Veteran right-hander Jeremy Guthrie, who elected free agency after being outrighted by the Nationals earlier this season, is not actively seeking an opportunity to sign with another team, according to MASNsports.com’s Mark Zuckerman. The 38-year-old didn’t go so far as to use the word “retire” during an excellent, lengthy interview with Zuckerman, but he also spoke like a man whose playing days could be behind him.
Guthrie’s lone start with the Nationals was memorable, although certainly not in the way that any pitcher would want to be remembered. Pitching on his 38th birthday, Guthrie was rocked for 10 runs in just two-thirds of an inning — a disastrous outcome for a pitcher that had turned in an outstanding Spring Training and forced himself into consideration for a 40-man roster spot.
“That start has not been something easy for me to let go,” Guthrie tells Zuckerman. “I wanted to end on a good note. I wanted to go out on my terms.”
Prior to that outing, Guthrie had tossed 18 2/3 innings for the Nats in the spring, posting a 2.41 ERA with a strong 15-to-5 K/BB ratio. The performance was impressive enough, Zuckerman writes, that GM Mike Rizzo promised Guthrie he’d start the team’s fifth game of the season (despite not technically being placed onto the roster out of camp, thus allowing the Nats to briefly carry an extra reliever). Guthrie was well aware that he’d be designated and sent back to Triple-A no matter how he fared, Zuckerman continues, though he’d have been considered for future spot starts and opportunities with the club had he performed well.
“I had a conversation with Mike Rizzo during the game, in the clubhouse, where he was positive and kind,” Guthrie tells Zuckerman. “But he didn’t sugarcoat the devastating blow that game meant to my future.”
Similarly, Guthrie doesn’t sugarcoat his own take of his brutal start to the season, telling Zuckerman, ” I was realistic with myself enough to know that was the type of outing that could completely change what had transpired the prior six weeks.”
Zuckerman’s column is rife with honest, candid quotes from Guthrie that serve as a poignant reminder of the human component of the game that is often easy to forget. The decision not to return to Triple-A Syracuse does not seem like one which Guthrie took lightly, as he details the amount of thought that both he and his wife put into the decision.
I’d highly recommend that MLBTR readers give it a full read — especially those who were fans of Guthrie during his more successful years earlier. Nats fans, too, will want to give it a look, as Guthrie offers nothing but praise for the entire organization, from the front office to the training staff to the current roster of players in D.C. “I would tell every player, if they have the chance, to come play for them,” says Guthrie.
It’s possible that Guthrie again feels the urge to seek out one last shot at a Major League roster, but if this is indeed the end of his career, he has little to hang his head about. Guthrie spent parts of 13 seasons in the Major Leagues, pitching to a 4.42 ERA over the life of 1765 1/3 innings between the Indians, Orioles, Rockies, Royals and Nationals. He made three starts for the Royals in the 2014 postseason, including two in the World Series, and he received a World Series ring for his time with the 2015 Royals.
Guthrie may never have been a front-line starter, but he was a durable workhorse for the Orioles and Royals for the better part of seven seasons. From 2008-14, he averaged 32 starts and 201 innings per year. Guthrie earned nearly $47MM in his career, between his $3MM signing bonus as the No. 22 overall pick in 2002 and the player contracts he’d go on to take home. Baseball-Reference pegs his career at 17.9 wins above replacement, while RA9-WAR had him at 20.4.
Brixton
If the Nats get a WS win, he gets a ring
padresfan
They will never win a ws
natsgm
Says “padresfan”
jdgoat
Why do you say that
ABCD
Well, the Cubs won one. It could be the Nats turn this year. Maybe the Padres will win too…in about 60 years.
MafiaBass
They won in ’94
CelticSentinel314
As a Phils fan, I was loving that game. Until I found out we basically got him fired on his birthday… I am so sorry Jeremy.
oct27
Guthrie was a great guy – I loved him as a Royal. Very intelligent, well spoken, great teammate etc. He’d probably make a very good pitching coach/manager.
EonADS
That sounds perfect for him, so consistently decent until his stuff finally gave out. He even has the manager scowl already down-pat.
User 4245925809
Cursed by having his prime time with poor Orioles teams that had lousy defense and being the only capable starter for most of those years. Guthrie finally gets a break, gets to move to the NL and is stuck in Coors field for a year and gets hurt on top of that.
Only real break this great guy got his entire career was his time in KC and he took advantage of that and performed pretty well for the aging veteran he was.
greatgame 2
All that money paid for a 5.3 career K/9 rate and 4.78 career FIP.
lesterdnightfly
And, as it states clearly, for 17.9 Wins Above Replacement, which are currently valued at $7-8 million per.
So he was worth it to his teams, especially the Royals.
Maybe somebody here has “Penny Envy”.
pinkerton
I guess he isn’t getting the Cy Young now
davidcoonce74
This is a good story, and, as MLBTR points out, these people are human beings. Yes, Guthrie is impossibly rich compared to most of us (Guthrie made around 44 million dollars in his career). But his career is over, probably, at age 37. That’s younger than me. While he may not hurt for money for the rest of his life, I can’t quite imagine a life without work, especially for an athlete with a competitive drive. He’s still a human being, and while we can joke about his horrific final outing, we should still acknowledge the sting of ending your career like that. I mean, think about it: he basically got fired after having the worst day at work in his life. That can’t be a good feeling.
ReverieDays
The dude will find a job in baseball. Its not like he’ll never work again.
lesterdnightfly
That was a good article showing the human side of the players’ lives. Mrs. Guthrie sounds like a level-headed and empathic mate.
Ironman_4life
Shouldn’t the article read there are no teams pursuing Jeremy Guthrie
Sano Smash
Well the Nats tried to send him to Triple-A, so clearly they wanted him.
Oh, that was an attempt at humor. Good one champ.
ReverieDays
A bit better than yours, at least.
bobtillman
Class act throughout his entire career. With all that he went thru, definitely a coaching possibility. Wish him well.
bringoutthegimp
Padresfan is talkin! Almost 40 years in the MLB & have won ONE WS game! The NAT’s will win a WS before the Padres ever make it into the playoff again!! You should wait till their at least make it to 500 before you make a fool of yourself again!!
thegreatcerealfamine
It’s just MLB and not “the MLB”.
davidcoonce74
Talkin? Not a word. “The MLB”? Not an entity. “You should wait until their at least make it to…”. I can’t even begin to parse that sentence.