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White Sox Designate Bryan Hudson For Assignment

By Darragh McDonald | February 4, 2026 at 2:45pm CDT

The White Sox announced that left-hander Bryan Hudson has been designated for assignment. That’s the corresponding move for the Sox to add outfielder Austin Hays, whose signing is now official.

Hudson, 29 in May, seemed to have a breakout with the Brewers in 2024. He gave Milwaukee 62 1/3 innings that year, allowing just 1.73 earned runs per nine. His 26.8% strikeout rate and 7.4% walk rate were both strong figures, while his 41.2% ground ball rate was around par. He averaged just over 91 miles per hour on his four-seamer while also throwing a cutter and a sweeper.

That ERA was at least slightly misleading as Hudson’s .148 batting average on balls in play allowed and 94.2% strand rate was both unsustainably lucky. But even advanced metrics felt he deserved decent results, as he had a 3.60 FIP and 3.22 SIERA on the year. He had enough trust in Milwaukee to rack up 14 holds.

He wasn’t able to maintain that in 2025. He struggled in the first few months and got sent to the minors a couple of times, before being designated for assignment at the trade deadline. A few days later, the White Sox grabbed him off waivers. Between the two clubs, he posted a 4.80 ERA in 15 innings. He still struck out 25.3% of batters faced but gave out walks at an awful 17.3% clip. He also logged 31 2/3 Triple-A innings with a 5.97 ERA, 22.5% strikeout rate, 10.1% walk rate and 51.6% ground ball rate.

Over the course of that rocky campaign, Hudson exhausted his final option season, meaning he’ll be out of options going forward. That’s going to make it harder for him to hold a roster spot and has presumably contributed to the Sox bumping him off today.

The Sox will now have one week of DFA limbo to work with. The waiver process takes 48 hours, so they could take as long as five days to field trade interest. If Hudson were to clear waivers, he would stick with the Sox as non-roster depth. He doesn’t have a previous career outright and his service clock is shy of three years, meaning he wouldn’t have the right to reject an outright assignment in favor of electing free agency.

If that’s an outcome the Sox are hoping for, then they will probably put Hudson on waivers sooner rather than later. Most clubs have full 40-man rosters at the moment but the 60-day injured list comes back next week, which will open up some greater flexibility for fringe roster moves.

Photo courtesy of Eakin Howard, Imagn Images

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Chicago White Sox Transactions Bryan Hudson

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White Sox Sign Austin Hays

By Mark Polishuk | February 4, 2026 at 2:20pm CDT

February 4th: The Sox officially announced their signing of Hays today. The mutual option is worth $8MM, per James Fegan of Sox Machine.

January 31st: The White Sox have agreed to a deal with outfielder Austin Hays, ESPN’s Jesse Rogers reports.  The one-year deal will pay Hays $6MM, according to Jon Heyman of the New York Post, and the contract will be official following a physical. Hays will earn $5MM in salary in 2026, and there is a $1MM buyout on a mutual option for 2027, The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal writes.  Another $375K is available for Hays in incentive bonuses based around plate appearances. Chicago’s 40-man roster is full, so the team will also have to make a corresponding transaction before the signing is finalized.  Hays is represented by the MAS+ Agency.

Earlier today, Heyman reported that Hays was “said to be deciding this weekend” about his next landing spot.  Heyman listed the White Sox, Cubs, Padres, Tigers, and Rangers as teams who had showed some level of interest in Hays at some point during the offseason.  These five clubs were new to Hays’ market, as previous reports this winter linked the Royals, Reds, Mets, Yankees, and Cardinals to the 30-year-old outfielder.  The Athletic’s Zack Meisel also wrote that the Guardians “put out feelers on” Hays’ services.

Playing time was an apparent priority for Hays, as Meisel wrote that the outfielder was looking for “a situation in which he could play every day.”  That didn’t come in Cleveland since the Guardians didn’t want to block any of its up-and-coming younger outfielders, but Hays will now land with another AL Central team that has plenty of at-bats on offer.  Hays figures to step right into at least semi-regular duty in right field, and he might also get time in his regular left field position depending on how the White Sox approach Andrew Benintendi’s playing time.  Brooks Baldwin, Derek Hill, Tristan Peters, Everson Pereira, and Jarred Kelenic are among the names in Chicago’s outfield mix, plus Luisangel Acuna is likely to get a lot of time in center field.

Hays has held his own defensively over 483 career MLB innings as a center fielder, though he hasn’t played the position since 2023.  With both glovework and health in mind, Hays is probably better suited for a corner outfield slot, and some DH at-bats are probably also a consideration for a player who has taken six separate trips to the injured list over the last two seasons.  Four of those six IL stints were due to left calf and hamstring strains, and Hays also missed a few weeks last season due to a left foot contusion.

It was almost exactly one year ago that the Reds signed Hays to a one-year, $5MM guarantee, which broke down as $4MM in salary and a $1MM buyout of a $12MM mutual option for the 2026 season.  As with virtually all mutual options, Hays was cut loose following the 2025 campaign, though he had a respectable .266/.315/.453 slash line and 15 homers over 416 plate appearances for Cincinnati.

On a team that struggled to generate consistent offense, Hays’ 105 wRC+ was the third-highest of any Reds player who had at least 111 trips to the plate.  Though Hays was again hampered by injuries, it was least a step upwards from the uncertainty of the kidney infection that plagued him for much of the 2024 campaign, and cratered his numbers altogether after a deadline trade to the Phillies.

Since Opening Day 2021, Hays has a 106 wRC+ over 2348 PA, and he played in basically an everyday role with the Orioles from 2021-23.  Despite the decent production, Hays has never walked much or made a lot of hard contact, and his strikeout rates have shot upwards over the last three seasons.  Hays’ viability for an everyday role will probably hinge on how much he can hit right-handed pitching, as his splits have made him look like most of a lefty-masher in recent years.

The Reds hung onto Hays last summer both because they needed him for their own playoff push and probably in part because his injuries hurt his trade market, but it certainly seems possible the Sox could shop Hays at the upcoming deadline.  The focus remains on the future for the rebuilding White Sox, and plenty of teams would figure to have trade interest in a veteran bat who has a 160 wRC+ against left-handed pitching over the last two seasons.

The Hays signing is the latest intriguing move for a White Sox team that is planning to be more competitive in 2026, even if a full-fledged run at a playoff berth remains at least a year away.  Trading Luis Robert Jr. to the Mets freed up $20MM in payroll space, and the Sox reinvested that money into a two-year, $20MM deal for Seranthony Dominguez to become Chicago’s next closer.

Since Dominguez is only getting $8MM of that money in 2026, the White Sox have now been able to sign Hays and ostensibly still have $6MM more to spend from the $20MM hole Robert left in the team’s budget.  A pitching addition may be more likely than another position-player add given Chicago’s needs in the rotation and bullpen.

Inset photograph courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas — Imagn Images

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Chicago White Sox Newsstand Transactions Austin Hays

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Yankees Designate Dom Hamel For Assignment

By Darragh McDonald | February 4, 2026 at 1:50pm CDT

The Yankees announced that they have designated right-hander Dom Hamel for assignment. That’s the corresponding move for their claim of outfielder Yanquiel Fernández, a move that was previously reported.

Hamel, 27 in March, got to make a brief major league debut with the Mets last year. He tossed a scoreless inning on September 17th but has been riding the DFA carousel ever since then. He went to the Orioles and Rangers via waiver claims before September was even finished. Texas held him for a few months but gave him another DFA in January. The Yankees claimed him but have now sent him back into DFA limbo again just over a week later.

With that tiny major league résumé, teams are surely focusing on his minor league work. He came up as a starter with the Mets but showed a lack of control and got nudged to the bullpen last year. He pitched 67 2/3 innings over 31 Triple-A outings in 2025, with 11 of those technically starts but with Hamel mostly working as an Opener. His four-seamer and sinker both sat in the low-90s on average while he also threw a cutter, slider and changeup.

He posted a 5.32 earned run average, which is obviously not a sexy number, but his 7.4% walk rate demonstrated much better control. He also punched out 25.2% of opponents faced. There’s clearly enough here for teams to have some interest, but it seems they are likely hoping to pass him through waivers in order to keep Hamel as non-roster depth, hence the cycle of claims and DFAs. Hamel doesn’t have a previous outright and is shy of three years of service, so he wouldn’t have the right to elect free agency if he were to clear waivers.

The Yanks will likely put him back out on waivers soon. They technically could wait as long as five days but start the process sooner. Most teams currently have full 40-man rosters but the 60-day injured list opens up next week, which will give some clubs extra flexibility for fringe roster moves.

Photo courtesy of Sam Navarro, Imagn Images

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New York Yankees Transactions Dom Hamel

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Rangers, Mason Thompson Agree To Minor League Deal

By Steve Adams | February 4, 2026 at 1:31pm CDT

The Rangers have agreed to a minor league contract with free agent righty Mason Thompson, per the team’s transaction log at MLB.com. It’s a homecoming for the Round Rock native, who’ll presumably be in big league camp with the club later this month.

A third-round pick by the Padres in 2016, Thompson has pitched in parts of four big league seasons between the Friars and the Nationals. The 6’6″, 240-pound righty been tagged for a 5.21 ERA in 114 innings, with a gruesome 11.81 ERA (16 runs in 10 2/3 innings) this past season skewing that mark a bit. Though Thompson’s 2025 performance was rocky to say the least — he also posted an ERA over 6.00 in 16 minor league frames — it bears mentioning that this was his first time back on the mound following Tommy John surgery in spring of 2024.

Prior to his injury, Thompson pitched 103 1/3 major league frames with a more palatable 4.53 ERA. His 17.7% strikeout rate and 10% walk rate were both notably worse than league average, but his 51.1% ground-ball mark was excellent. The velocity on Thompson’s sinker was down a big in his return, but he still averaged a hearty 95 mph on the pitch, complementing it with a lesser-used four-seamer at the same velocity, a mid-80s slider and a very occasional upper-80s changeup.

Because they cobbled together their 2025 bullpen primarily via a series of low-cost, one-year contracts, the Rangers entered the 2025-26 offseason in need of nearly an entirely new relief corps. They’ve followed a similar path to the one they took last winter, adding veterans Chris Martin (who re-signed), Jakob Junis, Alexis Diaz and Tyler Alexander on one-year contracts and claiming righty Michael Otañez off waivers. Assuming he is indeed invited to camp, Thompson will be the most experienced bullpen arm among Texas’ collection of non-roster invitees.

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Texas Rangers Transactions Mason Thompson

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Red Sox Claim Mickey Gasper

By Darragh McDonald | February 4, 2026 at 1:14pm CDT

The Red Sox announced that they have claimed utility player Mickey Gasper off waivers from the Nationals. Washington designated him for assignment last week when they claimed Richard Lovelady. Boston had a couple of 40-man openings after trading Jordan Hicks and David Sandlin to the White Sox a few days ago. This claim moves their count from 38 to 39.

It’s a bit of a homecoming for Gasper. He was originally drafted by the Yankees but Boston plucked him away in the minor league portion of the 2023 Rule 5 draft. Gasper spent 2024 with the Sox and got to make a brief major league debut but then was traded to the Twins going into the 2025 season. He got some more major league action with Minnesota in 2025 but was mostly a depth piece. He’s been riding the DFA carousel this winter, going to the Nats and now the Red Sox via waivers.

Gasper, 30, still hasn’t done much at the major league level. In his 133 plate appearances, he has a .133/.250/.195 line. He has shown far more potential in the minors, however. He has taken 412 Triple-A appearances over the past two years with 18 home runs, a 13.3% walk rate, 14.1% strikeout rate, a .325/.427/.560 line and 158 wRC+.

If Gasper could bring even a portion of that minor league offense up to the big leagues, that would be great. Even if that doesn’t happen, he provides loads of defensive versatility. He has experience behind the plate, at the three non-shortstop infield positions and in left field. He hits from both sides of the plate as well, adding an extra layer of flexibility.

Gasper still has options and could be kept in the minors as depth. It’s also possible to see him providing value in a bench role in the big leagues. The Sox have been on the hunt for more catching depth behind Carlos Narváez. They have a few question marks on the infield. Their outfield is very lefty heavy and Rob Refsnyder is no longer around as a righty-swinging complement.

Boston will probably still make another move or two, which could change the picture, and injuries will inevitably arise to shake things up. Gasper’s role will depend on how everything plays out in the coming weeks and months, if he sticks on the roster.

Photo courtesy of David Richard, Imagn Images

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Boston Red Sox Transactions Washington Nationals Mickey Gasper

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Yankees To Claim Yanquiel Fernández

By Darragh McDonald | February 4, 2026 at 12:40pm CDT

The Yankees are going to claim outfielder Yanquiel Fernández off waivers from the Rockies, reports Francys Romero of BeisbolFR. Colorado designated him for assignment a week ago. The Yanks haven’t yet officially announced this claim. When they do, they will need to make a corresponding move to open a 40-man spot.

Fernández, 23, was one of the top prospects in the Rockies’ system as of a few years ago. An international signing out of Cuba, Fernández boosted his stock with a strong 2023 season. He hit 25 home runs across three different levels, topping out at Double-A. Going into 2024, the Rockies added him to their 40-man roster to keep him out of the Rule 5 draft. Baseball America ranked him the #3 prospect in the organization and #92 in the whole league.

His stock has dipped since then. He has taken 147 big league plate appearances with a .225/.265/.348 line and 29.9% strikeout rate. In 409 Triple-A plate appearances, his .259/.320/.437 line looks decent at first glance but actually translates to a 77 wRC+ in the hitter-friendly environment of the Pacific Coast League. The declining offense is significant for Fernández. He doesn’t steal a ton of bases and is a corner outfielder. He has a strong arm but isn’t considered an especially strong defender. His best path to providing value is crushing the ball.

The Rockies just overhauled their front office, moving on from general manager Bill Schmidt in the fall. It seems the new regime, led by president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta, wasn’t bullish on his chances of getting back on track. Fernández has a minor league option remaining and could have been kept in Triple-A as depth but the Rockies bumped him off the roster as they made buy-low pickups of slightly more experienced players like Jake McCarthy and Edouard Julien.

The Yankees have a fairly crowded outfield at the moment. They project to have Aaron Judge, Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger getting regular playing time on the grass with Giancarlo Stanton in the designated hitter spot. They also have Jasson Domínguez and Spencer Jones in the mix and have been sniffing around the market for righty platoon guys like Randal Grichuk and Austin Slater. Guys like Marco Luciano and Seth Brown are around as non-roster depth.

That picture could change over time. There are some injury concerns in there, particularly with Stanton. There has been some trade speculation surrounding Domínguez and Jones. For now, Fernández figures to be way down the depth chart. The Yankees might try to pass him through waivers at some point in the future. If he hangs onto his roster spot, he figures to get regular playing time in Triple-A.

Photo courtesy of Isaiah J. Downing, Imagn Images

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Colorado Rockies New York Yankees Transactions Yanquiel Fernandez

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Royals Sign Brandon Drury

By Steve Adams | February 4, 2026 at 10:11am CDT

The Royals announced Wednesday morning that they’ve signed infielder/outfielder Brandon Drury to a minor league contract. The Wasserman client will be in big league camp with Kansas City this spring as a non-roster invitee.

Drury, 33, put on a show in spring training with the White Sox last year when he hit .410/.439/.821 with three homers and seven doubles in only 41 plate appearances. He looked to have secured a spot on Chicago’s Opening Day club but suffered a broken thumb in the final days of camp, sinking any hope of cracking the roster. The veteran utilityman struggled in the minors upon returning and was eventually cut loose by the ChiSox. He didn’t fare much better on a minor league deal with the Angels. Drury didn’t play in the majors last year and closed out the season with a disappointing .214/.338/.323 slash in 228 minor league plate appearances following that ill-timed hand injury.

Of course, Drury has plenty of track record in the big leagues. It’s been an up-and-down career for the righty-swinging slugger, but at his best he’s shown the ability to pop 25 homers in a season, albeit typically with a low on-base percentage.

Drury’s most recent big league work came in 2024, when he struggled through a career-worst year and hit just .169/.242/.228 with sub-par defense in 97 games for the Angels. In the two preceding seasons, however, he was terrific. From 2022-23, Drury slashed .262/.313/.495 with 54 home runs, 64 doubles, five triples, a 5.8% walk rate and a 24% strikeout rate in 1091 plate appearances between the Reds, Padres and Angels.

A bat-first utility player, Drury has extensive experience at all four corner positions and second base, though he hasn’t been considered a strong defender at any of those five spots. That’s not likely to change as he progresses into his mid-30s, but there’s still some value in even being a below-average option at multiple spots in the diamond if his bat can get back on track.

The Royals have Vinnie Pasquantino and Maikel Garcia entrenched at first base and third base, respectively. They added Isaac Collins in an offseason trade with the Brewers and figure to give the late-blooming switch-hitter the bulk of the playing time in left field. Former top pick and top prospect Jac Caglianone will get the first crack at right field, with free agent pickup Lane Thomas perhaps serving as a platoon partner. Jonathan India will aim for a rebound campaign at second base.

The presence of that quintet — plus catcher Salvador Perez, who figures to spend a chunk of time at DH and first base this year — makes for a crowded outlook at Drury’s positions. He could still compete for a bench job, and having him on hand provides some depth in the event of injuries to the primary options currently on the roster.

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Kansas City Royals Transactions Brandon Drury

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Brewers Agree To Deal With Jordyn Adams

By Anthony Franco | February 3, 2026 at 10:28pm CDT

Outfielder Jordyn Adams has an agreement with the Brewers, reports Chris Cotillo of MassLive. That’ll almost certainly be a minor league contract with a non-roster invite to MLB camp once the signing is finalized. Adams is a CAA client.

The 26-year-old Adams was the 17th overall pick by the Angels out of high school in 2018. He’s an elite athlete who covers a lot of ground in center field but has never been a consistently productive hitter. Adams’ strikeout rates hit alarming levels by the time he reached Double-A. That swing-and-miss remains the biggest impediment for the speedster, though he has gotten brief looks at the MLB level over the past three seasons.

Adams combined for 28 games with the Halos between 2023-24. The Angels non-tendered him last winter. Adams signed a minor league deal with Baltimore and cracked the big league club at the end of May. He got into 10 games but only picked up five plate appearances, as he was mostly a late-game defensive substitute. Baltimore outrighted him off the 40-man roster in August. He finished the season at Triple-A Norfolk, where he batted .213/.291/.379 with a 30.3% strikeout rate over 310 plate appearances.

Milwaukee places a lot of emphasis on athleticism and defense in the outfield. Adams fits that role as a non-roster depth piece. The Brewers have Jackson Chourio, Sal Frelick, Garrett Mitchell and Blake Perkins lined up to split the majority of the outfield reps. Christian Yelich will get some work as a left fielder while serving mostly as a designated hitter, and Jake Bauers will rotate between the corners and first base. Brandon Lockridge, Steward Berroa and Akil Baddoo are potential center fielders with minor league options who all occupy 40-man roster spots. Adams joins Greg Jones, another elite runner and former first-round pick, as offseason depth adds.

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Milwaukee Brewers Transactions Jordyn Adams

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Yainer Diaz Wins Arbitration Hearing Over Astros

By Anthony Franco | February 3, 2026 at 8:03pm CDT

Yainer Diaz won his arbitration hearing against the Astros, reports Francys Romero. The catcher, a PRIME client, will be paid a $4.5MM salary instead of the team’s $3MM filing figure.

Diaz earns a strong payday in his first trip through the arbitration process. The benefit of the win goes beyond the extra $1.5MM he’ll make than if he’d lost the hearing. It also sets a higher baseline for his final two years. The process is designed for players’ salaries to climb as they get closer to free agency, so there’ll be compounding benefits to today’s result.

The 27-year-old Diaz is one of the better catchers in the sport. He’s a career .279/.305/.454 hitter in nearly 1600 plate appearances. Baseball Reference has valued him around three wins above replacement in each of his first three seasons. He has topped 20 doubles in each and is coming off his second 20-homer campaign. Diaz hit .256/.284/.417 with 20 longballs and 70 runs driven in across 143 games a year ago.

That included a career-high 111 starts behind the plate, plus 24 as a designated hitter. Diaz caught the seventh-most innings in MLB. They’ll need him to take a similarly heavy workload now that high-end backup Victor Caratini departed to sign a two-year deal with Minnesota. César Salazar is expected to step into the backup role.

A $1.5MM isn’t a huge difference for a team in isolation, though it takes on a little more importance for the Astros than it would for most clubs. RosterResource estimated their luxury tax payroll within the $238-240MM range depending on the hearing result. Ownership reportedly wants to remain below the $244MM base tax threshold, so this could have a modest impact on the front office’s midseason flexibility on the trade front.

Today was a strong start for the players in arbitration. Orioles righty Kyle Bradish also won his case, pushing players to 2-0 thus far. The Diaz and Bradish hearings took place yesterday. Dylan Lee and Edwin Uceta had hearings last week, though their results are being held until other comparable cases are decided. According to The Associated Press, the Blue Jays had their hearing with left-hander Eric Lauer this afternoon, though that ruling is also expected to be held for a later date. Tomorrow is the biggest date of the arbitration class, as the Tigers and Tarik Skubal are set to present their cases with a record $13MM gap between their respective filing figures.

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Houston Astros Transactions Yainer Diaz

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Red Sox, Kyle Keller Agree To Minor League Deal

By Anthony Franco | February 3, 2026 at 6:05pm CDT

The Red Sox are in agreement with reliever Kyle Keller on a minor league contract with an invite to Spring Training, reports Will Sammon of The Athletic. The Nello Gamberdino client would be paid a $1.9MM base salary if he makes the MLB roster.

Chris Cotillo of MassLive adds that the deal includes multiple assignment clauses, the first of which has a mid-April date. At that point, the Red Sox would need to make Keller available to other teams if they haven’t called him up. If another team is willing to add him to the MLB roster, Boston would need to call him up themselves or let him go.

It’s a stronger than average minor league deal for the 6’4″ righty. Keller makes his return to affiliated ball after pitching four seasons in Japan. He spent the first two seasons with the Hanshin Tigers and the most recent two years as a member of the Yomiuri Giants. Keller posted a 2.42 ERA across 152 1/3 innings during his NPB career. He’s coming off a 3.11 showing in 46 1/3 frames. He fanned an above-average 26.3% of batters faced but issued walks at a near-12% clip.

Keller didn’t land a guaranteed roster spot, but he’ll have a chance at solid earnings if he’s able to pitch his way to the big leagues early in the year. He appeared at the MLB level each season between 2019-21. Keller saw time with the Marlins, Angels and Pirates and combined for a 5.83 earned run average over 46 1/3 innings. He sat in the mid-90s with a decent curveball but didn’t throw strikes consistently enough to stick in a big league bullpen.

Chief baseball officer Craig Breslow has stockpiled a decent amount of non-roster relief depth who can compete for jobs in camp. Keller joins Vinny Nittoli, Seth Martinez, Devin Sweet, Tayron Guerrero and Hobie Harris as minor league signees.

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Boston Red Sox Transactions Kyle Keller

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