Angels Outright Alek Manoah

The Angels announced that right-hander Alek Manoah has been outrighted to Triple-A Salt Lake. There wasn’t any announcement about him being designated for assignment but it appears the Halos quietly put him on waivers and he cleared. The club’s 40-man roster count drops to 39.

Manoah has the right to elect free agency but isn’t likely to do so. A player with at least three years of big league service has the right to reject an outright assignment in favor of the open market but needs five years of service to exercise that right while keeping his salary commitments in place. Manoah’s service count is over four years but less than five. The Angels signed him to a deal worth $1.95MM this offseason. With roughly $1.35MM left to be paid out, it’s fair to expect Manoah will accept his assignment and won’t be walking away from that money.

For the Angels, signing Manoah was a bet on a bounceback. He was a borderline ace earlier in his career. With the Blue Jays in 2022, he posted a 2.24 ERA over 31 starts and finished third in Cy Young voting. But he hasn’t been anywhere close to that level since. He posted a 5.87 ERA in 2023. Shoulder and elbow issues held him back after that and he ultimately required Tommy John surgery. He made five big league starts in 2024 and none in 2025.

He was put on waivers late last year and was claimed by Atlanta, but that club non-tendered him. That sent him to free agency and allowed the Angels to scoop him up, but that hasn’t panned out thus far. He started the season on the IL due to a middle finger contusion. He came off the IL earlier this month and has made three relief appearances. The first two were scoreless but he was torched by the Dodgers in the third, allowing eight earned runs in an inning and a third. He was optioned to the minors a few days ago and is now off the 40-man.

It’s unclear if the Angels want to keep Manoah stretched out or use him out of the bullpen. He made just one rehab appearance before coming off the IL, tossing 4 1/3 innings. Once activated, he started with a single-inning appearance, then tossed five frames in the second outing. That was followed by the aforementioned drubbing from the Dodgers in an inning and a third.

With Yusei Kikuchi on the IL, the rotation currently consists of José Soriano, Reid Detmers, Jack Kochanowicz, Walbert Ureña and Grayson Rodriguez. They have George Klassen, Caden Dana and Sam Aldegheri on the 40-man but currently on optional assignment. If Manoah is used as a starter in Triple-A, he can try to pitch his way into that group.

Photo courtesy of Dan Hamilton, Imagn Images

Gunnar Hoglund Undergoes Season-Ending Hip Surgery

The Athletics announced that right-hander Gunnar Hoglund underwent left hip surgery yesterday, specifically a hip labral repair and cartilage debridement to address femoroacetabular impingement. He will miss the entire 2026 season. He is already on the 60-day injured list and will stay there for the remainder of the campaign.

It’s a brutal development for Hoglund, as this will be his second straight season ended by surgery on that hip. In 2025, he was on the mound through the month of May. He hit the IL in early June due to a left hip impingement and went under the knife a couple of weeks later.

Ideally, he would have been healthy again in 2026 but that hasn’t come to pass. He missed all of spring training due to a knee issue and a back issue. He started the season on the IL with a lumbar spine strain. Now yet another hip surgery will wipe out his whole season.

Injuries were already a part of Hoglund’s story even before these multiple hip surgeries. While still in college, he required Tommy John surgery in May of 2021. A couple of months later, the Jays selected him 19th overall in that summer’s draft. While still rehabbing in March of 2022, Hoglund was traded to the A’s as part of the deal sending Matt Chapman to Toronto.

Hoglund was able to make a very brief professional debut late in 2022, tossing eight innings on the farm. He got up to 61 minor league innings in 2023 but with poor results, posting a 6.05 earned run average. He showed some progress in 2024, posting a 3.44 ERA in 130 2/3 innings split between Double-A and Triple-A.

He was added to the 40-man roster in November of 2024, to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft. He began 2025 back at Triple-A and made six strong starts, which led to a call-up to the majors. He put six big league starts under his belt before hitting the IL last year. Ideally, he would have been developing as a pitcher and continuing to build his workload capacity as he moved further from his Tommy John. Instead, he lost most of 2025 and now all of 2026, leaving him as a big question mark going into 2027.

For the A’s, without Hoglund, they have primarily relied on a rotation consisting of Luis Severino, Jeffrey Springs, Aaron Civale, J.T. Ginn and Jacob Lopez. That group has mostly been putting up good numbers, except for Lopez, who has a 6.14 ERA. Depth options on the 40-man include Luis Morales, Joey Estes, Mason Barnett and Chen Zhong-Ao Zhuang.

The A’s are 24-24, which is good enough for them to have the lead in the American League West at the moment. If they continue to hang in the playoff race this summer, the pitching staff would certainly be an area to add before this summer’s trade deadline. The club has a collective 4.38 ERA on the season, which is better than just six clubs in the majors. Since Hoglund won’t be able to come back this year, that should only add to the club’s desire to add arms in the coming months.

Photo courtesy of Matt Kartozian, Imagn Images

José Berríos Undergoes Tommy John Surgery

Blue Jays right-hander José Berríos has had a full Tommy John surgery, per manager John Schneider, as relayed by Hazel Mae of Sportsnet. He will miss the entire 2026 season and a good chunk of 2027 as well. He is on the 15-day injured list but will be transferred to the 60-day IL whenever the Jays need a 40-man roster spot.

It has been a strange injury odyssey for Berríos, who was the most durable pitcher in the league until late last year. From 2018 through 2024, he made 32 starts in each full season, plus 12 in the shortened 2020 campaign. In 2025, he made 31 appearances but landed on the IL late in the year due to right elbow inflammation, his first time going on the IL as a big leaguer.

Berríos missed Toronto’s playoff run last year but appeared to be healthy going into 2026, making three spring training starts. He was then going to join the Puerto Rico team in the World Baseball Classic. A routine physical for that tournament showed some more elbow inflammation, even though he wasn’t experiencing any pain or symptoms. Things got stranger still when further testing revealed a stress fracture.

Despite the ominous diagnosis, Berríos began throwing again not long after and started a rehab assignment in mid-April. However, his results during those rehab starts were not good and his velocity started dropping. It was reported a few days ago that Berríos would undergo some kind of surgery here on Wednesday, but the details wouldn’t be known until it took place. Elbow surgery is always a big deal but it still seemed possible that a relatively minor procedure to address loose bodies, with a rough timeline of a few months, was a possibility.

But now the worst-case scenario has come to pass. Per Shi Davidi of Sportsnet, the stress fracture damaged the ulnar collateral ligament, which made this surgery necessary. It’s been an unusual sequence of events, taken all together. It’s unclear exactly how or when this stress fracture occurred, since Berríos wasn’t in pain and it was seemingly only discovered by accident. If there was a risk of the fracture damaging the ligament, it’s unclear why Berríos was allowed to resume throwing or if there were any alternate paths to take.

Perhaps there will be some more clarity on the whole saga in time. Regardless, the result is that Berríos is now slated for a long recovery. A full Tommy John surgery usually requires a pitcher to take 14 months or more to get back on the mound, so Berríos might be looking at a return around the 2027 All-Star break in a best-case scenario from this point forward.

Back in 2021, Berríos and the Jays signed a seven-year extension worth $131MM. That deal allowed him to opt out after 2026, walking away from the final two years, both of which come with salaries of $24MM. Leaving two years and $48MM on the table would have seemed viable at his peak but Berríos wasn’t trending in the right direction. His strikeout rate dipped below 20% in both 2024 and 2025. This injury makes it a lock that he’ll forgo the opt-out and play out the remainder of the contract.

For the 2026 Blue Jays, this only adds to the huge number of rotation issues they have had to deal with. At one point earlier this year, it looked like they were eight starters deep on paper. In addition to Berríos, they had Kevin Gausman, Dylan Cease, Trey Yesavage, Shane Bieber, Cody Ponce, Max Scherzer and Eric Lauer. Berríos, Bieber and Yesavage all started the season on the IL, quickly dropping the Jays from eight to five. Ponce suffered a season-ending knee injury in his first start, prompting the Jays to sign Patrick Corbin. Yesavage eventually came off the IL but Scherzer went the other way.

In addition to the injuries to those big league starters, the bodies have also been piling up in the depth department. Bowden Francis required Tommy John surgery a few months ago. Lazaro Estrada is on the IL with a shoulder impingement. Ricky Tiedemann‘s hasn’t pitched in official game action this year due to his ongoing injury issues. Jake Bloss is still working back from last year’s Tommy John, having just started a rehab assignment this month.

On top of the injuries, Lauer pitched so poorly that he got designated for assignment and then traded to the Dodgers. The Jays have four healthy starters in Gausman, Cease, Yesavage and Corbin but are currently patching together Lauer’s spot with bullpen games led by Rule 5 pick Spencer Miles, who came into the year with fewer than 15 innings in the minors and no appearances above Single-A.

They will now have to proceed knowing there’s no chance of Berríos coming back late in the year to help out. For the time being, they will be hoping that Scherzer, Bieber, Estrada or Bloss get healthy and re-enter the mix. Until that happens, some of their depth options at Triple-A include Josh Fleming, Austin Voth, Chad Dallas and CJ Van Eyk. Fleming has good numbers in Triple-A this year but was lit up by the Dodgers when called up to the majors. Voth has a solid ERA in Triple-A but with a very low strikeout rate. Dallas and Van Eyk both have ERAs under 3.50 this year but they don’t currently have any major league experience nor a spot on the 40-man.

It’s possible the Jays will enhance their efforts to add external arms, though the options aren’t amazing at this time of year. There aren’t really notable free agents and a big trade is hard to pull off as few teams are looking to sell this early.

In the longer term, the Jays will no longer be able to pencil Berríos into their rotation for the start of 2027. Gausman, Bieber and Scherzer are all impending free agents after 2026. The Jays should have Cease and Yesavage in two slots. Ponce will probably get a chance to take a spot, though he’ll be coming off an essentially lost season. Perhaps guys like Bloss, Estrada or others could push into the mix later this year, but there are clear gaps. Even before this news, the Jays were probably going to be looking for pitching in the coming offseason. Subtracting Berríos from the plans should only increase those odds.

Photo courtesy of Brian Fluharty, Imagn Images

Mets Select Zach Thornton

May 20th: Thornton has now been officially selected, per a team announcement. Right-hander Daniel Duarte was optioned as the corresponding active roster move. They opened a 40-man spot yesterday when they designated outfielder Austin Slater for assignment and recalled Nick Morabito.

May 18th: The Mets are going to promote pitching prospect Zach Thornton this week. Manager Carlos Mendoza informed reporters, including Tim Britton of The Athletic, that Thornton will play some kind of role for the Mets on Wednesday. That could be as a starter or working as a bulk guy behind an opener. Thornton is not yet on the 40-man roster, so the Mets will have to make room for him somehow.

Thornton, now 24, was a fifth-round pick of the Mets in 2023. He put himself on the prospect map with a strong 2025 season. He only made 14 starts before an oblique injury ended his season, but the numbers were good. Between High-A and Double-A, he tossed 72 2/3 innings, allowing 1.98 earned runs per nine. He struck out 28.5% of batters faced and only walked 4% of opponents. He also induced grounders on 43.2% of balls in play.

Coming into 2026, Baseball America ranked him the #13 prospect in the system and FanGraphs had him 12th. He doesn’t have huge velocity, averaging just 91 miles per hour with his fastball these days, but both BA and FG highlight his excellent command. FG also highlights his vertical slot and his ability to hide the ball as part of his delivery. His full arsenal includes a four-seamer, sinker, slider, cutter, curveball and changeup.

He has continued to post good numbers this year, with five Double-A starts and two at Triple-A. Combined, he has thrown 37 innings with a 3.16 ERA, 26.5% strikeout rate, 7.9% walk rate and 44.4% ground ball rate. BA bumped him up to #10 in the system in today’s update.

The Mets are dipping into their depth due to the recent injury to Clay Holmes, who fractured his right fibula and might be sidelined into August. Christian Scott is starting tonight and Nolan McLean tomorrow. Wednesday would have been Holmes’s turn. The Mets have some long relief options on the roster, although Sean Manaea just tossed four innings behind Freddy Peralta yesterday. Tobias Myers has starting experience but hasn’t tossed more than three innings in any game this year.

Thornton will at least get a spot start. What remains to be seen is if he’ll get sent back to the minors after that or if he’ll stick around. For the next turn, they could put Manaea or Myers into the Holmes spot. They could also turn to someone else on the farm, such as Jonah Tong, Jack Wenninger or Jonathan Pintaro.

Photo courtesy of Jim Rassol, Imagn Images

Braves Designate José Azócar For Assignment

The Braves announced that outfielder Eli White has been reinstated from the ten-day injured list. Fellow outfielder José Azócar has been designated for assignment in a corresponding roster move.

Azócar, 30, signed a minor league deal with Atlanta in the offseason. He was added to the roster in May when Ronald Acuña Jr. hit the injured list. A few days later, they decided to promote infielder Jim Jarvis and move Mauricio Dubón to the outfield mix. Since Azócar is out of options, he was bumped off the 40-man. After clearing waivers, he quickly re-signed and then got added back to the roster in the wake of White hitting the IL.

Around those transactions, Azócar has put up good numbers. He has a .333/.375/.467 slash line but he surely wasn’t going to maintain that kind of production. He put up that line in a tiny sample of 16 plate appearances with a huge .417 batting average on balls in play. That’s nowhere near his career track record, which consists of 434 plate appearances with a .248/.293/.325 slash line.

Broadly speaking, Azócar is a glove-first depth outfielder. He gets good reviews for his defense and can steal a base from time to time but his offense has mostly been subpar. Atlanta clearly still views him that way and hasn’t been swayed by a few extra batted balls finding holes in the past few weeks.

Azócar now heads to DFA limbo again. Atlanta can take some time to explore trade interest but it’s possible he ends up back on waivers and clears, like he did a few weeks back, though it’s also possible a team with some recent injury trouble has a need for an extra outfielder and puts in a claim. If Azócar does clear again, he has the right to elect free agency since he has a previous career outright. That’s the way things played out earlier this month but Atlanta quickly re-signed him to a new minors deal.

Photo courtesy of Brett Davis, Imagn Images

MLBTR Podcast: Colt Emerson Debuts, Blue Jays’ Rotation Issues, And What To Make Of The Mets And Astros

The latest episode of the MLB Trade Rumors Podcast is now live on SpotifyApple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you subscribe as well! You can also use the player at this link to listen, if you don’t use Spotify or Apple for podcasts.

This week, host Darragh McDonald is joined by Anthony Franco of MLB Trade Rumors to discuss…

Plus, we answer your questions, including…

  • Which teams have been the biggest positive surprises so far this season? (43:00)
  • With the Dodgers having a lot of outfield prospects and trending towards a surplus, do they put together a trade or hold and develop them? (54:10)

Check out our past episodes!

  • Patrick Bailey To Cleveland, The Struggling Astros, And Arizona’s Outfield Changes – listen here
  • Skubal’s Injury, The Marlins’ Catchers, Eldridge Called Up, And Volpe Sent Down – listen here
  • The Alex Cora Situation, Lucas Giolito Signs, And The Phillies Fire Rob Thomson – listen here

The podcast intro and outro song “So Long” is provided courtesy of the band Showoff.  Check out their Facebook page here!

Photo courtesy of Steven Bisig, Imagn Images

Gerrit Cole To Start For Yankees On Friday

Yankees manager Aaron Boone informed reporters, including Chris Kirschner of The Athletic, that right-hander Gerrit Cole will be activated from the 15-day injured list to start for the club on Friday. That will be his first start in the big leagues since 2024, as he spent 2025 recovering from Tommy John surgery.

Cole’s track record is well known at this point, as he has been one of the most consistent performers for most of his career. He has a 3.18 earned run average in almost 2,000 big league innings. In 12 seasons, he has only once finished with an ERA higher than 3.88.

Injury absences had been rare for him. From 2013 to 2023, he logged at least 116 innings in each full season and hit the 200-inning mark six times. Elbow issues became a talking point in 2024. Fresh off his Cy Young win in 2023, he experienced some elbow discomfort early the next year. He began the 2024 season on the IL but ultimately returned and posted a 3.41 ERA over 95 innings. He then put up a 2.17 ERA in five postseason starts as the Yanks charged to the World Series, ultimately falling to the Dodgers.

Then in spring training 2025, elbow discomfort returned. This time, it was more serious, as Cole had to go under the knife in March. He sat out the 2025 season and the Yanks did fairly well without him. They had signed Max Fried, who stepped into the ace role. Fried gave the Yanks a 2.86 ERA over 32 starts last year as the Yanks went 94-68. They couldn’t go as far in the playoffs as the year prior, dropping an ALDS matchup with the Blue Jays.

Now, coincidentally, Fried and Cole are effectively swapping places again. Fried recently hit the IL due to a bone bruise in his left elbow. It’s unclear how long that issue will keep Fried on the shelf, but it continues the stretch of the two pitchers technically being on the same team without ever being on the active roster together.

Cole has been rehabbing for a few weeks and was slated to make one more rehab start. The Yanks initially said that Fried’s injury wouldn’t prompt them to speed up Cole’s timeline but it seems they have pivoted from that. Cole is undoubtedly stretched out, having gone at least 4 1/3 innings in all six of his rehab outings. His 4.66 ERA doesn’t look especially impressive but he only allowed three earned runs combined over his two most recent games, tossing 10 1/3 innings in those.

Fried’s injury temporarily delays a tough decision for the Yankees. The club has been getting good results from Fried, Will Warren, Cam Schlittler and Ryan Weathers, with all four of those guys having ERAs under 3.60. Carlos Rodón has a 5.63 ERA but it only two starts, as he also began the season on the IL recovering from elbow surgery. As Cole was rehabbing, it looked like someone was going to get an undeserved demotion to the minors or the bullpen.

For now, Cole takes Fried’s spot and everyone else in that group can stay. If Fried is able to return relatively quickly, then perhaps an awkward decision will be required at that time, though it’s also possible another injury pops up in the interim. It’s also possible that Clarke Schmidt could enter the picture later in the season, as he is recovering a Tommy John surgery performed in July.

Photo courtesy of Kim Klement Neitzel, Imagn Images

Astros Place Lance McCullers Jr. On Injured List

The Astros announced that right-hander Lance McCullers Jr. has been placed on the 15-day injured list, retroactive to May 16th, due to right shoulder inflammation. Fellow righty Nate Pearson has been reinstated from the 15-day IL in a corresponding move. Houston also reinstated outfielder Jake Meyers from the 10-day IL and optioned infielder/outfielder Shay Whitcomb.

McCullers was the scheduled starter for tonight’s game but the club announced a few hours ago that he had been scratched, with Jason Alexander to take the ball tonight instead. Though this was a last-minute scratch, manager Joe Espada said McCullers has been dealing with shoulder pain for “a while,” per Chandler Rome of The Athletic. It’s unclear how much time McCullers will miss, as he is heading to Houston for more testing.

Injuries have been a big part of recent history for McCullers. He missed the 2023 and 2024 seasons due a flexor injury that required surgery. He was back on the mound in 2025 and made 16 appearances, but with diminished velocity and a 6.51 earned run average. Here in 2026, he has a 6.86 ERA in eight starts.

Though he doesn’t appear to be the same pitcher he was before the injuries set him back, it’s still a blow for the Astros. The club has been hit real hard by injuries this year. In the rotation, Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier are each on the IL due to shoulder strains. The club is still waiting for Ronel Blanco, Brandon Walter and Hayden Wesneski to return from last year’s Tommy John surgeries.

Around those injuries and others, they have had to rely upon almost every depth option available. They have also been trying to deploy a six-man rotation at various times, both due to the schedule and trying to manage the workload of Tatsuya Imai. 12 different pitchers have already made starts for the club. Some of those have been openers but the club has clearly been churning through guys. Though McCullers doesn’t have good numbers, removing him from the equation just means they will have to keep reaching deeper when they’ve already fallen to 19-30 on the year.

As mentioned, Alexander is taking the ball tonight. That could be a spot start or he could stick around for another turn. Mike Burrows is the scheduled starter tomorrow. The Astros are off on Thursday, which is perhaps a chance to recover and reset before they play ten days in a row.

Burrows, Imai, Spencer Arrighetti, Peter Lambert and Kai-Wei Teng are in the rotation at the moment. If Alexander doesn’t stick around, they have Miguel Ullola, Colton Gordon and Ryan Weiss on optional assignment at Triple-A. Ullola has a 6.03 ERA and 16.8% walk rate in Triple-A this year. The Astros haven’t trusted him enough to call him up at any other point this season, despite really needing arms. Gordon and Weiss got some MLB time earlier this year but both posted ERAs north of 7.00 in those looks. Rome floats the possibility of calling up Ethan Pecko, who has a 2.21 ERA on the farm this year, though he’s not yet on the 40-man roster.

Photo courtesy of Jamie Sabau, Imagn Images

Ryan Jeffers, Emmanuel Rodriguez To Undergo Surgeries

Twins general manager Jeremy Zoll provided some updates on injured players to reporters, including Aaron Gleeman as well as Dan Hayes of The Athletic. Catcher Ryan Jeffers will undergo hamate surgery and has an expected return timeline of six to eight weeks. Outfielder Emmanuel Rodriguez will also undergo surgery, in his case to address the torn ulnar collateral ligament in his left thumb.

Neither procedure is surprising but both are disappointing. It was reported earlier today that Jeffers had suffered a fracture of his hamate. That situation usually leads to surgery and that will indeed be the case in this instance.

Jeffers has been Minnesota’s primary catcher for a while now and has been one of the better offensive backstops in the league. Dating back to the start of 2023, he has a .258/.346/.445 line and 122 wRC+. Only four qualified catchers have a better wRC+ mark for that span and one of them, Willson Contreras, isn’t even a catcher anymore. That leaves Cal Raleigh, William Contreras and Will Smith as the active backstops ahead of Jeffers.

The production from Jeffers includes a huge .295/.408/.541 showing this season. That has helped the Twins hang in the playoff race, as they are currently only half a game out of a Wild Card spot in the American League. For now, Minnesota will have Victor Caratini and Alex Jackson handling the catching duties, which will surely be a downgrade. Caratini has a strong track record but is hitting only .192/.299/.231 this year. Jackson has a career batting line of .153/.239/.288.

The injury also interrupts a platform year for Jeffers, as he is an impending free agent. He was on pace to be the top available catcher and one of the top available bats regardless of position. That could still end up being the case but he’ll now have to deal with this lengthy absence and then try to get back on track after. The timeline with a hamate surgery isn’t massive in the grand scheme of things but players often struggle with a lack of power when they return.

As for Rodriguez, it’s also not a shocking development, as this thumb issue put him on the IL a couple of weeks ago. Though his timeline is still to be determined, the timing stings, as he is on the 40-man roster and could have been up in the big leagues right now if he were healthy.

The Twins have sent outfielder Matt Wallner and third baseman Royce Lewis to the minors this month, opening up some big league at-bats. Rodriguez wasn’t going to play third base but the demotion of Lewis could lead to other guys getting moved around. The Jeffers injury could also indirectly open up some designated hitter at-bats, as Caratini and Josh Bell have been splitting first base and DH. If Caratini is going to be behind the plate more regularly, there are extra DH at-bats available.

Though Rodriguez is very talented, injuries are becoming an annoying recurrence, perhaps giving Twins fans some déjà vu after years of watching Lewis and Byron Buxton. In the minors, Rodriguez has dealt with knee, abdominal, right thumb, left thumb and hip injuries. Due to all those ailments, he hasn’t topped 99 games in a season, which was back in 2023. He was capped at 45 games in 2024 and 65 last year. Now he is once again hurt and facing a notable absence.

When on the field, the talent is there and is also unique. Rodriguez has one of the most extreme approaches of any player. In his minor league career, he has a huge 30.2% strikeout rate but also a massive 21.6% walk rate. He has big power, speed and is considered a good defender. The strikeouts may become a problem but he also offsets those with the free passes.

Rodriguez has been on the Minnesota 40-man roster since November of 2023, getting added to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft. That means he has already burned two option seasons and is currently burning the third. That could put him out of options going into 2027, unless he can qualify for a fourth option, though that may not be possible.

A player is eligible for a fourth option if he hasn’t played five “full” professional seasons, where a full season is defined as one in which the player is active for 90 days, or is active for at least 30 with a 90-day total of active/IL time. This is basically to discount short-season rookie ball campaigns or seasons totally lost to injury. Despite all his issues, Rodriguez has been in full-season ball since getting promoted to Low-A at the start of 2022. He played 40-plus games from 2022 to 2025, so that would seemingly hit the 30-day/90-day threshold in each and count as four full seasons. Here in 2026, he has only played 26 games thus far but was active from late March to early May, getting to at least 30 days again.

Photo courtesy of Matt Blewett, Imagn Images

Diamondbacks Place James McCann On IL, Select Aramis Garcia

The Diamondbacks announced that catcher James McCann has been placed on the 10-day injured list with a strained right quad. Fellow catcher Aramis Garcia has been selected to take his place on the roster. The Snakes had a couple of 40-man vacancies, with Garcia filling one of them.

McCann, 36 next month, was signed to a $2.75MM deal to serve as a veteran backup to Gabriel Moreno. McCann has appeared in 22 games with a .203/.217/.254 line and questionable defensive metrics.

Arizona has been rostering three catchers for most of the season. Adrian Del Castillo has done some catching but has been seeing a lot of time in the designated hitter slot, even though he hasn’t been living up to that designation, with a .185/.232/.326 line and 33.3% strikeout rate this year.

It seems the Snakes prefer to keep that three-catcher system going. Earlier this year, when Moreno required a stint on the IL, they added Garcia to the roster. He was mostly there for emergencies, as he spent over two weeks on the roster but only made three plate appearances. When Moreno came off the IL, the out-of-options Garcia was designated for assignment and outrighted back to Triple-A Reno.

It’s possible Garcia is slated for a similar experience now. While McCann is out, the Snakes will continue to have Moreno as their primary catcher, with Del Castillo a backup/DH. Garcia will be there for late-game substitutions or if someone gets hurt. Garcia has just a .210/.245/.321 line in his career but the Diamondbacks obviously value his defense and/or the work he does with pitchers. He was selected to their roster twice last year and this is now already his second selection of 2026.

Photo courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas, Imagn Images