White Sox Designate Reese McGuire, Select Drew Romo

The White Sox announced that catcher Reese McGuire has been designated for assignment.  Taking McGuire’s spot on both the 26-man and 40-man rosters is catcher Drew Romo, whose contract has been selected from Triple-A Charlotte.

After signing a minor league deal with the Brewers during the offseason, McGuire triggered an opt-out clause in the contract a few days before Opening Day when it became clear that he wasn’t making Milwaukee’s active roster.  McGuire then signed a one-year deal worth $1.2MM in guaranteed money to join Chicago’s roster, as the Sox needed some veteran help to complement Edgar Quero while Kyle Teel was on the injured list.  (Korey Lee was also designated for assignment and then outrighted off Chicago’s 40-man roster, as the White Sox seemingly preferred McGuire over Lee.)

The results haven’t been pretty for either Quero or McGuire, as the duo have combined for -0.6 bWAR (the lowest bWAR of any team’s catching corps) in the first month of play.  Quero is hitting only .153/.271/.169 over 72 PA, while McGuire has slashed a near-identical .172/.273/.172 over 34 PA.  Quero’s struggles are a bigger-picture concern for the White Sox since the young backstop is viewed as a potential building block, yet McGuire is naturally the far more expendable of the two.

If another team claims McGuire off waivers, they’ll absorb the approximately $1MM remaining of McGuire’s 2026 salary.  The White Sox may be hoping that the price tag scares off any teams who might be thin enough at catcher to consider a claim, so that McGuire can clear waivers and be outrighted to Triple-A Charlotte.

Since McGuire has been outrighted in the past, however, he has the right to reject any future outright assignments in favor of free agency, so he’ll have some leverage if he does make it through the waiver wire.  McGuire also has more than five years of MLB service time, so he would be able to keep his remaining $1MM-ish salary even if he did reject an outright assignment and become a free agent.  Any new team who then signed McGuire would only owe him the prorated MLB minimum salary, which would be subtracted from what the White Sox still owe the catcher.

Romo landed with the Sox via a waiver claim off the Mets’ roster in January.  This was the third waiver claim in a little over a month for Romo, who went from the Rockies (the team that drafted him 35th overall in 2020) to the Orioles to the Mets and finally to the Southsiders.  Chicago then designated Romo for assignment and subsequently outrighted him in February, and Romo didn’t have the ability to elect free agency.

His stint at Triple-A Charlotte has been a smash to date, as Romo has hit .298/.385/.561 with four home runs over his first 68 PA for the Knights.  Matching anything close to that production in the big leagues is far-fetched, but it is possible Romo might still hold some late bloomer potential.  The catcher is only 24 years old, and his big league resume consists of only 20 plate appearances with Colorado in 2024-25.

Romo will get another chance to show what he can do against MLB pitching, and even an average level of offense would be both an upgrade over McGuire and a chance to take some at-bats away from the struggling Quero.  As for Teel, he has already passed the initial 4-to-6 week recovery timeframe for his Grade 2 hamstring strain, yet White Sox GM Chris Getz told MLB.com’s Scott Merkin and other reporters that Teel isn’t quite yet ready to begin a minor league rehab assignment.

Blue Jays Select Yohendrick Pinango, Place Nathan Lukes On 10-Day Injured List

The Blue Jays announced that outfielder Nathan Lukes has been placed on the 10-day injured list due to a left hamstring strain.  Taking Lukes’ place on the active roster is outfield prospect Yohendrick Pinango, whose contract has been selected from Triple-A Buffalo.  Right-hander Yimi Garcia was moved from the 15-day IL to the 60-day IL in order to create space for Pinango on Toronto’s 40-man roster.  Prior to the Jays’ official announcement, the Ander Beisbol X account was the first to report that Pinango was on his way to the Show for his first taste of MLB action.

Friday’s 8-6 Jays loss to the Guardians saw Lukes lead off the bottom of the first with a double, but the right fielder then had to be replaced by pinch-runner Davis Schneider due to the hamstring issue.  Blue Jays manager John Schneider is expected to update reporters today on the outcome of Lukes’ MRI, though obviously the problem was immediately serious enough to warrant an IL placement.

George Springer (toe fracture) and Addison Barger (ankle sprain) are making progress in their recoveries and could be activated from the 10-day IL within a week’s time.  That said, Lukes is now the 12th player on Toronto’s current injured list, adding to what has been a snakebitten start to the Blue Jays’ defense of their American League title.

Lukes in particular has had a tough go of things, as the outfielder has spent much of the season plagued by vertigo symptoms.  A visit to a specialist in Phoenix during the Jays’ recent series with the Diamondbacks seemed to solve things — Lukes had just two hits over his first 34 trips to the plate before the Arizona series, but then posted a 1.260 OPS over his next 22 PA, going 11-for-21 with four doubles.

The hamstring strain both interrupts this hot streak for Lukes, and creates another vacancy in Toronto’s outfield.  The Jays have already had to dig pretty deep into their depth chart to address their many injuries on the pitching and position-player sides, and the situation has now created an opportunity for Pinango (who turns 24 next month) to make his big league debut.

Pinango began his career as a Cubs international signing in 2018, and he was dealt to the Jays along with minor league infielder Josh Rivera in the 2024 deadline trade that saw Nate Pearson sent to Wrigleyville.  Pinango hit .235/.335/.379 over his first 340 Triple-A plate appearances in 2025, and he has jumped out to a .288/.370/.488 slash line and three homers over 92 PA for Buffalo this season.

MLB Pipeline ranks Pinango as the 10th-best prospect in the Blue Jays’ farm system, with Baseball America slotting him 11th on their list.  His lack of defensive value hurts his ceiling, as Pinango is seen as a below-average corner outfielder at best who is probably best suited for a DH spot.  That puts more pressure on his bat, and his ability to consistently get the ball into the air.  When he is able to keep the ball off the ground, Pinango has displayed intriguing raw power to go along with his solid contact skills and excellent bat speed.

While Pinango lacks Lukes’ defensive upside, he’ll fill in as a left-handed option in Toronto’s outfield mix.  Pinango joins Jesus Sanchez as the left-handed hitting corner outfielders, with Davis Schneider and Myles Straw providing right-handed complements.

Garcia underwent surgery last September to fix scar tissue in his throwing elbow, and the Jays were slowplaying his ramp-up period throughout Spring Training and in the early part of the 2026 season.  The shift to the 60-man now delays Garcia’s 2026 debut until the last week of May, which doesn’t alter his planned timeline.  Garcia has been facing live batters in the latest step in his throwing progression, and the reliever may not be far away from a minor league rehab assignment.

Rockies Place Ryan Feltner On 15-Day Injured List

The Rockies placed right-hander Ryan Feltner on the 15-day injured list on Friday, and called up left-hander Sammy Peralta from Triple-A in the corresponding move.  Feltner is dealing with right ulnar nerve inflammation, which forced him out of his start on Thursday (a 10-8 Rockies loss to the Padres) after two innings of work.

Manager Warren Schaeffer described the issue as “just a little elbow inflammation” when speaking with MLB.com’s Bill Ladson and other reporters.  Since Feltner’s “MRI looked pretty good,” the Rox are hopeful that the righty will be back after just a minimal 15-day absence.

Feltner allowed two runs in his abbreviated outing against San Diego, boosting his ERA to 6.30 over five starts and 20 innings this season.  His 4.46 SIERA is almost two runs lower than his ERA and Thursday’s start could be considered a wash due to his injury, yet Feltner’s Statcast metrics are uniformly below average at this early point in the season.  In particular, opposing batters have been laying into Feltner’s pitches to the tune of a 49.2% hard-hit ball rate and a 15.9% barrel rate.

As Ladson observed, injuries have been a persistent issue for Feltner during his career, including a 2025 season that saw the righty limited to 30 1/3 innings due to back spasms and a shoulder problem.  The most frightening of Feltner’s injuries was a skull fracture and a concussion sustained after he was hit in the head by a Nick Castellanos line drive in May 2023, which resulted in another shortened season of only 43 1/3 frames.

The Rockies’ scheduled game with the Mets today has been rained out, and the two teams will play a doubleheader on Sunday.  With the pitching schedule already a little scrambled, the Rox will likely get through the doubleheader and then Monday’s offday before addressing Feltner’s rotation spot.  Kyle Freeland has been on the 15-day IL since April 13 due to some minor shoulder inflammation and could be back when first eligible, as Freeland tossed 41 pitches over a two-inning simulated outing on Wednesday.

Orioles Notes: Akin, Kittredge, O’Neill, Kremer, Holliday

Injuries have (again) been a major storyline of the Orioles’ season, but the team announced today that left-hander Keegan Akin has been activated from the 15-day injured list.  Akin’s return comes a day after Andrew Kittredge and Tyler O’Neill were both activated Friday from the 15-day IL and seven-day concussion IL, respectively.  Right-hander Cameron Foster was optioned to Triple-A for Akin, while outfielder Johnathan Rodriguez and right-hander Jose Espada were optioned to Triple-A yesterday for Kittredge and O’Neill.

Both Akin (groin strain) and Kittredge (shoulder inflammation) had spent the entire season on the IL, and Kittredge made his season debut yesterday, tossing a 1-2-3 inning out of the bullpen in the Orioles’ 10-3 win over the Red Sox.  Initially signed to a one-year, $9MM contract in the 2024-25 offseason, Kittredge was dealt to the Cubs at last summer’s trade deadline, but Chicago then swapped Kittredge back to Baltimore in early November, and the O’s exercised a $9MM club option on the reliever’s services for 2026.

Kittredge and Akin are expected to be high-leverage arms in Baltimore’s pen, and Akin is the team’s top left-handed relief option.  With both Akin and Dietrich Enns out of action, Grant Wolfram had been the Orioles’ only southpaw reliever for the last several days.

O’Neill was sidelined after hitting .241/.353/.345 over his first 34 plate appearances, and since he didn’t play yesterday, April 8 remains the outfielder’s last game.  The always-uncertain nature of concussion symptoms led to an absence of over two weeks, yet hopefully O’Neill has now put the issue entirely behind him.

Even with three players now back in action, Baltimore’s injured list remains 10 players deep.  Dean Kremer was the latest player sidelined, as the right-hander was placed on the 15-day IL on Thursday (retroactive to April 20) due to a right quad strain.  Right-hander Brandon Young was called up from Triple-A in the corresponding move, and Young started Friday’s game in Kremer’s place, getting the win while allowing three runs on seven hits and a walk over 5 2/3 innings of work.

Young will probably get an extended run as Baltimore’s fifth starter since Kremer will miss “several weeks,” as O’s president of baseball operations Mike Elias told MASNsports.com’s Roch Kubatko and other reporters.  Elias said Kremer’s injury surfaced during his between-starts prep work, and that “our plan is to try to keep his arm in as good of shape as possible because it’s not bothering him too much to throw right now, but we’ve got to let that thing heal and get his lower body condition back.”

The injury is another setback in what has already been an unusual season for Kremer, who began the season in Triple-A simply because the Orioles had five preferred options in their starting rotation.  Zach Eflin‘s Tommy John surgery created an avenue for Kremer’s return, and the righty posted a 4.09 ERA over two starts and 11 innings before his quad strain surfaced.

With Kremer out and Eflin gone for the entire season, Cade Povich is now the Orioles’ top depth arm if another injury should strike the rotation.  Albert Suarez and Tyler Wells are both ex-starters turned into multi-inning relievers, and conceivably either pitcher could be stretched out again for at least a piggyback type of role if even more starting help was needed beyond Povich.

Elias provided some updates to Kubatko and company on several other O’s players, including the news that Enns (foot infection) also seems to be nearing a return from the 15-day IL.  Heston Kjerstad (hamstring strain) has yet to play this season, but is participating in full baseball activities and could be close to a minor league rehab assignment.

Concerns were raised earlier this week when Jackson Holliday underwent a fresh set of tests on his injured right hand, but Elias said the MRI, CT scan, and x-rays all came back clean.  Holliday underwent hamate bone surgery on February 12 and was expected to start playing within the usual four to eight weeks, but his rehab work has now been paused twice due to continued soreness in the right hand.

Holliday discussed his latest setback with reporters yesterday, saying that a foul tip in Tuesday’s rehab game left him feeling “like I broke my hand again.  Obviously, kind of concerning taking a swing and having that kind of pain, but I guess it’s not normal, but obviously nothing structurally wrong, and I guess whenever a tendon rolls over a nerve it can kind of cause that.”

The plan is to keep Holliday shut down for another week before restarting the rehab process.  The clean tests at least provided some evidence that Holliday’s continued hand problems aren’t anything overtly serious, and Elias described the situation as “all within the possible normal spectrum of outcomes with the hamate injury….We’ve seen these come really quick for some players, and others take a long time to feel like themselves. So we want to let him get through this on an individual basis, and we’re giving him as much time as he needs, but we’re eager to have him back and welcome back with open arms once he’s ready.”

Twins Promote Kendry Rojas, Activate Royce Lewis

April 21: The Twins formally announced that Rojas has been recalled for his MLB debut and that Funderburk has been placed on the paternity list. Minnesota also formalized its previously reported placement of righty Mick Abel on the 15-day IL due to elbow inflammation. To take his spot on the active roster, the Twins reinstated third baseman Royce Lewis from the injured list.

At least for now, Prielipp has not been added to the big league roster, so it seems he’ll remain on the taxi squad. Minnesota’s Wednesday starter is still listed as TBD, so perhaps that could go to Prielipp or to Rojas — depending on how tonight’s game plays out.

April 19: The Twins will promote left-hander Kendry Rojas from Triple-A to the active roster prior to Tuesday’s game with the Mets, according to Declan Goff and Darren Wolfson of SKOR North.  Rojas was already added to the 40-man roster last November in advance of the Rule 5 Draft, and Bobby Nightengale of the Minnesota Star Tribune writes that the corresponding 26-man roster move is Kody Funderburk‘s placement on the paternity list.

In addition, left-hander Connor Prielipp will also be joining the Twins for the start of their series with the Mets, as per The Athletic’s Dan Hayes.  It isn’t an official call-up yet, as Prielipp is only part of the taxi squad.  Prielipp joined Rojas as two of the six 40-man additions Minnesota made back in November, so the Twins would just have to make another 26-man roster move if Prielipp is officially promoted.

Both Rojas and Prielipp will be making their Major League debuts whenever they appear in a game.  In Rojas’ case, this might just be a cup of coffee while Funderburk is absent, though the Twins’ relief corps has struggled enough that adding a raw but talented young arm could help spark the pen.  Funderburk, Taylor Rogers, and Anthony Banda are the bullpen’s current trio of left-handers, and Banda in particular has gotten off to a rough start in 2026.

Tuesday’s game in New York begins a stretch of 13 games in 13 days for the Twins, so it is possible Rojas or Prielipp might receive a spot start in order to help preserve the rotation.  The club could look to use either southpaw as a traditional starter or as a long reliever, or perhaps Minnesota could deploy a piggyback with Rojas and Prielipp paired with another starter.

Rojas missed time due to a hamstring injury this year and has only pitched 7 1/3 total innings, though the 23-year-old has yet to allow a run in that small sample size.  (Six innings were with Triple-A St. Paul, and 1 1/3 IP were with A-ball Fort Myers on a rehab assignment.)  In those 7 1/3 frames, Rojas has posted seven strikeouts, but also four walks.  Over 38 1/3 career innings at the Triple-A level, Rojas has a 14.06% walk rate, along with a 20.31% strikeout rate and a 6.10 ERA.

How well Rojas can harness his control appears to the chief question facing the lefty’s future as a viable big league arm.  Baseball America ranks Rojas as the eighth-best prospect in the Twins’ farm system and MLB Pipeline has him tenth, with both outlets noting that he projects as a back-end rotation arm if he remains a starting pitcher.  As per BA, Rojas “has a balanced arsenal with all his pitches projecting as at least average,” though he doesn’t have a true plus pitch.  His fastball might be his top offering, as the pitch usually sits around 95mph and Nightengale writes that Rojas hit the 99mph threshold during his time in St. Paul.

The Blue Jays landed Rojas as an international signing in 2020, and his time in Toronto’s farm system was hampered by lat, shoulder, and abdominal injuries.  Prior to last summer’s trade deadline, the Jays shipped Rojas and outfielder Alan Roden to the Twins in perhaps the most surprising move of Minnesota’s deadline fire sale, as controllable reliever Louis Varland and Ty France went the other way.  Varland immediately became a critical piece of Toronto’s pen, but Rojas and Roden fit the Twins’ trade model of obtaining players that were at or close to big league readiness.

Prielipp is a homegrown product, selected by the Twins in the second round of the 2022 draft.  BA ranked him as the 96th-best prospect in baseball prior to the 2026 season and slotted him fourth on their list of Twins prospects, while Pipeline put Prielipp fifth.  Both outlets give 60-grades to the southpaw’s changeup and slider, and Prielipp generates a ton of spin on the latter pitch.  Prielipp also has a mid-90s fastball that can hit 98mph.

After reaching Triple-A ball for the first time last season, Prielipp had some struggles but has now looked sharper over 15 2/3 innings for St. Paul in 2026.  Over 36 2/3 innings of Triple-A ball, Prielipp has a 3.93 ERA, a 30.13% strikeout rate, and a 13.46% walk rate, so control is also a concern on his end.  Staying healthy has been Prielipp’s largest issue, as he underwent a Tommy John surgery in college at Alabama and then an internal brace surgery that sidelined him for big chunks of the 2023-24 seasons.  Prielipp has thrown only 128 1/3 total innings of minor league ball.

AL East Notes: Sandoval, Lukes, Orioles

Patrick Sandoval was in Boston today to undergo some testing after felt some left biceps soreness in the aftermath of his last minor league rehab outing.  Red Sox manager Alex Cora didn’t have any info on the outcome of those tests when speaking with MassLive.com’s Chris Cotillo and other reporters earlier today, and it wasn’t yet known if Sandoval would even be formally pulled off his 30-day minor league rehab assignment.  Sandoval has made two starts during the assignment as he continues to work his way back from an internal brace surgery in July 2024.

Kutter Crawford also hasn’t pitched since 2024 (due to wrist and knee injuries that cost him the entirety of the 2025 campaign), and the right-hander’s own rehab assignment has also been put on pause due to a new health concern.  Crawford underwent an MRI today after he felt some elbow soreness following his first rehab outing, so both Crawford and Sandoval are currently in limbo as they await their next steps.

The Sox have avoided any injury setbacks within their starting five, though these setbacks for Sandoval and Crawford create more questions about the team’s rotation depth.  Johan Oviedo is on the 60-day injured list due to a flexor strain, and recent call-up Tyler Uberstine is on the Triple-A injured list due to shoulder soreness.  Top prospect Payton Tolle made his MLB debut last season and is Boston’s first option for a call-up if a need develops in the rotation.

Here’s more from around the AL East…

  • Nathan Lukes has been battling vertigo symptoms for the last month, and visited a specialist in Phoenix on Friday to help combat the issue, Sportsnet’s Shi Davidi writes.  Lukes felt greatly improved following the session, and he responded by going 7-for-11 over the Blue Jays‘ three-game series with the Diamondbacks.  It was a much-needed breakout series for the outfielder, who had just two hits and an ugly .182 OPS in his first 34 plate appearances.  The Jays have been dealing with a lot of injuries and slumping hitters over the first few weeks, so getting Lukes right both physically and at the plate would be a big help in getting Toronto’s season on track.
  • The Orioles are another struggling team with a crowded injured list, but the O’s should be getting some reinforcements back this week.  Left-hander Dietrich Enns (foot infection) started a minor league rehab assignment yesterday, and fellow southpaw Keegan Akin (groin strain) has two rehab outings under his belt.  The Baltimore Sun’s Jacob Calvin Meyer wrote that Adley Rutschman (ankle inflammation) and Tyler O’Neill (concussion symptoms) were both running the bases prior to today’s game, in the latest step in their recovery processes.  It isn’t yet known if either might need a brief rehab assignment before returning to the O’s, and Rutschman isn’t eligible to be activated from the 10-day IL until Tuesday at the earliest.

MLBTR Live Chat

Mark P

  • The Weekend Chat is back after a one-week hiatus! We’ll get things rolling after a few questions pile up in the queue….

Ross Atkins

  • Should I trade Jeff Hoffman for either Andrew or Trevor? Right now, I think other Hoffmans might serve the Jays well.

Mark P

  • Dustin Hoffman is enough of a method actor that if you told him to “act like a relief pitcher,” he could give you some solid innings out of the pen.

    The Jays are in a tough spot with Hoffman.  As much as his underlying metrics are all still good, that doesn’t mean much if he’s still getting taken yard on a regular basis.  Toronto was more than open to moving Hoffman into a setup role in the offseason if they’d been able to obtain another closer, and I think the move might be to just do it now and install Varland for save situations

Travis Bazzana

  • I know you won’t answer me…just like Chris Antonetti…but when are the Guards going to realize that I should be in The Show?   I’m the 2B, Rocchio is the SS and Angel Ramirez should play everyday.   Isn’t it time to finally trade the glutton of Middle Infielders away for a true, everyday power bat in the OF?

Mark P

  • You won’t have to wait long to see Bazzana in the majors, as he’s maybe a month or so away from his MLB debut.  In terms of trades, why would a team trade an “everyday power bat” for one or two spare part middle infielders?

With Club Sauce?

  • If the Vegas A’s are forced to change their name, what should they go with? Vultures? Valkyries? Victorfrankensteins? Trying to be semi-alliterative here. I also wanted to try a ‘blue’ based Arrested Development joke but was worried my question would get DQ’d so I’ll just finish with: BEES???!?!

Mark P

  • “Vegas Vagabonds” fits for alliteration purposes, and the fact that this franchise has moved so often in its history.

    But, I’m on record as preferring that they just remain the A’s.  The name is the only connective thread over all of the cities over the team’s 126 years

Pirates

  • Are we for real this time?

Mark P

  • While we’re seen the Pirates collapse after hot starts before, this does legitimately seem like the best roster the Buccos have fielded in quite some time.  I’d say they’re for real, but with the caveat that the entire NL Central currently has a winning record, so the Pirates haven’t even done much to separate themselves from the pack.

Zach

  • Do you have any changed ROTY picks from the beginning of the year now nearly a month in?

Mark P

  • My ROY picks were Sal Stewart and Kazuma Okamoto, so a .500 record isn’t bad

Rally Reds

  • Reds have to be encouraged with their pitching depth considering their ridiculous 10-0 record in close games, and Hunter and Lodolo yet to return, right?

Mark P

  • That kind of record in close games (Reds are 6-0 in one-run games specifically) is bound to regress, though there are always a couple of teams every year with absurdly slanted close-game records.  Maybe this is Cincinnati’s year to get lucky, and you’re right that it’s particularly good that the Reds are banking these wins without arguably their two best arms

Read more

Hunter Brown, Cristian Javier Projected To Return In 5-7 Weeks

In an interview on SportsTalk790 radio today, Astros general manager Dana Brown said right-handers Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier are tentatively expected to return to Houston’s rotation by late May or early June.  (Hat tip to MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart for the link.)  The timeline for both pitchers is still fluid, so the GM thinks their returns could “hopefully…be a little sooner.

The Astros are probably due some good health news, given how the team has been hit hard by injuries in the season’s first month.  Houston’s injury list consists of 14 players, and Brown and Javier are two of 10 pitchers on either the 15-day or 60-day IL.  The depleted and makeshift rotation is down to Mike Burrows, Lance McCullers Jr., Spencer Arrighetti, and Peter Lambert, whose minor league contract was just selected on Thursday (Lambert then allowed four runs over five innings in Friday’s 9-4 loss to the Cardinals.)

Brown and Javier were each sidelined by Grade 2 shoulder strains.  Brown posted an 0.84 ERA over his first two starts before being placed on the 15-day IL on April 2, while Javier joined him a week later after struggling to a 12.54 ERA over his first three starts and 9 1/3 innings.  No tentative recovery timelines were given at the time of the IL placements, and neither pitcher has resumed throwing, which is why Dana Brown’s projection was fairly broad.

Assuming no setbacks, Brown and Javier each face the standard build-up process of playing catch, bullpen sessions, live batting practice sessions, and surely at least a couple of minor league rehab games given the length of their IL stints.  Even if the best-case scenario is late May, however, that still means the Astros will be scrambling for rotation innings for upwards of another month.

All of the injuries have unsurprisingly led to a rough start to Houston’s season, as the team is now 8-15 after today’s extra-innings 7-5 loss to St. Louis.  The Astros are 10 games into a stretch of 13 games in 13 days, and some relief may come for the pitching staff in terms of off-days on April 23 and 27.

AL West Notes: Garcia, Angels, Wisdom

Robert Garcia came out of a relief appearance on Thursday with a sore throwing shoulder, and Rangers manager Skip Schumaker told reporters (including the Dallas Morning News’ Evan Grant) that Garcia underwent an MRI today to access the damage.  The results of the testing isn’t yet known, but while Schumaker believes the situation isn’t too serious, Grant notes that Garcia is likely to need a few more days of rest and recovery even if the MRI comes back clean.

It has been an unusual start to the season for Garcia, who has a 3.38 ERA over eight innings despite recording more walks (seven) than strikeouts (six).  Batted-ball luck has played a role, as Garcia has benefited from a .238 BABIP and a 52.4% grounder rate.  Despite the shaky performance to date, the Rangers can hardly afford to lose Garcia to the injury bug, given how fellow relievers Chris Martin, Luis Curvelo, and Carter Baumler are already on the 15-day IL.

More from around the AL West…

  • Angels manager Kurt Suzuki updated the media (including Jeff Fletcher of the Southern California News Group) on the status of several injured pitchers today.  Grayson Rodriguez and Ben Joyce are both expected to start facing hitters in a live batting-practice setting within the next few days, while Alek Manoah has been facing hitters at the Angels’ spring facility in Arizona.  This trio began the season on the 15-day IL, as Rodriguez has been dealing with shoulder inflammation, Manoah with a finger contusion, and Joyce is in the final stages of his recovery from a May 2025 shoulder surgery.  Kirby Yates also began the year on the 15-day IL due to left knee inflammation, but the reliever started a Triple-A rehab assignment on Friday.  Yates told MLB.com’s Rhett Bollinger that the rehab assignment will consist of at least a few more games, as Yates is still working on building up his velocity and gaining some weight.
  • Catching up on an IL placement from Friday, the Mariners sent Patrick Wisdom to the 10-day injured list (retroactive to April 15) due to a left oblique strain.  Wisdom just had his minor league contract selected to the 26-man roster on Tuesday and he appeared in that day’s game as a pinch-hitter before getting hurt.  The lone appearance marked Wisdom’s first MLB game since 2024, when the infielder was still a member of the Cubs.

Astros Sign Daniel Johnson To Minors Contract

The Astros have signed Daniel Johnson to a minor league deal, according to the outfielder’s MLB.com profile page.  Johnson became a free agent earlier this month when he was released from a previous minors contract with the Marlins.

A veteran of four big league seasons, Johnson hit .189/.246/.302 over 57 plate appearances with the Giants and Orioles in 2025.  His 31 games marked a new career high, topping Johnson’s 30 appearances for Cleveland in 2021.  Johnson only has 67 games on his MLB resume, with a .196/.243/.322 slash line and five home runs to show for 152 plate appearances.

Johnson is both a left-handed hitter and capable of playing all three outfield positions, making him a useful depth addition for the Astros on a couple of fronts.  Houston’s active roster is overloaded with right-handed bats, and Joey Loperfido (one of the few lefty swingers) was just placed on the 10-day IL due to a quad strain.  Loperfido, Jake Meyers, and Zach Dezenzo are all on the injured list, depleting an Astros outfield core that was already thin coming into the season.

Houston selected Taylor Trammell‘s contract earlier this month in the wake of these outfield injuries, and Dustin Harris was just claimed off waivers from the White Sox yesterday.  This duo, Cam Smith, Brice Matthews, and Shay Whitcomb comprise the Astros’ makeshift outfield mix, plus Yordan Alvarez can chip in as a left fielder when he isn’t the designated hitter.  Johnson can add some speed and defense at least at Triple-A to back up this group, though his roster flexibility is limited since he is out of minor league options.