The Reds announced today that right-hander Hunter Strickland has been released. Strickland was one of several veterans who can opt out of their minor league deals today, and it seems the Reds have decided he won’t make the club.
Strickland, 34, had his best years with the Giants earlier in his career, but has gone into journeyman mode of late. Over the past four seasons, he’s suited up for the Mariners, Nationals, Mets, Rays, Angels, Brewers and Reds. He struggled with Cincinnati last year, posting a 4.91 ERA over 66 appearances, striking out 21.1% of batters faced, walking 11.6% and getting grounders at a 34.2% clip. However, he’s not too far removed from a 2021 season that saw him register a 2.61 ERA with better rate stats, though that might have also had some good fortune behind it. His .250 batting average on balls in play and 83.3% strand rate were both on the fortunate side of league averages, leading to a 4.19 FIP and 4.06 SIERA.
The veteran will now head to the open market and look for his next opportunity. With several teams around the league dealing with notable injuries and several more roster cuts and opt-outs to come, Strickland is sure to find interest somewhere, at least on another minor league deal. The Reds had two other veterans who had opt-outs today, none of whom will make the team. Infielder Chad Pinder was released yesterday and right-hander Chase Anderson was reassigned to minor league camp.
Anderson, though, seems like he will stick around. Manager David Bell tells Bobby Nightengale of the Cincinnati Enquirer that Anderson will accept his minor league assignment and be part of the Triple-A rotation. Bell also confirmed what seemed likely when Anderson was demoted, that the final two rotation spots will go to Luis Cessa and Connor Overton.
Anderson could have pursued opportunities with other clubs but it’s possible that he’s in a decent spot with the Reds, as he may be the #6 starter at the moment. The front three spots are going to youngsters Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo and Graham Ashcraft, as those three will continue their development after encouraging seasons in 2022. With Luke Weaver set to begin the season on the injured list, the final two rotation spots will fall to Cessa and Overton, with Anderson perhaps the next man up if there’s another injury or someone struggles.
The club also has prospects Brandon Williamson and Levi Stoudt on the 40-man, though neither has any major league experience yet and neither impressed in spring. Williamson posted an ERA of 11.20 and Stoudt’s was 13.50 in Cactus League action. They seem ticketed for starts in Triple-A alongside Anderson, though the veteran might be ahead of them if there’s a need for a big league starter early in the season, with those two continuing to develop.
The 35-year-old Anderson was once a solid starter with the Diamondbacks and Brewers, but has struggled in recent years. The past three seasons have each seen him post an ERA above 6.00 at the big league level. Last year, he made nine appearances with the Reds, finishing with a 6.38 ERA, 22.3% strikeout rate, 14.6% walk rate and 51.6% ground ball rate.
Despite the recent struggles, Anderson’s path to a roster spot isn’t a long shot, as neither Cessa nor Overton are truly established. Cessa, 31 in April, has made 201 MLB appearances but only 29 of those have been starts, with most of those coming earlier in his career. He posted a 4.30 ERA in 10 starts last year. As for Overton, 29, he has just 15 major league games on his résumé thus far. He posted a 2.73 ERA last year but spent most of the season on the injured list due to a stress reaction in his lower back.
vandilioff
Blue Jays need to pick him up ASAP!
Marlins_Fan
Toronto needs a lot more than that. No World Series in 30 years and counting and none in sight and reliant on an obese non-superstar who will never be a real superstar and who has been a 3 WAR type of player other than the flash in the pan that was 2021 and who already is at his half decade point in MLB (he can’t be counted on to improve- he’s a fairly good player- that’s it).
utah cornelius
And you just took a dump in an Angels article and now this. You’re a small, angry person it seems. This is just a game and you are supposedly an adult. Reflect and get some perspective. Sheesh!
Marlins_Fan
.133 playoff BA, .235 playoff OBP, 133 playoff Slugging %, All while consuming disgusting amounts of food that his “grandmommy” (who bizarrely travels with the team) cooks for him
User 3921286289
The small angry people have really gotten bad in the commenct sections of this site recently. Sometimes I suspect it’s one person who is incredibly bored, terribly bitter, and has no life…so he/she/it has created multiple accounts to troll fans of other teams.
Big whiffa
U can stop thinking that. This country is full of miserable people.
BPax
Sanka, he’s the Marlins fan. Sadly, that description is almost literal. Look for him and the other 300 fans in the Marlin stands.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
Hunter is now the prey.
If you can’t make the Reds’ roster as a pitcher, your options are limited.
Chase was right to stay in the organization, it is his last best chance to get a few more starts before hanging up his cleats.
Still, India, De La Cruz, Noelvi, Steer, Stephenson and Encarnacion-Straud are exciting.
Cincyfan85
Good riddance. So thankful he’s gone. I was bummed when they brought him back.
MLB Top 100 Commenter
Alexi Diaz is very good. Tejay Antone might be good if he gets healthy. It was time to cut Hunter.
Big whiffa
I a subsequent move – Strickland retires. When u can’t make the reds pen – time to hang it up
This one belongs to the Reds
Thank God. He was horrible.
crazybaseballgal
Mr “I don’t have anger issues” hothead man child Strickland has been cut loose. Good. One of my least favorite all about me players