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Anthony Bemboom Accepts Outright Assignment

By Anthony Franco | April 13, 2023 at 8:47pm CDT

The Orioles announced this evening that backstop Anthony Bemboom has gone unclaimed on waivers. He’s accepted an outright assignment to Triple-A Norfolk and will remain in the organization without occupying a spot on the 40-man roster.

Baltimore just announced this morning that Bemboom had been designated for assignment as the corresponding move to select Ryan O’Hearn onto the 40-man. It appears he’d hit the waiver wire before the official announcement and the DFA was resolved quickly when he cleared waivers this afternoon.

It’s the second time in the past six months the O’s have outrighted Bemboom. Baltimore added him to the roster at the start of the offseason, with the sides agreeing to a split contract that likely pays him higher than the typical salary for a Triple-A player. Bemboom has had the right to refuse the outright assignments. Doing so, however, would mean forfeiting his salary. It’s not surprising he accepted an assignment over the winter and will do so again after a brief return to the majors to start the season.

Bemboom got into two games this year. He’s now played at the major league level in five consecutive years, though his cumulative playing time (78 games, 206 plate appearances) is still less than half a season’s worth of work. The 33-year-old is a .158/.233/.262 hitter at the major league level. He carries a .247/.340/.392 line over parts of six Triple-A seasons and the O’s are clearly comfortable with his work with their pitching staff.

Baltimore has one of the game’s top catchers in Adley Rutschman. Veteran James McCann returned from the injured list over the weekend and will serve as Rutschman’s backup.

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Baltimore Orioles Transactions Anthony Bemboom

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The Rangers’ Options At Shortstop

By Anthony Franco | April 13, 2023 at 6:48pm CDT

The Rangers were dealt one of the more notable early-season injuries. Star shortstop Corey Seager pulled up on a double during Tuesday’s night matchup in Kansas City. He was diagnosed with a Grade 2 strain of his left hamstring. That’ll cost him a month at minimum.

Seager had been off to a .359/.469/.538 start. Texas won’t be able to replace that kind of offense — Seager himself wasn’t going to keep hitting at that rate — but it’s an obviously tough blow for a team that projects as a fringe playoff club.

Manager Bruce Bochy quickly shot down the notion of sliding Marcus Semien over to shortstop (via Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News). The All-Star infielder has plenty of experience from his time in Oakland, but he’s primarily played second base over the past two-plus seasons. With Seager expected to return at some point during the season’s first half, the Rangers don’t seem keen on disrupting Semien’s rhythm at the keystone only to move him back there a few weeks from now.

Instead, it seems the Rangers will turn to a combination of less proven options to cover the position. Let’s take a look at the candidates.

The Favorites

Josh H. Smith

Smith picked up the first shortstop start last night, plugging right into Seager’s customary No. 2 spot in the lineup versus Royals’ righty Brad Keller. As a left-handed hitter, he could pick up the bulk of the work against right-handed pitching.

A second-round pick of the Yankees in 2019, Smith landed in Texas via the Joey Gallo trade (which’ll come up again shortly). He made his MLB debut last season, appearing in 73 games. Smith struggled through his looks at big league pitching, hitting .197/.307/.249 over 253 trips to the plate. He demonstrated a very patient approach, walking 11.1% of the time while keeping his strikeouts to a lower-than-average 19.8% clip. Yet he didn’t do much when he put the ball in play, only picking up two home runs with a well below-average 28.6% hard-contact percentage.

Smith was much better in Triple-A. He’s been a productive hitter throughout his minor league career. That continued in 2022, when he put up a .290/.395/.466 line with six homers, a 12.6% walk rate and a 20.7% strikeout percentage over 55 contests for the Rangers’ Triple-A affiliate in Round Rock. Baseball America’s pre-2022 scouting report on Smith praised his exit velocities in the minor leagues, which he’ll need to carry over more effectively to be a productive MLB hitter.

Ezequiel Durán

Durán, a right-handed hitter, also began his career in the Yankees’ system. Signed out of the Dominican Republic in 2017, he joined Smith as part of the package sent to Texas for Gallo. (Glenn Otto and Trevor Hauver were also included.) Like Smith, Durán made his big league debut last season but didn’t perform well in his first crack, albeit with a different profile.

The 23-year-old Durán hit .236/.277/.365 in 220 MLB plate appearances. He was among the game’s most aggressive hitters, chasing nearly half the pitches he saw outside the strike zone and whiffing at more than 14% of total offerings. Durán walked at a meager 5.5% rate while punching out 24.5% of the time. He did more damage than Smith when he made contact, connecting on five home runs, ten doubles and a triple. However, he’ll need to rein in his approach to keep his on-base percentage at a suitable level.

Durán was better in Triple-A, hitting .283/.316/.531 in 33 games. His strikeout and walk rates there (27.7% and 4.5%, respectively) remained concerning, but he connected on nine long balls. Durán was a highly-regarded prospect — perhaps even more so than Smith — based on his power potential but he’s faced more questions about his swing decisions and ability to handle shortstop defensively. Durán spent most of his time at second base in the minors and played primarily third base at the big league level. He’s yet to log a single major league inning at shortstop, though Bochy named him as an option there after Seager’s injury.

Other Possibilities

There aren’t many alternatives for Texas at the moment. Brad Miller hasn’t regularly played shortstop since 2016. Prospects Luisangel Acuña and Jonathan Ornelas are on the 40-man roster but don’t seem on the radar for an immediate call. The 21-year-old Acuña has barely played above High-A and isn’t likely to play in the majors at all this season. Ornelas, 23 next month, could be a more realistic option for a midseason promotion after hitting .299/.360/.425 with Double-A Frisco last year. He has all of nine games of Triple-A experience, though.

Perhaps the Rangers will look to fortify the depth in the coming weeks. Didi Gregorius and Andrelton Simmons are still unsigned and would have to take a minor league deal if they wish to continue playing. Even then, neither would be ready to step right into a big league lineup. Maybe the Marlins would part with José Iglesias, who’s at Triple-A Jacksonville after signing a non-roster deal in Spring Training. Iglesias can opt out of that contract if he’s not in the majors by May 1; it’s not uncommon for teams to grant players in his position an early release or cash trade if another club is willing to give them an immediate MLB roster spot.

The Rangers aren’t going to make any kind of impact outside acquisition at this time of the year. That’s not necessary with Seager likely returning in late May or early June. Barring a veteran depth pickup, Texas looks set to rely on a pair of young players to man shortstop for the next few weeks.

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MLBTR Originals Texas Rangers Ezequiel Duran Josh Smith (1997) Marcus Semien

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Rule 5 Draft Update: April 2023

By Steve Adams | April 13, 2023 at 5:55pm CDT

Fifteen players were selected in the 2022 Rule 5 Draft — an annual avenue for teams to potentially acquire talent from other organizations whose decision-makers did not place them on the 40-man roster. For those unfamiliar, in order to be eligible for the Rule 5 Draft, a player must not be on his team’s 40-man roster and must have played in either parts of five professional seasons (if they signed at 18 or younger) or four professional seasons (if they signed at 19 or older). The deadline to protect players from the Rule 5 by selecting their contracts to the 40-man roster typically falls in mid-November and spurs a good deal of player movement as teams jettison borderline players and non-tender candidates from their roster in order to protect younger prospects.

A player who is selected in the Rule 5 Draft must spend the entire subsequent season on his new club’s Major League roster and cannot be optioned to the minors. The player can technically spend time on the injured list as well, but at least 90 days must be spent on the active roster. If not, the player’s Rule 5 status rolls into the following season until 90 days on the active roster have been accrued. If a team at any point decides it can no longer carry a Rule 5 selection, that player must be passed through waivers and subsequently offered back to his original organization. Any other club can claim the player via waivers, but the same Rule 5 restrictions will apply to the claiming team.

Broadly speaking, the Rule 5 Draft rarely produces impact players. There are plenty of exceptions over the years, though, with names like Johan Santana, Dan Uggla, Shane Victorino, Joakim Soria, Josh Hamilton and, more recently, Garrett Whitlock and Trevor Stephan thriving in new organizations. The Rule 5 Draft dates back more than a century and has even produced a handful of Hall of Famers: Roberto Clemente, Hack Wilson and Christy Mathewson.

It’s unlikely we’ll see any Cooperstown-bound players come from this year’s crop, but the teams who opted to select a player will be content if any of these names become a viable reliever or role player for the next several seasons. Here’s a look at this year’s group of 15 Rule 5 players and where they stand a couple of weeks into the 2023 season. We’ll do a few of these throughout the season, keeping tabs on which players survive the season and formally have their long-term rights transferred to their new clubs.

Currently on a Major League Roster

  • Thaddeus Ward, RHP (Nationals, from the Red Sox): Ward was one of Boston’s best prospects a few years back but went the better part of two years without pitching due to the canceled 2020 minor league season and Tommy John surgery in 2021. He impressed in 51 minor league frames in his 2022 return, and many Red Sox fans were irked not to see him protected last November. The Nats selected him with the top pick in the Rule 5, and after a solid spring he’s tossed 5 2/3 innings and allowed three runs on four hits and a couple of walks. Ward is averaging 94.3 mph with his heater and has fanned seven of his 23 opponents (30.4%). The Nats are the exact type of rebuilding team that can afford to carry a player all season even if he struggles, so it’s quite likely that Ward will spend the year in their bullpen — and potentially get a look in the rotation sometime down the road.
  • Ryan Noda, 1B/OF (Athletics, from the Dodgers): Like the Nats, the A’s aren’t going anywhere this season, so there’s every incentive for them to give Noda a long audition. The 27-year-old slugger hit .259/.395/.474 in Triple-A last season, and while he fanned in 28.2% of his plate appearances he also walked at a gaudy 16% clip. It’s been more of the same with the A’s. He walked 11 times but fanned on 26 occasions in 69 spring plate appearances. So far in the regular season, he’s belted a pair of homers, drawn seven walks and whiffed a dozen times in 37 A’s plate appearances. The A’s aren’t ones to shy away from a three-true-outcomes skill set, and they’ll see if Noda can do the Jack Cust dance for them moving forward.
  • Jose Hernandez, LHP (Pirates, from the Dodgers): A rocky spring didn’t dissuade the Pirates from carrying Hernandez on their Opening Day roster, and so far it seems wise that they looked past that 8.18 Grapefruit League ERA. In 5 1/3 frames, Hernandez has held opponents to one run on five hits and a walk with four strikeouts. He’s averaged 96 mph on his heater. The 25-year-old Hernandez used that power fastball and a sharp slider to fan nearly 30% of his opponents in Double-A last year, and the Bucs are currently trusting him as one of two lefties in Derek Shelton’s bullpen. He’s already picked up his first big league hold.
  • Blake Sabol, C/OF (Giants, from the Pirates): Sabol was technically selected by the Reds with the fourth pick in the draft, but Cincinnati and San Francisco had an agreed-upon deal sending Sabol to the Giants for a player to be named later. (Such swaps are common in the Rule 5 Draft.) The 25-year-old Sabol split the 2022 season between Double-A and Triple-A in Pittsburgh, batting a combined .284/.363/.497 with 66 games behind the dish and another 22 in the outfield. A monster spring showing (.348/.475/.630) and an injury to Mitch Haniger set the stage for Sabol to open the season in left field for the Giants. He’s hitting just .194/.265/.290 through his first 10 games and has split time between catcher and outfield pretty evenly. If the Giants feel he can legitimately play both spots, that’s just the type of versatility they crave when constructing their roster.
  • Mason Englert, RHP (Tigers, from the Rangers): Englert isn’t a power arm but had a strong showing in the Rangers’ High-A and (briefly) Double-A rotations in 2022, when he pitched to a combined 3.64 ERA in 118 2/3 innings. The Tigers have used him out of the bullpen so far, and the results haven’t been great. He’s surrendered six runs in just 7 1/3 innings, including a trio of long balls. Englert was a 2018 fourth-rounder who’s generally regarded as a potential back-of-the-rotation starter. It’s feasible Detroit could get him a look in a starting role at some point. Englert entered the 2023 season with just 15 1/3 innings above A-ball, so some struggles aren’t exactly surprising.
  • Kevin Kelly, RHP (Rays, from the Guardians): In a shocking and unprecedented development, the Rays look like they’ve plucked a pitcher from obscurity and perhaps found a keeper. Small sample caveats abound this time of season, but Kelly has now made four relief appearances of at least two innings (including today’s game) and yielded three runs on eight hits and no walks with seven punchouts. That comes on the heels of a 3.38 ERA and 21-to-6 K/BB ratio in 13 1/3 spring innings. The Guardians have a deep farm system and perennial 40-man crunch, which can lead to players like this going unprotected; Kelly posted a 2.04 ERA, 29.9% strikeout rate and 8.8% walk rate in 57 1/3 frames between Double-A and Triple-A last year.
  • Gus Varland, RHP (Brewers, from the Dodgers): The Brewers looked past Varland’s woeful 5.98 ERA in Double-A across the past two seasons, betting on the right-hander’s raw stuff rather than his results. So far, so good. Varland obliterated opposing hitters in spring training, whiffing a comical 17 of the 35 batters he faced (48.6%). So far during the regular season, he’s allowed a pair of runs on eight hits and two walks with four strikeouts through six innings out of the bullpen. Varland is averaging 95.9 mph on his fastball and has kept 11 of the 22 balls in play against him on the ground.

On the Major League Injured List

  • Nic Enright, RHP (Marlins, from the Guardians): Enright announced in February that just weeks after being selected in the Rule 5 Draft, doctors diagnosed him with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He’s undergoing treatment and has said he hopes to “use his platform to provide hope and inspiration to others who fight their battle with cancer.” Enright is currently on Miami’s 60-day injured list, but baseball of course takes a back seat in this type of instance. We at MLBTR join fans of the Marlins, Guardians and every other organization in pulling for the 26-year-old Enright and wishing him a full recovery.
  • Noah Song, RHP (Phillies, from the Red Sox): Ranked as the No. 65 prospect in the 2019 draft by Baseball America, Song slid to the Red Sox in the fourth round due to his military commitments as a Naval Academy cadet. His professional experience is limited to 17 Low-A innings in 2019 while spending the past three seasons in the Navy but was transferred from active duty to selective reserves earlier this year, allowing him to play baseball. He’s on the Phillies’ 15-day injured list with a back strain, and it’s tough to imagine him just diving into a Major League bullpen after spending three years away from the game. Still, Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski held that same title in Boston when the Red Sox drafted Song and has said since the Rule 5 Draft that he feels Song’s pure talent is worth the risk.
  • Wilking Rodriguez, RHP (Cardinals, from the Yankees): The 33-year-old Rodriguez is a remarkable story. It’s been eight years since he last pitched in affiliated ball and nine years since his lone MLB cup of coffee with the Royals. Since then, he’s been a staple in the Venezuelan Winter League and the Mexican League. During his past two seasons in Mexico, he hurled 73 innings with a 2.71 ERA — including 44 2/3 innings of 2.01 ERA ball with a 43.2% strikeout rate there in 2022. The Yankees signed him to a minor league deal in August, but because of his prior minor league experience from 2007-15, he was Rule 5-eligible and selected by the Cardinals. A right shoulder issue has Rodriguez on the 15-day IL right now. He’s yet to pitch for the Cardinals this year.

Already Returned to their Former Club

  • Nick Avila, RHP: Avila allowed eight runs in ten spring innings with the White Sox and was returned to the Giants, for whom he posted an electric 1.14 ERA in 55 1/3 innings between High-A and Double-A last season.
  • Andrew Politi, RHP: Politi was tagged for six runs on nine hits and three walks in 8 2/3 spring innings with the Orioles, who returned him to the Red Sox late in camp.
  • Jose Lopez, LHP: Lopez walked five batters in six frames with the Padres this spring, and the Friars returned him to the Rays on March 27.
  • Chris Clarke, RHP: The towering 6’7″ Clarke faced the tough task of cracking a deep Mariners bullpen and was returned to the Cubs late in spring training after allowing four runs on eight hits and a pair of walks in 6 2/3 innings.
  • Zach Greene, RHP: The Mets plucked Greene out of the Yankees’ system, but in 4 2/3 innings during spring training he yielded seven runs with more walks (six) than strikeouts (five). The Mets returned him to the Yankees on March 14.
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Athletics Boston Red Sox Cleveland Guardians Detroit Tigers Los Angeles Dodgers MLBTR Originals Miami Marlins Milwaukee Brewers New York Yankees Philadelphia Phillies Pittsburgh Pirates Rule 5 Draft San Francisco Giants St. Louis Cardinals Tampa Bay Rays Texas Rangers Washington Nationals Blake Sabol Gus Varland Jose Hernandez Kevin Kelly Mason Englert Nic Enright Noah Song Ryan Noda Thad Ward Wilking Rodriguez

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Brewers Select Colin Rea, Designate Payton Henry

By Darragh McDonald | April 13, 2023 at 4:50pm CDT

The Brewers announced that they have selected the contract of right-hander Colin Rea. Fellow righty Janson Junk was optioned to Triple-A Nashville to open a spot on the active roster. To get Rea onto the 40-man, catcher Payton Henry was designated for assignment.

Rea, 32, has 36 games of scattered big league action with the Padres, Marlins, Cubs and Brewers. Most of that came back in 2015 and 2016, as he’s only tossed 20 innings in the bigs since then. He has a career ERA of 4.90 in 154 1/3 innings overall.

He spent last year pitching for the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks in Japan, posting a 3.96 ERA over exactly 100 innings. He returned to North America this winter by signing a minor league deal with the Brewers. He’s already made a couple of starts in Triple-A, throwing seven innings without allowing an earned run.

The Brewers needed to address their rotation when Brandon Woodruff was placed on the injured list earlier this week with shoulder inflammation. They also intended to give their regular starters a breather by pushing them back a day, per Curt Hogg of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, meaning they needed a couple of fresh arms. Junk was recalled to make a spot start yesterday but has now been quickly optioned to make room for Rea.

Henry, 26 in June, has spent most of his career in the Brewers’ organization, having been drafted by them in 2016. He was dealt to the Marlins in July of 2021 but then was traded back to Milwaukee in November of last year. He has 20 games of major league experience, all of it with the Marlins in between those two trades. He hit .186/.314/.209 in 51 plate appearances, which is a tiny sample but it tracks with his reputation as a glove-first catching prospect. He’s hit .200/.294/.267 in five Triple-A games so far this year.

The Brewers will now have one week to trade Henry or pass him through waivers. Catching depth tends to be in demand throughout the season given the high number of injuries at the position. Since Henry has options remaining, he doesn’t even need to be given an active roster spot. The Brewers now have just two catchers on their 40-man roster in William Contreras and Victor Caratini. They have some non-roster depth with players like Alex Jackson and Brian Navarreto, though Henry would join them if he clears waivers. He doesn’t have a previous career outright or three-plus years of service time, meaning he won’t have the right to reject an outright assignment.

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Milwaukee Brewers Transactions Colin Rea Janson Junk Payton Henry

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Athletics Claim Richard Lovelady From Braves

By Darragh McDonald | April 13, 2023 at 4:00pm CDT

The Athletics announced that they have claimed left-hander Richard Lovelady off waivers from the Braves and assigned him to Triple-A Las Vegas. To open a spot on the 40-man roster, right-hander Freddy Tarnok was transferred to the 60-day injured list.

There had been no public indication that Atlanta had made any kind of roster move with Lovelady, but they evidently tried to pass him through waivers at some point in recent days. Since the A’s swooped in to grab him, Atlanta’s 40-man count will drop to 39 as they also lose a bit of optionable bullpen depth. They liked the lefty enough to acquire him just a couple weeks ago by sending cash considerations to Kansas City but will now see him move out west.

For the A’s, they are adding an intriguing southpaw arm to the roster. Lovelady, 27, struggled in his first major league action but seemed to take a step forward in 2021. He posted a 3.48 ERA in 20 appearances for the Royals, striking out 27.4% of batters faced with a 7.1% walk rate and 56.6% ground ball rate. Unfortunately, he required Tommy John surgery in September of that year. The Royals then non-tendered him but re-signed him on a minor league deal.

He returned to health and made a couple of minor league appearances late last year, which encouraged the Royals enough to add him back to their roster in November to prevent him from reaching minor league free agency. But when faced with a roster crunch around Opening Day, they flipped Lovelady to Atlanta for cash. He’s made four appearances for Triple-A Gwinnett this year with a 7.20 ERA in that small sample.

Lovelady is in his final option year, which will mean the A’s can potentially keep him stashed in the minors for the rest of the year, though it’s possible he gets back to the majors by performing well or simply due to the club needing a fresh arm. The rebuilding club has a bullpen that’s light on experience and also light on lefties, with Sam Moll the only southpaw currently in the big league bullpen.

As for Tarnok, he was acquired from Atlanta in the Sean Murphy trade this winter but began the season on the injured list due to a strained right shoulder. It’s unclear how long he’ll be out of action but he’ll now be ineligible to return until 60 days from his initial IL placement, which would be late May.

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Athletics Atlanta Braves Transactions Freddy Tarnok Richard Lovelady

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Jeffrey Springs Removed From Game With Ulnar Neuritis

By Darragh McDonald | April 13, 2023 at 2:49pm CDT

Rays left-hander Jeffrey Springs was removed from today’s game after a visit from manager Kevin Cash as well as the club’s trainer. The club later announced his injury to reporters, including Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times, describing it as left arm ulnar neuritis. He will undergo further evaluation tomorrow.

Until more testing is done, it will be unclear what kind of an absence Springs is facing. The ulnar nerve is commonly known as the “funny bone” due to the tingling sensation it can create in one’s arm when struck. “Neuritis” means that the nerve is inflamed. Having the diagnosis doesn’t necessarily pinpoint a timeline, as there’s still a range of possible outcomes. On the positive end, the Blue Jays placed Jordan Romano on the injured list in April of 2021 with ulnar neuritis, but he was back after just a 10-day absence.

On the other end of the spectrum, Jacob deGrom had surgery to address ulnar neuritis in September of 2016. That ended his season, which isn’t surprising as it was late in the schedule, but the Mets announced the recovery time as three months. It was a similar situation for Michael Fulmer when he was with the Tigers in 2017. He had surgery to address ulnar neuritis late in that season with the club announcing a recovery timeline of three to four months. Clearly, there’s a wide range of outcomes with this issue. The Rays and Springs will have to examine the severity of his ailment and determine the next steps before even a rough timeline can be mapped out.

However it ultimately plays out, it figures to be a blow to the Rays, as Springs has surprisingly emerged as an excellent starter recently. He had spent most of his career working out of the bullpen until the Rays stretched him out last year. He ultimately tossed 135 1/3 innings over 25 starts and eight relief appearances with a 2.46 ERA. He struck out 26.2% of batters faced against a 5.6% walk rate and 40.9% ground ball rate. The club had enough belief in those results to sign Springs to a four-year, $31MM extension this winter, though he could bump his earnings as high as $65.75MM over five years via a club option and incentives. He had looked strong so far here in 2023, not allowing an earned run over his first two starts, then letting one run cross the plate today before his exit.

The Rays have a strong starting staff, which has helped them jump out to an incredible 13-0 start to their season, as they eventually won today’s contest despite the loss of Springs. But if the lefty has to miss some time, it will further handcuff a rotation that started the season without Shane Baz or Tyler Glasnow and recently placed Zach Eflin on the injured list as well. If Springs joins that group on the IL, they will be down to two strong starters in Shane McClanahan and Drew Rasmussen, while Josh Fleming has had mixed results so far this year. Eflin is expecting a minimum stay on the IL but still has another 10 days before he’s eligible to return, even if that’s true.

The Rays have often used bullpen games in the past but they would be challenged to get through their upcoming schedule with just three starters in McClanahan, Rasmussen and Fleming. They don’t have an off-day until April 20 and then won’t have another until May 15. That means they will likely have to lean on their depth at some point. Prospect Taj Bradley made his major league debut yesterday but was then optioned to Triple-A this morning. He isn’t eligible to return until 15 days from that optioning, though an exception is made when another player is going on the injured list. Luis Patiño and Yonny Chirinos are other options on the 40-man roster.

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Tampa Bay Rays Jeffrey Springs

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Roberto Perez Undergoes Season-Ending Shoulder Surgery

By Steve Adams | April 13, 2023 at 1:10pm CDT

For a second straight year, catcher Roberto Perez’s season is over before it had much of a chance to get underway. The Giants announced Thursday that Perez underwent surgery to repair the rotator cuff in his right shoulder and will miss the remainder of the season. Perez, who played in just five games before sustaining the injury, was limited to 21 games with the Pirates in 2022 before a torn hamstring required season-ending surgery.

The injury to Perez was rather sudden, as a week ago he was still suiting up for the club. He exited their April 7 contest with what the team originally termed a shoulder strain, but further imaging revealed extensive enough damage that surgical intervention was required. He’d already been placed on the 60-day injured list, but the Giants hadn’t indicated until today that Perez’s entire season was even in jeopardy — let alone finished.

Signed to a minor league contract with a $2.5MM base salary back in early February, the 34-year-old Perez parlayed a decent spring showing (.261/.292/.391) into a spot on the Giants’ Opening Day roster. Long considered one of the premier defenders in the game at the catcher position, he appeared positioned for at least a backup role and — depending on Joey Bart and Rule 5 outfielder/catcher Blake Sabol fare — perhaps even a slightly larger role. Instead, he’ll spend the season on the Major League injured list.

The Giants didn’t do much to address their catching depth this offseason, with Perez and Sabol standing as their primary additions. They re-signed Austin Wynns to a non-roster deal and selected him to the big league roster when Perez hit the injured list, but he’s already since been designated for assignment. San Francisco did pick up Gary Sanchez on a minor league contract a week or so into the season, though he’s just 2-for-17 with seven strikeouts in 19 Triple-A plate appearances.

Sanchez could still factor into the Giants’ plans behind the dish, but at least for the time being, it’ll be Bart and Sabol splitting time behind the plate. Sanchez’s deal comes with a weighty (by minor league deal standards) $4MM base salary in the Majors and affords him the opportunity to opt out and re-enter the free-agent market on May 1 if he’s not been added to the big league roster by that point.

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San Francisco Giants Roberto Perez

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Padres Notes: Catcher, Musgrove, Snell

By Steve Adams | April 13, 2023 at 12:10pm CDT

Padres catcher Austin Nola has struggled through a slow start to the season, perhaps still feeling the effects of a broken nose suffered when he was hit in the face by a Michael Fulmer fastball late in spring training. The 33-year-old is out to just a 3-for-29 start, and manager Bob Melvin conceded after last night’s game that the Padres “might need to do things a little differently” with regard to their catching setup (link via Kevin Acee of the San Diego Union-Tribune). As Melvin points out, Nola enjoyed a strong spring before that unfortunate plunking; in 30 plate appearances he slashed .333/.487/.467.

Presumably, “differently” entails allotting more time to longtime top catching prospect Luis Campusano. The 24-year-old hasn’t exactly set the world on fire himself in this season’s small sample, going 4-for-16 with a double and five punchouts in 17 plate appearances. In parts of four seasons in the Majors, Campusano has received just 109 plate appearances and posted a .198/.239/.277 batting line. However, he’s also posted excellent batted-ball metrics (90.9 mph average exit velocity, 48.6% hard-hit rate) and owns a .296/.364/.511 batting line in 684 Triple-A plate appearances. He’s never been given a legitimate run as the team’s primary catcher.

To this point, Acee notes, Campusano has been the catcher for righty Michael Wacha and lefty Ryan Weathers, with Nola lining up behind the dish to catch Yu Darvish, Nick Martinez, Seth Lugo and Blake Snell. Whether the Friars will continue to deploy their catchers based on specific pitcher pairings remains to be determined, but Melvin’s comments suggest that Campusano is likely in for a larger workload to an extent.

As far as the rotation is concerned, the Padres have had to patch things together a bit with Joe Musgrove opening the season on the injured list due to a broken toe he suffered in the weight room during spring training. He’s already made one rehab start, but Musgrove landed awkwardly on his shoulder while making a play in the field during that start and had his second rehab start pushed back as a result. The right-hander had a cortisone injection in that shoulder earlier this week, and he’ll be evaluated again today, Melvin said earlier in the week (link via FriarWire’s Bill Center).

If things go well today, Musgrove could make a second rehab start as soon as tomorrow. Given that he already tossed 4 1/3 innings in his first rehab outing, Musgrove could plausibly be ready for activation following a second rehab appearance, although the team has not yet indicated whether the plan is for him to make two or three rehab starts. Even if Musgrove makes another pair of rehab appearances, he could still be in line for his season debut in the final week of April, assuming all goes well from a health vantage point.

Weathers and Lugo have exceeded expectations in joining the starting staff, but the Padres are surely eager to get Musgrove back nonetheless. Musgrove would’ve likely been in line to serve as San Diego’s Opening Day starter, but that title wound up going to lefty Blake Snell, who’s struggled through his first three starts of a contract season.

Dennis Lin of The Athletic spoke with Snell about those struggles, noting that the lefty began his offseason throwing program earlier than usual in hopes of shaking off some of his increasingly characteristic early-season struggles. Snell tells Lin that he’s made a concerted effort to throw more fastballs in an effort to “get out of my own way” and to remind him of the quality of his secondary pitches. “My curveball and slider are really good because of how good the fastball is,” says Snell.

Thus far, it hasn’t worked out in Snell’s favor. He’s lasted just 13 total innings across three starts, pitching to a 6.92 ERA while walking 10 of is 66 opponents (15.2%). Command and pitch efficiency have been issues for Snell throughout his career, which helps to explain his penchant for relatively short starts. (Snell has averaged just 5.09 innings per start in his career.)

Snell, the 2018 American League Cy Young winner with the Rays, has stumbled out of the gate in each of the past two seasons before ultimately righting the ship and dominating late in the year. In 2021, he pitched to a 5.44 ERA with a 14.3% walk rate in 19 starts through late July before rebounding with 44 1/3 innings of 1.83 ERA ball and an 8.4% walk rate over his final seven starts (44 1/3 innings). His 2022 season played out similarly: a 5.60 ERA and 12.2% walk rate through late June, followed by a 2.53 ERA, 35.1% strikeout rate and 8.4% walk rate in his final 17 starts.

Snell’s raw abilities are unquestionable. He’s a former Cy Young winner who can miss bats at an elite rate and, when he’s at his best, look like one of the game’s best pitchers. His ability to reach those peak levels with any degree of consistency, however, are far more questionable. Nonetheless, that repeatedly demonstrated ability to overwhelm opposing lineups — however inconsistent it may be — is what landed him in the No. 10 spot on yesterday’s edition of MLBTR’s 2023-24 Free Agent Power Rankings.

If he’s able to uncage his dominant form earlier than usual, Snell has the potential to be one of the most in-demand arms on next offseason’s market. His all-too-familiar peaks and valleys may give teams trepidation even he can round into form sooner than later, but left-handers who throw 96 mph and punch out nearly 30% of their opponents don’t grow on trees. And, other clubs will surely have their own ideas about how to get Snell to tap into that No. 1 starter upside with more regularity.

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San Diego Padres Austin Nola Blake Snell Joe Musgrove Luis Campusano

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Twins Select Kyle Garlick

By Anthony Franco | April 13, 2023 at 12:05pm CDT

April 13: The Twins have made this official today, selecting Garlick and moving Celestino to the 60-day IL. A spot on the active roster was opened by placing Farmer on the 10-day IL with a facial laceration.  The club’s communications director Dustin Morse relayed last night on Twitter that Farmer had successful surgery on his lower lip and bottom four teeth.

April 12: The Twins are expected to select Kyle Garlick onto the big league roster, tweets Dan Hayes of the Athletic. Doing so would require a 40-man roster spot, which Hayes indicates would likely be achieved by transferring Gilberto Celestino from the 10-day to the 60-day injured list.

Garlick has appeared at the big league level for Minnesota in each of the past two seasons. He’s combined for a .233/.283/.446 line in 269 plate appearances over that stretch. Garlick has popped 14 home runs in less than half a season’s worth of playing time, though his on-base percentage has been deflated by few walks and a strikeout rate pushing 30%.

The right-handed hitter has gotten nearly equal run in his career against left and right-handed pitching alike. He’s been far more productive with the platoon advantage, hitting .251/.301/.538 against southpaws but limping to a .203/.258/.324 line against righties. The 31-year-old is best deployed in the lesser half of a corner outfield platoon, where his power against left-handed pitching has played.

Minnesota and Garlick agreed to $750K contract at the start of the offseason to avoid arbitration. The Twins nevertheless ran him through waivers over the winter, though he accepted a minor league assignment to hold onto that guaranteed salary. He’s picked up eight hits (including two homers and a double) over seven games this year with Triple-A St. Paul.

The Twins could find themselves down a right-handed bat in the next couple weeks. Utilityman Kyle Farmer was hit in the face by a Lucas Giolito offering during this afternoon’s win over the White Sox. He walked off the field with a towel pressed up against his face. Hayes notes that initial indications are that Farmer fortunately avoided a fractured jaw, though he has a laceration around his mouth. It seems likely he’ll require a stint on the 10-day IL.

Celestino, meanwhile, underwent thumb surgery during Spring Training. That initially came with a recovery timetable in the six to eight week range. Celestino lost most of exhibition play and will have to work back into game shape. A transfer to the 60-day IL could be backdated to Opening Day and would keep him out until at least late May.

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MLB Agency Update

By Tim Dierkes | April 13, 2023 at 11:18am CDT

As you know, we maintain an MLB agency database here at MLB Trade Rumors, consisting of all players who played in the Majors in the last three completed seasons (currently 2020-22).

We currently have 559 players for whom we do not have an agency, and they’re listed if you hit the “Read More” button.  If your company represents any of these players, or you know of their agencies through media reports or social media, please reach out through our contact form.

In the database, you will find the 1,742 players for whom we do have an agency, but errors are possible.  If you see any errors please contact us about that as well!

Here’s the list of players for whom we do not have an agency:

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Abrams, C.J.
Abreu, Bryan
Adams, Chance
Adams, Riley
Adon, Joan
Aguilar, Miguel
Akin, Keegan
Alcantara, Victor
Alldred, Cam
Allen, Logan
Allen, Nick
Allgeyer, Nick
Alvarez, Eddy
Alvarez, R.J.
Amburgey, Trey
Anderson, Drew
Anderson, Justin
Apostel, Sherten
Appel, Mark
Aranda, Jonathan
Arano, Victor
Arihara, Kohei
Armenteros, Rogelio
Assad, Javier
Astudillo, Willians
Avelino, Abiatal
Avila, Pedro
Azocar, Jose
Bae, Ji-Hwan
Baez, Michel
Baldonado, Alberto
Barker, Luke
Barlow, Joe
Barnes, Charlie
Barnes, Jacob
Barreda, Manny
Barreto, Franklin
Basabe, Luis Alexander
Batten, Matt
Baty, Brett
Baumann, Mike
Bazardo, Eduard
Beasley, Jeremy
Bedrosian, Cam
Beer, Seth
Bellatti, Andrew
Bello, Brayan
Bender, Anthony
Benjamin, Wes
Bernard, Wynton
Bernardino, Brennan
Bethancourt, Christian
Bettinger, Alec
Biagini, Joe
Bird, Kyle
Blanco, Ronel
Blankenhorn, Travis
Bleday, JJ
Blewett, Scott
Boshers, Buddy
Bouchard, Sean
Bowden, Ben
Bracho, Silvino
Bradish, Kyle
Bradley, Bobby
Brazoban, Huascar
Brennan, Brandon
Brennan, Will
Brieske, Beau
Brubaker, J.T.
Bruihl, Justin
Buchter, Ryan
Bukauskas, J.B.
Burns, Andrew
Burr, Ryan
Butto, Jose
Buttrey, Ty
Cabrera, Edward
Cabrera, Genesis
Campbell, Paul
Cano, Yennier
Capra, Vinny
Carasiti, Matt
Carlton, Drew
Carpenter, Ryan
Carroll, Cody
Casas, Triston
Castillo, Diego
Castillo, Diego
Castillo, Erick
Castillo, Ivan
Castillo, Luis (2022 Tigers)
Castillo, Wilkin
Castro, Anthony
Castro, Kervin
Castro, Rodolfo
Cederlind, Blake
Celestino, Gilberto
Cessa, Luis
Chargois, J.T.
Clement, Ernie
Cody, Kyle
Cole, Taylor
Coleman, Dylan
Contreras, Mark
Cotton, Jharel
Court, Ryan
Cousins, Jake
Crawford, Kutter
Crismatt, Nabil
Crook, Narciso
Cruz, Fernando
Cuevas, Noel
Curry, Xzavion
Curtiss, John
Davis, Noah
De Goti, Alex
De Jesus, Angel
De Jong, Chase
Dean, Austin
Deichmann, Greg
Del Pozo, Miguel
Delay, Jason
Diaz, Jhonathan
Diaz, Miguel
Diaz, Yainer
Diaz, Yusniel
Dini, Nick
Dorow, Ryan
Doval, Camilo
Dowdy, Kyle
Downs, Jeter
Duarte, Daniel
Dugger, Robert
Dunand, Joe
Dunn, Mike
Duran, Jarren
Duran, Jhoan
Duron, Nick
Eades, Ryan
Eibner, Brett
Elder, Bryce
Elmore, Jake
Emanuel, Kent
Encarnacion, Jerar
Escobar, Luis
Espinal, Raynel
Espino, Paolo
Espinoza, Anderson
Estrada, Jeremiah
Faedo, Alex
Fairchild, Stuart
Fargas, Johneshwy
Faria, Jacob
Feliciano, Mario
Feltner, Ryan
Fernandez, Julian
Festa, Matt
Fisher, Derek
Fishman, Jake
Flaa, Jay
Flores, Bernardo
Florial, Estevan
Foley, Jason
Foster, Matt
Fowler, Dustin
Franco, Enderson
Frare, Caleb
Freeman, Freddie
Frias, Luis
Fuentes, Josh
Fujinami, Shintaro
Gaddis, Hunter
Gage, Matt
Gale, Rocky
Gallegos, Giovanny
Galloway, Isaac
Garcia, Aramis
Garcia, Bryan
Garcia, Edgar
Garcia, Jose
Garcia, Maikel
Garcia, Rony
Garlick, Kyle
Garrett, Reed
Garton, Ryan
Garza, Justin
Garza, Ralph
Gerber, Joey
Giambrone, Trent
Gil, Luis
Gilbreath, Lucas
Gillaspie, Logan
Gittens, Chris
Godoy, Jose
Gonzalez, Erik
Gonzalez, Oscar
Gonzalez, Victor
Gosselin, Phil
Green, Zach
Greene, Hunter
Grissom, Vaughn
Groshans, Jordan
Grotz, Zac
Grove, Michael
Grullon, Deivy
Guenther, Sean
Guerra, Javier
Guilmet, Preston
Hall, Matt
Hamilton, Caleb
Hanhold, Eric
Harper, Ryne
Harris, Michael
Hartman, Ryan
Head, Louis
Hendrix, Ryan
Henry, Payton
Henry, Tommy
Herget, Kevin
Hermosillo, Michael
Hernandez, Elier
Hernandez, Jonathan
Hernandez, Oscar
Hernandez, Yadiel
Herrera, Ivan
Herrera, Jose
Hill, Cam
Hill, Garrett
Hjelle, Sean
Hoeing, Bryan
Holder, Jonathan
Holloway, Jordan
Hollowell, Gavin
Holton, Tyler
Honeywell, Brent
Hoyt, James
Huang, Wei-Chieh
Hudson, Dakota
Hughes, Brandon
Hurst, Scott
Irvin, Cole
Ivey, Tyler
Jackson, Alex
Jackson, Zach
Jankowski, Travis
Jannis, Mickey
Jerez, Williams
Jewell, Jake
Jimenez, Eduardo
Johnson, Bryce
Johnson, Daniel
Jones, Damon
Junk, Janson
Jurado, Ariel
Kaprielian, James
Karns, Nathan
Katoh, Gosuke
Kazmar, Sean
Kelly, Zack
Kennedy, Buddy
Kerr, Ray
King, John
King, Michael
Kirby, George
Kline, Branden
Klobosits, Gabe
Koch, Matt
Koenig, Jared
Koerner, Brody
Kolozsvary, Mark
Kowar, Jackson
Krehbiel, Joey
Kriske, Brooks
Krizan, Jason
Ladendorf, Tyler
Lail, Brady
Lakins, Travis
Lambert, Jimmy
Lambert, Peter
Lange, Alex
Larsen, Jack
Latz, Jake
Lavastida, Bryan
Leblanc, Charles
Lee, Evan
Lee, Khalil
Leibrandt, Brandon
Lemoine, Jacob
Lester, Josh
Leyer, Robinson
Liberato, Luis
Lin, Tzu-Wei
Llovera, Mauricio
Lopes, Christian
Lopez, Alejo
Lopez, Jack
Lopez, Jorge
Lovelady, Richard
Lugo, Dawel
MacKinnon, David
Madero, Luis
Madris, Bligh
Marchan, Rafael
Marrero, Deven
Marte, Jose
Marte, Yunior
Martin, Corbin
Martinez, Seth
Martini, Nick
Marvel, James
Mastrobuoni, Miles
Matijevic, J.J.
Maton, Nick
Mattson, Isaac
Mayers, Mike
Mazeika, Patrick
McCarthy, Jake
McCaughan, Darren
McClain, Reggie
McDonald, Mickey
McGough, Scott
McGowin, Kyle
McKenna, Ryan
McRae, Alex
Mears, Nick
Mejia, Jean Carlos
Mendez, Yohander
Menez, Conner
Mengden, Daniel
Miller, Brian
Miller, Ian
Miller, Owen
Mills, Wyatt
Milner, Hoby
Minaya, Juan
Miranda, Jose
Misiewicz, Anthony
Mitchell, Calvin
Mitchell, Garrett
Moll, Sam
Mondou, Nate
Montero, Elehuris
Morales, Francisco
Morel, Christopher
Morgan, Eli
Moroff, Max
Mullins, Cedric
Munoz, Yairo
Murphy, Patrick
Musgrave, Harrison
Mushinski, Parker
Naile, James
Nardi, Andrew
Navarreto, Brian
Negron, Kristopher
Neverauskas, Dovydas
Nevin, Tyler
Northcraft, Aaron
Nottingham, Jacob
Nunez, Darien
O’Brien, Peter
O’Brien, Riley
O’Hearn, Ryan
O’Keefe, Brian
Ober, Bailey
Odom, Joseph
Ogando, Cristofer
Oh, Seung Hwan
Okey, Chris
Olivares, Edward
Ona, Jorge
Orf, Nathan
Ortega, Oliver
Ortega, Rafael
Ortiz, Luis
Osuna, Roberto
Oviedo, Luis
Owen, Hunter
Palacios, Jermaine
Palumbo, Joe
Pannone, Thomas
Papierski, Michael
Paredes, Enoli
Park, Hoy Jun
Patino, Luis
Payamps, Joel
Payano, Pedro
Peguero, Elvis
Pena, Felix
Peraza, Oswald
Perdomo, Angel
Perez, Carlos
Perez, Francisco
Peters, Dillon
Peters, DJ
Peterson, Tim
Pilkington, Konnor
Pop, Zach
Poteet, Cody
Poyner, Bobby
Pozo, Yohel
Proctor, Ford
Pruitt, Austin
Quezada, Johan
Quiroz, Esteban
Rainey, Tanner
Raleigh, Cal
Raley, Luke
Ramirez, JC
Ramirez, Nick
Ramirez, Yefry
Ramirez, Yohan
Ramos, Edubray
Ramos, Heliot
Ramos, Henry
Ramsey, Matt
Ravelo, Rangel
Ray, Corey
Reed, Michael
Reks, Zach
Reyes, Denyi
Reyes, Gerardo
Reyes, Pablo
Ridings, Stephen
Rivas, Alfonso
Rivas, Webster
Rivera, Yadiel
Rivero, Sebastian
Roberts, Ethan
Robertson, Kramer
Robinson, Chuckie
Robinson, Drew
Robson, Jacob
Rodgers, Brady
Rodriguez, Chris
Rodriguez, Elvin
Rodriguez, Jefry
Rodriguez, Jose
Rodriguez, Manuel De Jesus
Rodriguez, Nivaldo
Rodriguez, Ronny
Rodriguez, Yerry
Romero, Fernando
Romero, Jhon
Rondon, Jose
Rosa, Adonis
Rosario, Eguy
Rosenberg, Kenny
Rossman, Bubby
Rowen, Ben
Rucinski, Drew
Ruiz, Rio
Saladino, Tyler
Sanabria, Carlos
Sanchez, Adrian
Sanchez, Ali
Sanchez, Cristopher
Sanchez, Jesus
Sanchez, Miguel
Sanders, Phoenix
Sandlin, Nick
Sands, Cole
Sands, Donny
Sanmartin, Reiver
Santana, Edgar
Santos, Antonio
Santos, Gregory
Saucedo, Tayler
Sceroler, Mac
Scott, Tanner
Scrubb, Andre
Sears, JP
Sedlock, Cody
Serven, Brian
Severino, Anderson
Shawaryn, Mike
Sheets, Gavin
Sheffield, Jordan
Sherriff, Ryan
Short, Zack
Shuck, J.B.
Siri, Jose
Small, Ethan
Smith, Canaan
Smith, Josh
Smith, Josh
Smith, Josh D.
Snider, Collin
Snyder, Nick
Sosa, Lenyn
Soto, Livan
Sousa, Bennett
Stashak, Cody
Stevenson, Cal
Stokes Jr., Troy
Stowers, Kyle
Suarez, Andrew
Suwinski, Jack
Swaggerty, Travis
Swarmer, Matthew
Tarpley, Stephen
Taveras, Leody
Terry, Curtis
Thomas, Dillon
Thompson, Keegan
Thompson, Mason
Thompson, Zack
Tice, Ty
Tilson, Charlie
Tom, Ka’ai
Topa, Justin
Torreyes, Ronald
Tovar, Ezequiel
Uelmen, Erich
Urias, Ramon
Valdez, Cesar
Valdez, Phillips
Valera, Breyvic
Vargas, Ildemaro
Vasquez, Andrew
Velazquez, Hector
Velazquez, Nelson
Vieaux, Cameron
Vieira, Thyago
Viloria, Meibrys
Wahl, Bobby
Walding, Mitch
Walsh, Jake
Walters, Nash
Weathers, Ryan
Weigel, Patrick
Weiss, Zack
Weissert, Greg
Welker, Colton
Wells, Alexander
White, Eli
Whitley, Kodi
Williams, Austen
Williams, Luke
Williams, Mason
Wilson, Cody
Wilson, Jacob
Wilson, Marcus
Wilson, Steven
Winder, Josh
Wong, Connor
Woods, William
Woods-Richardson, Simeon
Wotherspoon, Matt
Wright, Mike
Wright, Steven
Yang, Hyeon-jong
Yepez, Juan
Ynoa, Huascar
Young, Danny
Zabala, Aneurys
Zagunis, Mark
Zamora, Daniel
Zastryzny, Rob
Zavala, Seby

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