Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told members of the media, including Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times and Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic, that reliever Daniel Hudson will be in the club’s bullpen. Hudson is in camp on a minor league deal and has a March 15 opt-out but Roberts says there’s no “hard date” for adding him to the roster. The club will need to make a corresponding 40-man roster move whenever Hudson is added.
Hudson, who turns 37 on Saturday, signed with the Dodgers going into 2022. He and the club agreed to a one-year, $7MM deal with a club option for 2023. He was excellent for the first few months, posting a 2.22 earned run average over 25 relief appearances. He struck out 30.9% of batters faced, only gave out walks at a 5.2% clip and kept 53.4% of balls in play on the ground.
Unfortunately, he tore the ACL in his left knee in June of that year, prematurely ending his season. The Dodgers had enough faith in him that they agreed to an extension in September of that year, effectively triggering the 2023 option early and adding another option for 2024. But in the winter heading into 2023, he developed ankle tendinitis as well as patellar tendinitis in the knee. He was on the injured list until June and then made just three appearances before suffering a sprained MCL in his right knee, ending his season early yet again.
The club turned down their option on Hudson’s services for 2024 but brought him back via a minors pact, which comes with a $2MM base salary and $2MM worth of incentives. He’s been healthy enough to make four appearances already this spring and it seems the club plans to put him back on the roster at some point. The Dodgers are set to be a third-time payor of the competitive balance tax this year and are well beyond the fourth and final line of the tax. That means they are facing a 110% tax rate on any additional spending so they will effectively be paying $4.2MM to add Hudson’s salary onto their books.
Hudson is an Article XX(B) free agent, which is a player with at least six years of service time who finished the previous season on a major league roster or injured list. Under the current collective bargaining agreement, any such player who signs a minor league deal more than 10 days prior to Opening Day can opt out of that deal at three points if they haven’t been added to the 40-man roster: five days before Opening Day, May 1 and June 1.
Most clubs open this season on March 28 but the Dodgers start early when they play the Padres in the Seoul Series March 20. It’s unclear whether Hudson’s March 15 opt-out is the “five days before Opening Day” opt-out that he is guaranteed or if it was a contractual stipulation and he will have another chance on March 23, five days before the wider Opening Day. Regardless, he will have two other opt-out chances and it seems as though he and the Dodgers have a good relationship anyway. With Roberts’ suggestion that there’s no “hard date,” perhaps Hudson and the club have some kind of understanding whereby he won’t feel compelled to trigger his early opt-out.
Adding Hudson will make the Dodger bullpen a bit crowded to start the year. Closer Evan Phillips is out of options while veterans like Hudson, Joe Kelly, Ryan Brasier, Blake Treinen and Ryan Yarbrough can’t be optioned by virtue of having more than five years of service time. That group would account for six of the eight bullpen slots. Brusdar Graterol has options but would certainly have a spot with the big league club after posting a 1.20 ERA last year while racking up seven saves and 19 holds. Yarbrough is the only southpaw in that group and he’s a long relief guy, so the Dodgers will probably want a spot for Alex Vesia for when they need a situational lefty.
Unless Yarbrough winds up in the rotation or someone goes on the injured list, it’s possible that someone like J.P. Feyereisen gets squeezed out and optioned to the minors. The Dodgers acquired him from the Rays prior to 2023, knowing that he had undergone shoulder surgery and was facing a significant absence. He didn’t pitch at all last year but has a 2.31 ERA in his 89 2/3 innings pitched in his career.
acoss13
It’s going to be interesting once Dustin May and Clayton Kershaw need to be activated. Quite a roster crunch come this summer, but that’s a lot of good options for the Dodgers, an enviable position to be in.
Senioreditor
Injuries will happen. There will be spots.
holecamels35
Yeah, “injuries will happen”. They’ve done this far more than any other team yet the Mets got in trouble??
fox471 Dave
Oh, here we go.
DarrenDreifortsContract
May hasn’t pitched 60 innings in a season. He’s on the bottom of the priority list.
Gwynning
The headline reads like Doc just learned Huddy is a reliver!
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Hudson seems washed at this point….
MLB Fanatic
His ’22 statline says otherwise. Why would the Dodgers re-up with him for ’24 then?
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Friedman loves paying injury-prone pitchers….
JCL10
He’s currently on a Minor league deal. They won’t be paying him much
its_happening
Because they hope he can avoid another injury? Emphasis on another.
Old York
@bluebludd
Hard to get a read on his, given he has only pitched 27.1 innings in the past 2 years. I guess on a 1 year deal, it’s not terrible for the team.
If he returns to his career self, he’s posted an FRA of 4.31 and K-BB% of 16.5%. Given he’s a groundball pitcher, that FRA could drop to 3.31 in 2024. FG & BR are both projecting ERAs around 4+, so I’d say that’s probably a decent idea where he will be. Not truly washed up, though.
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
We’ll see if the knees hold up. Wouldn’t bet on it…
BlueSkies_LA
The first one was a total freak injury on a fielding play. I’m going to generously guess that you didn’t know that.
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
It happened when he was a Dodger, so of course I saw it. Dude is in his late-30s, and his knees are compromised now. Lux will have knee issues when he gets older too. I’m guessing you’re young and don’t know the aches and pains of aging. Hudson was on the verge of retirement, so he prolly doesn’t feel all that confident with his health either. But Friedman’s throwing money at him, so….
BlueSkies_LA
I sprained my ACL around 20 years ago, when I was considerably older than Hudson is now. It was a bad luck injury, which in my case resulted from missing the bottom rung of a ladder. Surgery wasn’t recommended and the knee will never be 100% but then I am not an athlete so it’s fine. Hudson’s injury was similar bad luck on a hurry-up fielding play. In both cases it was a classic foot-plant and twist ACL injury. Lux did the same a year ago, but on a running play. That one was really painful to watch. The orthopedic surgery they can do now is so much better than it was just a few years ago.
So it seems you’re wrong about both. I’m going to trust the judgement of the sports medicine people and those who are actually doing the spending.
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Yes, because Friedman & Co. have an incredible track record of not giving money to injured pitchers to just rehab and sit on the injured list….
BlueSkies_LA
Yes, what?
FWIW I’m not a big fan of Friedman’s dart throwing on rehab pitchers, and have taken plenty of crap here for saying so. But I don’t happen to think this is one of those cases. Hudson isn’t injured, and doesn’t need to rehab, and I’m not going to take any wild guesses about his medicals. He’s also on a heavily performance based contract. So it all looks fine to me.
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Well, the staff looks great on paper. We’ll see who’s available in October….
BlueSkies_LA
Let’s see what the Magic 8-Ball says:
“Ask again later.”
BlueSkies_LA
Worth keeping in mind, Hudson was contemplating retirement when the Dodgers made him the comeback offer. So I think he’s going to play fair with them as far as the opt outs are concerned.
Either way I learned something today. I’d never heard of an Article XX(B) free agent before.
The Voices
Trevor (best pitcher in the world) is still available. Just fyi.
JCL10
And he won’t be coming to the Dodgers. I’ll tell you that much. He’s gonna need at least another year in Japan IMO.
labial
Best pitcher… to run away from when he has a bat in his hands. “Fun”
This one belongs to the Reds
He won’t be going anywhere he was before (or anyplace with personnel from those places) under normal circumstances, let alone especially now.
You torpedo bridges, you pay for it eventually, whether in baseball or life.
TellItGoodbye
Yamamoto today:
3.0IP 6H 5ER 3BB Spring ERA: 9.00
Dodgers already in Postseason mode!
JCL10
He’ll be fine. Every pitcher has a bad start now and then.
l9ydodger
JCL10; what would be interesting to know, was he tipping his pitches again. Hopefully some word from the manager/coaching staff in next day or two.
halloffamernobodycares
he’s tipping in that you can see his grip from the CF camera when his hands are together in his glove. Rick Monday, Dodgers legend and announcer called it right away. He’s not tipping so as to be able to identify the pitch from the batter’s box.
If there is a differing opinion or more knowledge dropped that I missed, I’ll take the L, but Monday was all over it, and the news honks need something to write about.
He literally held the splitter grip in his glove and you could tell from the CF camera when he did. You could also see a different grip with the fastball as well.
MLB Fanatic
“Too many balls and walks. But one good thing was I could try what I wanted to try. I was testing a couple of things, and that was good.” – Yamamoto (today)
Datashark
Preseason for “practice” – this is when pitchers get acclimated or trying new pitches. So do not read into his stats, come the season He will get into another mode and might throw a no hitter against SD
math
4 of the 6 hits didn’t leave the infield, and the last 2 runs came in on a flubbed double play ball. Giants fans apparently also in postseason mode — not actually watching games.
Jerry Hairston Jr's Toupee
Lux and Muncy might be one of the weakest left side of the infield tandems in the league….
Mickey Solis
I’m surprised the Dodgers don’t cheat and get an extra roster spot somehow for all their star purchases.
ATinz
Cry!
Wren
That’s quite a BP the Dodgers have amassed.
Would have kept Caleb over Vesia though