season, working to a 3.70 earned run average across 133 2/3 innings. He spent most of last year rehabbing a shoulder strain and dealt with forearm discomfort at the end of the season.
The injuries limited Suárez to 11 2/3 MLB frames in 2025. The Orioles non-tendered him as a result, though they brought him back on a minor league deal. He has had a couple stints at the MLB level this season, working 15 2/3 innings over six appearances. His 3.45 ERA isn’t bad on the surface, but Suárez has also allowed four unearned runs and has as many walks as strikeouts (nine apiece).
Baltimore has preferred Suárez in a relief role at the MLB level over the past year-plus. The rotation has taken a few injury hits that could eventually open an opportunity for him to make a spot start or two. Suárez is out of options, so there’s a decent chance he’ll go through the selection/outright cycle a few times over the course of the year.
Astros Select César Salazar
The Astros are selecting catcher César Salazar back onto the big league roster, reports Brian McTaggart of MLB.com. Infielder Shay Whitcomb was optioned to Triple-A Sugar Land in a corresponding move. Houston opened a spot on the 40-man roster this afternoon when they designated outfielder Daniel Johnson for assignment.
Salazar’s promotion is spurred by what appears to be a minor injury for starting catcher Yainer Diaz. He’s out of tonight’s lineup with a left abdominal issue. The Astros haven’t placed him on the injured list but seemingly want to stay away from him tonight. Christian Vázquez draws into the lineup against the Dodgers and Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Salazar provides some insurance as a reserve catcher.
Unless Diaz eventually needs an injured list stay, it’ll probably be a brief stint on the roster for Salazar. He’s out of minor league options and was designated for assignment at the end of Spring Training when Houston opted for Vázquez as their backup catcher. They surely don’t have any regrets about that decision, as the veteran is out to a .333/.390/.519 start to his age-35 season.
Salazar appeared in 36 MLB games as Houston’s third catcher between 2023-25. He’s hitting .193/.333/.281 with one home run over 19 games with Sugar Land this season. The 30-year-old has a solid reputation for his glove and work with a pitching staff but isn’t likely to be much of an offensive threat.
Carl Edwards Jr. Elects Free Agency
Veteran righty Carl Edwards Jr. elected free agency after clearing outright waivers, reports Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. He’d been designated for assignment by the Mets on Thursday.
Edwards had a brief stint on the active roster, pitching twice over six days. He showed well in that limited look, striking out 11 across six innings of one-run ball. Edwards issued four walks but only allowed three hits. He got swinging strikes at a massive 17.2% rate.
Those six innings matched his MLB workload last season, divided over four games between the Rangers and Angels. He failed to record an out in his lone MLB appearance in 2024. Edwards hasn’t had an extended look at the big league level since he was a member of the Nationals three years ago.
He has continued to bounce around the league via a series of minor league contracts. Edwards has been a reliever for the majority of his career but started four games for Triple-A Syracuse before the Mets called him up. He worked multiple innings in both of his MLB appearances. He should find a new minor league deal, perhaps returning to the Mets, within the coming days.
Braves Designate Jonah Heim For Assignment, Activate Sean Murphy
The Braves announced they’ve reinstated catcher Sean Murphy from his season-opening injured list stint. That pushed Jonah Heim off the team, as he has been designated for assignment to create space for Murphy on the active roster. Atlanta’s 40-man count drops to 39.
It’s an unfortunate but probably expected outcome for Heim. The switch-hitting backstop signed a $1.5MM free agent deal early in Spring Training. The Braves knew Murphy would need some time to recover from last fall’s hip labrum surgery. NL Rookie of the Year Drake Baldwin was the clear #1 option behind the dish, leaving Heim mostly as a fill-in backup until Murphy was back from injury.
The Braves could have carried three catchers, but that’s generally not the way teams prefer to use two of their four bench spots. They’re also currently playing a little shorthanded in the outfield. Not only did they lose Ronald Acuña Jr. to the injured list yesterday, they haven’t felt comfortable playing Michael Harris II in center field since Wednesday.
Harris has been dealing with left quad discomfort that kept him out of the starting lineup on Thursday and Friday. He worked as the designated hitter on Saturday but didn’t play yesterday and is out again tonight against Seattle righty Logan Gilbert.
The thinner outfield led the Braves to select Jose Azocar for a bench role over the weekend. They’ve pushed Mauricio Dubón from shortstop to center field for the past few games, drawing Jorge Mateo into the lineup. Kyle Farmer sticks around as the backup infielder. The moving pieces didn’t leave much room for three catchers. Murphy had reached the end of his 20-day rehab window and needed to be activated tonight.
Heim had a respectable showing over 12 games in an Atlanta uniform. He walked as often as he struck out while hitting .231/.311/.410 with one home run in 45 plate appearances. The defense was a little more concerning, as he failed to catch any of the 13 runners who attempted to steal against him. He didn’t commit any passed balls but was behind the dish for six wild pitches in 103 innings.
There’s nevertheless a decent chance another club takes a flier on Heim within the next week. He was an above-average starting catcher for the Rangers between 2022-23, earning an All-Star nod and a Gold Glove while helping Texas to a championship in 2023. Heim’s production plummeted after that, but he’s only making around twice the league minimum salary and would probably upgrade the backup catching spot for a few teams. The Guardians, Reds, Angels, Pirates, Phillies and Nationals are among clubs that have gotten little to no production from the position this season.
The Braves have five days to line up a trade or place Heim on waivers. If they can’t find a trade partner, he’ll probably be released, as he has the five years of service time necessary to retain his salary while refusing a minor league assignment.
Murphy will be behind the plate tonight for his season debut at T-Mobile Park. Baldwin gets a second consecutive start at DH. Murphy hit 16 homers last year but struck out at a career-high 31% clip while hitting below .200 for a second straight season. He’d played through the hip discomfort for some time before undergoing surgery. The Braves will hope that procedure gets him back closer to peak level, though he showed some rust on his minor league rehab assignment after missing all of Spring Training.
White Sox Sign Randal Grichuk
5:05pm: The Sox made it official, announcing that they have signed Grichuk. Hays goes on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to May 2nd, due to a left calf strain. Murray has been transferred to the 60-day IL to open a 40-man spot.
3:02pm: The White Sox and outfielder Randal Grichuk are in agreement on a major league deal, reports Robert Murray of FanSided. The Sox will need to make corresponding moves to open space for the Paragon Sports International client on the active and 40-man rosters.
Grichuk elected free agency just three days ago after being designated for assignment by the Yankees. The 34-year-old had broken camp on a minor league contract to work in a short side platoon role. He was essentially the last man on Aaron Boone’s bench and took more than two-thirds of his 33 plate appearances versus lefty pitching.
Despite the favorable matchup deployments, Grichuk didn’t hit over his scattered playing time. He batted .194 without a home run while striking out 10 times. He worked one walk and had a .212 on-base mark. Grichuk didn’t perform especially well against left-handed pitching last season either, batting .227/.273/.430. He was among the best hitters in MLB against southpaws from 2022-24, however, destroying them at a .317/.367/.573 clip. He connected on 25 homers, 34 doubles and four triples in just under 500 trips against lefties over those three years.
Grichuk hasn’t played center field in three seasons and has been a well below-average hitter against righty pitching. It’s a limited profile but one the Sox feel comfortable carrying on their bench. They lost right fielder Everson Pereira to the injured list last week with a pectoral strain. Jarred Kelenic was selected onto the MLB roster in his stead and is out to a 1-6 start over three games. The lefty-hitting Kelenic and right-handed Austin Hays — a similar player to Grichuk — are dividing right field work.
The White Sox could create a 40-man roster spot for Grichuk by transferring Tanner Murray to the 60-day injured list. However, they may need to designate someone for assignment given their lack of active roster flexibility.
Backup catcher Drew Romo is the only player on Will Venable’s bench who has minor league options. They’re presumably not going to move on from Hays a month into a $6MM free agent deal. Andrew Benintendi isn’t performing but is signed through 2027 and remains the team’s leadoff man. Rookie left fielder Sam Antonacci is playing too well to option out.
Luisangel Acuña has been ice cold to begin the season, but he headlined Chicago’s return for Luis Robert Jr. over the offseason. They haven’t made the same investment in Kelenic, an offseason minor league signee, or September waiver claim Derek Hill. Hill has decent numbers this season but has struck out 14 times in 44 plate appearances and has only started 10 of the first 34 games.
Braves Re-Sign Carlos Carrasco, Select Him To Active Roster
TODAY: The Braves announced that Carrasco has been selected to the 26-man roster, so Carrasco must have quickly re-signed a new minor league deal after his brief stint in free agency. Right-hander Anthony Molina was optioned to Triple-A in the corresponding 26-man roster move, and Atlanta will fit Carrasco into one of two open slots on their 40-man roster.
MAY 1: Carlos Carrasco elected free agency after clearing outright waivers, according to the MLB.com transaction log. The Braves designated him for assignment on Thursday when Dylan Lee returned from the paternity list.
There’s a decent chance this is a procedural move and Carrasco will re-sign with Atlanta on a new minor league contract. Initially acquired from the Yankees last July in a cash trade, Carrasco has subsequently signed a pair of minor league deals. He finished last year at Triple-A Gwinnett and quickly re-signed once the offseason began.
Carrasco pitched well in his first four turns through the Triple-A rotation this year. He owns a 1.71 ERA with a solid 20.7% strikeout percentage and tidy 6% walk rate over 21 innings. Carrasco tossed a perfect inning with a strikeout of CJ Abrams in his lone MLB appearance this season.
The 39-year-old righty doesn’t have huge stuff at this stage of his career. His fastball sits around 92 mph and he has leaned more heavily on his slider and changeup to fool Triple-A hitters. He owns a 6.33 ERA at the major league level since the start of 2023.
Nick Martini, Jacob Barnes Sign With Mexican League Teams
A pair of players who were in the big leagues last season signed with Mexican League teams. Reliever Jacob Barnes joined the Algodoneros de Unión Laguna yesterday, while outfielder Nick Martini signed with the Piratas de Campeche tonight.
Barnes, who recently turned 36, has made 334 career appearances while pitching in the big leagues in 10 straight years. The righty was in the Opening Day bullpen for the eventual American League champion Blue Jays last year. Barnes made six early-season appearances, allowing nine runs (eight earned) through eight innings. The Jays outrighted him off the 40-man roster in late April, bringing him back on a minor league contract.
That didn’t go well, as Barnes allowed nearly seven earned runs per nine over 25 Triple-A innings. Toronto released him in August. Barnes has a mid-90s fastball and was a serviceable middle reliever for the Nationals in 2024, when he worked to a 4.36 ERA across 66 innings. He’ll be teammates with swingman Erasmo Ramírez and infielder Emmanuel Rivera, each of whom also logged MLB time last season and signed with the Algodoneros in the middle of April.
Martini, a lefty-hitting outfielder, played in 43 games for the Rockies last season. He was on the MLB roster for the first two months. Martini hit .225/.288/.294 over 111 plate appearances and was designated for assignment at the end of May. He landed with the A’s on a minor league deal, hitting .259/.383/.434 over four months at Triple-A Las Vegas without getting another MLB opportunity.
A veteran of parts of six seasons, Martini has shown strong on-base skills throughout his minor league career. He doesn’t have much defensive value, but his career .248/.328/.382 slash at the MLB level isn’t far below average. He’s a .290/.397/.451 hitter in nearly 3000 Triple-A plate appearances.
Lou Trivino Opts Out Of Phillies Deal
Veteran reliever Lou Trivino exercised the May 1 opt-out right in his minor league contract with the Phillies, reports Matt Winkelman. According to the MLB.com transaction tracker, the team then granted Trivino his release.
Trivino pitched well over his month at Triple-A Lehigh Valley. The 34-year-old righty struck out 20 of 56 batters faced (36%) while issuing four walks. He surrendered 15 hits and 10 runs, though only four of those were earned. Trivino’s sinker and four-seam fastball each sat in the 94-95 mph range and he used three other pitches — cutter, slider and changeup — with regularity.
This was Trivino’s second stint with the Philly organization. He signed a minor league deal last August and was selected onto the MLB roster at the end of the month. He worked nine innings of three-run ball to close the season. Trivino pitched for three different clubs overall and tallied a 3.97 earned run average across 47 2/3 MLB innings a year ago. It was first big league action in three seasons, as he’d missed most of 2023-24 due to Tommy John surgery.
Philadelphia’s bullpen ranks 19th in MLB with a 4.22 ERA. That’s somewhat inflated by a .328 average on balls in play, the second-highest mark (behind Minnesota’s). Philly relievers are 12th in strikeout rate. Chase Shugart and Tanner Banks each have a minor league option remaining, but the Phils opted to keep them on the MLB roster while allowing Trivino to explore other opportunities. The Phillies did select a non-roster reliever yesterday when they called up long man Trevor Richards.
Mariners Notes: Brash, Simpson, Robles, Right Field
The Mariners placed setup man Matt Brash on the 15-day injured list, retroactive to April 30, before tonight’s series opener against the Royals. He’s dealing with lat inflammation. Seattle recalled lefty Josh Simpson from Triple-A Tacoma in a corresponding move.
Brash made an early exit from Wednesday’s game in Minnesota. He threw two pitches before reporting side tightness that led the Mariners to lift him. General manager Justin Hollander told reporters (including Daniel Kramer of MLB.com) that Brash will be shut down for three to five days. He’ll resume throwing early next week and doesn’t seem to be in for a lengthy absence. There’s nothing structurally off.
The seemingly minor injury halts an excellent start to the season for Brash. He has allowed just one unearned run through his first 11 1/3 innings. Although Brash hasn’t had huge swinging strike or ground-ball numbers, he’s second on the team with four holds and has pitched in the highest-leverage situations aside from closer Andrés Muñoz.
Seattle’s bullpen is out to a strong start. Their 3.31 earned run average trails only that of the Rangers and Giants. They’re middle of the pack in strikeouts while ranking ninth in whiff rate. Muñoz has had a couple uncharacteristically poor outings (most notably against the Padres on April 15) but is typically one of the best closers in the game. Gabe Speier, Eduard Bazardo and offseason trade pickup Jose A. Ferrer have pitched well.
Simpson would be lined up for his team debut if he makes it into a game. Seattle acquired him from the Marlins over the offseason. The 28-year-old has fanned 12 over 9 1/3 innings of one-run ball with Tacoma, albeit with six walks. He posted a 7.34 ERA across 31 appearances as a rookie with Miami last season.
In other M’s news, Victor Robles will join Tacoma to begin a rehab assignment on Sunday (relayed by Adam Jude of The Seattle Times). He has been out since April 7 with a pectoral strain. Robles had a slow start over his first five games after a disappointing 2025 season in which he missed most of the year with a dislocated left shoulder.
Luke Raley and Rob Refsnyder have platooned in right field in Robles’ absence. Raley homered in each of the first three games of the season and went on a brief tear in the middle of April. He’s now mired in a 1-27 slump over his last 12 games. Refsnyder has limped to a .135/.214/.297 start through 17 games. Connor Joe gets the nod tonight against K.C. southpaw Cole Ragans.
