50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings in 50 Years: Zack Britton

BRONX, NY - OCTOBER 18: Zack Britton #53 of the New York Yankees pitches during Game 5 of the ALCS between the Houston Astros and the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Friday, October 18, 2019 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Alex Trautwig/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

For the third consecutive entry into the free agency series, another elite left-handed reliever is due to be covered. For better or for worse, the Yankees made another splash in the offseason following the 2018 season from a free agent class that featured far more generational talent than the usual crop.

Zack Britton, in all fairness, was not all that far removed from one of the great pitching performances in modern baseball history. The perception of his deal may not be entirely fair, as it wouldn’t be right to compare his overall value to someone like Bryce Harper or Manny Machado, but on the whole, Britton was quite good for the Yankees. Big-money deals on relief pitching can feel like a letdown when there are A-list free agents available on the market, but Britton was elite for a long stretch, some of which the Yankees were able to enjoy.

Zack Britton
Signing Date: January 11, 2019
Contract: Three years, $39 million

Britton, a 6-foot-1 left-hander, was originally drafted in the third round of the 2006 amateur draft by the Orioles. He would remain with that organization for over a decade, and see a level of success at times that few other pitchers in the history of the sport enjoyed.

He initially came up as a starter, pitching over 150 innings across 28 starts in his 2011 rookie campaign. Over the next couple of seasons, he was only able to make 11 and seven starts for Baltimore, respectively. Unfortunately for the O’s and their lefty, it was an unconvincing stretch on the bump, as he managed an ERA approaching five across those three years.

For the 2014 season, Britton was moved to the bullpen. As a result, he almost instantly became one of baseball’s most dominant forces on the mound. He pitched in a career-high 71 games, racked up 37 saves, and managed a stingy 1.65 ERA in over 75 innings of work for Baltimore. A year later, he was just as good in the closer role for the Birds, earning his first All-Star nod in the process. In 2016, his third season coming out of the bullpen, Britton established himself fully as one of the most dominant pitchers on the planet. He had a similar workload, 67 innings across 69 innings of work, but he reached an entirely different level after already pitching incredibly well over the last couple of seasons.

In 2016, the 0.54 ERA he posted still stands as the lowest figure by a pitcher in MLB history among all to ever throw at least 50 innings in one season. That is no small feat, and it earned him another All-Star selection, as well as a fourth-place finish in the Cy Young voting (in a weaker year for candidates, he may have had a legitimate case for the award). Britton was perfect in save opportunities, closing down all 47 chances that Buck Showalter gave him. It would take some squinting, but there is an avenue where you could call that season one of the great pitching performances in baseball history.

It’s just a shame that Showalter’s outdated thoughts on closer usage meant that Britton inexplicably didn’t throw a single pitch during Baltimore’s Wild Card Game loss to the Blue Jays. Held out for a save opportunity that never came, he could only watch as Edwin Encarnación took Ubaldo Jiménez deep to walk it off in the 11th.

Britton missed some time in 2017, and was not quite at the same level in his 39.1 innings, though he was still very solid. The following season was mostly the same for Britton with Baltimore in the first half, and he was eventually sent to the Yankees in a rental trade that saw New York deal three prospects but none of particular note. He worked 25 games with the Yankees that season, maintaining a sub-3 ERA in 25 innings, a nice note to hit free agency on.

It was an offseason that carried a lot of hope and potential for plenty of clubs, with the likes of Harper, Machado, and Patrick Corbin headlining the free agent class. They were all players that could have made good fits with the Yankees, though they clearly went a different direction. Instead of any of the top-shelf names, the Yankees re-signed J.A. Happ, made a savvy move in picking up DJ LeMahieu, and in January of 2019, re-upped the services of Zack Britton.

It was a three-year deal, with Britton making $13 million per season, a lot of money for a reliever, surely, but nothing franchise-altering. In his first full season with the club, Britton did his part in making it look like a great deal. The lefty pitched over 60 innings, boasting a 1.91 ERA in a high-leverage role in what was one of his best seasons in terms of results. He even did his part in the postseason that year, when the Yankees came to within a game of the World Series. He allowed just one run on two hits across eight innings of work that October.

Although that was his age-31 season, Britton was still in the midst of his prime, and showed minimal signs of slowing down on the mound. Unfortunately for him and the Yankees, however, that year would be his last real chance at a full season of work.

Britton was even better for the shortened 2020 season, but obvious circumstances limited him to just 19 innings of work, albeit very good ones. It was the next season, unfortunately, that his career began to hit the wall. The injury bug had come to bite the Yankees left-hander, as he missed much of that season with injuries in his throwing elbow and his hamstring. His abbreviated work was not up to standards that year either, as he pitched to the tune of an ERA and FIP well north of five, and wrapped up the season with salt in the wound, as he needed Tommy John surgery in September of that year.

A club option was kicked in following the 2020 season, meaning that Britton would remain with the Yankees through 2022, despite the injury trouble. More than a year after his initial shelving, Britton returned for the Yankees in September of ‘22. After three abysmal appearances on the mound, he left a late-season game against his old team, the Orioles, with more elbow discomfort. Surely disappointed in the turn his baseball life had taken, that would be the final action of Britton’s career in the major leagues. He sat out 2023 and then officially retired that November.

Britton’s contract is a difficult one to assess on the whole. Relief pitcher contracts can get funky in general, and he was actually very good for two of the planned three years of their agreement. Despite that, it feels as though his tenure is surrounded by so much disappointment. His career unfortunately ended with a bit of a whimper, and his signing came at a time when fans likely expected a lot more aggression out of the club in terms of spending.

However fair all of that may be, it still feels reasonable to recognize how good of a pitcher Britton was. From 2014-20, Britton’s 1.84 ERA was a distant best in baseball, and the Yankees were able to enjoy two-and-a-half years of that dominant stretch. It may have been an underwhelming deal in the bigger picture, but it’s also hard to deny the value of the signing at the time, and what Britton provided at his best for the Yankees.


See more of the “50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings in 50 Years” series here.

Have the Royals done enough to win the division?

The Kansas City Royals were active in making moves toward the beginning of the offseason. They acquired some key pieces via trades. Nick Mears, Isaac Collins, Matt Strahm. They also signed Lane Thomas.

Now, comparatively speaking, the rest of the division did not do a whole lot. The Twins and White Sox are tanking and not trying to do anything ambitious this season. The Guardians are pretty much running it back with who they had last season. Jose Ramirez and friends, some would say.

The only real contender that has also made some moves is the Tigers. They got Tarik Skubal back after a historic arbitration case. They signed Framber Valdez to a huge three-year contract, and they signed former ace Justin Verlander.

So, the Tigers are trying to somewhat copy the Royals’ strategy and win games with amazing pitching. Skubal and Valdez is one heck of a 1-2 punch. Their offense might be a little better than the Royals right now, too.

PECOTA seems to like the Royals, for what that’s worth. But that was before Detroit made their big moves.

But what do you think? Have the Royals done enough this offseason to win the division? Is there something else you are hoping or wanting them to do?

2026 Mountain West Baseball Preseason Top-10 Players

(Credit: The Mountain West Conference)

As we close out our preseason baseball content, we’ve compiled a list of the top-10 players entering the 2026 season. The season officially starts this weekend, so let’s get right into it so we can enjoy some baseball!

1. Sean Yamaguchi, 3B, Nevada

Yamaguchi’s freshman campaign in 2025 was one of the most impressive debut seasons in the conference. He hit .324 with 13 home runs, 13 doubles, and 50 RBIs, tying a Mountain West freshman home run record while immediately establishing himself as a middle-of-the-order force.

Beyond the bat, Yamaguchi showed advanced defensive instincts at third base, handling the hot corner with confidence well beyond his age. Entering his sophomore season, he has star upside written all over him and could very easily push him to the top even more.

2. Carson Lane, RHP, UNLV

Lane enters 2026 as the Mountain West’s premier arm after a workhorse 2025 season for UNLV. The right-hander finished 6–4 with a 4.23 ERA, logging 78.2 innings and striking out 85 batters, consistently pitching deep into games in a Rebels rotation that leaned heavily on his durability.

Lane’s ability to hold velocity, limit damage, and compete through traffic elevated his value beyond raw numbers. With another offseason of development and a clear role as UNLV’s Friday-night starter, Lane enters 2026 as the conference’s most trusted ace and a legitimate Pitcher of the Year frontrunner.

3. Khalil Walker, OF, New Mexico

Walker was one of the most dangerous offensive players in the conference during 2025, finishing the season just under .400 at the plate while catalyzing New Mexico’s nation-leading offense. His ability to square up pitches consistently and reach base at an elite rate made him a constant problem for opposing pitchers.

Add in his speed and defensive range in the outfield, and Walker’s all-around game puts him firmly among the Mountain West’s elite. If New Mexico stays in the conference title picture again, Walker will be a major reason why.

4. Jayce Dobie, UTL, Nevada

Dobie’s versatility and production make him one of the most valuable players in the Mountain West entering 2026. At the plate in 2025, he hit .339 with 15 doubles, seven home runs and 36 RBIs, providing consistent offense regardless of where he was slotted in the lineup.

What separates Dobie from others is his two-way ability. He also contributed on the mound, finishing 2–2 with 37 strikeouts in 43 innings, giving Nevada the flexibility few teams can match. His senior season projects as another high-impact year on both sides of the ball.

5. Akili Carris, 3B, New Mexico

Carris emerged as one of the most impactful bats in the Mountain West during New Mexico’s explosive 2025 season, carving out a key role in one of the nation’s most productive offenses. The infielder finished the year hitting .341, piling up 13 doubles, consistent extra-base damage, and finishing near the top of the Lobos’ lineup in both runs scored and on-base percentage. His ability to consistently barrel the baseball made him a constant threat in conference play.

What elevates Carris into the top tier entering 2026 is how well his skill set fits New Mexico’s offensive identity. He combines plate discipline with gap power, rarely giving away at-bats, and forces pitchers to work deep counts. Defensively, he brings athleticism and range to the infield, rounding out a complete profile. With another year of experience and a lineup built to score in bunches, Carris enters 2026 as one of the most dangerous and reliable position players in the Mountain West.

6. Griffen Sotomayor, 1B, Fresno State

Sotomayor emerged as a cornerstone of Fresno State’s offense in 2025, batting .330 with 16 doubles, seven home runs and 41 RBIs while posting a slugging percentage north of .500. His ability to drive the baseball to all fields made him a true middle-order threat for the Bulldogs.

As a senior, Sotomayor enters 2026 as one of the conference’s top run producers and a stabilizing presence at first base. His power-plus-contact profile gives Fresno State one of the safest offensive bets in the league.

7. Max Hartman, OF, Washington State

Hartman quietly put together one of the most efficient offensive seasons in the Mountain West in 2025, hitting approximately .360 with a .430+ on-base percentage while consistently producing extra-base hits. His disciplined approach allowed him to impact games without forcing the issue.

Defensively sound and offensively consistent, Hartman gives Washington State a veteran bat capable of anchoring a lineup. Entering his senior season, he profiles as one of the conference’s most reliable outfielders.

8. Alex Fernandes, OF, San Jose State

Fernandes was a model of consistency in 2025, finishing the season hitting .361 with a .447 on-base percentage while serving as one of San Jose State’s most dependable offensive options. His ability to grind at-bats and drive the gaps made him a key piece of the Spartans’ lineup.

Entering 2026, Fernandes brings senior leadership, defensive stability, and a proven bat to a San Jose State team with conference aspirations. He may not be flashy, but his production speaks loudly.

9. Tyler Albanese, RHP, San Jose State

Albanese took a major step forward in 2025, emerging as one of the most reliable arms in the Mountain West. The right-hander finished the season 4–3 with a 2.97 ERA across 39.1 innings, consistently limiting damage and giving San Jose State quality outings in both starting and high-leverage relief roles. His ability to throw strikes and change speeds allowed him to neutralize some of the league’s better offenses. He’s a big, physical RHP with a low-mid 90s heater with two quality breakers. 

What makes Albanese especially valuable entering 2026 is his versatility. He proved capable of handling multiple roles, whether bridging innings out of the bullpen or stepping into bigger spots when needed. With another year of development and a clear role in the Spartans’ pitching plans, Albanese enters the season as one of the conference’s most dependable arms and a key piece for a San Jose State team with postseason aspirations.

10. Karsen Waslefsky, SS, New Mexico

Waslefsky was a key part of the Lobos’ offense that hit .337 last year, as he batted .298 on the season with an .828 OPS, scoring 32 runs on 42 hits while driving in 31. He finished the season with six doubles, one triple and five homers.

Defensively, his fielding percentage was at .959 with 47 putouts and 116 assists on 170 opportunities with just seven errors. As a senior shortstop, his glove and experienced bat will be integral to a Lobo squad hoping to build on its prolific run production.

Honorable mentions: Billy Ham (DH, Nevada), Junhyuk Kwon (INF, Nevada), Jake McCoy (OF, San Jose State), Alessandro Castro( P, Nevada), Tyler Patrick (P, Fresno State)

What’s good and bad about spring training?

It has to be said, the bonus months of baseball in Arizona are definitely a plus. When the rest of the country is still digging itself out of snow-drifts, the state becomes a mecca for all the MLB teams in the Western half of the country. It’s like having an All-Star Game in your backyard. Then, at the end of the year, we get the Arizona Fall League, a showcase for some of the best prospects from all thirty teams. But spring training is not all sunshine and roses…

What do you enjoy most and least about spring training?

I think it’s a delight when it starts, simply because we’ve been starved of baseball for months. Simply seeing the players wandering about, stretching and taking ground balls is a joy, especially if you’ve been spending your time not giving a damn about the NFL, NBA or… whatever that other league is. But speaking personally, there’s a point – well before the end of the Cactus League schedule – where I’ve had enough of games where even the starting position players only go five innings, and by the end, your score-card resembles the first draft of Peter Jackson’s next trilogy. Then there’s the potential for meaningless baseball leading to very meaningful injury…

So, whether you live in Arizona or not, tell us what you feel about spring training!

Twins Acquire LHP Anthony Banda from Dodgers

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 03: Anthony Banda of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates on a bus during the Dodgers 2025 World Series Championship parade on November 03, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Twins have acquired left-handed reliever Anthony Banda from the Dodgers in exchange for international bonus pool space. Banda was designated for assignment by the Dodgers earlier this week, essentially meaning the Twins gave the Dodgers a bit of cash to jump the waiver line. RHP Jackson Kowar, picked up off the waiver wire last week, was DFA’d to make room on the 40-man roster. The minor trade was reported by Bobby Nightengale of the Star Tribune.

Over the past two seasons in LA, Banda has a 3.14 ERA/4.52 FIP with 111 strikeouts in 114.2 innings. The FIP is quite a bit higher due to his walk rate, which was one of the worst in MLB among relievers last season. Like most lefties, he’s significantly better against left-handed batters and will likely be deployed as more of a true lefty-specialist. Fellow left-hander Kody Funderburk actually struggles more against lefties, making him and Banda a good pair in the middle innings for the Twins.

Banda will make a very modest $1.625M in 2026 and is controllable next season as well via arbitration. I would expect the Twins to still be pretty active on the waiver and trade market over the next two months as they look to beef up their bullpen. They have three solid left-handed options now with Banda, Funderburk, and Taylor Rogers, but could still use a more established right-handed reliever to go with Cole Sands and Justin Topa.

What are your thoughts on Banda? Can the Twins help get his walk rate under control and make him a more effective reliever?

Better Know Your Blue Jays 40-man: Chase Lee

PITTSBURGH, PA - JULY 21: Chase Lee #53 of the Detroit Tigers delivers a pitch during an MLB game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on July 21, 2025 at PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Chase Lee is a 27-year-old, side-arm, right-handed reliever we picked up in trade from the Tigers in December. The Tigers needed a spot on the 40-man roster. And I had totally forgotten he was on the 40-man. I think this is the first one I totally forgot about. I’m not sure if this is true, but I’ve always felt that side-arm pitchers can continue to be effective into their late-30s.

The Jays sent Johan Simon to the Tigers, a 24-year-old left-handed pitcher who spent most of 2025 with Vancouver. He throws a 94 MPH fastball and gets a lot of ground balls. He had a 3.42 ERA across three levels last year. Not a big prospect but could make it as a lefty reliever.

Lee has two option years left, which gives him more value to the Jays. He pitched in 32 games as a reliever for the Tigers, with a 4.10 ERA, 9 walks, 36 strikeouts in 37.1 innings with 7 home runs against. Batters hit .239/.291/.478 against him. Statcast says he averaged 89.1 on his fastball.

He throws a sinker, sweeper, 4-seem and an occasion change up.

He also had 32 innings in Toledo with a 6.75 ERA in 32 innings, with 38 strikeouts, 10 walks and 4 home runs.

FanGraphs had Lee at #29 on their top 39 Tigers’ prospect list (39 seems a strange number). They said:

Lee, who came to Detroit from Texas in the Andrew Chafin deal, is a pretty standard sinker/slider sidearmer who has posted strikeout rates up around 30% his entire minor league career while maintaining a below-average walk rate. He doesn’t have precise fastball control — he lives in the zone, but not always on the edge of it — and that might be a problem against big leaguers when you’re only sitting 88. But both Lee’s sinker and slider live in the bottom of the zone consistently enough to consider him a high-probability up/down look reliever.

Bless You Boys had him #37 on their list:

Lee is a sidearm reliever who rarely tops 91 mph, but his mix of fastball types and sweeper-slider combination makes him a tricky at-bat, especially for right-handed hitters. The Rangers certainly thought so when they spent the second pick of the sixth round of the 2021 draft on the reliever out of Alabama. He racked up a ton of strikeouts in their farm system and limited home runs, but trouble with walks kept him from breaking through at the major league level.

Against right-handers, Lee will also use a heavy volume of sweepers. Against lefties he’ll mix his slider in almost as much as the sweeper. The sweeper is typically around 80-81 mph, with a lot of horizontal movement out of that low, side arm slot. Right-handers are consistently seeing the sweeper start in their hot zones, beginning their swing, and then flailing as the pitch bends all the way across the strike zone to be buried down and away. He’s racked up a solid but unspectacular whiff rate of 28.3 percent with it at the Triple-A level going back to the beginning of the 2024 season. The slider has more depth and is typically 84 mph. He uses it a little more when he needs to throw something that’s a change of pace for a strike.

As Lee is likely to be used as right-handed hitter specialist for the most part at the major league level, it’s the sinker-sweeper combination that you’re likely to see most from him. However, the slider and fourseamer give him extra weapons to work with against lefties, and he’s handled them pretty well too. He’s just more home run prone against southpaws and not the guy you want facing Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman in an outing, as an extreme example.

For the Jays, I think a lot of his value is the arm angle and the options. You can see the arm angle here:

Steamer thinks he’ll pitch 30 games, 30 innings, with a 3.92 ERA, 29 Ks, and 10 walks.

Brewers, William Contreras avoid arbitration hearing

MILWAUKEE, WI - OCTOBER 11: William Contreras #24 of the Milwaukee Brewers celebrates at home plate after hitting a solo home run in the first inning during Game Five of the National League Division Series presented by Booking.com between the Chicago Cubs and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Saturday, October 11, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

People who closely follow the Brewers have been wondering: when is William Contreras’ arbitration hearing? In January, the two sides were separated by $1.35 million and did not come to an agreement. We’ve been waiting for news since then, especially in the last two weeks, as the remaining arbitration cases have been heard.

Well, Contreras and the Brewers did not require a hearing, after all. They’ve agreed to a one-year deal with a club option for 2027. While terms haven’t yet been disclosed, that’s similar to the 1+1 deal he signed before the 2025 season. Contreras made $6.1 million in 2025, but the Brewers declined their 2026 club option (reportedly worth $12 million), instead preferring to negotiate his arbitration salary again. That move saved them a few million dollars, as Contreras filed at $9.9 million and the Brewers countered at $8.55 million.

Whether the Brewers decline Contreras’ option after this season or choose to pick it up, they’ll still have his rights through the 2027 season.

We’ll update this article when we hear the terms of Contreras’s contract. His was the last outstanding case, and all Brewers currently on the team are now signed.

Update: Jon Heyman has the terms:

So, depending if Contreras doesn’t reach any of those mysterious Awards Bonuses, the Brewers will have saved $2.6 million by declining the club option for 2026.

Dodgers trade Anthony Banda to Twins for international bonus pool space

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 31: Anthony Banda of the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on January 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by John McCoy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers found a new home for Anthony Banda, trading the veteran left-handed reliever to the Minnesota Twins on Thursday for international bonus pool space, the teams announced.

The amount of bonus pool space traded is reportedly $500,000, per Francys Romero. By rule, teams can trade space in increments of $250,000 unless trading the entirety of its remaining bonus pool space.

Banda was designated for assignment on Friday when the Dodgers claimed catcher Ben Rortvedt off waivers, a product of a crowded bullpen depth chart that also includes fellow left-handers Alex Vesia, Tanner Scott, Jack Dreyer, and possibly Justin Wrobleski.

Acquired in a minor league trade from the Guardians in the 2024 season, Banda put up a 3.14 ERA and 3.46 xERA with 111 strikeouts and 40 unintentional walks in 114 2/3 innings. The southpaw held left-handed batters to hit just .182/.259/.261 with a 26.1-percent strikeout rate.

Banda was a reliable workhorse in his two years in the Dodgers bullpen. He didn’t join the team in 2024 until May 19, but from then through the end of 2025 Banda led the Dodgers by appearing in 119 games, four more than Alex Vesia and tied for 15th-most in baseball during that time. Banda also appeared in 17 of the Dodgers’ 33 postseason games over the last two years.

“The way I look at it is, whoever is in the bullpen, whoever’s name is called, they’re going to be ready to take on whatever they need to do. That’s kind of the environment they’ve created down there,” Banda said late in 2024. “I focus on feeling good every single day, being ready, and if my number is called, then just go out and do my job and be ready for the next day.”

Banda had the best two seasons of his career in Los Angeles. Now entering his 15th professional season, the 32-year-old is onto his 12th major league organization with the Twins.

With four years, 135 days of major league service time, Banda was eligible for salary arbitration for a second time this offseason. He avoided a hearing in January with a one-year deal worth $1.625 million.

Dodgers re-sign Kiké Hernández on $4.5 million contract

Men and children on a double-decker bus during a parade with blue and white confetti falling.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by JILL CONNELLY/EPA/Shutterstock Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kike Hernandez and shortstop Miguel Rojas celebrates during the Los Angeles Dodgers World Series championship parade in Los Angeles, California, USA, 03 November 2025. The Dodgers rallied in game 7 to win their second consecutive World Series championship.

All offseason, it’d been a fait accompli that Kiké Hernández would re-sign with the Dodgers.

On Thursday, it was Hernández himself who broke the news that the reunion was official.

In an Instagram post, Hernández announced he was re-signing with the club where he has spent most of his career and won three World Series titles, posting a picture of himself at last year’s Dodgers’ World Series parade with the caption: “What else did you expect?!!! 3 in a row has a nice ring to it! #WeBack.”

Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kike Hernandez and shortstop Miguel Rojas celebrates during the Los Angeles Dodgers World Series championship parade in Los Angeles, California, USA. JILL CONNELLY/EPA/Shutterstock

According to a source, the deal will be for one year and $4.5 million.

Hernández’s return to Los Angeles had been expected for most of this winter –– in which the 34-year-old entered free agency, and ultimately signed with the Dodgers, for a third-consecutive offseason.

A longtime fan favorite and standout postseason performer, the only reason Hernández wasn’t officially re-signed sooner was because of roster logistics.

The utilityman underwent elbow surgery this offseason that will likely sideline him for the first few months of the campaign. Because of that, the Dodgers seemingly waited to bring him back until spring training opened this week, when they could place him on the 60-day injured list and preserve a 40-man roster spot.

Hernández is coming off a down regular season in 2025, having hit just .203 (albeit with 10 home runs) in 92 games while dealing with his lingering elbow issue. 

In October, however, he once again played a crucial role, replacing Michael Conforto as the Dodgers’ primary left fielder and batting .250 with seven RBIs in 17 postseason games. 

Newcomers add stuff, fearlessness to Texas pitching staff

AUSTIN, TEXAS - JANUARY 7: Brett Crossland #88 of the Texas Longhorns poses for a portrait on Texas baseball media day on January 7, 2026 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by The University of Texas Athletics/University Images via Getty Images)

From doing more with less to doing more with more.

Texas Longhorns head coach Jim Schlossnagle and Max Weiner are beginning to build the pitching staff on the Forty Acres in their desired image, buoyed by pitcher-heavy 2025 recruiting class that ranked No. 1 nationally by Baseball America and several important additions from the NCAA transfer portal.

“All of our freshmen are disgusting. They’re big, a lot of stuff behind them. We’ve got a lot of pitches to throw. I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of freshmen have important roles this year,” Texas sophomore left-hander Dylan Volantis said last month.

One of the biggest additions, literally and figuratively, is 6’5, 255-pound Brett Crossland out of Phoenix (Ariz.) Corona Del Sol. Because Crossland was ranked as a top-100 prospect by ESPN heading into the 2025 MLB Draft, it was a major coup to get the hard-throwing right-hander to the Forty Acres.

With a fastball that typically sits at 94 miles per hour but can reach 97, Crossland also features three secondary pitches with his curveball serving as his most valuable breaking ball. The key for Weiner is to ensure that Crossland that repeat his delivery consistent to avoid breakdowns in command.

“Stuff’s nasty, confident guy. Totally see him being in one of the biggest roles,” Volantis said of Crossland.

Schlossnagle also noted Crossland’s confidence, as well as his improvement under Weiner.

Crossland isn’t even the biggest pitcher signed by the Longhorns in the 2025 class — that’s North Carolina product Sam Cozart, a 6’6, 260-pounder whose full beard belies his youth. Cozart hails from a family of talented athletes, as his parents met at UCF where his father played baseball and his mother played volleyball, and both older brothers played college baseball with his older brother Jacob now in the Cleveland Guardians organization.

Ranked as the No. 47 player nationally by Perfect Game, Cozart was formerly committed to Mississippi State as well as to Schlossnagle when he was at Texas A&M. Considered an advanced strike thrower with a fastball up to 96 mph, Cozart has three other pitches he can throw strikes, including a cutter, changeup, and curveball.

Pitching for the Alumni team two weeks ago, Cozart threw four hitless innings, striking out five and allowing just three baserunners with his fastball typically sitting between 93 and 94 mph.

“Sam Cozart is a strike thrower, super serious,” Schlossnagle said, noting Cozart’s fearlessness in another interview.

Put 6’5, 240-pound right-hander Michael Winter into the same category of power arms. A late-rising prospect out of Kansas who was committed to Dartmouth before seeing his stock explode during the spring, Winter ranked as the No. 274 player overall and the No. 77 right-handed pitcher by Perfect Game.

Winter features a fastball that reaches up to 95 miles per hour with arm-side run and has a natural ability to shape a four-pitch mix that includes the type of cutter that Weiner likes to teach his proteges. Winter uses a slider with a high spin rate to finish at bats with strikeouts.

Two other freshman pitchers have joined the three big right-handers in separating themselves from the rest of the class — right-hander Brody Walls and left-hander Jack McKernan, who combined with Crossland to pitch six innings of one-run baseball in the Alumni game.

Walls is smaller physically at 6’0, 200 pounds, but he’s on the Forty Acres because he gets plenty of juice out of that frame, working 90 to 96 mph with his fastball, which is complemented by a power slider with good spin metrics. In assessing the potential durability of Walls, it’s a positive that his delivery is not just repeatable, but also smooth and low-effort.

At 5’11, 205 pounds, McKernan has a similar build from the left side, and similar juice with a fastball from 92 to 94 mph with arm-side life. McKernan also features a sweeping slider and a changeup he can throw for strikes in any count.

Late in the preseason, right-hander Cooper Rummel came on strong before suffering a setback with a sprained ankle. The 6’2, 235-pounder from Dripping Springs is another elite prospect ranked No. 82 nationally by Perfect Game thanks to a heavy fastball with carry up to 96 mph, a sweeping slider, and a curveball with adequate depth.

Last month, right-hander Kaleb Rogers had a standout performance that drew praise from Schlossnagle. The 5’11, 200-pounder from San Antonio Reagan ranked No. 169 in the 2025 class by Perfect Game.

Through the transfer portal, Texas lost former Mississippi State left-hander Luke Dotson to the 2025 MLB Draft, but kept physical Western Kentucky transfer left-hander Cal Higgins, who profiles as a back-end bullpen piece.

In 2025, the Nebraska product was working his fastball up to 96 miles per hour, earning second-team All-Conference USA recognition for recording a 1.87 ERA with a 3-2 record and six saves. Opponents only hit .190 against Higgins as he struck out 52 batters in 43.1 innings. In addition to the power arm from the left side, Higgins dominated the zone in 2025, allowing only 11 walks and 28 hits for a WHIP of 0.90.

The other portal piece for Weiner’s staff is Wake Forest transfer Haiden Leffew, another left-handed pitcher who made a team-leading 27 appearances for the Demon Deacons in 2025, posting 4-1 mark with a 4.46 ERA and four saves while totaling 18 walks and 59 strikeouts across 34.1 innings.

The 6’1, 235-pounder fits the mold of the additions to the staff because his fastball reached 97 miles per hour as a sophomore in Winston-Salem, though it more typically sat around 93 to 94 miles per hour, earning a ranking as the No. 14 player in the portal by 64 Analytics.

“At the end of the day, strength wins,” Schlossnagle said. “You can be tall or short, but you can’t be weak and short, especially on the mound. When I think of the University of Texas, they should have big, athletic, physical pitchers.”

Now they do.

‘Dynamic’ Blaine Brown poised for big season with Tennessee

Jun 24, 2024; Omaha, NE, USA; A Tennessee Volunteers hat and glove lay on the field after defeating the Texas A&M Aggies in the championship at Charles Schwab Field Omaha. Mandatory Credit: Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

One of Tennessee’s biggest pick-ups in the transfer portal over the offseason was Blaine Brown, a 6-5 lefty two-way player. Brown is coming off of a freshman All-American season at Rice — a season that opened the door for him to transfer to a school like Tennessee, but also a season that put him on the MLB’s radar.

Brown currently ranks as a top five overall prospect for the 2027 MLB Draft, according to Over-Slot Baseball. The 19-year-old hit .292 last season at Rice, hitting ten home runs and driving in 38 runs. Oh, and he can touch upper-90s on the mound on top of all that.

“He’s just such a dynamic talent,” Josh Elander said this week of Brown. “I mean, you could argue he had the best weekend swinging the bat. I mean, the guy hits the ball regularly over 110 miles per hour. And then, you know, one thing we talked to him about is — that was a big part of his recruitment process — what does the schedule look like? And how am I in a position to have success on both sides of the ball?”

Brown’s bat figures to be an everyday presence in Tennessee’s 2026 lineup, but figuring out his plan on the mound is something Elander is going to have to work through, perhaps a bit on the fly.

“We spent a ton of time kind of outlining different options,” Elander said. “Because, again, do you start? Do you come out of the pen? Does he go from left field and then come in? So what we went with yesterday was a pretty good little trial, we went with the pitcher-DH. So he opened up the game and he was 93-95 (mph) with over seven foot of extension, really kind of cutting it loose.

“Then that gives him the freedom to then kind of just go to DH, so take focus, go get us some outs. So there’s some opener capabilities there. Full confidence in him being able to start. But then also, I like the idea of, hey, maybe he comes in out of left field at one point.”

Brown appeared in seven games for Rice last season, making four starts. Those outings didn’t go well though, with Brown giving up ten earned runs in just 4.1 innings pitched. He walked 12 batters in that span, highlighting some potential control issues. Scouts think his bat will eventually win out as he looks ahead to his professional career, but he will give Tennessee another option on the mound this spring.

“There’s a lot of options we can do there, but a lot of that with Blaine will just be communicating with him on how he’s feeling,” Elander said. “It’s just dynamic talent on both sides of the ball.”

Brown’s athletic pedigree is certainly there. His father, Chris Brown, was a third-round pick of the Tennessee Titans, where he went on to spend several seasons. Brown did get some action last year against the Volunteers, smacking a double in an early-season game in Houston.

He now joins a loaded Tennessee lineup ready to usher in a new era in Knoxville. Based on the early buzz Brown has generated so far? You’ll be hearing a lot more about him in the coming weeks.

Which Guardians’ reunion most warms your heart?

Sep 27, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians catcher Austin Hedges (27) celebrates after the Guardians beat the Texas Rangers to secure a playoff berth at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

The Guardians have brought back some familiar faces for 2026 – which brings the most joy to you as a fan to imagine seeing in a Guardians’ uniform this season?

Austin Hedges – the heart of the Guardians’ clubhouse and an elite defender (let’s not talk about his bat)?

Pedro Avila – the lovable Teddy Bear and ravenous innings eater?

Ben Lively – fierce mound competitor and innings-eating fifth starter?

Shawn Armstrong – former useful organization arm turned effective high leverage reliever in the meantime?

Still time to add Yandy Diaz to this list, Guards!

Kiké Hernández says he’s back with Dodgers

Dodgers player Kike Hernandez fires up crowd during the 2025 World Series championship celebration at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. | JOE LUMAYA/SPECIAL TO THE STAR / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

It’s time for the annual tradition of fan favorite and postseason stalwart Kiké Hernández returning to the Dodgers. The veteran utility player says he’s back in Los Angeles for a fifth time, posting on Instagram on Thursday that he’s returning to the Dodgers for 2026.

From Hernández on Instagram: “What else did you expect?!!! 3 in a row has a nice ring to it! #WeBack”

Hernández’s deal with the Dodgers is for $4.5 million, per Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic and Jack Harris of The California Post.

The Dodgers, who have a full 40-man roster, haven’t yet announced a new deal for Hernández. They can start using the 60-day injured list on the date pitchers and catchers officially report to camp to open up a roster spot. That’s no later than Friday, when the Dodgers will hold their first official workout at Camelback Ranch.

Hernández had an injury-plagued 2025 regular season, sidelined for seven weeks with left elbow inflammation in July and August. He hit .203/.255/.366 with 10 home run in 92 games, and per usual started at five different positions.

He got healthy by October and started all 17 postseason games, but even that period was affected by the injury. Through the first eight games of the postseason, Hernández was hitting .379/.455/.517 with four doubles. But after an ill-advised dive in left field in Game 3 of the NLCS, in which he landed on his left elbow, Hernández had just five hits in 35 at-bats (.143/.139/.229).

In November, Hernández had surgery on his left elbow that will prevent him from playing for Puerto Rico in the World Baseball Classic in March, and could affect his readiness at the beginning of the regular season.

During Dodgers Fest on January 31 at Dodger Stadium, Miguel Rojas said he expected Hernández to return to Los Angeles.

“I’m in constant communication with Kiké. I feel like, all my mind, I have no doubt that he’s gonna be back,” Rojas said. “It has something to do with his injury and the stuff that he’s going through right now, he’s not going to be ready until maybe a couple of months into the season. I’m crossing my fingers and keeping the hope that we’re going to have Kiké, because we all know how important he is for the clubhouse, the organization, for the fans, for the city of LA. He deserves to be with us, too.”

During the World Series, Hernández broke Justin Turner’s record for most postseason games played in Dodgers history, now at 92 games for Hernández.

“This is not just any franchise, man. This is the LA Dodgers. They’ve been around for a long time, and they have a lot of history,” Hernández said in October. “And for a guy like me from Puerto Rico, kind of swam against the current my entire life, to be sitting in this position is pretty special.”

The Dodgers acquired Hernández from the Marlins at the 2014 winter meetings in the Dee Strange-Gordon trade, then acquired him from the Red Sox at the 2023 trade deadline. This is now the third straight offseason Hernández has returned to the Dodgers in free agency.

Including 2026, Hernández will have played for the Dodgers in 10 of his 13 major league seasons.

Three Subtle Phillies Predictions

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - SEPTEMBER 21: Bryce Harper #3 of the Philadelphia Phillies bats during the fifth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on September 21, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Diamondbacks defeated the Phillies 9-2. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Spring training is the time to hear about who is in the best shape of their life, which teams might be cursed with injuries (not a great start for the Braves), and potential adjustments players make.

While the narrative is that the Phillies are “running it back” and that everything will remain static year to year, it is important to point out that players and teams make adjustments. In 2025, Trea Turner became a much better defensive shortstop, Brandon Marsh cut his strikeout rate by more than six percent, and Jesús Luzardo started throwing a sweeper.

Here is an attempt to predict what adjustments we see from Phillies players in 2026 and why they’re making them.

Bryce Harper’s First Pitch Swing% drops to 40%

Since his second MVP season in 2021, Bryce Harper has become more and more aggressive early in counts because of how pitchers were pitching him. Harper’s best chance at getting a fastball came early in counts and he was seeing less and less of them as time went on.

In 2021, Harper saw four-seam fastballs 36.2% of the time, that number dropped to 32.6 the following season as pitchers made adjustments.

So he made his counter adjustments by being more aggressive early in counts. After swinging at the first pitch 40.2% of the time in 2021, here are his first pitch swing rates the next four seasons:

2022: 50.4%

2023: 47.5%

2024: 47.4%

2025: 54.1%

This all led to more chase outside of the strike zone and fewer fastballs over time. Harper only saw four-seam fastballs 28.4% of the time in 2025, the lowest since Baseballsavant has tracked back in 2017. It was probably the first time in Harper’s professional career he saw four-seam fastballs less than 30% of the time.

The goal for 2026 is to get pitchers to throw more of them. Maybe moving Harper to the two-hole or Schwarber down to the cleanup position might help but if Harper is keeping a similar approach, it might not make much of a difference.

Instead, Harper will course-correct all the way back and become way more patient at the plate early in counts as pitchers have adjusted. With a first-pitch swing rate of roughly 40%, he will also have his lowest chase rate since 2021, and get into more favorable counts. Eventually, pitchers will have to come in the zone, throw him slightly more fastballs, and Bryce Harper will magically put him elite numbers again because there is nothing to show he’s physically declining as a player.

Brad Keller’s go-to secondary pitch will not be his slider

Since Brad Keller entered the majors in 2018, his primary non-fastball pitch was his hard-slider but that will change in 2026 under the Phillies major league pitching department. Keller has already talked about some of the new ideas the Phillies might be bringing to the table with his arsenal.

“He kinda brought up some ideas of things that we feel like would be fun things to try,” Keller said. “Like, throwing sweepers to lefties, changeups to righties, things like that that’s kind of a little unorthodox.

Keller’s 2025 changed the entire trajectory of his career. He went from a starter that sat roughly 93-95 and mostly three pitches to a hard throwing reliever with 4 or 5 pitches he can use to anyone.

I wrote about some of the tweaks the Phillies could make but there was nothing definitive about how he will attack hitters in 2026.

What I am predicting is that he will throw more sweepers to right handed hitters and more changeups to lefties and what pitch will he throw less of in 2026? His traditional slider.

For the first time in Brad Keller’s major league career, and probably his entire life, his go-to secondary pitch won’t be the hard-slider.

Adolis García’s opposite-field flyball rate will be at least 25%

The Phillies signed Adolis García and hope to get his swing to stay in the strike zone more consistently in 2026. He had a chase rate of 35.8% and 31.1% of the fastballs he saw were outside of the strike zone.

The best place to start with making slight approach changes is to stay back on fastballs and use the opposite field. With Garcia’s plus raw power, going the other way could help his overall numbers if he is making more contact.

Another reason he could be using the entire field is because of physical decline he is facing as an aging player. García turns 33 in March and has carried league average bat speed the past two seasons, a decline over what it was back in 2023. It could get even worse as he ages.

Part of using the entire field could be by design to stay within the strike zone slightly more often but also could be aging-related if he is not able to catch up to velocity and spin like he used to.

García is a strange bet for the Phillies to make in general. He’s 33, has shown some signs as an aging athlete already but could be inclined for bigger issues in 2026. He is considered a power hitter but has a sub .400 slugging over the past two seasons. He is a good defensive right fielder, a massive upgrade over Nick Castellanos, but his range could slip with natural physical decline.

Justin Verlander meets the media in his introductory press conference

Detroit Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander, right, speaks next to president of baseball operations Scott Harris, center left, and general manager Jeff Greenberg, left, during his introductory press conference at the 34 Club of Joker Marchant Stadium on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026. | Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

After stepping aside on the first day of spring training so that teammate Framber Valdez could have the stage, it was Justin Verlander’s turn on Thursday. Scott Harris and Jeff Greenberg introduced him to the media on Thursday morning, and we go the first image in almost nine years of Verlander in the classic Detroit Tigers home white jersey. He then took questions from the press and there were some interesting notes, starting with the fact that the whole projected starting rotation came to the presser, as they did for Valdez on Wednesday. We love a show of rotational unity.

Verlander mentioned that as early as September of 2025, with the San Francisco Giants missing out on the postseason, his thoughts returned to Detroit. He reached out to the Tigers front office at the end of the season, but noted that he and Harris had some candid conversations where it didn’t really seem like a reunion was going to fit into the Tigers plans. The season ending injury to Reese Olson, and the fact that Verlander was still considering his options in early February, finally opened up a role and a need on the Tigers roster that their former ace could return to fill.

Nine full years since his last spring training camp in Lakeland, the facilities looked completely different as the numerous renovations and upgrades to the Tigers campus all took place after he was traded to Houston in August of 2017. Verlander noted Tarik Skubal showing him around and the oddity of finding picture of himself in his younger days around the facility and locker room. He described the last two days as “very surreal” at one point.

He talked about growing up in Detroit in front of this fanbase, and his reputation as a fairly solitary and self-obsessed player in those days, saying that he didn’t really have any regrets as he needed that intensity to become the pitcher he wanted to be and ultimately became. Verlander discussed actively working on his communication and becoming a more relaxed, open teammate available for questions and advice, saying it was something he had to work on as his career evolved. He also reminded reporters that he’d been saying he wanted to pitch until he’s 45 since he was 22 years old, and chuckled at how naive that sounds now, while discussing how he’s been able to keep it going and continue evolving.

The way he finished the 2025 season found him the healthiest he’s been in a few seasons, and sparked his continued conviction that he could still get it done. Adjustments he made during the 2025 season, and that he’d been working on since 2024, finally came together and he could feel it immediately in his stuff and in hitters reactions to certain pitches.

There was plenty more as reporters probed for his recollections of his younger eras in Detroit, and Verlander generally tried to keep the emphasis on the present and what he can do now to help the Tigers win. One question about whether his daughter is old enough to appreciate the return drew laughs when Verlander chuckled and emphasized that no, this means nothing at her age yet. He also emphasized that short of a major injury that requires surgery, he’s going to keep pitching for as long as he can, and he also recounted a point in which Brad Ausmus started teaching him to use data to improve his pitch selection and how that led him to using analytics much more in his preparation. A final note was that the famous or infamous Taco Bell superstition ended in 2017.

More than anything, just the visuals of Justin Verlander speaking to reporters while wearing the Olde English D really brought home how unexpected and yet totally familiar this all feels.