D-backs Announce Several Roster Moves

The Diamondbacks announced a slate of roster moves Tuesday. Catcher Gabriel Moreno was placed on the 10-day injured list (retroactive to April 11) due to an oblique strain. Fellow catcher Aramis Garcia has had his contract selected from Triple-A and will take Moreno’s spot on the roster, serving as a complement to veteran James McCann and 26-year-old Adrian Del Castillo. Arizona moved first baseman/designated hitter Pavin Smith from the 10-day IL to the 60-day IL to clear a 40-man spot for Garcia. The Snakes also reinstated right-hander Merrill Kelly from the 15-day injured list and optioned right-hander Taylor Rashi to Triple-A Reno.

Moreno missed the past three games after what was originally termed as a back issue. The Diamondbacks haven’t provided a timetable, but historically speaking, it’s common for even low-grade oblique strains to sideline a player for close to a month. The former top prospect is one of baseball’s more complete catchers, combining elite defense with above-average offense in each season of his still-young big league career. He was out to a fine start in 2026, hitting .275/.333/.400 in 45 turns at the plate.

With Moreno sidelined, the D-backs can use the lefty-hitting Del Castillo against right-handed pitching and the righty-swinging McCann versus southpaws. Garcia provides a viable third catching option on the roster and also has some experience at first base. He’s probably relegated to third catcher status in this setup, with Del Castillo the most obvious beneficiary on paper. He hasn’t gotten a consistent look in the majors, thanks largely to Moreno’s presence, but Del Castillo is a .276/.322/.439 hitter in 239 big league plate appearances and touts a .292/.381/.535 line in parts of four seasons (712 plate appearances) in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League.

Garcia, 33, has played sparingly in parts of six major league seasons — including a two-game cup of coffee in Arizona last year. He’s a lifetime .208/.245/.321 hitter in 331 plate appearances. He’s never logged more than 115 plate appearances in a given major league season but is a career .240/.316/.436 hitter in just under 1400 Triple-A plate appearances.

Kelly’s return from the injured list was expected. The team moved righty Brandon Pfaadt to the bullpen yesterday to clear a spot in the rotation, where Kelly will join Zac Gallen, Eduardo Rodriguez, Ryne Nelson and offseason signee Michael Soroka. The 37-year-old Kelly also signed with Arizona this winter, returning to the D-backs on a two-year, $40MM deal after closing out the 2025 season in Texas following a deadline trade that netted three pitching prospects from the Rangers (Kohl Drake, Mitch Bratt, David Hagaman).

Kelly will make his first start of the season for the Snakes tonight against the Orioles. He was slowed by back discomfort early in spring training and was thus limited to only two starts during exhibition play in the Cactus League. Kelly tossed five shutout frames for Triple-A Reno in what wound up being his only rehab outing. He might be on something of a pitch/workload limit in his season debut as he continues to build up, but it shouldn’t be long before he’s back to his workhorse ways atop manager Torey Lovullo’s rotation.

Brewers Place Christian Yelich On Injured List, Select Greg Jones

2:15pm: The Brewers estimate Yelich to be out until mid-to-late May, so about four to six weeks, per Todd Rosiak of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

11:49am: The Brewers on Tuesday placed outfielder/designated hitter Christian Yelich on the 10-day injured list due to a left groin strain, per Adam McCalvy of MLB.com. Milwaukee selected the contract of infielder/outfielder Greg Jones from Triple-A Nashville to take Yelich’s spot on the 40-man roster. Left-handed reliever Rob Zastryzny has been moved from the 10-day IL to the 60-day IL to open a 40-man roster spot for Jones.

Yelich was out to a strong start, having slashed .314/.375/.451 with a homer, a triple, two doubles and three steals through his first 56 plate appearances. The 34-year-old left Sunday’s game with what the team first described as a possible hamstring injury, however, before eventually being diagnosed with the groin strain. There’s no immediate timetable for his potential return, though to this point there’s no indication that Yelich is expected to be faced with a particularly long absence.

Today’s IL placement marks the third time in the past couple weeks that Milwaukee has lost a core lineup piece due to injury. Yelich joins outfielder Jackson Chourio and first baseman Andrew Vaughn on the injured list. Both have hand fractures — Chourio a hairline fracture after being hit by a pitch and Vaughn a hamate fracture that required surgery. On the pitching side of things, the Brewers are most notably without starter Quinn Priester (thoracic outlet symptoms) and reliever Jared Koenig (elbow sprain).

Yelich’s move to the injured list should open some playing time for a series of bench options and platoon bats to rotate through the designated hitter slot in the lineup. Backup catcher Gary Sánchez could see some looks there, as could switch-hitting infielder Luis Rengifo (at least on days where David Hamilton plays third base). Outfielders Brandon Lockridge, Garrett Mitchell, Sal Frelick and Blake Perkins are options for both outfield and DH work.

Jones, 28, was a first-round pick by the Rays in 2018 and briefly ranked on the back end of MLB.com’s ranking of the sport’s top-100 prospects back in 2022. He’s never pieced things together at the Triple-A level, however, and is 1-for-7 in a tiny sample of eight major league plate appearances. The fleet-footed Jones offers top-of-the-scale speed. He went 46-for-49 in stolen base attempts in just 89 minor league games as recently as 2024.

However, Jones has also battled various injuries and struggled to produce at an average level even in Triple-A. His .262/.344/.438 batting line in parts of four Triple-A seasons looks solid relative to the average major league batting line but is sub-par in Triple-A — particularly in the Pacific Coast League, where he spent that ’24 season. He’s shown an especially concerning lack of contact skills and pitch recognition, punching out in 36.3% of his Triple-A plate appearances against a solid but unspectacular 8.6% walk rate. That said, Jones is currently hitting .317/.462/.390 in 52 plate appearances with Nashville. He’s stolen seven bags in nine tries.

Though he was drafted as a shortstop, Jones has played far more outfield in recent seasons. Scouting reports were always a bit skeptical of his ability to stick at short, and his blazing speed lends itself well to center field range. Jones has experience in all three outfield spots and has picked up 16 games at second base over the course of his pro career as well. He’s a left-handed bat who can bounce around the diamond and provide a some speed off the bench while backing up at several spots.

Zastryzny was rehabbing from a shoulder issue during spring training when he suffered a separate intercostal strain. At the time of that setback, the Brewers indicated he’d be out until at least late April. Today’s move to the 60-day IL doesn’t reset his IL clock but does mean he’ll be sidelined for at least the majority of May now as well.

The journeyman Zastryzny has pitched 29 1/3 innings with the Brewers over the past two seasons and logged a sparkling 2.12 earned run average despite more pedestrian strikeout and walk rates of 20.5% and 9%, respectively. Even with Zastryzny and the aforementioned Koenig sidelined, Milwaukee has three lefties in the bullpen: Angel Zerpa, Aaron Ashby and DL Hall.

MLBTR Chat Transcript

Steve Adams

  • Good morning! We’ll get going at 1pm CT, but feel free to begin submitting questions ahead of time, as always.
  • Good afternoon! Let’s get underway.

Ross Atkins

  • injuries have plagued us. With the several different timelines on players coming back, do you think we will still be a playoff team?

Steve Adams

  • The Blue Jays are one of the teams hit hardest by injuries this season, but the division has been pretty even as a whole thus far. It also doesn’t seem like Yesavage — their most impactful absence on the pitching side — is looking at something super long term. I still like the Jays to reach the postseason, but the early slog of health troubles has obviously lessened their odds.

Jordan Walker

  • Tell me you were wrong!!

Steve Adams

  • Do this for another few months and I sure will.

Free Agency

  • Do you believe players heading into free agency play a lot harder to collect all the counting stats to oversell themselves to prospective teams?

Read more

Sean Murphy To Begin Rehab Assignment

Braves catcher Sean Murphy is headed out on a minor league rehab assignment, the team announced this morning. He’ll report to Atlanta’s High-A affiliate tonight, kicking off a rehab window that can last up to 20 days.

Murphy, 31, looked last year to be on his way to a nice rebound effort from a down showing in 2024. He missed some time early due to an oblique strain and a fractured rib but posted a hearty .240./331/.514 slash (131 wRC+) with 16 home runs in his first 239 plate appearances last year.

Murphy’s production began to dwindle in late July, however, and it cratered over the next month-plus before he was diagnosed with a torn labrum in his hip, necessitating season-ending surgery. Over his final 98 plate appearances, the former All-Star batted only .096/.224/.145 — brutal numbers that certainly appear to depict a player who had been attempting to gut out an injury of note.

Prior to Murphy’s struggles last summer, the Braves had begun using both him and fellow catcher (and eventual Rookie of the Year winner) Drake Baldwin in the same lineup — one behind the plate and the other at designated hitter. With Marcell Ozuna‘s contract expiring at season’s end, that setup looked like it could carry over into the 2026 season. There was naturally some speculation about the possibility of trading Murphy and the remaining three years/$45MM on his contract as Baldwin emerged into stardom, but that possibility seemed like a long shot once Murphy required surgery. No team was going to take on the remaining contract — let alone do so and give up something of note.

With Murphy’s rehab lingering into the ’26 season, the door seemed open for Jurickson Profar to take regular at-bats as the DH in Atlanta. The Braves signed Mike Yastrzemski in the offseason, adding him to an outfield mix also including Profar, Michael Harris II and Ronald Acuña Jr. Instead, Profar’s second PED suspension of the past year prompted a 162-game ban and paved the way for minor league signee Dominic Smith to make the roster. Smith has been beyond a pleasant surprise; he’s been one the most productive hitters in the league, albeit in a limited role. Through 37 plate appearances, he’s homered three times while slashing .353/.378/.647.

Smith’s track record suggests he’s not going to sustain anything close to this pace, but he’s hit so well that Atlanta won’t be in any rush to move on from him. It feels likelier that Murphy’s return would spell trouble for veteran Jonah Heim, who signed a one-year deal during camp and has thus far gone 3-for-19 in 22 plate appearances. Heim had a breakout showing with the ’23 World Series champion Rangers but followed it up with a .217/.269/.334 performance in two subsequent seasons before being non-tendered by Texas.

At least for the time being, the Braves needn’t make any roster decisions just yet. Murphy is going to need a fairly lengthy buildup after missing all of spring training. He hasn’t seen game action since Sept. 6. It’s unlikely this will be just a quick two- or three-game rehab stint. But the start of the clock on his 20-day window does establish a pretty set deadline for the Braves to make a call on a veteran player who can’t be optioned (e.g. Heim) before too long, barring additional injuries that arise in the next couple weeks.

Orioles Place Ryan Mountcastle On 60-Day IL, Select Weston Wilson

4:12pm: The Orioles officially announced that Wilson’s contract has been selected and that Mountcastle has been placed on the 60-day IL. That’s one of just several moves for the O’s today. Baltimore also recalled righty Dean Kremer earlier today and just announced the acquisition of corner infielder Christian Encarnacion-Strand in a cash swap with the Reds.

3:43pm: Orioles first baseman/designated hitter Ryan Mountcastle is headed to the injured list after suffering a broken fourth metacarpal in his left foot while legging out a double this past weekend, manager Craig Albernaz tells the Baltimore beat (link via MASNsports.com’s Roch Kubatko). Albernaz didn’t tip the team’s hand on whether Mountcastle would head to the 10-day or 60-day IL, suggesting only that both are under consideration. He added that he has not yet been told whether surgery is on the table.

Kubatko adds that infielder/outfielder Weston Wilson is on the Orioles’ taxi squad at the moment, making him a likely replacement, though the team hasn’t announced anything on that front. Jackson Holliday is with the club today at Camden Yards but is not yet ready for reinstatement from the IL. He’s merely taking some infield drills while Triple-A Norfolk is off. Holliday has yet to play this season after suffering a hamate fracture early in spring training.

Wilson isn’t on the 40-man roster, so assuming he is indeed the corresponding move, he’d need to have his contract selected. The Orioles have a full 40-man roster, though if Mountcastle heads to the 60-day IL, that’d open a spot.

The 29-year-old Mountcastle has hit decently in a far more limited role than he’s used to so far in 2026. He’s appeared in eight games and tallied only 15 plate appearances, going 4-for-14 with a double and a walk in that time. Baltimore’s signing of Pete Alonso and the ascension of catcher/designated hitter Samuel Basallo has substantially cut into Mountcastle’s playing time.

Even before the O’s signed Alonso, Mountcastle looked like a prime non-tender candidate. Injuries limited him to 89 games last season, and he slashed just .250/.286/.367 (81 wRC+) when healthy. He was due for one final raise in arbitration, and with a $6.787MM salary last year, he felt like a relatively pricey rebound candidate, given his limited defensive utility. Baltimore also had longtime top prospect Coby Mayo ready for a full-time run at first base (though obviously the Alonso signing changed that calculus).

The Orioles made the somewhat surprising call to tender him. They wound up coaxing some additional value by getting Mountcastle to agree to repeat his 2025 salary and tack on a $7.5MM club option for what should’ve been his first free agent year in 2026. However, Mountcastle still entered camp with a “square peg in a round hole” vibe as a clearly imperfect fit for an Orioles roster that had changed considerably since his run as a regular in the middle of the order. Unsurprisingly, the O’s looked into various trade possibilities throughout spring training, but no deal came together.

Mountcastle now heads to the injured list for a potentially prolonged absence. He’ll join third baseman Jordan Westburg, who’s hoping to avoid Tommy John surgery after being diagnosed with a UCL tear, in that regard. With Westburg sidelined, the aforementioned Mayo has been manning the hot corner but has struggled with the bat. An absence of some note for Mountcastle could give Mayo a longer leash to get right at the plate even when Holliday and possibly Westburg return to the fold.

Wilson, 31, was an offseason waiver claim out of the Phillies organization. He’s spent parts of the past three seasons in the majors with Philadelphia, hitting a combined .242/.328/.428 with nine home runs in 245 trips to the plate. Almost all of that production came in 2023-24, however. Wilson hit just .198/.282/.369 in a career-high 125 plate appearances in 2025 but raked at a .288/.375/.490 clip the prior two seasons.

Wilson has never hit righties much but feasted on southpaws in ’23-’24 before taking a huge step back in ’25. Even with last year’s lack of production in platoon settings, he’s a career .250/.359/.475 hitter (130 wRC+) against left-handed pitching. Wilson also owns a solid .247/.339/.462 output in nearly 1700 plate appearances of Triple-A work and will give Baltimore an option at all four corner positions. He batted .233/.395/.433 in 36 spring plate appearances but has mustered only a .195/.298/.366 slash in a comparable sample at Triple-A this year.

Tigers Claim Yoniel Curet, Transfer Parker Meadows To 60-Day IL

The Tigers announced Monday that they’ve claimed righty Yoniel Curet off waivers from the Phillies, who’d designated him for assignment last week. In order to open a spot on the 40-man roster, Detroit transferred center fielder Parker Meadows from the 10-day injured list to the 60-day injured list. Meadows suffered a concussion and a forearm fracture last week in an outfield collision with teammate Riley Greene when both were tracking down a ball hit to the left-center gap.

Curet, 23, was optioned to the Tigers’ Rookie affiliate in the Florida Complex League. He’ll presumably ramp up there before heading to Triple-A Toledo. He hasn’t pitched since spring training, so he’s not ready to join a minor league affiliate just yet.

Originally signed by the Rays as an amateur out of his native Dominican Republic, Curet landed in Philadelphia by way of an offseason trade sending righty Tommy McCollum back to Tampa Bay. The Rays had designated Curet for assignment themselves in order to clear a roster spot for free agent signee Cedric Mullins.

Curet has yet to make his big league debut. He’s a hard-throwing, command-challenged righty who’s posted decent numbers in the upper minors and briefly cracked FanGraphs’ top 100 prospect list prior to the 2025 season. The 6’2″, 250-pound righty sits mid-90s with a four-seamer and sinker that can both reach the upper 90s. His go-to breaking pitch is a slider in the 87-88 mph range.

A shoulder injury limited Curet to 14 starts and a pair of relief outings in the Rays’ system last year. He totaled 55 1/3 innings with a 3.90 ERA, a sharp 25.5% strikeout rate but a concerning 12.8% walk rate.

While Curet has consistently missed bats in the minors, he regularly runs up poor walk rates. He looked to be on the right track in 2024, when he posted a sub-3.00 ERA with a 31.5% strikeout rate and a 10.7% walk rate that was down several percentage points from the year prior. That shot him up the rankings at FanGraphs, but last year’s shoulder injury was accompanied by that nearly 13% walk rate — including a 17.4% walk rate in 33 1/3 Triple-A innings. This spring, Curet faced 14 hitters and walked four of them. He plunked another. Overall, he was tagged for eight runs in 1 2/3 innings.

Time will tell what role the Tigers envision for the righty, but he’s worked consistently as a starter to this point in his career. Detroit could build him back up for some rotation depth, but it’s hard not to wonder what Curet’s already powerful arsenal might look like in short relief. The 95-96 he averages on his pair of heaters would presumably tick up a couple miles, and that slider could creep into the 90 mph range on average. Max-effort relievers tend to have a bit easier time running a higher-than-average walk rate than a starter who needs to turn the lineup over multiple times.

Scouting reports at FanGraphs, Baseball America, MLB.com and other public outlets have long suggested a move to relief could be in the offing eventually. For now, Curet is in his final minor league option year, so there’s no immediate urgency to sort it out. The Tigers can get him built up and see how he looks in a variety of roles.

As for Meadows, the move to the 60-day IL isn’t all that surprising in light of the fractured radius he sustained in pursuit of a potential game-saving catch. Today’s move to the IL means he’ll be sidelined into at least mid-June. A light-hitting plus defender who runs well, Meadows opened the season with a .250/.308/.333 slash in 39 turns at the plate. The 2018 second-rounder was hoping to move past a rough 2025 season (.215/.291/.330) and get back closer to his 2024 form (.244/.310/.433), but that rebound effort is on hold for a couple months at the very least. In the meantime, the Tigers have Wenceel Pérez, Javier Báez and Matt Vierling as options in center field.

Braves Designate Luke Williams For Assignment

The Braves announced today that outfielder Michael Harris II has been reinstated from the paternity list. In a corresponding move, infielder Luke Williams has been designated for assignment. Atlanta’s 40-man roster count drops from 39 to 38.

Williams was only selected to the big league roster this past weekend when Harris went on paternity leave. He appeared in two games with Atlanta and took one plate appearance, drawing a walk in that lone trip to the batter’s box.

This is now four straight seasons in which Williams, 29, has suited up for Atlanta. He’s a clear favorite of the organization, even if his production in the majors hasn’t amounted to much. The 2015 third-rounder (Phillies) has totaled 350 plate appearances in the big leagues but sports just a .212/.272/.280 batting line. He’s a versatile defender with a decent track record in the upper minors, however.

Williams has played all four infield positions, all three outfield spots and even taken 11 innings of mop-up relief in his big league career. His career line in Triple-A is weighed down a bit by an especially rocky showing there last season, but he’s still a lifetime .255/.333/.401 hitter at the top minor league level, including a .282/.344/.495 slash in 55 games in 2024.

This is the fourth DFA of Williams’ career (not counting the original 2023 waiver claim that sent him from L.A. to Atlanta, as he wasn’t formally designated for assignment prior to being placed on waivers). The Braves have successfully passed him through waivers unclaimed on three separate occasions since first claiming him from the Dodgers. He’ll be placed on waivers or traded within the next five days, and the outcome of his DFA will be known within the next seven days, at maximum. (Waivers are a 48-hour process.) Williams will have the right to reject an outright assignment if he clears waivers, but even if he does, recent history tells us there’s a good chance he’d re-sign with the organization and head back to Triple-A Gwinnett anyhow.

Cardinals Notes: Naughton, Fitts

Cardinals left-hander Packy Naughton exited a recent appearance with the team’s Triple-A affiliate with an apparent elbow injury. Naughton missed badly while delivering a 1-1 pitch and immediately clutched his elbow (video link). That naturally prompted a visit from the trainer, and the southpaw left the game shortly thereafter. Per Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat, Naughton has been diagnosed with a UCL injury and is seeking a second opinion.

There’s more bad injury news down in Memphis. The team announced Monday that right-hander Richard Fitts is headed to the injured list after suffering a lat strain while pitching with the Redbirds. A timetable for his return isn’t clear, but lat strains often come with significant layoffs.

A UCL injury is an awful development for any pitcher but is particularly heartbreaking for Naughton, who hasn’t been able to catch a break when it comes to his health. He underwent Tommy John surgery in high school and has since undergone flexor tendon surgery (2023) and UCL surgery (2024). He signed a two-year minor league pact with the Cardinals in November of 2024 and missed the entire 2025 season mending from that second UCL surgery. He pitched just 2 1/3 frames with Memphis this season and now appears to be facing a third UCL procedure as he approaches his 30th birthday later this week.

Naughton has pitched in parts of three major league seasons, totaling 59 2/3 frames between the Angels and Cardinals. He was a ninth-round pick by the Reds back in 2017 and has been consistently effective in the minors when healthy. He has a 3.63 ERA in 476 minor league frames, including a 3.84 mark in Triple-A. His 4.98 earned run average in the big leagues is obviously a lesser mark, though it’s impacted in part by a lofty .330 average on balls in play. Naughton’s 18% strikeout rate in the majors is well below average, but his 8.3% walk rate is solid and his 51% ground-ball rate is quite strong.

Though many associate MLB’s ever-increasing rash of pitcher injuries with the game’s rapid rise in velocity over the past decade-plus, Naughton stands as a reminder that elbow troubles can take their toll on any pitcher. He’s averaged 91.8 mph on his sinker in his big league career and was sitting 91.9 mph in his brief return to the mound in Memphis this season.

Naughton isn’t on the Cardinals’ 40-man roster, but a strong return effort this season would have put him in line for a return to the majors. The Cards currently have JoJo Romero, Justin Bruihl and Jared Shuster as left-handed options in the ‘pen. Romero is a trade candidate as he navigates his final season of club control. Bruihl came to St. Louis in a cash swap with Cleveland after being designated for assignment in the offseason. Shuster is a minor league signee whose contract was just selected to the majors last week.

As for Fitts, he’s yet to make his Cardinals debut. The 26-year-old was acquired from the Red Sox in the trade that sent Sonny Gray to Boston this past offseason. He’s started 14 major league games and made one relief appearance, working to an overall 3.97 ERA in 65 2/3 innings.

Fitts entered camp this spring competing for a rotation spot. He had a rough showing and was optioned to Memphis but would’ve likely been the next man up had the Cardinals incurred an injury at the MLB level. He’s been excellent in Triple-A to start the season, posting a sub-2.00 ERA in his first 15 1/3 innings.

The Cardinals currently have Matthew Liberatore, Michael McGreevy, Kyle Leahy, Dustin May and Andre Pallante in their major league rotation. Righty Hunter Dobbins — who also came over from the Red Sox via a separate trade this winter (Willson Contreras) — opened the season on the injured list while rehabbing the ACL tear he suffered last July. Fitts now joins prospects Tekoah Roby (Tommy John surgery last July) and Cooper Hjerpe (Tommy John surgery last April) on the minor league injured list.

That slate of injuries leaves the Cardinals with a thin rotation mix. Given the team’s struggles in the rotation to open the season, that’s all the more problematic. St. Louis starting pitchers have combined for a 4.92 ERA to begin the season — the fifth-worst mark in the majors. The rotation’s 13.6% strikeout rate is far and away the worst in baseball, which has led ERA alternatives to paint an even less optimistic picture. Cardinals starters rank 29th in SIERA (4.84) and 30th in Statcast’s expected ERA (6.02).

Reds Option Noelvi Marte

The Reds announced Monday that they’ve optioned struggling outfielder Noelvi Marte to Triple-A Louisville. A corresponding move wasn’t announced, but FOX 19’s Charlie Goldsmith reports that Cincinnati is expected to recall outfielder Rece Hinds from Louisville in Marte’s place.

The 24-year-old Marte’s run with the Reds has been filled with peaks and valleys. The former top prospect came to Cincinnati as part of the blockbuster trade sending Luis Castillo to Seattle and burst onto the MLB scene with a .316/.366/.456 batting line in his first 123 plate appearances in 2023 — his age-21 season. He was popped for an 80-game PED ban the following spring and looked lost in his return to the majors later in the season, slashing just .210/.248/.301 in 242 turns at the plate.

Marte’s stock hit a low point after that 2024 campaign, and in 2025 he was moved from third base to right field to accommodate deadline pickup Ke’Bryan Hayes. Marte’s stock was trending down, but he took to right field nicely, posting solid defensive grades while rebounding at the plate. He appeared in 90 games — 56 of them in the outfield — and batted .263/.300/.448 with 14 homers and 10 steals. Defensive Runs Saved credited him as a strong defender on the grass (+4), while Statcast’s Outs Above Average (-2) was more bearish. Still, even a slightly negative mark for an infielder who learned the outfield on the fly — midseason, no less — suggested he had the potential to develop into a solid defender there.

Obscured a bit by that solid rebound effort in 2025, however, was a poor finish to the season. Marte floundered down the stretch with a .184/.214/.276 showing in his final 103 plate appearances of the season. He punched out 33 times (32%) against just four walks (3.9%).

Marte belted four homers in 56 plate appearances this spring, but he also continued on that worrisome K-BB trajectory from the end of the ’25 season. He walked just once this spring while fanning 16 times (28.6%). So far, his regular season output sits at just .138/.194/.138 with 10 strikeouts (32.3%) and two walks (6.5%) in 31 plate appearances. Marte has lacked any semblance of pitch recognition, chasing a staggering 47.4% of pitches he’s seen outside the strike zone this year. That’s sixth-worst among the 290 MLB hitters who’ve stepped into the batter’s box at least 30 times this year. His 71.5 mph average bat speed is down nearly two miles per hour from last year’s 73.3 mph.

If there’s a silver lining to Marte’s struggles, it’s that he won’t turn 25 until after the season ends and is still in the second of his three minor league option years. There’s ample time for him to right the ship and get back on track. Even combining his end-of-season slump, his rocky spring and his woeful start to 2026, we’re looking at a sample of fewer than 200 plate appearances. He made tons of hard contact during Cactus League play, and he’s still sporting a contact rate north of 90% on pitches within the strike zone. It stands to reason that if Marte can scale back his chase rate closer to the 33.7% he averaged from 2023-25, he could yet re-emerge as a quality hitter. That’d still be north of this year’s 29.5% league average, but not by an especially alarming measure.

From a service time vantage point, the demotion isn’t likely to impact Marte’s potential path to free agency. He entered the season needing only 33 days on the big league roster/injured list to reach two years of service. He’s already more than halfway there. He’ll very likely be back up this season, which would keep him on pace to hit the open market following the 2030 season (assuming he gets back on track and plays well enough to merit accruing six years of service, of course). It could cost him in arbitration, however. Marte was on a clear path to Super Two status, which would make him arbitration-eligible four times rather than the standard three, but if he spends a notable portion of time in the minors, he won’t reach Super Two designation after all.

In place of Marte, the Reds will apparently turn to the 25-year-old Hinds. He’s a career .191/.245/.506 hitter in 95 big league plate appearances. He’s been even more strikeout-prone in the majors (38.9%) than Marte has during his slump, but Hinds has enormous raw power and has gotten out to a big start in Louisville. He’s slashing .354/.475/.771 with five round-trippers in his first 61 cracks at the plate. More encouragingly, he’s walked a dozen times (19.7%) with a manageable 15 strikeouts (24.6%). Hinds chased more than 37% of pitches off the plate in Triple-A last year and nearly 40% in the majors. This year, he’s sitting on an improved 31.3% chase rate in Louisville.

Hinds wrecked Triple-A pitching last year, too (.302/.359/.563) and flashed potential 30-30 upside with 24 big flies and 21 steals in only 107 games. It seems unlikely that he’ll make enough contact to reach that ceiling, but his power is readily apparent and Statcast credited him with 98th percentile sprint speed in 2025. The power-speed combination is understandably alluring, and he’ll get another opportunity to show he can stick in the majors while Marte looks to get back on track down in Louisville.

Cubs Place Cade Horton On Injured List With Forearm Discomfort

Today: Speaking on ESPN 1000 radio, ESPN’s Jesse Rogers reported that Horton is set to visit Dr. Keith Meister later today, following an inauspicious MRI (per ESPN 1000’s David Kaplan). While a second opinion from a well-known orthopedic surgeon doesn’t confirm bad news, it’s no doubt a worrisome development for the Cubs and their young right-hander.

April 3, 6:17pm: Skipper Craig Counsell tells Sahadev Sharma of The Athletic that Horton will go for imaging this weekend. The team will know once the results come back, but the righty will land on the 15-day injured list in any case.

April 3, 3:56pm: Cubs righty Cade Horton exited today’s start after calling for a trainer in the second inning. The Chicago Tribune’s Meghan Montemurro points out that Horton’s final pitch was a fastball that clocked in about two miles per hour shy of his season average. Taylor McGregor of the Marquee Sports Network adds that the Cubs are calling Horton’s injury right forearm discomfort.

It’s an ominous development for a Cubs team that opened the season without ace Justin Steele, who is still on the mend from last April’s UCL surgery. Horton, 24, was the National League Rookie of the Year runner-up in 2025 after kicking down the door to the majors with a 2.67 ERA in his first 118 big league frames. The 2022 No. 7 overall pick’s 20.4% strikeout rate was a couple percentage points shy of average, but he offset that with strong command (6.9% walk rate), an average ground-ball rate (42.3%) and a knack for avoiding hard contact. He’s pitched 7 1/3 innings this season between his debut and today’s abbreviated start. Opponents have two runs on four hits and a walk.

Obviously, it’s too soon to say whether Horton will miss an extended period of time — if he misses any at all. Even a short-term IL stint would sting, however. The rest of the Chicago rotation includes Matthew Boyd, Jameson Taillon, Shota Imanaga and trade acquisition Edward Cabrera. Steele and former first-rounder Jordan Wicks are both on the injured list already.

Veteran swingman Colin Rea is in the bullpen and could start in the short term if the Cubs need. He filled in admirably last year when injuries piled up on the starting staff. Rea posted a 4.33 ERA in 27 starts last season and a 0.56 ERA in 16 relief innings. He was manager Craig Counsell‘s go-to option today as well, taking over after Horton’s exit. Righty Ben Brown worked as a starter in camp and is still stretched out for multiple innings as well; he’s tossed 6 2/3 frames in two appearances this season.

Looking further down the depth chart, righty Javier Assad is in Triple-A and already on the 40-man roster. He’s pitched to a 3.43 ERA in 331 major league innings, mostly out of the rotation, though injuries limited him to 55 1/3 innings between Triple-A and the big leagues last year. Top prospect Jaxon Wiggins is also in Triple-A but would need to be added to the 40-man roster. Veterans Kyle Wright and Vince Velasquez also opened the season with the Cubs’ top affiliate in Des Moines after signing minor league deals in the winter. Either could be called upon as short-term replacements, although like Wiggins, they’d need to be added to the 40-man roster.