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Picollo: “Safe To Say” Salvador Perez Will Return To Royals In 2026

By AJ Eustace | September 30, 2025 at 10:38pm CDT

The Royals expect to retain longtime catcher and team captain Salvador Perez for the 2026 season. “I think it’s safe to say that one way or another, Salvy will be in a Royals uniform in ‘26,” general manager J.J. Picollo told reporters (including Jaylon Thompson of The Kansas City Star). “What we do beyond that is still to be determined. But there are some things that we still need to work through and talk about.”

The simplest path would be for the team to exercise their $13.5MM option for next season. Picollo didn’t commit to that course of action, leaving open the possibility of reworking the deal as part of an extension. Speculatively, they could try to hammer out a new contract that lowers next season’s salary while locking in some guaranteed money for Perez during his age-37 campaign in 2027. Picollo said the sides have “already started those discussions” about potentially reworking the deal (link via The Associated Press).

Perez, 35, has played all 15 of his big-league seasons with Kansas City and is a franchise icon. He currently ranks 7th in franchise history in games played with 1,707, 6th in hits with 1,712, 2nd in home runs with 303, and 2nd in RBI with 1,016. Altogether, he has been worth 35.5 bWAR in his career, good for 4th in Royals history among position players behind George Brett, Amos Otis, and Willie Wilson. He has been named an All-Star nine times while winning five Gold Gloves and finishing 7th in AL MVP voting in 2021 on the back of a 48-homer campaign.

His 2025 offensive numbers were largely in line with his career output. In 155 games, Perez batted .236/.284/.446 with 30 home runs and 100 RBI. His walk rate of 4.4% was slightly lower than last year’s 6.7% mark, while his strikeout rate of 19.5% was roughly the same. His 95 wRC+ was close to average overall but above average for his position, placing 7th among qualified catchers between William Contreras and J.T. Realmuto. All told, his offensive contributions were valued at 1.6 bWAR.

His defensive numbers were a different story. Continuing a trend from recent seasons, Perez split time behind the plate and at first base in 2025. In 92 games behind the plate, he was valued at -15 DRS, which ranked last among catchers with at least 500 innings at the position (Perez played 761 2/3 innings there). Statcast still thinks highly of Perez’s pop time, which ranks in the 68th percentile, but his arm strength and framing rank in the 2nd and 15th percentiles, respectively. He graded at -3 DRS and committed one error in 30 games at first base.

Defensive woes aside, Perez is widely valued in the Royals clubhouse for his veteran presence and leadership. He is the last remaining active player from the 2015 club that won the World Series (in which he was the Series MVP), and he was named team captain in 2023. He also works well as a mentor to the team’s young pitchers and catchers, including Carter Jensen, who rates as the Royals’ No. 2 prospect and the No. 66 prospect in all of baseball according to MLB.com.

Jensen made his big-league debut in 2025 and will compete for a roster spot next year, which may allow Perez to spend more time at first base and DH. Kansas City traded away longtime backup Freddy Fermin at the deadline. Luke Maile is an impending free agent, which will leave Perez (assuming some kind of contract is worked out) and Jensen as the only two catchers on the 40-man roster going into the offseason.

Whether they simply pick up his club option or sign him to a new deal, the Royals are making sure their franchise player stays on as an elder statesman for an upstart roster looking to compete in 2026. The club finished with an 82-80 record in 2025, good for 3rd place in the AL Central. Their team ERA of 3.76 ranked 6th in the majors thanks to strong seasons from Michael Wacha, Kris Bubic, and Noah Cameron. Ace Cole Ragans missed time due to injury but will return in 2026 with a full offseason to rest and get back into form. On the offensive side, Kansas City ranked 22nd in the league with a team wRC+ of 93, although they have two highly valuable players in Bobby Witt Jr. and Maikel Garcia to build around. If they can find some complementary pieces around those two and Perez while maintaining their pitching strength, the club may be a dark horse candidate to win the AL Central next year.

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Kansas City Royals Salvador Perez

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Padres Select Martin Maldonado

By Anthony Franco | September 30, 2025 at 10:17pm CDT

The Padres selected Martín Maldonado back onto the 40-man roster on Tuesday morning. That was required to carry him as the backup catcher for their Wild Card Series against the Cubs. Reliever Jason Adam, who is out for the season with a quad injury, was transferred to the 60-day injured list. Maldonado was in the organization on a minor league deal after being released from the MLB roster in August.

Backup catcher Elias Díaz tweaked his left oblique over the weekend and was evidently unavailable. Luis Campusano was the only other option on the 40-man roster who could back up Freddy Fermin. The Padres are carrying Campusano on the Wild Card series roster as well, but he hasn’t caught a single major league inning all season. Maldonado hasn’t been in the majors since the trade deadline but at least had built something of a rapport with the pitching staff when he and Díaz were the catching duo earlier in the year.

Fermin caught Nick Pivetta in today’s Game 1 loss. Díaz had worked behind the plate as Pivetta’s personal catcher for the entire season and would surely have been the Game 1 starter if healthy. Unless he suffers an injury, Fermin will play tomorrow and what the Padres hope is a necessary Game 3. Dylan Cease starts against a Cubs’ bullpen game tomorrow. San Diego has Yu Darvish lined up if the series goes to a decider. The Cubs have not announced plans for that potential outing.

Maldonado, who hit .204/.245/.327 and hasn’t played a game since July 30, is a contingency plan. The 15-year MLB veteran and 2022 World Series champion appeared in 65 postseason contests with the Astros between 2018-23.

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San Diego Padres Transactions Elias Diaz Jason Adam Martin Maldonado

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Lucas Giolito Unlikely To Pitch Again This Season

By Charlie Wright | September 30, 2025 at 9:05pm CDT

9:02 pm: There is no structural damage to Giolito’s UCL, per Chris Cotillo of MassLive.com. He is dealing with flexor irritation as well as a bone issue, which will require rest for a while.

3:51 pm: Right-hander Lucas Giolito is likely out for the year with an elbow injury, manager Alex Cora told reporters at today’s media session (link via Jen McCaffrey of The Athletic). The elbow issue had already kept Giolito off the Wild Card roster. It will now seemingly cost him the rest of 2025. Cora told reporters that rookie Connelly Early will likely draw the starting nod in Game 3 against the Yankees, if needed.

The elbow injury will bring an untimely end to a resurgent season for Giolito. The 31-year-old shuffled between three different MLB organizations in 2023, posting a 4.88 ERA across 33 starts with the White Sox, Angels, and Guardians. He then missed the entirety of the 2024 season following surgery to repair his UCL. Giolito bounced back with a 3.41 ERA over 26 starts with the Red Sox this season. His 4.59 xFIP and 4.65 SIERA suggest he performed above his head, but his contributions helped solidify a staff that dealt with injuries all year.

Boston inked Giolito to a two-year deal ahead of the 2024 season, with the second season being a player option. After missing the entire year, Giolito picked up the option. By triggering that player option, he gave the club a $14MM option for 2026, though with a vesting clause that would convert it to a $19MM mutual option if Giolito reached 140 innings pitched. He exceeded that mark in his second-to-last outing of the regular season. Giolito seemed destined to decline his end of the option and return to free agency, but the elbow injury could lead Boston to reject it on their end.

If either side balks at the mutual option, Giolito would enter free agency in a peculiar position. He’d be coming off his best season in terms of run prevention since his breakout 2019. While he fell short of the above-average strikeout numbers he posted during his White Sox tenure, Giolito cleaned up the home run issues that plagued him in his wayward 2023 season. On the other hand, this is the second elbow problem in two years for Giolito. Even if this specific injury is minor, anything elbow-related is a red flag, especially for a pitcher who will be 32 years old next summer.

Early starting a playoff game would’ve seemed like a long shot heading into the season, but he’s now the clear top candidate to fill Giolito’s vacated spot. The rookie has impressed in four big-league starts, allowing two earned runs or less in every outing. He burst onto the scene with 11 strikeouts against the Athletics in his debut and has continued to rack up punchouts at an above-average clip. After posting a strikeout rate above 30% at each minor league stop, he’s at 36.7% through 19 1/3 innings with the Red Sox.

The Yankees will present a challenging task for the young lefty, especially in what would be a series-deciding game. New York led the league in OPS and wOBA against left-handed pitching in the regular season. They slugged 70 home runs off southpaws, matching the Dodgers for the league lead. The Yankees elected to roll out a lineup with just three left-handed hitters against Garrett Crochet in Game 1. That starting nine does not feature Jazz Chisholm Jr. While a strict platoon between Chisholm and righty Amed Rosario seems unlikely, New York appears willing to play matchups in this series. It’s a tiny sample, but Early has struck out an absurd 13 of the 22 lefties he’s faced this season. He’s held left-handed hitters to a meager .150/.227/.150 slash line.

Kyle Harrison and Payton Tolle are also on hand as potential options to replace Giolito. Tolle also impressed in his MLB debut, striking out eight Pirates over 5 1/3 innings. He’s posted a 7.36 ERA since that outing and has been used in a relief role in recent outings. Harrison came over from San Francisco in the Rafael Devers trade. He spent the majority of the season with Triple-A Worcester, but did make three appearances for Boston in September. Harrison tossed a quality start against Tampa Bay in his penultimate outing and is likely the most stretched-out member of the bullpen.

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Boston Red Sox Connelly Early Kyle Harrison Lucas Giolito Payton Tolle

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Pirates Make Changes To Coaching Staff

By AJ Eustace | September 30, 2025 at 8:21pm CDT

The Pirates are making several changes to their coaching staff. Pitching coach Oscar Marin will not have his contract renewed, as first reported by Jon Heyman of The New York Post. Assistant pitching coach Brent Strom and third-base coach Mike Rabelo will also not be returning, per Jason Mackey of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

It was earlier reported that GM Ben Cherington and manager Don Kelly would remain in their current roles. Cherington has been in charge of the front office since November 2019, while Kelly had served as interim manager since taking over for Derek Shelton in May. Kelly had noted on Monday that he and Cherington would meet to discuss the possibility of coaching changes. It appears the staff will indeed see some turnover as the Pirates look to improve in 2026 following a 71-91 season which saw them finish last in the NL Central.

Marin, 42, is perhaps the most notable of the changes. He had been serving as the Pirates’ pitching coach since December 2019, shortly after Cherington took over the front office. In that time, the team improved from a 5.08 ERA in 2021 (16% below average by ERA+) to a 3.76 ERA this year (14% above average). The starting rotation, in particular, benefited from a dominant sophomore effort by Paul Skenes, while the bullpen was anchored by Dennis Santana and David Bednar, before the latter’s trade to the Yankees.

The pitching outlook for next year is promising. As it stands, Skenes will be joined by Mitch Keller (barring an offseason trade) at the front of the rotation, while Bubba Chandler and Mike Burrows should be in the mix for season-opening spots. Jared Jones is recovering from UCL surgery but could be back within the first couple months. All three pitchers are controlled through at least 2028. Santana could return as the team’s closer in 2026, though he’s an impending free agent who could be in trade rumors himself. Braxton Ashcraft and Justin Lawrence also performed well out of the ’pen in 2025 and remain under team control for several years, although Ashcraft may be in contention for a rotation spot himself.

Strom, 76, has been the assistant pitching coach for just under a year, having been hired in November 2024. He had previously served as the pitching coach for the Astros from 2014-21, followed by a stint with the Diamondbacks for the 2022-24 seasons. He is known among players for blending an old-school mentality with an appreciation for analytics. While there were initial reports that Strom was contemplating retirement, the longtime coach tells Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic that he does not intend to retire and is open to offers from other teams. Strom told Rosenthal that he made the decision to leave the Pirates and informed the club of that call six weeks ago.

Rabelo, 45, was originally hired by the Pirates as an assistant hitting coach in 2020 before becoming their major league field coordinator in January 2021. He has served as the third-base coach since the 2022 season and has also acted as a bench coach since Kelly’s elevation to the manager post in May. This year, Pirates baserunners tied for last in the majors in extra bases taken on hits with 103.

Heading into the offseason, the club appears to be making these changes with the hope of building on their pitching core and making marginal improvements on offense. The Pirates are expected to carry a bottom-tier payroll once again, although they only have $31MM on the books in the contracts for Keller and Bryan Reynolds and might look to make marginal upgrades through one-year deals for free agents. If the team can add additional offensive pieces to complement Reynolds, Spencer Horwitz, and Oneil Cruz while the pitchers take another step forward, the club may look to finish at .500 in 2026.

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Pittsburgh Pirates Brent Strom Mike Rabelo Oscar Marin

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Luke Keaschall To Undergo Thumb Surgery

By Anthony Franco | September 30, 2025 at 6:19pm CDT

Sept. 30: Keaschall will indeed undergo thumb surgery tomorrow, per Dan Hayes of the Athletic. He is expected to be ready for spring training.

Sept. 24: Twins rookie infielder Luke Keaschall is weighing surgery to address a left thumb injury, manager Rocco Baldelli told reporters (including Dan Hayes of The Athletic and Matthew Leach of MLB.com). That decision will be made after Keaschall visits a specialist next week.

Keaschall jammed his thumb diving into second base on a steal during last night’s win in Texas. He exited the game and went for imaging this morning. The Twins haven’t officially placed him on the injured list, but there’s no reason to have him playing through pain for their final few games against the Rangers and Phillies. Ryan Fitzgerald drew into the lineup at second base tonight.

The 23-year-old Keaschall is one of Minnesota’s most promising players. A second-round pick in 2023, Keaschall hit at every minor league stop. The Twins called him up in the middle of April. He got out to a strong start to his MLB career when a Kyle Hendricks pitch broke his right arm in his seventh game. Keaschall was out of action until early August, at which point the team had fallen out of contention and sold off much of the roster.

Keaschall picked up where he left off once he returned from the forearm injury. He slashed .294/.359/.436 with four homers and 11 doubles over his final 181 plate appearances. The righty hitter struck out in fewer than 15% of his trips, continuing the plus contact ability he’d shown against minor league pitching. Keaschall didn’t post huge exit velocities, but he has shown an impressive understanding of the strike zone for any hitter, especially a rookie.

That should be enough to have a hold on the Opening Day second base job. The Twins will presumably provide more specifics on his recovery timeline and offseason plan once he makes the official decision on whether to undergo surgery. Keaschall’s promotion came a little too late in the season for him to get a full service year. Minnesota controls him for six seasons after this one.

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Minnesota Twins Luke Keaschall

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Athletics General Manager David Forst To Return In 2026

By Darragh McDonald | September 30, 2025 at 5:29pm CDT

Athletics general manager David Forst will be back in that job next year, he tells Martín Gallegos of MLB.com. His previous contract ran through 2025. It was reported last week that he and the A’s were in discussions to keep him around. It now seems he and the club have worked out a new pact of some sort, though he didn’t provide any specifics.

Forst was hired as a scout for the A’s back in 2000 and moved up the front office ranks over the years. After the 2022 season, he took over the top job in the front office when Billy Beane moved into more of an advisory position.

So far, Forst’s tenure has seen the club in rebuild mode. They went 60-102 in 2022, the year before he was hired. That record dropped to 50-112 in the following season but has been ticking up since. The A’s won 69 games last year and got up to 76 here in 2025.

Ideally, Forst can help the club take another step forward in 2026. The A’s have a bit of momentum, as they went 35-29 in the second half this year. What remains to be seen is what kind of resources he will have to work with in building the 2026 roster. Last offseason, multiple reports indicated the A’s needed to get their competitive balance tax number over $105MM or else they would risk a grievance from the MLB Players Association related to their revenue-sharing status.

That prompted the A’s to throw some money around. They signed Luis Severino and José Leclerc to eight-figure deals, acquired Jeffrey Springs and gave extensions to Brent Rooker and Lawrence Butler.

RosterResource pegs their 2025 CBT number at $118MM, though that number is slated to be just $77MM next year. Arbitration raises for players like Shea Langeliers and JJ Bleday will bump that up, but only slightly, as both of those guys will be qualifying for arbitration for the first time.

If the A’s have to hit a similar CBT target in 2026, then we could see them doing some more spending this winter. The starting rotation would be a natural target since that was a weak point for the club in 2025, though finding pitchers to take their money will be a challenge. The A’s are playing in a minor league facility as they await the construction of their new home in Las Vegas. No free agent pitchers will have the A’s atop their wish list. The industry consensus is that the club had to overpay to lure in Severino and he still publicly complained about his plight.

Perhaps that will lead the A’s to take on money in trade or sign a few more extensions. Per Gallegos, Forst says he has had “a lot of conversations” with ownership about the possibility of extending young players like Nick Kurtz and Jacob Wilson.

Kurtz came up this year and had just about the best debut that anyone could have hoped for. He hit 36 home runs in just 117 games. His 30.9% strikeout rate was certainly high but he also walked at a strong 12.9% clip. The result was a .290/.383/.619 batting line and 170 wRC+.

He wasn’t called up until late April but seems highly likely get a full year of service time anyway. Under the current collective bargaining agreement, top prospects can be retroactively awarded a full year of service time if they finish in the top two of Rookie of the Year voting. Kurtz is the industry favorite to win the award in the American League this year.

That would still leave the A’s with five years of club control but it would mean Kurtz is slated to hit free agency after his age-27 season, instead of age-28. That greatly increases his earning power since teams greatly value that youth.

Some large extensions have been given out to players this early in their careers. Guys like Julio Rodríguez, Jackson Merrill, Roman Anthony and Corbin Carroll have received nine-figure guarantees with less than two years of service time. However, those players offered more value via their baserunning and defense than Kurtz, who is a first baseman without speed. Yordan Alvarez is perhaps a closer analogue as a bat-first player. He got a $115MM extension from the Astros in 2022, though he was a bit further along in his career and just a few months away from qualifying for arbitration.

Wilson will be between one and two years of service this winter, meaning he will also be five years away from free agency. He only hit 13 home runs this year but showed exceptional contact skills. His 5.2% walk rate was subpar but his 7.5% strikeout rate was miniscule, about a third of the league-wide average. That helped him slash .311/.355/.444 for a wRC+ of 121.

He provides more defensive value than Kurtz as a shortstop but his reviews at that position aren’t strong. He was credited with -10 Defensive Runs Saved this year and -2 Outs Above Average. Regardless, FanGraphs still credited him with 3.5 wins above replacement this year and it’s possible his glovework can improve over time.

If the A’s are happy with the contributions from Kurtz and Wilson so far and if they are facing a similar grievance threshold this offseason, then exploring extensions makes plenty of sense. Though as is always the case in these situations, it takes two to tango and the players would have to be on board as well.

Gallegos also relayed one other detail relayed to the A’s, noting that Butler was playing through a patellar tendon strain in his right knee in the final few weeks of the season. He will visit a doctor, presumably soon, to see if surgery is required.

Photo courtesy of D. Ross Cameron, Imagn Images

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Athletics David Forst Jacob Wilson (b. 2002) Lawrence Butler Nick Kurtz

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Kendrick: D-backs’ Payroll Likely To Decline, Club Still Intent On Competing In 2026

By Steve Adams | September 30, 2025 at 4:24pm CDT

The D-backs sold off at the 2025 trade deadline, most notably shipping Josh Naylor and Eugenio Suarez to Seattle in separate deals and trading Merrill Kelly to the Rangers. Despite effectively waving the white flag on the ’25 season with that series of moves, Arizona rallied in the final two months and was in the mix for a postseason spot right up to the final weekend of the season. Owner Ken Kendrick chatted with John Gambadoro and Dave Burns of Arizona Sports 98.7 FM about his team’s hot finish, the decision to retain manager Torey Lovullo for a tenth season, and his club’s outlook for next year (YouTube link to the full 16-minute interview). Most notably, Kendrick conceded that payroll is likely to decline, but that doesn’t mean the Diamondbacks are entering a rebuild or moving out of win-now mode.

“We will not be spending at the same level,” Kendrick said when asked about payroll. “…We don’t just pay the 26 guys on the active roster. We have a 40-man roster. The amount of money we spent on our 40-man roster this year is $220MM. … Will we spend 220 next year? I don’t think that we will. Will we have a very significant payroll that will allow us to compete and be in the playoffs? I think we will.”

The 2025 season, fueled by last year’s surprise signing of Corbin Burnes, pushed the Diamondbacks to a franchise-record payroll. The deep postseason run in 2023 likely left the team with some extra spending capital, and that won’t be the case this year, but Kendrick repeatedly thanked fans for their commitment to the team and the manner in which they turned out. He pointed out this year’s 2.4 million tickets sold were the highest since 2008 and give the club the ability to be more competitive in subsequent seasons than if the fan base had checked out following the deadline.

“While we didn’t have playoff money, we had significant revenues from our fans attending games,” Kendrick continued. “And what I’ve said, and I’ll continue to say it, the money that is there from the revenue we take in, we’re going to reinvest in the team. We’re in a good position to have a very, very credible commitment, financially, to next season. Will the number be the same? It probably won’t be, but I think it’ll be a handsome number that will allow us to have a very, very competitive team — and I wouldn’t want us to back away from the goal of being in the postseason a year from now.”

With a return to the postseason the stated goal, the Snakes will have no shortage of work to do. Burnes will miss most or all of the 2026 season due to Tommy John surgery. Relievers A.J. Puk and Justin Martinez are in similar boats. Zac Gallen is a free agent. Kelly was traded midseason and would have been a free agent anyhow. The pitching staff will need significant help in order to reassemble a playoff-caliber roster.

At the moment, the only starters who can safely be penciled into next year’s staff are Eduardo Rodriguez, Brandon Pfaadt and Ryne Nelson. Both Rodriguez and Pfaadt posted ERAs north of 5.00 as they battled home run troubles throughout the year, though the veteran Rodriguez at least finished with a respectable 4.09 ERA following the trade deadline. Nelson was terrific all year, finishing out the 2025 campaign with a 3.39 ERA in a career-best 154 1/3 innings at the MLB level.

General manager Mike Hazen cited the rotation, the bullpen and solidifying the defense around the diamond as the top priorities this offseason (link via 98.7’s Alex Weiner). Pitching help takes priority, per Hazen, but the D-backs clearly plan to focus on run-prevention.

Could a reunion with Gallen be part of that? It’s possible. While the longtime Arizona ace struggled greatly through the season’s first four months, he finished brilliantly, tossing 65 innings with a vintage 3.32 ERA following the deadline (albeit with lesser strikeout numbers than we’re accustomed to seeing from him). Gallen has been open about his love for the organization and the roots he and his family have put down in Arizona. Kendrick heaped praise on Gallen when asked about the right-hander’s future, adding that he wouldn’t say it’s “out of the realm of reality” that the two parties could come to terms on a deal to bring Gallen back next year.

Whether it’s a reunion with Gallen, a reunion with Kelly or bringing a new rotation piece aboard via free agency or trade, the D-backs will have to add at least one starter this offseason — and likely two. Many of the organization’s top pitching prospects either took steps back or went down with notable injuries in 2025. Beyond needing help on the big league staff, the depth is going to need to be bolstered. The bullpen is every bit as much of a puzzle — if not an even larger quandary. It won’t be an easy path for Hazen and his staff.

In discussing the decision to retain Lovullo, Kendrick pointed both to the injuries he navigated — six D-backs pitchers had Tommy John surgery this year — and added that it wasn’t Lovullo’s decision to trade key veterans like Naylor, Suarez and Kelly at the deadline. That decision, he noted, came from himself, from president/CEO Derrick Hall and from general manager Mike Hazen. However, it was Lovullo who kept the team’s spirits up and guided the club down the stretch.

“I don’t think a single one of our fans, on the first of August, would have thought we could be potentially on the edge of being in the playoffs on the final weekend of the season,” Kendrick said. “[Lovullo] did manage all of those games.”

Even with a spending reduction, the Snakes could have room to maneuver this offseason. RosterResource pegs their 2025 payroll at $188MM with a $212MM competitive balance tax calculation. Both of those are below Kendrick’s $220MM figure, though the Diamondbacks moved a bunch of money off their books at the deadline, so those numbers would have been higher before the trades.

Going into 2026, RR lists the payroll at just $107MM with a CBT number of $142MM. Those numbers don’t include the club’s arbitration-eligible players but there should be some dry powder there, depending on exactly how much lower the payroll will go.

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Rays Sale To Patrick Zalupski’s Group Officially Completed

By Darragh McDonald | September 30, 2025 at 3:20pm CDT

The Rays officially have a new owner. Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times reports that the sale from Stuart Sternberg to a group led by Patrick Zalupski is now rubber stamped with the sale officially closing today.

“It’s an incredible honor to become the stewards of the Tampa Bay Rays, a franchise with a proud history and a bright future,” Zalupski said in a news release. “We are especially privileged to have been chosen by Stu Sternberg as his successors, and we’re all energized by the responsibility to serve Rays fans everywhere and this great game.”

This development was largely a formality. The reported $1.7 billion sale price was agreed to back in July and it was approved by Major League Baseball owners last week. It was noted that the time of that approval last week that the sale still needed to formally close, though that box is now ticked and the keys have changed hands.

Now that the new ownership group is in place, the attention will turn to the unanswered questions surrounding the franchise. The Rays had to play in a minor league park this year due to the extensive hurricane damage done to Tropicana Field. It is hoped that The Trop can be repaired and playable in time for the start of the 2026 season. The club’s lease originally ran through 2027 but the lost year in 2025 has extended that through 2028.

There isn’t a formal plan in place for 2029 and beyond. Zalupski is expected to explore building a new stadium in Tampa itself, as opposed to St. Petersburg, where The Trop is located. That process will take time, as the Rays will have to work out all the particulars with government officials to get the new venue designed, approved, funded, etc.

As Zalupski works on that, president of baseball operations Erik Neander will work on making the club as competitive as possible. Topkin reports that Neander will stay in his job. That’s not especially surprising, as the Rays have generally performed well on tight budgets throughout his tenure. In early 2024, he and manager Kevin Cash were extended through at least 2028.

However, the Rays are currently in a bit of a downswing. They just finished 77-85 after posting an 80-82 record last year. The last time they had losing records in consecutive seasons was back in 2016 and ’17. Amid the uncertainty away from the roster, it’s unclear what kind of resources Neander will have to work with this winter. Topkin notes that there is an introductory press conference scheduled for October 7th, at which point the new owners might shed more light on the next steps for the franchise.

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Astros Notes: Brown, Espada, Rotation, Caratini, Hader

By Steve Adams | September 30, 2025 at 3:07pm CDT

The Astros’ streak of consecutive postseason appearances ended in 2025. A poor second half, highlighted by a late sweep at the hands of the eventual division-champion Mariners (in Houston, no less), left the ’Stros on the outside looking in for the first time since 2016. Despite a disappointing finish to the season, it doesn’t seem like major changes are coming to the organization’s leadership. Speaking to reporters at a season-end press conference, general manager Dana Brown suggested both he and manager Joe Espada would return in 2026.

Brown declined to definitively comment on his own status, stating only: “I’m the GM of the Astros, and that’s what I would expect to be tomorrow, the next day and the next day” (audio link to the full 27-minute press conference, courtesy of SportsTalk 790). On Espada, he provided a clearer answer, stating: “Joe is the manager. Joe is under contract [for 2026].”

Any change up top would be at least somewhat surprising. Brown was hired as general manager in Jan. 2023 and has only had three full seasons and two full offseasons at his current post. Espada was elevated to the manager post for the 2024 season, following Dusty Baker’s retirement. While we’ve seen occasional instances of executives and managers having leashes that short, most are provided a lengthier runway after coming aboard with a new organization.

It’s possible there’ll be some changes further down the ladder. Brown vowed Sunday to conduct a “full assessment” and to “think about the entire operation.” Changes in the coaching staff and/or on the player development front haven’t decisively been ruled out. “The season ended 48 hours ago,” said Espada. “We are trying to have conversations and see how we’re going to move forward. That’s where we’re at right now.”

With regard to the roster itself, there’ll be clear turnover. Framber Valdez and Victor Caratini are free agents. Houston has a massive class of 14 arbitration-eligible players. Mauricio Dubon, Bryan Abreu, Ramon Urias, Luis Garcia, Steven Okert and Isaac Paredes are all eligible for the third time this winter (Paredes as a Super Two player who’ll be eligible once more after the ’26 season). Jesus Sanchez, Jeremy Pena, Chas McCormick and Jake Meyers are all eligible for the second time. Hunter Brown, Yainer Diaz, Bennett Sousa and Hayden Wesneski are eligible for the first time.

Not everyone from that group will return, of course. Garcia suffered another significant elbow injury late in the 2025 season. Urias and Sanchez struggled badly after being acquired at the trade deadline. McCormick tallied just 116 plate appearances and turned in his second consecutive poor year at the plate.

Possible non-tender/trade candidates aside, the most consequential departure will be Valdez — a rock in the Houston rotation since 2020. The Astros won’t outright close the door on a reunion, but Valdez figures to command the type of long-term contract that the Astros have reserved for position players only under Jim Crane’s ownership. Houston hasn’t gone beyond $95MM guaranteed to any pitcher under Crane, and that was to reliever Josh Hader. Lance McCullers Jr.’s ill-fated five-year, $85MM extension is the largest pact Crane has given to a starting pitcher.

“I think it’s going to be headed up with [Hunter] Brown,” the GM said when asked about his rotation. “We’re going to have some conversations, like we’ve had in the past, with Valdez. We’ve got some young guys. We’re going to see what they can do, and we’re going to have some other guys coming back off the IL.”

Both Brown and Espada praised the work Cristian Javier did in his return from Tommy John surgery and spoke of him as an important piece of the 2026 rotation. Righty AJ Blubaugh was also mentioned as a potential factor on next year’s staff. McCullers drew praise for making it back to the field after an arduous rehab process spanning more than two years, but Brown suggested only that McCullers will compete for a job in camp next year. The GM also suggested he’ll be on the hunt for additional starting pitching: “We’re going to probably be in the market to trade for an arm.”

Again, nothing within Brown’s comments expressly rules out the return of Valdez, but specifically calling out the possibility of addressing the rotation via trade is notable. Houston already has a bit more than $159MM on the 2026 books, per RosterResource, and that’s before accounting for any of the arbitration class. Their 2025 payroll finished at just under $225MM.

In addition to the rotation, catching help will be a priority. Brown noted that the Astros “definitely” have interest in bringing Caratini back after a successful run in Houston. The switch-hitting 32-year-old signed a two-year, $12MM deal prior to the 2024 season and wound up appearing in 201 games over his two seasons, slashing .263/.329/.406 in 660 turns at the plate.

“If you don’t bring him back, you definitely need a backup catcher,” said Brown. ” He’s been one of the best backup catchers in the league. … He’s going to be a free agent, so if he decides to go somewhere else, we have to be in the market for a backup — but we definitely have interest in talking to him.”

It’s a thin class of catchers in free agency this winter, with Caratini, 35-year-old J.T. Realmuto and Danny Jansen standing as the most notable names on the free agent market. The Astros don’t need a starter behind the plate. Yainer Diaz, 27, was terrific in 2023-24, hitting .293/.318/.478 with 39 homers in 996 plate appearances. He slipped in ’25, batting “only” .256/.284/.417 with 20 homers, but that’s plenty productive for a catcher. He figures to see a significant portion of the workload behind the plate again in 2026, regardless of who stands as the other half of the catching tandem.

Given the thin supply of backstops and Caratini’s success with the Astros, it’s possible catching-needy clubs could offer Caratini more playing time than Houston. That’d leave Brown and his staff searching for help behind the plate, as he alluded to; Cesar Salazar, who’ll turn 30 next March, is the only other catcher on Houston’s 40-man roster and turned in a tepid .213/.353/.353 batting line in Triple-A this season.

One other notable storyline for Astros fans to track this winter will be the progress of Hader, whose season ended in mid-August due to a capsule injury in his shoulder. Brown revealed that the team has “consistently” had imaging performed on Hader’s shoulder and that the closer is feeling better and appears to be “moving in the right direction.” Hader, however, has yet to resume throwing, and the Astros won’t have a clear picture on his timetable for a return until he takes that step and they can gauge how his shoulder responds. It’s not yet clear when Hader might pick up a ball.

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Houston Astros Notes A.J. Blubaugh Dana Brown Framber Valdez Joe Espada Josh Hader Lance McCullers Jr. Victor Caratini

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Matt Strahm Passes Physical, Guarantees 2026 Option

By Darragh McDonald | September 30, 2025 at 2:40pm CDT

Phillies left-hander Matt Strahm is now officially on the books for 2026. According to Matt Gelb of The Athletic, the southpaw has passed the requisite end-of-season physical to lock in a $7.5MM salary next year.

The Phils and Strahm agreed to an extension in March of 2024. He was already under contract for the 2024 season, with the new pact adding a $7.5MM salary for 2025. It also included a club option for 2026 with a $4.5MM base salary. Strahm could increase the value of that option by $1MM by getting to 40 innings pitched in 2025, then another $1MM for 50 innings. If he got to 60 innings, it would bump by another $1MM to $7.5MM. It would also become guaranteed, as long as he passed an end-of-season physical.

Strahm went on to toss 62 1/3 innings for the Phils this year, allowing 2.74 earned runs per nine. He struck out 27.3% of batters faced while only giving out walks at a 7.8% pace. He recorded six saves and 22 holds, his fourth straight season getting to double digits in the latter category.

Given his solid production, the Phils were probably going to trigger Strahm’s option regardless, but he has now made it official. He’ll return to the club next year and should serve as a key lefty reliever in the Philadelphia pen once more.

As for the other lefties in the bullpen, the Phils will face a decision on José Alvarado, who can be brought back for next year via a $9MM club option or be bought out for $500K. He had a solid performance when on the mound this year, with a 3.81 ERA, 28.1% strikeout rate, 6.1% walk rate and 45.8% ground ball rate. However, he was limited to 26 innings due to an 80-game PED suspension and a September forearm strain. Tanner Banks had a 3.07 ERA this year and can be retained for next year via arbitration. Tim Mayza is an impending free agent.

Photo courtesy of Jim Rassol, Imagn Images

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Philadelphia Phillies Transactions Matt Strahm

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