The Blue Jays announced Tuesday that they’ve placed left-hander Easton Lucas on unconditional release waivers. That drops their 40-man roster count to 37. Ben Nicholson-Smith of Sportsnet reports that Lucas will sign with a foreign team once he clears waivers (presumably in Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball or in the Korea Baseball Organization).
Lucas, 29, appeared in six games (five starts) for Toronto this past season. He became a cult hero in April when he rattled off 10 1/3 shutout innings across two starts to begin his Jays tenure — including a game at Fenway Park where he outdueled eventual Cy Young runner-up Garrett Crochet. The good times didn’t last, however. Lucas was torched for eight runs in his next start and wound up surrendering a total of 18 runs in 14 innings following that scoreless stretch.
This was the third season in which Lucas has logged some big league time, though his 24 1/3 frames this year marked a career-high. He’s pitched 42 2/3 innings in the majors and been tagged for an 8.02 earned run average. Lucas has fanned a below-average 19.6% of opponents against a bloated 12.3% walk rate in his limited MLB exposure.
Triple-A has been another story entirely. Lucas has spent parts of three seasons at the top minor league level and, in 162 2/3 innings, pitched to a solid 3.60 ERA. He’s punched out 24.4% of his opponents and logged a more palatable (but still higher-than-average) 10% walk rate. Lucas sits 93-95 mph with his four-seamer and rounds out his four-pitch arsenal with a changeup, slider and more seldom-used cutter.


The Mets are therefore taking on a slightly bigger tax hit while reducing the amount of overall dollars owed, while the Rangers are reducing their tax number but adding more overall money to their books. That adds an interesting wrinkle for a Texas club that was expected to reduce payroll this winter, though it is worth noting that the Rangers cleared a good chunk of money off the books (a projected $21.1MM) on Friday
2023 was Semien’s last year as a premium hitter, as he hit .276/.348/.478 with 29 homers over 753 PA for the Rangers’ World Series team. Semien delivered a 128 wRC+ that year, and his key role in Texas’ first championship will forever make him a beloved figure in Arlington. After that dream season, however, Semien dropped to a 101 wRC+ in 2024, and then a subpar 89 wRC+ in 2025. A .251 BABIP over the last two seasons is a partial explanation, yet the bigger culprit is a sizeable decline in power.