Phillies notes: Moore adds depth, Robertson retires, WBC ahead originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
Like every winter, clubs stockpile minor-league deals. As the offseason drags on and free agents remain unsigned, those opportunities tend to become more creative.
Friday night brought one of those.
The Phillies agreed to a minor-league deal with free-agent utility man Dylan Moore, according to Will Sammon of The Athletic. This contract stands apart from many of Philadelphia’s recent minor-league signings.
Per Sammon, Moore can earn up to $3.25 million through plate-appearance and active-roster bonuses.
Moore, 33, is a legitimate big leaguer with a track record across the diamond. While with Seattle in 2024, he earned Gold Glove honors for his work as a utility player.
Across his career — seven seasons with the Mariners before his release and a stint with Texas last year — Moore has played every defensive position except catcher. Most of his innings have come at second base and left field.
Offensively, Moore owns a career .693 OPS and is coming off a down season in which he slashed .201/.267/.374. Still, his value has consistently shown up against left-handed pitching.
Moore carries a career .400 slugging percentage and .727 OPS versus southpaws and has posted an OPS of .750 or higher in five of his seven seasons.
At his peak, Moore paired that platoon value with strong quality-of-contact metrics, posting barrel rates around 17 percentand hard-hit rates in the mid-40s. While those numbers have dipped in recent seasons, his approach has quietly improved.
Over the past two years, Moore has been among the league’s most disciplined hitters. For reference, in 2024 he ranked in the 99th percentile in chase rate (17.7%) and the 94th percentile in walk rate (12%).
The Phillies are well aware of that profile — and what it could still offer.
So where does he fit?
Moore will first need to make the club out of spring training. If not, a potential opt-out clause in his deal could give him the opportunity to go elsewhere. Those details remain to be seen.
If he performs well in camp, the signing creates flexibility. Edmundo Sosa has filled the utility role in recent seasons and continues to hit left-handed pitching well. In 2025, Sosa slashed .318/.362/.533 against lefties. Given his defensive reliability at second base, Sosa could also factor into a platoon with Bryson Stott, who has struggled in those matchups.
Moore’s differentiator is outfield experience. He has appeared in more than 250 career games across the corner outfield spots. Sosa, by comparison, has one career outfield start.
While it initially appeared Rob Thomson might deploy a left-field platoon of Brandon Marsh and Otto Kemp, Moore’s presence introduces competition, especially for Kemp, both in camp and potentially on the roster.
D-Rob officially hangs up the spikes
David Robertson’s relationship with Philadelphia spanned three separate stints. On Friday, the 40-year-old made it official, announcing his retirement.
Robertson pitched 17 seasons in the Majors with the Yankees, White Sox, Rays, Cubs, Mets, Marlins, Rangers and Phillies. Across 881 career appearances, he posted a 2.93 ERA.
With Philadelphia — in parts of 2019, 2022 and 2024 — Robertson logged a 3.59 ERA. His most memorable stretch came during the Phillies’ 2022 National League championship run, when he made eight postseason appearances, including four scoreless outings in the World Series, earning the save in Game 1 in Houston.
The Phillies signed Robertson for a third time at the end of last July. He made 20 appearances before closing out his career.
Pitchers, catchers — and the WBC
February has arrived, and baseball is close. Phillies pitchers and catchers report to Clearwater on Feb. 11. Five days later, position players join for the first full-squad workout. Spring Training games begin Feb. 16 in Dunedin against the Blue Jays.
Philadelphia will play 32 Grapefruit League games, including two Spring Breakout contests and one split-squad game day.
When camp opens — and into mid-March — nine Phillies will also be away participating in the World Baseball Classic:
- Brad Keller — USA
- Bryce Harper — USA
- Kyle Schwarber — USA
- Cristopher Sánchez — Dominican Republic
- Johan Rojas — Dominican Republic
- Aaron Nola — Italy
- Edmundo Sosa — Panama
- Taijuan Walker — Mexico
- Alan Rangel — Mexico
Seven of those players project as Opening Day roster locks. While representing one’s country is an honor, the injury risk remains real. A recent piece in The Athletic outlined how teams attempt to protect against that risk.
Insurance has become a bigger factor in the WBC since José Altuve and Edwin Díaz were hurt in 2023. Team Puerto Rico officials said this weekend eight to 10 players were initially denied coverage, including Francisco Lindor, as insurers have tightened standards and costs have risen heading into this spring.
The priority is protecting the clubs. The WBC policy is designed to reimburse a team for a player’s guaranteed salary if he gets hurt during the tournament and misses time afterward. Players typically go through entrance and exit physicals so injuries can be traced to the event instead of something preexisting.
Underwriting can also get stricter for players with recent surgeries or extended injured-list history, which is why some names get flagged late in the process. If a player isn’t approved, his MLB team can still clear him to play, but the club is taking on more financial risk.
Whether that impacts the Phillies remains to be seen, but it’s another layer they’ll be monitoring as camp opens.