Astros To Sign Brandon Bielak To Minor League Deal
The Astros are going to sign right-hander Brandon Bielak to a minor league deal, reports Ari Alexander of 7News Boston. Alexander adds that the Gaeta Sports Management client will report to Triple-A Sugar Land.
Bielak, now 30, pitched in the majors from 2020 to 2024. Most of that was with the Astros, though he also pitched for the Athletics. He was mostly a starter in the minors but worked both out of the rotation and the bullpen in the big leagues. He made 76 appearances, 21 of those being starts. He logged 204 innings over that five-year span, allowing 4.63 earned runs per nine. His 17.5% strikeout rate and 10% walk rate were below average but his 44.6% ground ball rate was a few ticks better than par.
Per Statcast, he mixed in seven different pitches in that time, throwing a four-seamer, sinker, changeup, sweeper, curveball, slider and cutter. The fastballs averaged in the mid-90s earlier in his career but dropped a few ticks over time. His four-seamer averaged 94 miles per hour in 2021 but crept down to 91.9 mph by 2024.
Late in 2024, he was outrighted off the Athletics’ roster. He became a free agent and signed a minor league deal with the Diamondbacks for 2025, though it turned into a lost season for him. He only made two minor league appearances before he landed on the minor league injured list. He underwent season-ending shoulder surgery in May.
Back in November, Alexander relayed that Bielak was recovered from that surgery and was hoping for a role as a starter. He signed with Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos in the Mexican League in March but that league’s season doesn’t begin until Thursday. For guys with big league experience signing in Mexico, it’s common for the deals to have clauses that allow them to leave if they get an offer in affiliated ball.
The Houston pitching staff has been beset by a number of injuries recently. Both Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier have been sidelined by shoulder strains. Tatsuya Imai hit the injured list due to arm fatigue. Cody Bolton hasn’t hit the injured list but departed his most recent start due to back tightness. Those injuries are on top of them being without Ronel Blanco, Brandon Walter and Hayden Wesneski, who all underwent surgery last year.
For now, the Astros have Mike Burrows and Lance McCullers Jr. in two rotation spots. Colton Gordon is starting today, though it’s unclear if that’s a spot start or if he’ll stick around. Bolton could make another start if his back is okay. Spencer Arrighetti is with the big league club on the taxi squad, per Chandler Rome of The Athletic. Manger Joe Espada says he’ll start tomorrow or Thursday, per Rome. Ryan Weiss, J.P. France and Christian Roa have been working long relief and could chip in here and there. Miguel Ullola and Jason Alexander are on optional assignment.
It’s quite a jumbled mess and the Astros will try their best to keep it together before their season slips away from them. Bielak will give them a bit more non-roster depth, alongside Peter Lambert in that department.
Photo courtesy of Thomas Shea, Imagn Images
Brandon Bielak Undergoes Season-Ending Shoulder Surgery
Right-hander Brandon Bielak recently underwent season-ending surgery, reports MLBTR’s Steve Adams. He’s expected to be ready for 2026 Spring Training. Bielak was released from a minor league deal with the Diamondbacks on Saturday after going on the full-season injured list last month.
The injury essentially ended Bielak’s stint with Arizona before it got off the ground. The 29-year-old signed a minor league contract with the Snakes in February. He worked 5 2/3 frames of two-run ball during Spring Training before being reassigned to the minors. Bielak started twice for Triple-A Reno. He allowed three runs across 9 2/3 innings with five strikeouts and walks apiece. Both appearances came within the first week of April. Bielak landed on the injured list on April 9 and was ruled out for the season within three days.
There’s a decent chance Bielak will spend the rest of the year as a free agent. He’ll be limited to minor league offers next winter but would again project as rotation or long relief depth if his recovery goes as expected. A former 11th-round draftee by the Astros, Bielak has spent most of his minor league career as a starting pitcher. He made 13 big league starts with Houston a couple seasons ago, though his 16 MLB appearances last year all came in relief.
Bielak divided last season between Houston and the A’s. He turned in a 5.16 ERA over 29 2/3 big league frames and a 6.08 mark across 16 Triple-A appearances. He now owns a 4.63 ERA over 204 major league innings. Bielak has a 4.37 mark over six career Triple-A seasons — a decent number for a depth starter who has spent all that time in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League.
D-Backs, Brandon Bielak Agree To Minor League Deal
The Diamondbacks are in agreement with Brandon Bielak on a minor league contract, reports Ari Alexander of KPRC 2. Bielak elected minor league free agency after being waived by the A’s late last fall.
Bielak has pitched in parts of five MLB seasons as a swingman. He spent the first four-plus years with the Astros, a tenure highlighted by his 3.83 ERA across a career-high 80 innings in 2023. Houston carried the out-of-options righty in their bullpen early last year. He struggled to a 5.71 ERA in 10 appearances, leading the Astros to designate him for assignment. They dealt him to the A’s in a cash trade a few days later.
The A’s only kept Bielak on their roster for nine days. They designated him for assignment themselves and ran him through outright waivers. He stuck with the club in Triple-A, where he allowed over six earned runs per nine in 66 2/3 innings. The A’s brought him back up for a couple weeks in September. He concluded the year with a 5.16 ERA with a well below-average 16.4% strikeout percentage over 29 2/3 MLB frames.
Bielak hasn’t missed many bats in the majors. He has an average 22.5% strikeout rate with a 4.42 ERA in parts of five Triple-A campaigns. He’s versatile enough to work as rotation or long relief depth. Arizona’s rotation is deep, so Bielak’s better path to a roster spot is in the bullpen. Barring a late-offseason trade, Jordan Montgomery is likely to begin the year as the long man for skipper Torey Lovullo.
Eight Players Elect Free Agency
As the offseason nears, a number of players elect minor league free agency each week. These players are separate from six-year MLB free agents, who’ll reach the open market five days after the conclusion of the World Series. Eligible minor leaguers can begin electing free agency as soon as the regular season wraps up. These players were all outrighted off a team’s 40-man roster during the year and have the requisite service time and/or multiple career outrights necessary to reach free agency since they weren’t added back to teams’ rosters.
Electing free agency is the anticipated outcome for these players. There’ll surely be more to test the market in the coming weeks. We’ll offer periodic updates at MLBTR. These transactions are all reflected on the MiLB.com or MLB.com logs.
Catchers
- Aramis Garcia (Phillies)
Infielders
- Abraham Toro (A’s)
Pitchers
- Brandon Bielak (A’s)
- Caleb Boushley (Twins)
- Jake Brentz (Royals)
- Humberto Castellanos (Diamondbacks)
- Domingo Germán (Pirates)
- Jeff Lindgren (Marlins)
A’s Outright Brandon Bielak
Sept. 25: Bielak went unclaimed on waivers and has been assigned outright to Triple-A Las Vegas, per the MLB.com transaction log. He’ll almost certainly become a free agent one way or another. He can reject the assignment right now or become a minor league free agent at season’s end, as is his right as a player with three-plus years of MLB service who was removed from a 40-man roster.
Sept. 22: The A’s announced this afternoon that they’ve designated right-hander Brandon Bielak for assignment. Right-hander Joe Boyle was recalled to the big league roster in a corresponding move, and Oakland’s 40-man roster now stands at 39.
It’s the second time this year Bielak has been DFA’d by the A’s. He was first removed from the club’s 40-man roster shortly after the club acquired him in a cash deal with the Astros back in May, and the righty was promptly outrighted to Triple-A after just three appearances in the majors. Bielak then struggled with Oakland’s Triple-A affiliate in Las Vegas, with a 6.08 ERA in 66 2/3 innings of work across 16 appearances (13 starts) but nonetheless was selected back onto the roster two weeks ago. He’s made three appearances for the A’s since returning with lackluster results, as he’s surrendered four runs on eight hits in 6 2/3 innings of work, striking out just two while walking five.
An 11th-round pick by the Astros in the 2017 draft, Bielak pitched for Houston at the big league level in each of the past five seasons before being swapped to Oakland. He served as a solid back-of-the-rotation arm and swing man from 2021-23, with a combined 4.05 ERA (104 ERA+) and 4.78 FIP in 48 games (15 starts) during those years. The righty began to struggle with the club in the majors this year, however, and in ten appearances as a multi-inning reliever surrendered a 5.71 ERA while walking (8.4%) nearly as many batters as he struck out (10.8%). Those struggles have obviously continued with the A’s, and his 2024 season comes to an end with a 5.16 ERA and 5.93 FIP in 29 2/3 innings of work. Assuming Bielak once again clears waivers, he’ll have the opportunity to reject an outright assignment in favor of heading to free agency for the first time in his career.
As for Boyle, the right-hander returns to the club’s roster to close out the season after making just four appearance in the majors since May 5 due to injuries and a stint in the minor leagues. Acquired from the Reds in exchange for Sam Moll at last year’s trade deadline, Boyle impressed with a 1.69 ERA in three starts for the A’s down the stretch last year but has had a rocky campaign this in 2024, which he kicked off by getting lit up for eight runs (seven earned) in 2 2/3 innings during his first start of the year. Boyle would go on to settle in a bit with a 4.13 ERA and a 24% strikeout rate in his next five starts, but his potential turnaround was cut short by a lower back strain that sent him to the IL in early May.
That stint on the shelf didn’t last very long, but Boyle found himself optioned to the minor leagues once he was healthy enough to return and struggled at the Triple-A level with a 5.12 ERA in 15 appearances, including 13 starts. Boyle eventually got called back up to the big leagues last month and struck out an impressive 28.2% of opponents in three starts, but surrendered a 5.40 ERA over that time and was moved to the bullpen, where he was promptly lit up for three runs on three walks and a hit-by-pitch while recording just one out. That disastrous outing resulted in Boyle’s second demotion of the year, but he’s now set to return to the majors in hopes of putting together a finish to the year that improves upon his brutal 7.12 ERA in 43 major league innings this year.
Athletics Select Brandon Bielak
The A’s announced this morning that they’ve selected the contract of right-hander Brandon Bielak. Lefty Brady Basso was optioned to Triple-A to make room for Bielak on the club’s active roster, and the 40-man roster now stands at 40.
Bielak, 28, was an 11th-round pick by the Astros in the 2017 draft and pitched for Houston at the big league level in each of the past five seasons. He served as a solid back-of-the-rotation arm and swing man from 2021-23, with a combined 4.05 ERA (104 ERA+) and 4.78 FIP in 48 games (15 starts) during those years. The righty began to struggle with the club in the majors this year, however, and in ten appearances as a multi-inning reliever surrendered a 5.71 ERA while walking (8.4%) nearly as many batters as he struck out (10.8%).
Those struggles were enough for the Astros to decide to cut bait on the right-hander, and he was swapped to the A’s in a cash deal back in May as a result. The right-hander made just three appearances with his new club at the big league level but posted improved results over those 5 2/3 innings of work, surrendering two runs and walking just one while striking out three. Still, the A’s designated him for assignment just over a week after acquiring him, though unlike Houston they managed to sneak him through waivers and outright him to the minor leagues.
Since then, Bielak has struggled with Oakland’s Triple-A affiliate in Las Vegas, with a 6.08 ERA in 66 2/3 innings of work across 16 appearances (13 starts). Those results are rather lackluster, even after accounting for the Pacific Coast League’s inflated offensive environment. Bielak will now get another opportunity at the big league level with the A’s despite those shaky numbers, likely acting as a long relief option alongside veteran Ross Stripling for the club’s bullpen down the stretch.
Making room for Bielak on the club’s active roster is Basso. The 26-year-old lefty made his big league debut back in May and has been an up-and-down option for the A’s throughout the year with solid results. He made his first career start in the big leagues last night to impressive results, throwing six scoreless innings against the Tigers where he allowed just three hits and walked one while racking up six strikeouts. Overall, Basso has a 1.93 ERA and 2.97 FIP in 9 1/3 innings of work in the majors to go with a 4.55 ERA in 93 innings of work at the minor league level this year. The lefty hasn’t received substantial playing time in the majors so far but could factor into the club’s pitching staff more prominently as soon as next year.
Athletics Outright Brandon Bielak
The Athletics have sent right-hander Brandon Bielak outright to Triple-A Las Vegas, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. That indicates he cleared waivers after being designated for assignment last week.
Bielak, 28, only came to the A’s a couple of weeks ago. He had been designated for assignment by the Astros and then flipped to Oakland in a cash deal. Up until that point, he had spent his entire career in the Astros’ organization, as that club drafted him in the 11th round back in 2017.
He debuted in the big leagues in 2020 and had a 6.75 earned run average that year, but he went on to serve as a decent depth swingman for the next three years. Over the 2021-23 seasons, while getting frequently shuttled to the farm and back, he tossed 142 1/3 major league innings with a 4.05 ERA. His 19.2% strikeout rate wasn’t amazing but his 9.8% walk rate was close to average and he got grounders at a strong 48.1% clip.
But in the process, he exhausted his option years. That meant that he came into 2024 out of options and with a tenuous hold on his roster spot. The Astros dealt with various pitching injuries this year and kept Bielak in their bullpen but his 5.71 ERA in 17 1/3 innings eventually squeezed him off.
He landed with Oakland but made just three appearances for that club before getting designated for assignment again. The other 29 clubs had a chance to grab him in recent days but it appears they all passed.
Bielak came into this year with two years and 110 days of service time, putting him 62 days shy of the three-year mark. Players continue to earn service time while in DFA limbo, so Bielak should have been earning service time all year until his outright. May 28 was the 62nd day of the season and his outright is listed as May 29, so he should have hit the three-year mark.
That is significant since players with at least three years of service or a previous career outright have the right to reject an outright assignment and elect free agency. Bielak doesn’t have a previous career outright but should now have hit the three-year service line. It’s not yet confirmed that he has the right to hit the open market, nor is it known what his decision will be, if he has one.
If he sticks with the A’s, he should have a decent chance of making it back to the majors later in the year. They have one of the weaker pitching staffs in baseball and currently have ten hurlers on the injured list. Anyone who is pitching well this summer could wind up traded by the rebuilding club, opening up opportunities for other guys.
Athletics Place Ross Stripling On 15-Day IL, Designate Brandon Bielak
The A’s announced that right-hander Ross Stripling has been placed on the 15-day injured list due to a strained right elbow. Right-hander Brandon Bielak has also been designated for assignment, opening up a 40-man roster spot for Jack O’Loughlin, whose promotion was reported earlier today. In addition to selecting O’Loughlin’s contract from Triple-A, the Athletics also called up righty Tyler Ferguson from Triple-A to take the other 26-man roster spot.
Stripling allowed six runs over 3 2/3 innings in yesterday’s 6-3 loss to the Astros. Even if it is fair to assume that the elbow strain impacted Stripling’s performance in some fashion, it was another in a string of tough outings for the veteran, as he has a 5.82 ERA across 55 2/3 innings and 11 starts for Oakland. His SIERA is a somewhat more palatable 4.66 and Stripling hasn’t enjoyed any batted-ball (.359 BABIP) or strand rate (56.4%) luck, plus his .328 xwOBA is well below his .364 wOBA. The righty’s 4.8% walk rate has been excellent and he has done a very good job of limiting hard contact, though his 13.9% strikeout rate ranks in only the seventh percentile among all pitchers.
Even if the results have been spotting, Stripling has been able to take the ball every fifth day, which is the kind of stability the A’s were hoping to receive when they acquired him in an offseason trade with the Giants. It was widely expected that the Athletics would also be shopping Stripling in advance of the trade deadline, yet this injury now casts doubt on that scenario, and potentially Stripling’s availability for the remainder of the season. More will be known about the severity of the elbow sprain soon, though it is worth noting that Stripling underwent a Tommy John surgery back in 2014 when he was pitching in the Dodgers’ farm system.
The more immediate impact of Stripling’s injury is that Oakland is now down yet another starting pitcher. Paul Blackburn (stress reaction in his right foot), Alex Wood (rotator cuff tendonitis), and Joe Boyle (lower back strain) are already all on the 15-day IL, meaning that of the five A’s pitchers who have made the most starts in 2024, JP Sears is the only fit hurler of the group. O’Loughlin has been a regular starter at Triple-A Las Vegas and will join Sears, Mitch Spence, Joey Estes, and Aaron Brooks in the makeshift rotation. The Athletics have off-days on each of the next two Mondays to allow for some flexibility in figuring out the pitching staff, and in perhaps buying time until at least one of their injured starters is healthy.
Given the short-handed rotation, it seems surprising that the A’s are parting ways with Bielak just nine days after acquiring the righty in a trade with the Astros. Bielak has a 3.18 ERA over 5 2/3 relief innings since coming to the Athletics, and while he has worked exclusively as a reliever over 13 total appearances for Oakland and Houston this season, he started 13 of his 15 games with the Astros in 2023.
Bielak’s Statcast numbers have been troubling in each of the last two seasons, so he might be fortunate to have even the 4.11 ERA he has posted over 103 innings since Opening Day 2023. Still, for a team that is so thin on starting pitching at the moment, designating a swingman with MLB experience puts even more pressure on the Athletics’ internal arms to pick up the slack. The A’s weren’t able to simply move Bielak to Triple-A since he is out of minor league options, and it is possible another team might again look to work out a trade or just claim Bielak in his latest trip to DFA limbo.
Astros Trade Brandon Bielak To Athletics
The Astros traded right-hander Brandon Bielak to the Athletics in exchange for cash, per a team announcement. Houston designated him for assignment last week. The A’s designated left-hander Easton Lucas for assignment to open a spot on the 40-man roster.
Bielak, 28, struggled with the ‘Stros this season, posting a 5.71 earned run average in ten appearances (17 1/3 innings). His 10.8% strikeout rate and 5.5% swinging-strike rate both stand as career-low marks.
That said, Bielak was a solid swingman in three prior seasons with Houston. From 2021-23, he notched a 4.05 ERA over the life of 142 1/3 innings, fanning a combined 19.2% of his opponents against a 9.8% walk rate. The former 11th-round pick made 15 starts and tallied another 33 relief appearances during that time. He’s not a flamethrower, but Bielak averaged 93.4 mph on his heater during that three-year stint and kept the ball on the ground at a strong 48.1% clip. He’s posted similar numbers in parts of four Triple-A campaigns, recording a 3.98 ERA with a 24.3% strikeout rate and 9.6% walk rate through 246 2/3 frames.
Bielak is out of minor league options, so he’ll jump right onto the Oakland staff. The A’s have placed starters Joe Boyle (back strain), Paul Blackburn (stress reaction in foot) and Alex Wood (shoulder tendinitis) on the injured list this month. They also announced that injured lefty Ken Waldichuk is done for the season due to elbow surgery. The addition of Bielak will help replenish some of that depth, whether he steps right into the rotation or provides a long-relief option. Rule 5 righty Mitch Spence has been Oakland’s primary long man this year, but he’s pitched well and could feasibly step into the rotation himself.
Because he has just 2.110 years of big league service, Bielak can be controlled for three more years beyond the current season. He’ll need to carve out a role for himself on the Athletics’ roster and get back to his 2021-23 form if that’s to even become a factor, but there’s potential for him to be a multi-year acquisition if Bielak can get back on track. He’ll be arbitration-eligible for the first time this winter and shouldn’t see an especially large raise, given his role as a low-leverage swingman and occasional back-end starter.
The addition of Bielak to the roster comes at the expense of the 27-year-old Lucas, who made his big league debut with the A’s last year but has only seen 10 1/3 total innings in the majors. It’s been a struggle in that small sample, to say the least. Lucas has been charged with a dozen earned runs (10.45 ERA) on 18 hits and a dozen walks with 13 strikeouts. A massive .459 average on balls in play has contributed to his ugly numbers, but Lucas hasn’t done himself any favors by walking just over 12% of his opponents.
As one would expect, things have gone better in the upper minors. Lucas split the 2023 season between Double-A and Triple-A, posting a combined 3.86 ERA in 46 2/3 innings. He punched out 25.8% of opponents against an 8.6% walk rate. The southpaw posted a 2.87 ERA in 15 2/3 innings of Triple-A work this year as well — albeit with just 13 strikeouts against six unintentional walks. The A’s acquired Lucas from the Orioles last July in the trade sending righty Shintaro Fujinami back to Baltimore.
Oakland selected Lucas to the 40-man roster last summer but passed him unclaimed through outright waivers just a couple months later, in November. Because of that prior outright assignment, he’ll have the right to reject a minor league assignment in favor of free agency even if he goes unclaimed a second time. As such, there’s a chance that today’s DFA ends his time with the A’s organization less than a year after he was acquired in a deadline swap.
Astros Activate Cristian Javier, Designate Brandon Bielak
The Astros have activated right-hander Cristian Javier from the 15-day injured list, as Javier will get the start in today’s game against the Tigers. To make room for Javier on the active roster, right-hander Brandon Bielak has been designated for assignment.
Javier blasted out of the gates this season, posting a 1.54 ERA over his first 23 1/3 innings and four starts. While a 5.29 SIERA painted a much less favorable picture of Javier’s performance due to such factors as his .215 BABIP, 18.9% strikeout rate and 11.6% walk rate, the Astros can hardly argue with the results given how desperately the team has needed all the quality pitching it can get. Unfortunately, Javier joined several other Houston pitchers on the IL when he was sidelined just under a month ago due to neck discomfort.
With Javier, Justin Verlander, and Framber Valdez now all back from stints on the injured list, the rotation has slowly started to take on its intended form, even if Luis Garcia, Jose Urquidy, Lance McCullers Jr., and J.P. France are all still on the mend. The combination of the three healthy starters plus Ronel Blanco will be the top four starters in what could be a six-man rotation for the time being, since the Astros are in the midst of playing 29 games in a 30-day span. Neither Hunter Brown or Spencer Arrighetti has pitched well this season, but they could be penciled in as the fifth and sixth starters if Houston does decide to expand the rotation to give everyone more rest.
It doesn’t seem like Bielak will be involved in this plan, unless he clears DFA waivers and is quickly brought back to the 40-man roster after being outrighted. Bielak has thrown more than one inning in the majority of his 10 appearances this season, and 21 of his 70 overall MLB appearances have been as a starter, though the results have been spotty for the 28-year-old. Over his 191 2/3 career innings (all with Houston), Bielak has a 4.65 ERA, a modest 18.1% strikeout rate, and an 8.4% walk rate that is on the high side.
Bielak has been shuttled back and forth many times between Triple-A and the majors over the previous four years, though he is now out of minor league options. As a result, the Astros were forced to designate the righty for assignment in order to move him back to the minors, and it’s possible another team could claim Bielak away off waivers.
