Astros To Select Peter Lambert

Right-hander Peter Lambert will start for the Astros on Friday, with Chandler Rome of The Athletic among those to relay the update. Lambert is not currently on the roster, so he’ll need to be formally added prior to the game.

It’s an early birthday present for Lambert, who turns 29 on Saturday. When he takes the ball, he’ll be making his first major league appearance for a team other than the Rockies. Lambert made 74 appearances for Colorado from 2019 to 2024, throwing 243 2/3 innings and allowing 6.28 earned runs per nine.

At the end of the 2024 season, the Rockies outrighted Lambert off their roster and he elected free agency. He then signed with the Yakult Swallows of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball. He gave the Swallows 116 1/3 innings over 21 starts with a 4.26 ERA. That may seem like a passable mark but NPB has been a pitcher-friendly league in recent years. Last year’s league-wide ERA was 2.97 in the Central League and 3.04 in the Pacific League, the two main leagues of NPB.

He landed a minor league deal with the Astros in November. He opted out of that deal at the end of camp but re-signed on a fresh minor league deal. He has thrown 14 2/3 Triple-A innings this year over three appearances, allowing three earned runs via 11 hits, three walks and hitting two batters while striking out 12. In that small sample, his 20.3% strikeout rate is subpar but his 5.1% walk rate and 53.7% ground ball rate are strong figures. His four-seamer has averaged 94.5 miles per hour this year and he has also thrown a sinker, cutter, slider, curveball and changeup.

The Astros have been doing a lot of improvising on their pitching staff lately. Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier both landed on the injured list due to shoulder strains. Not long after, Tatsuya Imai hit the IL due to arm fatigue, meaning Houston quickly lost three fifths of the five Opening Day rotation. That forced them to turn to contingency plans but one of those also got bit with the injury bug, as back inflammation put Cody Bolton on the IL.

There’s never a good time for a team to lose four starters but the timing was especially unfortunate in this case as the Astros began a stretch of 13 straight games last Friday. Imai started the first game but lasted just a third of an inning, forcing J.P. France and others to soak up the rest. Lance McCullers Jr. and Mike Burrows are still around from the season-opening group. McCullers took the ball on Saturday and Burrows on Sunday. Bolton went on Monday but lasted just one inning. Colton Gordon was recalled this week and started on Tuesday, giving the club 3 2/3 innings. Spencer Arrighetti was recalled to start Wednesday and went six.

Just now in Thursday’s contest, they effectively did a bullpen game. Ryan Weiss, who had been pitching in long relief, started and went 3 2/3. Christian Roa then absorbed 1 1/3, followed by two frames each from AJ Blubaugh and Kai-Wei Teng.

The Astros still have six more games to get through before their next off-day. Lambert will take the ball tomorrow, followed by McCullers and Burrows. Houston could then perhaps go back to Gordon and Arrighetti in the next two. The final game could again be Lambert, though he is out of options. Depending on how things go tomorrow, it’s possible he may need to be bumped off the roster for a fresh arm. In that case, perhaps another bullpen game headlined by Weiss would be the move, depending on who gets used in the interim.

For tomorrow, as mentioned, corresponding moves will be required to get Lambert onto the roster. The Astros have several guys on the IL and perhaps one of them could be moved to the 60-day IL to open up a 40-man spot if the Astros don’t expect them back anytime soon. The list of pitchers currently on the 15-day IL includes Brown, Javier, Imai and Bolton but also Josh Hader, Nate Pearson and Bennett Sousa. If the club doesn’t want to lock any of those guys into a lengthy IL stint, someone else would have to be bumped off the 40-man. In terms of opening an active roster spot, most of their guys can be optioned, with McCullers, Bryan Abreu, Enyel De Los Santos and Steven Okert the only exceptions.

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Braves Re-Sign Luke Williams To Minor League Deal

The Braves have re-signed Luke Williams to a minor league deal, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. He has been assigned to Triple-A Gwinnett and entered tonight’s game as a pinch runner.

It’s an unsurprising development. Williams is clearly liked by the club as a depth piece but he is out of options, leading to frequent transactions. Williams was added to the roster a few days ago while Michael Harris II went on the paternity list. When Harris came back a few days later, Williams was designated for assignment, cleared waivers and elected free agency. It’s a familiar cycle for him. He was claimed off waivers in the summer of 2023 and, since then, this is the third time he has become a free agency and then quickly re-signed.

Williams hasn’t hit in the majors, with a .212/.272/.280 line in 350 plate appearances. But he provides defensive versatility, with experience at every position on the diamond except catcher. He can also steals some bases, swiping 25 bags in 31 attempts in his big league career.

Atlanta doesn’t have a ton of optionable position player depth on the roster. The only guy on the 40-man who isn’t already in the majors or on the injured list is Nacho Alvarez Jr., who has a .182/.325/.212 line in Triple-A so far this year. If someone on the active roster suffers an injury, Williams will be a candidate to rejoin the big league club.

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Kolby Allard Elects Free Agency

Left-hander Kolby Allard has elected free agency after being sent outright to Triple-A Columbus, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. That indicates he cleared waivers after being designated for assignment earlier this week.

Players have the right to reject outright assignments if they have a previous career outright or at least three years of service time. Allard qualifies on both counts and has exercised his right to head to the open market.

He is free to explore options with other clubs but the most likely outcome is that he re-signs with the Guards on a new minor league deal in the coming days. It’s common for players to return to their former clubs in these instances and that’s especially true with Allard specifically. He has been bouncing on and off the Cleveland roster for the better part of a year now, since he is out of options.

He signed a minor league deal with the club in February of 2025. He was added to the roster in April. In July, he was designated for assignment, elected free agency, re-signed to a new minor league deal and was back on the roster in less than a week. He was outrighted again at season’s end, then signed a new minor league deal ahead of this year’s spring training. He was added to the roster in late March and lasted on the roster for a couple of weeks before Monday’s DFA.

The transactions are probably not pleasant but Allard is presumably happy to get some major league pay and service time. The Guards, meanwhile, get some extra depth by keeping the relationship with Allard going.

Last year’s results were excellent, in that he tossed 65 innings as a swingman, allowing 2.63 earned runs per nine. That kind of run prevention wasn’t sustainable when he was only striking out 15.8% of batters faced, which is why he cleared waivers multiple times. This year’s results have been far worse, in a much smaller sample. He logged 8 2/3 innings over four appearances, allowing ten earned runs.

Perhaps news of a new deal with the Guards will emerge in the coming days, though there are several other clubs dealing with injuries, so the possibility of him signing elsewhere can’t be entirely ruled out.

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Mark Canha Released From Rangers Deal

9:41pm: Canha has now been granted his release, per Grant.

8:45pm: Veteran first baseman/outfielder Mark Canha has asked to be released from his minor league deal with the Rangers, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post. Canha is hoping to pursue big league deals with other clubs.

Canha, 37, signed a minor league deal with the Rangers in February. He had a solid spring, slashing .286/.318/.500, but didn’t break camp with the club. The Rangers effectively had a battle for their final roster spot between Canha and Andrew McCutchen, but the latter won out.

Canha had an opt-out in his deal at the end of spring training and could have returned to free agency at that point, but he and the Rangers agreed to an arrangement that worked for both of them. As reported by Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News at the end of March, Canha preferred not to go on the road with a minor league club. He agreed to stay with the Rangers in extended spring training in Surprise, Arizona. Since his full-time home is in nearby Scottsdale, he could stay with his family while maintaining game readiness by facing minor leaguers.

That allowed the club to hold onto some veteran depth in case an injury popped up, but it hasn’t. Almost three weeks have passed since that arrangement was made and, in the interim, the Rangers have been fortunate in terms of health on the position player side. Cody Freeman has been on the injured list all year due to a lower back fracture suffered back in February. No other position player has joined him on the IL since the season began.

Despite the health, there are some gaps in the performance. McCutchen isn’t out to a great start, working primarily as the short side of a designated hitter platoon with Joc Pederson, in addition to occasional outfield work. It’s a small sample of 28 plate appearances but he has struck out 12 times, a 42.9% clip, while his one walk is a 3.6% pace. His .222/.250/.407 line translates to an 84 wRC+.

Theoretically, Canha could be subbed in for McCutchen in that role, since he is also a veteran righty bat. But whether Canha can provide more than McCutchen is a fair question. With the Royals last year, Canha slashed .212/.272/.265, production which translated to a 49 wRC+. He was released in August and didn’t sign anywhere else in the final few weeks of the season. As mentioned, he had a decent spring but it’s hard to say what form he is in now since he hasn’t been playing in official game action.

If the Rangers grant Canha his release, it’s hard to see him landing an immediate major league offer, based on his most recent big league action and the fact that he hasn’t been playing in official games for a few weeks. He would almost certainly receive some minor league offers but it’s unclear if his appetite for riding the bus has increased in the past few weeks.

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Padres Option Sung-Mun Song

The Padres announced that infielder Sung-Mun Song has been reinstated from the 10-day injured list and optioned to Triple-A El Paso. He began the season on the IL due to a right oblique strain and had remained there until this transaction.

Song, 29, spent most of the past decade as a regular in the KBO League in South Korea. He was posted for MLB clubs in the offseason and landed with the Padres, securing a $15MM guarantee on a four-year deal.

It’s unusual for players signed to eight-figure, multi-year free agent deals to be optioned to the minors, but there are some unique circumstances at play here. Most players who sign such deals are MLB veterans who reached free agency by getting to six years of service time. Such players can’t be optioned to the minors without their consent. Players coming over from leagues in other countries will sometimes have language in their contracts giving them the same ability to veto minor league assignments. In this case, it appears that Song doesn’t have such protection.

It’s also possible the Padres want Song to get regular reps in the minors, as opposed to being in a part-time role in the big leagues. He suffered his oblique injury way back in January, before spring training games even began. He did eventually get into eight Cactus League contests but then the oblique issue flared up again, leading to his IL stint. He began a rehab assignment shortly after Opening Day, on March 27th. Rehab assignments for position players come with a 20-day maximum, so the Friars had to make a decision on him.

Adding Song would have likely meant designating someone for assignment. Of their 13 position players, the only three with options are Jackson Merrill, Freddy Fermin and Gavin Sheets. Those three are all regular parts of the lineup and wouldn’t be candidates for a stint in the minors. A bench player like Bryce Johnson, Ty France or Nick Castellanos would need the DFA treatment to squeeze in Song.

The Friars could have gone that route, especially with Castellanos and Johnson struggling, but Song hasn’t exactly been forcing the issue. He has been drawing walks on his rehab assignment but hasn’t been hitting the ball with authority. Of his 16 hits, only two of them have been for extra bases, both doubles. His .276/.364/.310 slash line translates to a 78 wRC+ in the hitter-friendly environment of the Pacific Coast League. He hit 26 homers in the KBO last year and 19 the year prior, so he should be capable of more than that.

There’s also the fact that the Padres are expanding Song’s versatility. In the KBO, he played the three non-shortstop positions. The Friars are getting him some action at second, third and shortstop. They had also considered him for some outfield work, though they put that plan on ice while Song was dealing with the oblique injury and he hasn’t yet played any outfield for El Paso.

Even if the Padres made space for Song in the big leagues, he wouldn’t find a ton of playing time behind the regular infield of third baseman Manny Machado, shortstop Xander Bogaerts and second baseman Jake Cronenworth, especially since they seem willing to play Fernando Tatis Jr. at second base from time to time.

Add it all up and there’s logic to the decision. Song can get regular playing time for El Paso, which will hopefully wake up his bat while also getting him more exposure to shortstop. Perhaps they will revisit the idea of the outfield experiment. The big league club, meanwhile, can hang onto everyone currently on the roster.

One thing that isn’t at play is service time manipulation. Most contracts for players coming from Japan or South Korea contain language making it clear that the player will be a free agent when the contract expires, regardless of major league service time. That is indeed the case for Song’s deal with the Padres, per Ronald Blum of The Associated Press.

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Orioles Recall Cameron Foster For MLB Debut

The Orioles announced that right-hander Cameron Foster has been recalled from Triple-A Norfolk. He’ll be making his major league debut as soon as he gets into a game. Catcher Maverick Handley was optioned to Norfolk in the corresponding active roster move.

It’s a bit unusual for a pitcher to be swapped in for a position player. 26-man rosters have a 13-pitcher limit and teams are almost always at that maximum. The O’s briefly went to a split of 14 position players and 12 hurlers yesterday when they selected catcher Sam Huff, with lefty Nick Raquet optioned out. This move gets them back to an even 13-13 split, with Huff sticking around to form the catching duo with Samuel Basallo while Adley Rutschman is on the injured list.

The move to get back to a full eight-man bullpen gets Foster, 27, up to the big leagues for the first time. The O’s acquired him from the Mets at last year’s deadline in the trade that sent Gregory Soto to Queens. The O’s then added him to their 40-man roster in November to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft. He came into big league camp in spring training but was optioned to Norfolk in March.

A 14th-round pick of the Mets in 2022, he mostly worked as a starter in 2023 and for parts of 2024 as well. 2025 was the first full season where he was focused on relief work. He pitched 46 1/3 innings on the year between the two clubs, and also split between Double-A and Triple-A. He had a combined 3.11 earned run average. He struck out 32.6% of batters faced, a huge mark, while his 8.4% walk rate was around league average.

He featured five different pitches at the Triple-A level last year, per Statcast. His four-seamer and sinker averaged in the mid-90s, while he mixed in a cutter, slider and curveball. So far this year, he has thrown six Triple-A innings. The seven earned runs give him an unsightly 10.50 ERA but his three home runs allowed might have tilted that number in a small sample. He has eight strikeouts to one walk, which is encouraging.

As mentioned, the O’s were playing with a seven-man bullpen yesterday. They used five of those relievers in their 10-inning loss to the Diamondbacks. The only two who didn’t pitch were Rico Garcia and Albert Suárez. Garcia had pitched the two prior games on Monday and Tuesday. Suárez is the long man and threw 40 pitches on Monday.

In short, they needed a fresh arm, so Foster may have a decent chance of making his first big league appearance tonight. Since this is his first season on the 40-man, he has a full slate of options and could be shuffled between Norfolk and Baltimore a few times this year.

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Rockies Place Kyle Freeland On IL

The Rockies announced today that left-hander Kyle Freeland has been placed on the 15-day injured list, retroactive to April 13th, due to left shoulder inflammation. Fellow lefty Jose Quintana was reinstated from his own stint on the IL as a corresponding move.

Freeland was scheduled to start for the Rockies three days ago but he was scratched due to some tightness in his shoulder. Details on his health are still not clear but the Rockies will let him rest up for at least a few turns through the rotation.

It’s an unfortunate setback for Freeland personally. He was out to a strong start this year, with a 2.30 earned run average through his first three appearances. But beyond that, this reduces the chances of him triggering his $17MM vesting player option for 2027.

Unlocking the player option was always going to be tough, as Freeland needs to throw 170 innings this year. That’s a mark he has hit only twice in his career. Way back in 2018, he got to 202 1/3 innings. His second-best season in that category was 2022, when he only barely got there, finishing at 174 2/3. Last year, a minimal stint on the IL for a back injury knocked him out for 15 days. He took the ball 31 times and logged 162 2/3 innings.

Naturally, Freeland’s best path to hitting that benchmark would be to stay healthy and pitch deep into games. Any kind of injury setback, even a small one, reduces his chances of getting to that line.

Presumably, the Rockies wouldn’t want him to trigger that option. They are rebuilding, having lost 119 games last year, and don’t have strong motivation to spend at that level on a starting pitcher. They did bolster the rotation this winter by signing some pitchers but all to notably lower salaries than that. They gave Michael Lorenzen $8MM, Quintana $6MM and Tomoyuki Sugano $5.1MM. Even if they are willing to bring back Freeland next year, it would make sense for them to prefer to negotiate a salary, as opposed to Freeland having the freedom to just lock in $17MM.

In terms of the on-field results, it’s not a huge deal in the short term. Quintana missed a couple of weeks with a hamstring strain but slots right into Freeland’s position in the rotation. He is taking the ball tonight, followed by Sugano, Ryan Feltner, Chase Dollander and then Lorenzen.

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Jared Young To Undergo Meniscus Surgery

The Mets announced that infielder/outfielder Jared Young has been placed on the 10-day injured list, retroactive to April 13th, due to a left meniscus tear. Outfielder MJ Melendez has been recalled to take his place on the roster. Young will undergo surgery, per Will Sammon of The Athletic. The team has not announced an expected recovery timeline.

It’s an unfortunate blow for both Young and the Mets. For Young personally, he was getting some big league time and making the most of it. He has usually hit well in the minors but came into this season as a 30-year-old with just 116 big league plate appearances. Injuries to Mike Tauchman, Juan Soto and Jorge Polanco opened up some playing time with the Mets this year. Young stepped up to take 23 plate appearances and produced a .350/.391/.450 line.

Unfortunately, his season will now be on pause for a while. Meniscus surgeries usually require a couple of months of recovery, give or take. For instance, Tauchman is also out due to meniscus surgery and his recovery will reportedly take six weeks.

Young’s path to playing time in the future will depend upon what else happens on the roster. Soto’s calf strain isn’t considered overly serious, so he’ll likely be back in the outfield before Young is healthy. Polanco’s Achilles injury has kept him primarily in the designated hitter slot, which has allowed Mark Vientos and Young to pick up some start at first base.

For now, Melendez comes up and will be making his Mets debut as soon as he gets in a game. A longtime member of the Royals, he signed a big league deal with the Mets in the offseason but has been on optional assignment so far this year. He has a subpar .216/.286/.431 line at Triple-A, which isn’t too far off his major league career line of .215/.297/.388.

The Mets will likely utilize a rotation of Carson Benge, Brett Baty, Luis Robert Jr., Tommy Pham, Tyrone Taylor and Melendez in the outfield, while Vientos might get more starts at first base. They don’t really have a clear depth infielder on the bench but Baty has experience at second and third, while third baseman Bo Bichette appears to be the emergency shortstop behind Francisco Lindor.

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Porter Hodge To Undergo UCL Surgery

Cubs right-hander Porter Hodge will undergo surgery on the ulnar collateral ligament in his throwing elbow, reports Taylor McGregor of the Marquee Sports Network. He will miss the entire 2026 season and likely part of 2027 as well.

It’s obviously an unwelcome development for Hodge, in addition to being another blow for the Chicago pitching staff. He began this season on the 15-day injured list with a right elbow strain. Now that he’s going to miss the remainder of the campaign, he’ll be transferred to the 60-day IL at some point in the future when the Cubs need a 40-man roster spot.

Hodge seemed to break out with the Cubs in 2024. He pitched 43 innings out of their bullpen that year, allowing 1.88 earned runs per nine. His 11.6% walk rate was on the high side but he punched out 31.7% of batters faced, averaging in the upper 90s with his fastball. He earned enough trust to rack up nine saves and nine holds that year. He got some help from a .189 batting average on balls in play and 80.1% strand rate but it was an encouraging season nonetheless.

His results backed up in 2025. His strikeout rate fell to 27.2%, still above average but well below the previous season. His walk rate ticked up a bit to 12.2%. His batted ball luck returned to normal levels and he fell victim to some home run troubles. The end result was a 6.27 ERA on the year. An oblique strain and a shoulder impingement may have impacted his ability to get in a groove.

Ideally, 2026 would have been a bounceback year but that won’t happen now. As mentioned, he has already been on the IL all season and will now stay there. The one silver lining for him personally is that he’ll collect big league pay and service time for the year. He began the season with his service clock at one years and 117 days. There’s a small chance he could qualify for arbitration as a Super Two player, depending on where the cutoff lands at season’s end.

For the Cubs, it’s another blow to the pitching staff. They have already lost Cade Horton to his own UCL surgery. Justin Steele is still working his way back from last year’s UCL surgery. Matthew Boyd, Jordan Wicks, Hunter Harvey, Phil Maton and Ethan Roberts are also on the IL. Some of those guys will be back in the mix later this season but the Cubs will now have to plan on getting through 2026 without any contributions from Hodge.

For now, they have a bullpen consisting of Daniel Palencia, Ben Brown, Caleb Thielbar, Jacob Webb, Hoby Milner, Riley Martin, Luke Little and Ryan Rolison. They have Gavin Hollowell and Charlie Barnes on optional assignment. Swingman Colin Rea is in the rotation but could be pushed back to the bullpen if some injured starters get healthy. The injured relievers could also come off the IL in the future and bolster the depth chart, but it’s also possible further injuries arise in the interim.

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Mets Release Luis García

Right-hander Luis García has been released by the Mets, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. He was designated for assignment on the weekend. He’ll head to free agency once he clears release waivers, if he hasn’t already.

García, 39, is a veteran with over ten years of service time. Any player with at least five years of service has the right to reject an outright assignment to the minor leagues while also keeping his salary commitments in place. It seems the Mets have decided to skip over the formality of that process.

The Mets signed García to a one-year, $1.75MM deal in the offseason. That’s relatively modest by the standards of big league contracts these days, though the Mets also face a huge tax bill as a repeated tax payor with a massive competitive balance tax number.

Despite making that financial commitment to García, the club quickly decided to pull the ripcord. He made six appearances, logging 6 1/3 innings. He allowed five earned runs via 11 hits and two walks while striking out four. It certainly wasn’t a good performance but that’s a tiny sample of work.

Despite his age, García was a solid relief arm as recently as last year. He tossed 55 1/3 innings for three different clubs with a 3.42 earned run average. His 20.6% strikeout rate and 11.2% walk rate weren’t amazing but he induced grounders at a strong rate of 49.7%.

Presumably, the Mets signed him because they thought he could still be effective in 2026 but they have quickly given up on that. Perhaps they were worried by his diminished stuff. His sinker averaged 96.9 miles per hour last year but has been at 94 mph so far this season, while his splitter and slider are also down about two ticks.

Garcia should land with another club shortly. Since the Mets are releasing him, they will remain on the hook for his salary. Another club could sign him and would only have to pay him the prorated portion of the league minimum for any time he spends on their roster. Given all the pitching injuries around the league, there will surely be clubs interested in a veteran arm who can be had for a minimal financial commitment.

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