There are still several starting pitchers available in free agency and it’s possible that mounting injuries could help create new opportunities for them. Ken Rosenthal and Patrick Mooney of The Athletic report that the Cubs and Orioles are two clubs exploring rotation additions. The Cubs reportedly had some talks with Andrew Heaney before he signed with the Pirates and are currently keeping tabs on Kyle Gibson and Lance Lynn.
The Cubs don’t have a major health concern in their rotation at the moment. Javier Assad has been slowed by some oblique soreness and is trending towards starting the season on the injured list, but it doesn’t seem like he’ll be out for an especially long time. The club’s projected top four of Justin Steele, Shota Imanaga, Matthew Boyd and Jameson Taillon are healthy. With Assad out, Colin Rea could perhaps take the fifth spot for a while. Or if he’s in a long relief role, guys like Ben Brown, Jordan Wicks, Caleb Kilian or Cody Poteet could step up, though all the guys in that group have options and could also be in the Triple-A rotation.
However, Rosenthal notes that the Cubs are facing an unusual spring. They have been ramping up a bit earlier than usual in anticipation of going to Japan soon. As part of the Tokyo Series, they will play a couple of exhibition games against Japanese clubs on March 15th and 16th, before playing regular season games against the Dodgers on March 18th and 19th. The Cubs are seemingly aware that some hiccups could arise with the unique schedule and are keeping the phone lines open.
At this part of the calendar, the market isn’t especially kind to players. The aforementioned Heaney signed with the Pirates a few weeks ago, a one-year deal with a guarantee of just $5.25MM. About a week ago, Jose Quintana signed with the Brewers for a $4.25MM guarantee. Coming into the winter, MLBTR predicted Heaney and Quintana to get two-year deals worth $24MM and $20MM respectively. Many pitchers outearned expectations earlier in the offseason but the market has clearly fallen off more recently.
A few months ago, Gibson and Lynn seemed like possibilities for eight-figure guarantees on one-year deals. But the fact that they have lingered unsigned while the market has softened means they are likely going to have to adjust their expectations if they want to sign. Rosenthal reports that unsigned pitchers are being asked to sign advanced consent forms, which allow clubs to terminate a contract within 45 days for any reason except injury and only have to pay the player for the time he spent on the roster. That’s obviously not ideal from a player’s perspective and it would only be signed if such a player had very little leverage.
Lynn, 38 in May, has a lengthy track record but isn’t riding a high tide of momentum at the moment. He posted a 5.73 earned run average in 2023, the worst of his career. He still was able to a secure a one-year, $11MM deal from the Cardinals and bounced back somewhat with a 3.84 ERA in 2024, but there were also some flags. He twice went on the injured list due to inflammation in his right knee, the same knee that had required surgical repair in 2022. Those IL stints limited him to 117 1/3 innings last year. While the ERA bounced back, his strikeout rate and velocity dropped.
Gibson, 37, is one of the steadiest pitchers in the league but lacks upside. He has logged at least 147 1/3 innings in each of the past ten major league seasons. However, he only posted an ERA below 4.20 in three of those. His 4.24 ERA last year was his best of the past three seasons.
Perhaps neither are as exciting as the aforementioned optionable pitchers that the Cubs have on hand, but they certainly have more experience. Between Brown, Wicks, Kilian and Poteet, there’s no one with even 85 big league innings.
For the Orioles, Rosenthal doesn’t specifically connect them to Gibson or Lynn, but it’s understandable that they would be keeping tabs on the market generally. Grayson Rodriguez has some elbow inflammation and is still getting some testing done but will start the season on the IL regardless. That leaves the O’s with a projected rotation of Zach Eflin, Charlie Morton, Tomoyuki Sugano and Dean Kremer. Manager Brandon Hyde has suggested the final spot is likely down to Albert Suárez or Cade Povich.
Suárez is a journeyman who spent many years in Asia before returning to North American ball last year. He pitched in a swing role for the O’s in 2024 and logged a 3.70 ERA. Povich went into 2024 as a notable prospect but had a 5.20 ERA in his first 16 big league starts. Adding a veteran starter could allow the club to keep Suárez in a long relief role and bump Povich to the Triple-A rotation, while also adding depth to hedge against future injuries.
Signing at this part of the season does come with some perceived risk, however. As noted by Rosenthal, both Blake Snell and Jordan Montgomery signed late last winter and the initial results were poor with both. Snell signed with the Giants in mid-March, then had a couple of IL stints in the first half. He eventually finished strong but was sitting on a 9.51 ERA when he returned from his second IL stint in July. Montgomery didn’t officially sign with the Diamondback until late March and never got on track, finishing the year with a 6.23 ERA over 117 innings.
The Cubs and Orioles are surely not the only clubs sniffing around the available starting pitchers. The Yankees will be without Luis Gil for months due to a lat strain and are facing the possibility of Gerrit Cole requiring Tommy John surgery. The Mariners are going to put George Kirby on the IL to start the year due to some shoulder inflammation. Other injuries will inevitably arise and lengthen that list.
For clubs looking to free agency, they will have to consider whether its worth the money to sign one of these vets and quickly ramp them up, as opposed to going with in-house options. Rosenthal notes that both Gibson and Lynn have been throwing in an attempt to be somewhat ready, though they would surely still need some game action somewhere to truly get in form. Other free agents of note include Patrick Corbin and Spencer Turnbull. Guys like Jordan Montgomery or Taijuan Walker may be available on the trade market.
Yes ,to kyle Gibson-eats up a ton of innings- Lynn not a reliever
Gibson eats up innings, Lynn eats everything
Mitch Keller is available in trade
How much of his contract is PIT eating?
Averaged 2.2 WAR the last 3 years. Making $15.4M this year. No need at all to eat money. Would not be wise to move him unless of course some team “blows you away”
Nutting eating salary? Let’s ask Rowdy Tellez his opinion on the matter.
According to who? What source did you get that from? I have seen many reports that Skeens, Jones an Keller are not available.
I heard they are shopping all three.
I’d be okay with the Orioles rolling the dice on some kind of rebound season for Montgomery to re-deepen the rotation depth after a few ST injuries (Grayson, Rogers, etc).
If Big Dave was serious when he recently said his franchise doesn’t have any financial constraints, then just agree to take on his full 2025 salary and send AZ a modest prospect return and a whole lot of salary relief.
Hard to believe that the O’s haven’t gone the extra mile to add another decent, reliable starting pitcher either through free agency or by trading from their strong farm system.
Who would you have bumped before the grod news? Kremer and grod only ones in orig 5 signed for next year. Plus wells and bradish expected back mid year and need room. One year of cease not worth 6 yes of their monster prospect c or 3b/1b. They can’t compete with NY money wise and need that prospect depth to turn over roster going forward.
Their acquisitions BEFORE this happened were underwhelming at the very least. Burnes was an ace; neither Morton or Sugano are anything better than a #4.
This feels increasingly as if the Orioles are wasting their opportunity to build a dominant team by surrounding their high upside youth with questionable mediocrity.
Well. There’s always next off season when the orioles don’t address their rotation issues again. Viva 2026.
Tbh, I feel like both teams have more in house options than the Yanks do and yet we’re hearing bupkiss from them. It’s pretty disheartening to see.
The Yankees are tapped out on how high they want their payroll to go right now.
Yeah yeah I get the line their towing, but when the team you spent a zillion dollars on is in trouble, losing Cole, Gil, and Stanton classifies as such, you absolutely need to do something whether it’s taking the hit on a spending a bit more or making a good trade. No one wants to hear excuses, not at this level.
@Salzilla I’d guess there will soon be news of a Yankees signing or trade. At the very least reporting on their attempts.
At this point I’d assume they re trying to keep it tight lipped which only would/will last so long
Please, no Suarez!
Expecting to hear this with the Yankees probabjy making some calls too today. Someone tell Ricketts if he trades for a front line starter to consider them a Wrigley Field concert 15 times a season. He’ll buy into that one.
If only there wasn’t just an entire offseason to address an obvious need…
You snooze you lose.
I don’t think any of the remaining SP FAs mentioned are worthy of an MLB rotation job at this point in their careers.
Probably so, but injuries happen and if you don’t have AAA options then you have to go dumpster diving.
Gibson worth a shot, but no argument on guys like Lynn. Rather give an internal solution a shot in most cases to sink or swim.
Can’t imagine the MLBPA would be happy if players took a deal that allowed contract termination at team’s discretion without cause. I’m surprised that’s even allowed under the CBA.
The orioles really don’t have the need as Povich looks like an adequate back end sp – which is the ceiling of Gibson/lynn/corbin/etc. The rotation definitely doesn’t look good absent Grayson but none of those guys are the answer. If they want to make a potentially impact signing then go get Robertson for the bullpen to fill the massive hole left by the Kittridge injury.
With you on this….adding bodies to the back end of the rotation isn’t adding value. Adding a top end of the rotation guy makes the entire rotation better top to bottom and adds tremendous value.
The Orioles have usually been able to find ways to keep the bullpen together, though with the rotation they have I worried about a “fried by July” issue with the group. Ironic that they balked at Hoffman’s injury history and physical, yet sign Kittridge who had an injury history of his own and he gets seriously injured within 2 weeks.
Matt Manning is available (I’d bet).
Didn’t they have like 4 months before now to do something that would have provided a greater positive impact?
Orioles-Yeah I could see. Cubs? Why? Makes zero sense. But neither does you know who.
Evert team, every day had better be exploring additions.
Shota Imanaga could not get out of 2nd inning today. He needs to be replaced before Ricketts is on plane to Japan for next weeks games
yes, dump last year’s best pitcher because “spring training”.
We may have an opening in my fantasy league, will you please join?
History shows this is a good time to look for starters.
sounds like the predictions were way off. this is why I take such predictions a grain of salt: some people work in professional baseball, some just wish they did. (I too would be in the latter group)
Kyle Gibson had a solid season with the Orioles a couple of years ago, I think he even started on Opening Day. They moved the left field wall in which could hurt him, but he’s still an effective pitcher who can take the ball 32 times. Seems like teams aren’t valuing back end starters or first basemen anymore.
It blows my mind that someone, somewhere actually thinks Caleb Kilian and Cody Poteet are candidates for the Cubs’, or anyone’s, rotation.
Eric Fedde should be available. Reasonable price, coming off a very nice season, and one year left on the contract.
The Cubs will be left in the dust by the Reds and Pirates. Overhyped lineup and a bullpen of, well, poop. These 10-50 yr rebuilds are done to perfection. Plus, ownership funds a convicted felon and rapist dictator. I wish them the worst.
Such weak reporting citing Povich’s rookie stats without addressing his outstanding September and spring thus far. Imagine a a young pitcher struggling in his first 10 starts – that never happens…