Cubs Sign Ty Blach To Minor League Deal
The Cubs and veteran lefty Ty Blach are in agreement on a deal, as first reported by Tommy Birch of the Des Moines Register. The Semper9 Sports client is headed to Triple-A Iowa. It’s a minor league pact, MLBTR has confirmed, and Blach has already joined the team on its road trip in Columbus. He’s expected to pitch Saturday, whether in a start or long relief.
Blach, 35, has pitched in parts of seven big league seasons. The bulk of his major league work has come with the Giants, for whom he tossed 299 1/3 innings of 4.36 ERA ball from 2016-18. He also spent three years with the Rockies organization from 2022-24, where he worked as a swingman but stumbled to an ERA north of 6.00 in 193 2/3 frames. That 2024 season with the Rockies was Blach’s most recent big league work. He spent most of the 2025 season with the Rangers organization and notched a solid 3.54 ERA in 56 minor league frames.
Blach has never been a hard thrower or missed many bats. He’s averaged 90 mph on his sinker in the majors and sat at 89 mph with that two-seamer during last year’s stint with the Rangers’ top affiliate. The 6’1″ southpaw has only fanned 13% of his major league opponents, but he’s regularly shown strong command (7% walk rate) and above-average groundball tendencies (45.6%). Blach did a nice job of dodging hard contact during his time in San Francisco but took a step back in that regard during his three seasons with the Rox.
The Cubs have been hit hard by pitching injuries, so it’s not a surprise to see them bring in some multi-inning depth. Cade Horton is the most notable loss for Chicago. Last year’s Rookie of the Year runner-up is headed for surgery to repair his right elbow’s ulnar collateral ligament and will be sidelined well into the 2027 season. The Cubs also have lefty Matthew Boyd on the 15-day IL due to a biceps strain, and top starter Justin Steele has yet to return from his own UCL surgery, which was performed about one year ago. He’s on the 60-day IL and likely out until early summer.
At present, the Cubs’ rotation includes Edward Cabrera, Shota Imanaga, Jameson Taillon, Javier Assad and Colin Rea. Assad opened the season in the minors and was hit hard in his his second start of the season this weekend. Rea re-signed as a free agent and opened the year in the ‘pen, as expected for the veteran swingman. But much like the 2025 season, when he unexpectedly finished second on the team in starts and innings pitched due to various injuries around the roster, he’s been thrust into the rotation and seems likely to stick there for the time being.
On the bullpen side of things, the Cubs are without Phil Maton (knee tendinitis), Porter Hodge (flexor strain), Hunter Harvey (triceps inflammation), Jordan Wicks (nerve irritation in his forearm) and Ethan Roberts (laceration on his pitching hand). The Cubs have five lefties in the big league bullpen at the moment: Caleb Thielbar, Hoby Milner, Riley Martin, Luke Little and Ryan Rolison. A sixth, Charlie Barnes, is on the 40-man roster down in Triple-A. Chicago certainly isn’t hurting for southpaw depth, but with Rea in the rotation, they’ll bring in an experienced swingman to stash in the upper minors.
Orioles Select Sam Huff, Designate Jayvien Sandridge For Assignment
The Orioles announced Wednesday that they’ve selected the contract of catcher Sam Huff from Triple-A Norfolk. Left-hander Jayvien Sandridge, who had been pitching in Triple-A, was designated for assignment to open a 40-man spot. Lefty Nick Raquet was optioned to Norfolk to open space for Huff on the active roster.
Huff’s call to the big leagues means the O’s will be playing a reliever short for at least today. Huff joins the roster as a third catcher alongside Samuel Basallo and Maverick Handley. Adley Rutschman hit the injured list last week due to an ankle issue.
Baltimore signed Huff to a minor league contract back in January. He’s a former Rangers seventh-rounder who’s played in parts of five major league seasons. Now 28 years old, Huff once rated as one of the top catching prospects in the sport and carries a decent .247/.301/.430 batting line in the majors. That production comes in a sample of only 272 plate appearances and despite a 36% strikeout rate, however. Huff’s production has been buoyed by a .350 average on balls in play that he’s not likely to sustain over a long period.
Huff has solid framing grades in his limited major league work but has struggled with blocking balls in the dirt and controlling the run game. He has just an 18.5% caught-stealing rate in his career and has been charged with eight passed balls in 507 innings behind the dish.
It’s been a struggle for Huff in a tiny sample of nine games with Norfolk this year. He’s hitting .156/.250/.168 in 36 plate appearances with the Tides but has a much stronger overall track record in Triple-A. Huff entered the season with a lifetime .258/.338/.476 slash, 56 homers, 60 doubles, a pair of triples, a 10.2% walk rate and a more troubling 29.9% strikeout rate in exactly 1200 Triple-A plate appearances.
The 27-year-old Sandridge joined the O’s in a cash swap with the Angels shortly after Opening Day. He was originally a 32nd-round pick by Baltimore back in 2018 but bounced from the Orioles, to the Reds, to the Padres, to the Yankees and to the Angels since that selection. Sandridge made an extremely brief MLB debut last season, facing a total of six hitters and retiring two of them. He has just two-thirds of an inning and two earned runs in the majors.
Sandridge has pitched in parts of seven minor league seasons but totaled only 243 1/3 total innings. He’s logged a solid 3.96 earned run average in that time and punched out nearly one-third of his opponents — but he’s also issued walks at a 17% clip and plunked another 22 of the 1108 batters he’s faced (2%). Coupled with a whopping 44 wild pitches, it’s more than fair to say that command is a major hindrance for the southpaw.
This season, Sandridge has tossed 1 2/3 scoreless innings with Norfolk, but he’s walked three of the nine batters he’s faced. It’s only a sample of two games, but it’s notable that his heater, which sat just shy of 95 mph in Triple-A and averaged 95.6 mph in last year’s brief debut, is clocking in at an average of 92.9 mph in 2026.
Sandridge is in the second of his three minor league option years. A team looking for some left-handed bullpen depth with a knack for missing bats could roll the dice on a waiver claim or a cash swap like the one that sent Sandridge back to Baltimore in the first place. The Orioles have five days to trade him or place him on waivers. Since waivers are a 48-hour process, the outcome of his DFA will be known within the next week.
Braves, Martín Pérez Agree To New Minor League Deal
The Braves and veteran lefty Martín Pérez are in agreement on another minor league contract, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Atlanta designated the 35-year-old for assignment over the weekend, and he elected free agency after clearing waivers. The Octagon client is now quickly returning to the Braves organization on a non-guaranteed deal, although given the mountain of injuries on the Atlanta pitching staff, it’s likely that Pérez will be back in the major league fold before all that long.
It’s increasingly common in today’s game for mid-30s veterans — particularly pitchers — to be designated for assignment and quickly re-sign upon being released. The Braves themselves have done this frequently in the past with Jesse Chavez, and we’ve seen clubs like the Mariners (Casey Lawrence), Yankees (Ryan Weber, David Hale) and Marlins (Devin Smeltzer) regularly shuffle players on and off the 40-man roster via repeated cycles of DFA, outright, and new minor league pacts. Organizations are typically up front about their intentions in these scenarios, and the player is obviously amenable to the setup. We don’t yet know if that’s the route down which Pérez is headed with Atlanta, but this is a first step in that direction.
Pérez has made three appearances for manager Walt Weiss’ club this season — two starts, one relief outing — and held opponents to five runs in 14 1/3 innings. That comes out to a tidy 3.14 earned run average, but Pérez’s six strikeouts (11.3%) and 90 mph sinker make it tough to imagine him sustaining that level of run prevention.
The veteran Pérez has been a reliable back-end starter in the second act of his career, dating back to 2020, with a collective 3.99 ERA in his past 719 1/3 MLB frames. That number is skewed a bit by an outlier 2022 season (2.89 ERA in 196 innings); Pérez has generally been good for bulk innings and a mid-4.00s ERA. Metrics like FIP (4.39) and SIERA (4.65) feel that’s about where his run prevention should reside, based on his strikeouts, walks, ground balls, etc.
The Braves currently have an entire rotation’s worth of arms on the injured list. Spencer Strider (oblique strain), Spencer Schwellenbach (surgery to remove bone chips from elbow), Hurston Waldrep (same as Schwellenbach), AJ Smith-Shawver (Tommy John surgery last June) and Joey Wentz (torn ACL) are all on the shelf. Wentz won’t return this season. Smith-Shawver, Schwellenbach and Waldrep are likely out until early or mid-summer.
At the moment, Atlanta’s rotation includes Chris Sale, Reynaldo López, Grant Holmes and Bryce Elder. Lefty José Suarez and righty Osvaldo Bido are swing options in the bullpen. Prospects JR Ritchie and Didier Fuentes are intriguing options in the minor leagues, though the former has yet to make his MLB debut and is not yet on the 40-man roster.
Pérez adds an experienced depth option to the mix. There’s enough track record here that he could pitch his way into a more permanent rotation spot, but if he’s comfortable riding the DFA carousel that Atlanta has previously utilized with Chavez, that could also present a path to somewhat consistent innings (albeit a more circuitous one).
Martín Pérez Elects Free Agency
Veteran left-hander Martín Pérez elected free agency, relays Chad Bishop of The Atlanta Journal Constitution. He cleared outright waivers after being designated for assignment by the Braves on Sunday.
Pérez made three appearances in an Atlanta uniform. He got decent results, allowing just five runs across 14 1/3 innings. The 35-year-old southpaw only struck out six of the 53 batters he faced with a well below-average 7.2% swinging strike percentage. The Braves opted not to continue running him out as their fifth starter. They’re carrying a nine-man bullpen for the time being — a luxury partially afforded by a day off on Thursday — but will need a fifth starter or bullpen game early next week.
Spencer Strider is set to begin a rehab assignment on Thursday. He’ll make at least three minor league appearances. The Braves could recall Didier Fuentes or turn to José Suarez to lead a bullpen game in the Pérez spot.
It’s possible the Braves look to bring Pérez back on a minor league deal. They don’t have much in the way of upper minors rotation experience. If Pérez is unable to find a big league contract as a free agent, he could be best served returning to an organization with which he’s already familiar.
Rays Sign Michael Grove, Transfer Ryan Pepiot To 60-Day IL
The Rays announced that they have signed right-hander Michael Grove to a big league deal and placed him on the 15-day injured list. He is still recovering from last year’s shoulder surgery. To open a 40-man spot for him, right-hander Ryan Pepiot was transferred to the 60-day IL. Marc Topkin of The Tampa Bay Times reported the moves prior to the official announcement.
It’s unclear what’s going on with Pepiot but this appears to represent at least a minor setback. He started the season on the 15-day IL due to inflammation in his right hip. As of April 4th, he was throwing bullpen sessions and reinstatement was expected right around now. This move to the 60-day injured list means he can’t be came off the IL until late May.
With Pepiot out, the Tampa rotation has consisted of Shane McClanahan, Drew Rasmussen, Steven Matz, Nick Martinez and Joe Boyle. They lost Boyle to the injured list a few days ago due to a right elbow strain. Jesse Scholtens was recalled and will take the ball tomorrow. Whether he sticks around or that’s just a spot start remains to be seen. The Rays also have Joe Rock on optional assignment while Yoendrys Gómez is pitching multiple innings out of the big league bullpen. Prospect Brody Hopkins is in Triple-A but has walked 20.3% of batters faced this year.
Getting Pepiot back into that mix would have helped but it doesn’t appear that’s happening anytime soon. More information will likely be revealed about his status shortly but the Rays will have to proceed without him for at least another six weeks or so.
The one benefit to Pepiot being delayed is that it effectively opened up a 40-man roster spot, which the Rays have used to scoop up Grove. As mentioned, he is recovering from shoulder surgery, which he underwent in March of last year.
A second-round pick from 2018, Grove had some intriguing results in the upper minors and the majors, around injuries. From 2022 to 2024, he logged 100 2/3 innings on the farm with a 3.40 earned run average. His 29.4% strikeout rate and 7.2% walk rate were both strong figures.
He also threw 149 1/3 major league innings in that span. The 5.48 ERA in the big leagues doesn’t look nice but there’s more encouragement when looking under the hood. His 23.2% strikeout rate, 6.9% walk rate and 41.3% ground ball rate were actually decent numbers. His .325 batting average on balls in play and 63.9% strand rate were both to the unfortunate side. His 4.35 FIP and 3.85 SIERA felt he would have fared better if his luck were more neutral.
Grove spent 2025 on the injured list and crossed three years of major league service time. He would have been eligible for arbitration for 2026 but would not have earned a big raise after missing a full season. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projected him for $800K, a bit above this year’s $780K minimum. The Dodgers outrighted him off the roster at season’s end, effectively an early non-tender.
For the Rays, Grove is a wild card after a lengthy absence due to that surgery. If he can get healthy, his service time count is at three years and 31 days. He is therefore controllable for this season and at least two more. He also has an option remaining. That means the Rays could shuttle him between Triple-A and the majors. If he spent a notable amount of time on optional assignment, he might not get to four years of service this year, which would delay his path to free agency.
That would be a secondary concern. Before that could be something worth thinking about, he’ll need to get his shoulder right and then start posting good results. His current recovery timeline isn’t clear.
Photo courtesy of Joe Camporeale, Imagn Images
Astros To Sign Brandon Bielak To Minor League Deal
The Astros are going to sign right-hander Brandon Bielak to a minor league deal, reports Ari Alexander of 7News Boston. Alexander adds that the Gaeta Sports Management client will report to Triple-A Sugar Land.
Bielak, now 30, pitched in the majors from 2020 to 2024. Most of that was with the Astros, though he also pitched for the Athletics. He was mostly a starter in the minors but worked both out of the rotation and the bullpen in the big leagues. He made 76 appearances, 21 of those being starts. He logged 204 innings over that five-year span, allowing 4.63 earned runs per nine. His 17.5% strikeout rate and 10% walk rate were below average but his 44.6% ground ball rate was a few ticks better than par.
Per Statcast, he mixed in seven different pitches in that time, throwing a four-seamer, sinker, changeup, sweeper, curveball, slider and cutter. The fastballs averaged in the mid-90s earlier in his career but dropped a few ticks over time. His four-seamer averaged 94 miles per hour in 2021 but crept down to 91.9 mph by 2024.
Late in 2024, he was outrighted off the Athletics’ roster. He became a free agent and signed a minor league deal with the Diamondbacks for 2025, though it turned into a lost season for him. He only made two minor league appearances before he landed on the minor league injured list. He underwent season-ending shoulder surgery in May.
Back in November, Alexander relayed that Bielak was recovered from that surgery and was hoping for a role as a starter. He signed with Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos in the Mexican League in March but that league’s season doesn’t begin until Thursday. For guys with big league experience signing in Mexico, it’s common for the deals to have clauses that allow them to leave if they get an offer in affiliated ball.
The Houston pitching staff has been beset by a number of injuries recently. Both Hunter Brown and Cristian Javier have been sidelined by shoulder strains. Tatsuya Imai hit the injured list due to arm fatigue. Cody Bolton hasn’t hit the injured list but departed his most recent start due to back tightness. Those injuries are on top of them being without Ronel Blanco, Brandon Walter and Hayden Wesneski, who all underwent surgery last year.
For now, the Astros have Mike Burrows and Lance McCullers Jr. in two rotation spots. Colton Gordon is starting today, though it’s unclear if that’s a spot start or if he’ll stick around. Bolton could make another start if his back is okay. Spencer Arrighetti is with the big league club on the taxi squad, per Chandler Rome of The Athletic. Manger Joe Espada says he’ll start tomorrow or Thursday, per Rome. Ryan Weiss, J.P. France and Christian Roa have been working long relief and could chip in here and there. Miguel Ullola and Jason Alexander are on optional assignment.
It’s quite a jumbled mess and the Astros will try their best to keep it together before their season slips away from them. Bielak will give them a bit more non-roster depth, alongside Peter Lambert in that department.
Photo courtesy of Thomas Shea, Imagn Images
Phillies Trade Griff McGarry To Dodgers
4:15pm: The Phillies will receive $500K in pool space, per Francys Romero of BeisbolFR. That’s the same amount the Dodgers got from the Twins in the Anthony Banda trade, so they have effectively traded Banda for McGarry.
2:52pm: The Dodgers have acquired minor league right-hander Griff McGarry from the Phillies in exchange for international bonus pool space, the teams announced Tuesday. (The Phillies’ announcement adds that they’ll also receive a player to be named later or cash.) He wasn’t on Philadelphia’s 40-man roster and thus won’t require Los Angeles to make a corresponding 40-man roster move.
McGarry once ranked as one of the more promising prospects in Philadelphia’s system, sitting third among Baseball America’s rankings ahead of the 2023 season. His standing slipped after a a pair of down showings in 2023-24, but the Nats scooped him up in December’s Rule 5 Draft following a rebound campaign in 2025. Washington wound up returning McGarry to the Phillies at the end of spring training, and he’ll now head to the Dodgers’ Triple-A affiliate in Oklahoma City.
Back in 2022, McGarry’s age-23 season, he pitched 87 1/3 innings across three levels and notched a 3.71 ERA with a huge 35.7% strikeout rate but a concerning 14.6% walk rate. He was rocked for a 6.00 ERA in 17 minor league starts the following season, then turned in a 4.55 ERA in 30 minor league relief appearances in 2024. McGarry had fallen almost entirely off the Phillies’ prospect map, but he bounced back with 83 2/3 innings of 3.44 ERA ball in a return to a rotation role in Triple-A last year.
McGarry walked more than 18% of his opponents in 2023 and saw that number spike all the way to 24% in 2024. Last year’s 13.9% walk rate is still far too high, but it’s a big step in the right direction relative to 2023-24, and he paired it with a huge 35.1% strikeout rate. The 6’2″ righty isn’t an especially hard thrower, sitting 93.9 mph with his four-seamer in ’25 and a hair better in this year’s small sample (94.3 mph). McGarry is a two-pitch right-hander, coupling that four-seamer with a slider that rests at 82-83 mph each year. He’s worked out of the bullpen again in 2026, allowing four runs in four Triple-A frames and walking more batters (seven) than he’s struck out (four).
Suffice it to say, McGarry is a pure change of scenery candidate and development project for the Dodgers. He’s long intrigued scouts with a fastball and slider that both grade as plus pitches and generate whiffs in droves, but McGarry’s command is nowhere close to average. The most recent scouting reports on him at FanGraphs, Baseball America, MLB.com and other outlets peg him with 30-grade command (on the 20-80 scale). There’s potential for a big relief arm in the plausible range of outcomes, even if it’s on the low-probability end of the spectrum, and it didn’t cost the Dodgers much to roll the dice on the soon-to-be 27-year-old righty.
It’s not yet clear how much international pool space is going back to the Phillies, but bonus pool allotments have to be traded in increments of $250K (unless it’s the remainder of a pool that’s currently at less than $250K total). In all likelihood, the Phils are adding one or two slots, giving them a bit of extra spending capacity to bring in some teenage talent on the international amateur market.
To be clear, no actual money is changing hands in the swap. The league places a hard cap on the amount each club can spend on international amateurs, but any team can acquire up to 60% of its original pool space in trades with other teams.
The Dodgers and Phillies both opened the 2026 international free agent period (which began in January) with a $6.679MM pool. Los Angeles spent about $3.265MM of that sum on day one of the period, per MLB.com. The Phillies spent about $4.85MM, with a hefty $4MM of that sum going to Venezuelan outfielder Francisco Renteria.
D-backs Announce Several Roster Moves
The Diamondbacks announced a slate of roster moves Tuesday. Catcher Gabriel Moreno was placed on the 10-day injured list (retroactive to April 11) due to an oblique strain. Fellow catcher Aramis Garcia has had his contract selected from Triple-A and will take Moreno’s spot on the roster, serving as a complement to veteran James McCann and 26-year-old Adrian Del Castillo. Arizona moved first baseman/designated hitter Pavin Smith from the 10-day IL to the 60-day IL to clear a 40-man spot for Garcia. The Snakes also reinstated right-hander Merrill Kelly from the 15-day injured list and optioned right-hander Taylor Rashi to Triple-A Reno.
Moreno missed the past three games after what was originally termed as a back issue. The Diamondbacks haven’t provided a timetable, but historically speaking, it’s common for even low-grade oblique strains to sideline a player for close to a month. The former top prospect is one of baseball’s more complete catchers, combining elite defense with above-average offense in each season of his still-young big league career. He was out to a fine start in 2026, hitting .275/.333/.400 in 45 turns at the plate.
With Moreno sidelined, the D-backs can use the lefty-hitting Del Castillo against right-handed pitching and the righty-swinging McCann versus southpaws. Garcia provides a viable third catching option on the roster and also has some experience at first base. He’s probably relegated to third catcher status in this setup, with Del Castillo the most obvious beneficiary on paper. He hasn’t gotten a consistent look in the majors, thanks largely to Moreno’s presence, but Del Castillo is a .276/.322/.439 hitter in 239 big league plate appearances and touts a .292/.381/.535 line in parts of four seasons (712 plate appearances) in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League.
Garcia, 33, has played sparingly in parts of six major league seasons — including a two-game cup of coffee in Arizona last year. He’s a lifetime .208/.245/.321 hitter in 331 plate appearances. He’s never logged more than 115 plate appearances in a given major league season but is a career .240/.316/.436 hitter in just under 1400 Triple-A plate appearances.
Kelly’s return from the injured list was expected. The team moved righty Brandon Pfaadt to the bullpen yesterday to clear a spot in the rotation, where Kelly will join Zac Gallen, Eduardo Rodriguez, Ryne Nelson and offseason signee Michael Soroka. The 37-year-old Kelly also signed with Arizona this winter, returning to the D-backs on a two-year, $40MM deal after closing out the 2025 season in Texas following a deadline trade that netted three pitching prospects from the Rangers (Kohl Drake, Mitch Bratt, David Hagaman).
Kelly will make his first start of the season for the Snakes tonight against the Orioles. He was slowed by back discomfort early in spring training and was thus limited to only two starts during exhibition play in the Cactus League. Kelly tossed five shutout frames for Triple-A Reno in what wound up being his only rehab outing. He might be on something of a pitch/workload limit in his season debut as he continues to build up, but it shouldn’t be long before he’s back to his workhorse ways atop manager Torey Lovullo’s rotation.
Red Sox Select Jack Anderson
3:24pm: These moves have now all been officially announced by the team.
1:05pm: Samaniego will be optioned to open an active roster spot, per Chris Cotillo of MassLive. To open 40-man space, right-hander Johan Oviedo will be transferred to the 60-day injured list, also per Cotillo. Oviedo was recently diagnosed with a flexor strain and will be shut down for six weeks. If he’s healthy at that point, he’ll have to ramp back up. That whole process will be longer than 60 days, so it’s not a surprise that he is bound for the 60-day IL.
7:11am: The Red Sox are promoting right-hander Jack Anderson, according to Ari Alexander of 7News. Anderson is not yet on the 40-man roster, so the Red Sox will need to clear a spot for him before the move can be made official. The righty is now in line to make his MLB debut when he gets into a game with Boston.
Anderson, 26, was a 16th-round pick by the Tigers back in 2021. He was plucked from that organization by the Red Sox during the minor league phase of the 2024 Rule 5 draft and has been in his new organization for over a year now. Anderson was utilized as a pure reliever during his time with the Tigers, but since joining the Red Sox he’s gotten some looks out of the rotation. After posting a 3.58 ERA in 75 1/3 innings at Double-A last year while being primarily used as a multi-inning reliever, Anderson finished the year with two starts at Triple-A where he posted a lackluster 5.59 ERA but struck out an impressive 29.7% of his opponents.
This spring, Anderson appeared in the World Baseball Classic as a member of Team Great Britain. He struck out three and walked none in three innings of one-run ball in his lone start for them. That came against Team Mexico and a stacked lineup that featured the likes of Jarren Duran, Randy Arozarena, Jonathan Aranda and Alejandro Kirk. Anderson’s impressive showing wasn’t enough to win Great Britain the game or help them advance out of the pool stage, but he’s continued to look good since returning to Triple-A.
In his first two starts of the year at the level, he’s posted a 3.72 ERA in 9 2/3 innings of work while punching out 22.5% of his opponents. Taken together, Anderson’s last five starts (between Triple-A and the WBC) have looked rather solid. He’s pitched to a 4.43 ERA while striking out 26.1% of his opponents. He’s topped out at 77 pitches in those outings (76 this year), so he seems better suited for a multi-inning relief role in the majors, but his ability to rack up strikeouts at a solid clip should make him an interesting addition to the big league pitching staff in Boston.
Anderson’s call-up comes on the heels of a disastrous start from ace Garrett Crochet where he lasted just 1 2/3 innings before departing the game. That left Jovani Moran, Tyler Samaniego, and Ryan Watson to each handle two-plus innings of work, depleting the bullpen of long relief talent. Barring a surprise injury for Crochet, it seems reasonable to expect that Anderson will be joining the roster in place of one of those long relief arms. Samaniego is the only one of that trio who can be optioned to the minors. Zack Kelly and Greg Weissert are the only other Red Sox relievers with options remaining, and while neither pitched yesterday both have struggled in the early going this year.
Brewers Place Christian Yelich On Injured List, Select Greg Jones
2:15pm: The Brewers estimate Yelich to be out until mid-to-late May, so about four to six weeks, per Todd Rosiak of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
11:49am: The Brewers on Tuesday placed outfielder/designated hitter Christian Yelich on the 10-day injured list due to a left groin strain, per Adam McCalvy of MLB.com. Milwaukee selected the contract of infielder/outfielder Greg Jones from Triple-A Nashville to take Yelich’s spot on the 40-man roster. Left-handed reliever Rob Zastryzny has been moved from the 10-day IL to the 60-day IL to open a 40-man roster spot for Jones.
Yelich was out to a strong start, having slashed .314/.375/.451 with a homer, a triple, two doubles and three steals through his first 56 plate appearances. The 34-year-old left Sunday’s game with what the team first described as a possible hamstring injury, however, before eventually being diagnosed with the groin strain. There’s no immediate timetable for his potential return, though to this point there’s no indication that Yelich is expected to be faced with a particularly long absence.
Today’s IL placement marks the third time in the past couple weeks that Milwaukee has lost a core lineup piece due to injury. Yelich joins outfielder Jackson Chourio and first baseman Andrew Vaughn on the injured list. Both have hand fractures — Chourio a hairline fracture after being hit by a pitch and Vaughn a hamate fracture that required surgery. On the pitching side of things, the Brewers are most notably without starter Quinn Priester (thoracic outlet symptoms) and reliever Jared Koenig (elbow sprain).
Yelich’s move to the injured list should open some playing time for a series of bench options and platoon bats to rotate through the designated hitter slot in the lineup. Backup catcher Gary Sánchez could see some looks there, as could switch-hitting infielder Luis Rengifo (at least on days where David Hamilton plays third base). Outfielders Brandon Lockridge, Garrett Mitchell, Sal Frelick and Blake Perkins are options for both outfield and DH work.
Jones, 28, was a first-round pick by the Rays in 2018 and briefly ranked on the back end of MLB.com’s ranking of the sport’s top-100 prospects back in 2022. He’s never pieced things together at the Triple-A level, however, and is 1-for-7 in a tiny sample of eight major league plate appearances. The fleet-footed Jones offers top-of-the-scale speed. He went 46-for-49 in stolen base attempts in just 89 minor league games as recently as 2024.
However, Jones has also battled various injuries and struggled to produce at an average level even in Triple-A. His .262/.344/.438 batting line in parts of four Triple-A seasons looks solid relative to the average major league batting line but is sub-par in Triple-A — particularly in the Pacific Coast League, where he spent that ’24 season. He’s shown an especially concerning lack of contact skills and pitch recognition, punching out in 36.3% of his Triple-A plate appearances against a solid but unspectacular 8.6% walk rate. That said, Jones is currently hitting .317/.462/.390 in 52 plate appearances with Nashville. He’s stolen seven bags in nine tries.
Though he was drafted as a shortstop, Jones has played far more outfield in recent seasons. Scouting reports were always a bit skeptical of his ability to stick at short, and his blazing speed lends itself well to center field range. Jones has experience in all three outfield spots and has picked up 16 games at second base over the course of his pro career as well. He’s a left-handed bat who can bounce around the diamond and provide a some speed off the bench while backing up at several spots.
Zastryzny was rehabbing from a shoulder issue during spring training when he suffered a separate intercostal strain. At the time of that setback, the Brewers indicated he’d be out until at least late April. Today’s move to the 60-day IL doesn’t reset his IL clock but does mean he’ll be sidelined for at least the majority of May now as well.
The journeyman Zastryzny has pitched 29 1/3 innings with the Brewers over the past two seasons and logged a sparkling 2.12 earned run average despite more pedestrian strikeout and walk rates of 20.5% and 9%, respectively. Even with Zastryzny and the aforementioned Koenig sidelined, Milwaukee has three lefties in the bullpen: Angel Zerpa, Aaron Ashby and DL Hall.
