The Angels announced this afternoon that they’ve outrighted infielder Scott Kingery to Triple-A Salt Lake earlier today. Kingery had been designated for assignment earlier this week when the club acquired southpaw Angel Perdomo from Atlanta.
Kingery, 31 next month, was a second-round pick by the Phillies back in 2015. The infielder signed a six-year, $24MM contract with Philadelphia before even making his MLB debut and went on to struggle badly throughout his time in the majors with the club. Kingery’s rookie season in 2018 saw him hit just .226/.267/.338 in 484 trips to the plate, and while he took a major step forward with a .258/.315/.474 (100 wRC+) slash line across 500 plate appearances in 2019 en route to a 2.1 fWAR/2.7 bWAR season, that success as a league average contributor did not last. The 2020 campaign saw Kingery hit just .159/.228/.283, and he’s taken just 19 trips to the plate in the majors since then.
Despite Kingery’s failures at the big league level, the Angels brought him into the fold and gave him a spot on their 40-man roster this winter in hopes of creating some depth on the infield. J.D. Davis, Kevin Newman, and Tim Anderson all jumped head of Kingery on the Anaheim depth chart throughout Spring Training, however, and Kingery eventually found himself on the outside looking in with regards to the Opening Day roster mix. That led the club to designate him for assignment, and now that he’s cleared waivers he’ll serve as non-roster depth for the club at the Triple-A level.
While Kingery’s struggled in the majors so far, he’s still a worthwhile depth piece for a club littered with players who struggle to stay healthy like the Angels. Kingery spent most of his time in the majors at shortstop and in center field, but has the versatility to play virtually anywhere on the diamond except for catcher with significant experience at both second and third base as well. He also showed flashes of improvement at the Triple-A level last year, crushing the ball to the tune of a .268/.316/.488 slash line in 125 games while swiping 25 bases.
Kingery’s speed and versatility seem likely to make him a viable depth option off the bench for the club should injuries clear room on the roster for him at some point, and it’s at least possible that his surge of success with the bat at Triple-A last year could translate to modestly improved production in the majors as well. If a spot opens up in the majors, Kingery will likely compete with Kyren Paris and Carter Kieboom for the opportunity to fill in.
Pretty sure there’s no competition between Kingery and Paris. Paris will be part of the team this year or next, while Kingery twill languish in the minors this season.
@kellin. Probably right about Paris, but we could see kingery if Davis, and Anderson falter early.
Angels are basically overpaying for AAA depth because we don’t have any.
what are u talking about? Kingery is getting 770k. Paying Moncada 5mil. Newman 2.75mil. How is that overpaying?
Pretty much league minimum. Not sure if that is a huge overpay. With JD Davis, Newman, and Tim Anderson all outplaying Kingery this spring, it was easy to see why Kingery outrighted.
Kingery could step in and do a bunch of things—hit, run, play different spots—and maybe even turn their season around. It’s like buying a lottery ticket that could win big, but costs almost nothing.
I wouldn’t call him a failure. He did make it to the majors. And he got paid. But I see him as a Rockies type player. Or frankly get your ass overseas and reinvent yourself. A season to season might not hurt.
Why is the photo of Logan O’Hoppe?