The Cubs have agreed to a minor league deal with free-agent outfielder Mike Tauchman, per the transaction log at MiLB.com. Presumably, the Meister Sports client will be in Major League camp as a non-roster invitee this spring.
The deal with the Cubs marks a return to North American ball for the 32-year-old Tauchman, who spent the 2022 season with the Hanwha Eagles of the Korea Baseball Organization. It was a brief but productive stint, as the former Rockies, Yankees and Giants outfielder turned in a hearty .289/.366/.430 batting line with a dozen homers, 37 doubles, four triples and 19 steals while appearing in 144 games and tallying 648 plate appearances.
Tauchman is best known for a terrific 2019 season, when the Yankees acquired him from the Rockies in exchange for lefty Phillip Diehl and were rewarded with 296 plate appearances of .277/.361/.504 output from a then-28-year-old Tauchman. The former 10th-round pick couldn’t replicate that showing in 2020, batting .242/.342/.305. After a similarly slow start in 2021 he was flipped to the Giants in a trade that netted the Yankees left-hander Wandy Peralta, who has since emerged as a quality member of manager Aaron Boone’s bullpen.
The trade didn’t pan out for the Giants, with Tauchman hitting .178/.286/.283 in 175 plate appearances. San Francisco designated him for assignment in late July and passed him through outright waivers a couple days later. Tauchman became a free agent at season’s end and signed with the Eagles for a $1MM salary in 2022.
He’ll now return stateside in hopes of cracking the Cubs’ roster as a bench option behind starting outfielders Ian Happ, Cody Bellinger and Seiya Suzuki. Other outfield options for the Cubs include Nelson Velazquez, utilityman Zach McKinstry, and prospects Brennen Davis and Alexander Canario, all of whom are on the 40-man roster.
Tauchman will likely join Ben DeLuzio as a non-roster hopeful in camp, and as it stands he’ll be the most experienced member of that bunch vying for an outfield spot. Tauchman has just over three years of Major League service time and carries a .231/.326/.378 batting line in 667 MLB plate appearances, in addition to a .306/.377/.489 line in parts of five Triple-A campaigns.