Orioles Acquire Jayvien Sandridge
The Orioles are acquiring left-hander Jayvien Sandridge from the Angels in exchange for cash, per an announcement from both teams. The Orioles had open space on their 40-man roster, so no corresponding move was necessary to complete the transaction. Sandridge was designated for assignment by the Halos just before Opening Day.
It’s the second cash trade of the year that Sandridge has been a part of, as the Angels acquired him from the Yankees back in January. This trade is actually something of a homecoming for Sandridge, as he was a 32nd-round pick by the Orioles back in 2018 and spent parts of two seasons in the Orioles organization. He was released during the pandemic-cancelled minor league season in 2020 and took a brief stint in college ball before signing with the Reds and returning to pro ball. He climbed the minor league ladder with the Reds, Padres, and Yankees over the years before finally making his big league debut in 2025.
Sandridge’s debut with New York saw him record just two outs while surrendering two runs. It’s not exactly an auspicious start to his big league career, although with such a small sample size it’s hard to draw any substantial conclusions about the lefty’s viability as a big league arm. His work at Triple-A with the Yankees last season was generally more middling than impressive, as he posted a 4.55 ERA despite a 33.1% strikeout rate. Those big strikeout totals clearly caught the eye of the Angels over the offseason, leading them to acquire him this offseason. Sandridge’s Spring Training performance did him few favors, however, as he was torched for five runs in just two innings of work during camp.
Now, he returns to the Orioles organization as an optionable depth arm for the club’s bullpen. Baltimore has Dietrich Enns and Grant Wolfram as their only lefties in the bullpen at the moment with Keegan Akin on the shelf, and Sandridge is now the only other lefty on the 40-man roster. That could put him in position to get a look in the majors at some point this year, particularly if he can get his elevated walk rate (12.0% in Triple-A last year) under control more reliably. Josh Walker is the only other southpaw relief arm with big league experience in the organization, but he’s on a non-roster deal and would require a 40-man roster move to bring to the majors. That could put Sandridge ahead of him on the depth chart, though lefty starter Cade Povich could also pose a threat to Sandridge’s chances of making the majors if the Orioles are willing to use him in relief at some point.
Angels Select Shaun Anderson
The Angels announced this afternoon that they’ve selected the contract of right-hander Shaun Anderson. In a corresponding move, right-hander Victor Mederos was designated for assignment.
Anderson, 31, is entering what will be his 7th season as a big leaguer. A third-round pick by the Red Sox in 2016, he didn’t make his big league debut until 2019, at which point he was a member of the Giants after being part of the return for the Eduardo Nunez trade. Anderson came up to the majors as a swing man and struggled somewhat, with a lackluster 5.44 ERA in 96 innings of work. He moved to the bullpen full-time after that, and while he pitched to a solid 3.52 ERA in 18 appearances during the abbreviated 2020 season, questionable peripherals left his role uncertain headed into 2021.
Ultimately, Anderson didn’t even make it onto the Giants roster that year. He was traded to the Twins in the LaMonte Wade Jr. deal and spent the rest of the year riding the waiver wire. Ultimately, he split time between the Twins, Orioles, and Padres during the 2021 campaign and pitched to a rough 8.49 ERA across 23 1/3 innings during that rollercoaster year. He’s pitched just 28 2/3 innings total at the big league level since then, splitting time between the Jays, Rangers, Angels, and Marlins to post a 9.42 ERA across 14 outings.
The right-hander doesn’t have the most exciting profile as a big leaguer, to say the least. His career 6.39 ERA in 163 1/3 innings of work is certainly lackluster, and a 4.35 ERA at the Triple-A level for his career doesn’t offer much reason for further excitement. A 14-game stint in the KBO did yield some interesting results, as he pitched to a 3.76 ERA in 14 starts, but that was three years ago now and it’s hard to see that as indicative of future stateside success at this point. Still, he could help contribute to an Angels pitching staff that will need help covering innings with Grayson Rodriguez, Alek Manoah, Kirby Yates, Robert Stephenson, and Ben Joyce all opening the season on the injured list.
Making room for Anderson on the 40-man roster is Mederos. A sixth-round pick by the Angels back in 2022, the club wasted no time in promoting him to the majors, allowing him to make his big league debut the following year. Despite his quick rise to the big leagues, Mederos was never quite able to stick at the level. He has just 25 1/3 innings across 12 appearances in the show, and during that time he’s looked completely over-matched with an 8.52 ERA and a 6.95 FIP. A career 3.96 ERA in 20 career starts at the Triple-A level offers a bit more room for optimism about his long-term prospects, and Mederos won’t turn 25 until June. That wasn’t enough to save his roster spot with the Angels, but perhaps another club will be intrigued enough by his profile to take him on as a more of a long-term project. If Mederos passes through waivers unclaimed, the Angels will have the opportunity to outright him to the minor leagues as non-roster depth for their pitching staff.
Angels Re-Sign Hunter Strickland, Chris Taylor To Minor League Deals
The Angels are re-signing reliever Hunter Strickland and utilityman Chris Taylor on minor league contracts, the team told reporters (including Jeff Fletcher of The Orange County Register). Both players will report to Triple-A Salt Lake after opting out of their previous contracts at the end of Spring Training.
Strickland, 37, has spent the past two seasons with the Halos. He has managed a low-3.00s ERA in both years, though he was limited to 19 appearances by a shoulder injury last summer. Strickland worked five innings of one-run ball in camp, striking out just two of 19 opponents. His fastball averaged 91.8 mph, a couple ticks down from last year’s 93.6 mph regular season mark.
Taylor hit .231 this spring. He walked 10 times in 49 plate appearances to get on base at a .388 clip. The Angels nevertheless opted for a pair of different non-roster infielders, Adam Frazier and Jeimer Candelario, to break camp. Taylor circles back to the organization with which he ended the 2025 season. The Angels signed him last May after he was released by the Dodgers. He missed a few months with a broken arm and batted .179/.278/.321 with 29 strikeouts over 90 trips to the plate.
Angels Announce 11 Roster Moves
The Angels announced nearly a dozen roster moves as they prepare their Opening Day lineup. The team confirmed the signing of lefty reliever Joey Lucchesi to a one-year free agent deal. They also selected veteran infielders Adam Frazier and Jeimer Candelario onto the big league roster.
Vaughn Grissom lands on the 10-day injured list with a sprained left wrist. Pitchers Ben Joyce (shoulder inflammation), Alek Manoah (middle finger contusion), Kirby Yates (left knee inflammation), and Grayson Rodriguez (shoulder inflammation) all land on the 15-day injured list. Those five placements are retroactive to March 22.
The Angels needed to open three spots on the 40-man roster for Lucchesi, Frazier and Candelario. Two of those are procedural moves, as Anthony Rendon and Robert Stephenson have been placed on the 60-day injured list. The one roster casualty of the whole series of transactions is left-handed reliever Jayvien Sandridge, who was designated for assignment.
Most of these transactions had either been announced or strongly telegraphed by prior moves. Frazier and Candelario were each expected to break camp after offseason minor league contracts. The former is ticketed for the majority of the playing time at second base. Frazier’s left-handed bat and plus contact skills make him a rarity in a heavily right-handed lineup. He hit .281 with a .452 on-base percentage this spring but has been a below-average hitter in four consecutive seasons. Frazier ran a .267/.319/.365 slash in 459 plate appearances between the Pirates and Royals a year ago.
Candelario, 32, returns to the majors after finishing last season in Triple-A in the Yankees system. The switch-hitter turned in a meager .207/.265/.394 line while battling various injuries over a season and a half with the Reds. He popped four homers this spring but struck out 17 times in 56 plate appearances.
Primarily a corner infielder, Candelario has also gotten acclimated to second base in camp. He’ll work as a backup infielder alongside the out-of-options Oswald Peraza behind Frazier and third baseman Yoán Moncada. The Angels will only pay him the $780K league minimum while he’s on the roster. The Reds are still covering the rest of his $13MM salary after releasing him last June.
Of the injured list assignments, only the Yates move comes as a surprise. The 39-year-old righty signed a $5MM free agent deal over the winter. That was the biggest investment the Halos made in a quiet offseason. Yates was one of a handful of reclamation fliers who’ll slot into the bullpen. He had been expected to share closing work with Jordan Romano and Drew Pomeranz. That’ll be on hold for at least the first 12 days of the regular season. Yates pitched four times this spring, allowing one earned run over four innings.
Joyce is still building back from last May’s shoulder procedure. He’s throwing but didn’t get into any games this spring. He’s not ready for MLB game action but should be back relatively early in the year. It’s an encouraging sign for his health that the Angels opted to designate someone for assignment rather than place Joyce on the 60-day IL.
Grissom is out of minor league options. His injury buys the Halos a little bit of time to determine whether they want to keep him on the roster or designate him for assignment. Rodriguez and Manoah entered camp as the projected fourth and fifth starters. Their continued injury issues will draw Jack Kochanowicz and Ryan Johnson into the final two rotation spots instead.
Sandridge came over from the Yankees in a cash trade in January. The 27-year-old southpaw pitched twice before being optioned early in camp. He allowed five runs over two innings. Sandridge gave up two runs while recording two outs in his lone major league appearance, which came as a Yankee last July. In Triple-A, he posted a 4.55 ERA with huge strikeout stuff (33.1%) but too many walks (12%). The Angels have five days to trade him or try to run him through waivers.
Angels To Sign Joey Lucchesi
The Angels are going to sign left-hander Joey Lucchesi, reports Jon Heyman of The New York Post. Heyman adds that the CAA Sports client is expected to be on the Opening Day roster, suggesting it’s a major league deal. That would mean the Halos would need a corresponding 40-man move. They have some candidates to move to the 60-day injured list, with Anthony Rendon being an obvious one, but they may also need spots for Adam Frazier and Jeimer Candelario if they plan to roster those guys.
Lucchesi, 33 in June, was in camp with the Giants on a minor league deal as of a few days ago. He was granted his release, which may or may not have involved him triggering an opt-out in that deal. Regardless, he was back on the open market and the Halos have scooped him up.
The southpaw has been a starter or swingman for most of his career. 2025 was his first big league season where he pitched exclusively as a reliever. He averaged just under 93 miles per hour with both his four-seamer and his sinker while also throwing a low-80s splitter and high-70s curveball. He gave the Giants 38 1/3 innings over 38 appearances, allowing 3.76 earned runs per nine frames. His 18.8% strikeout rate was subpar but his 7.3% walk rate was good and he induced grounders on 53% of balls in play.
The Giants could have retained Lucchesi for 2026 via arbitration, with MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projecting him for a $2MM salary. Instead, they non-tendered him and then re-signed him to a minor league deal that would have paid him $1.5MM in the majors. As mentioned, they released him from that pact a few days ago.
The Angels signed Kirby Yates, Jordan Romano, Drew Pomeranz and Brent Suter to free agent deals this offseason. No one in that group can be optioned to the minors. Chase Silseth is out of options. Guys like Ryan Zeferjahn, Sam Bachman and Walbert Ureña seemed to be trending to Opening Day jobs but all three can be optioned. Perhaps one of them will get bumped to the minors to make room for Lucchesi, though knocking out Silseth could be a way for the club to open a 40-man spot.
Photo courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas, Imagn Images
Poll: Who Will Win The AL West?
With Opening Day just around the corner, the offseason is more or less complete for MLB’s 30 clubs and teams. Until the playoffs begin, teams will be focused on a smaller goal: winning their division. In the run-up to the start of the season, we will be conducting a series of polls to gauge who MLBTR readers believe is the favorite in each division. The Blue Jays came out on top in the AL East, while our readers overwhelmingly (58%) voted for the Tigers in our poll on the AL Central. Today, we’ll be moving on to the AL West. All teams are listed in order of their 2025 regular season record:
Seattle Mariners (90-72)
Powered by an MVP-caliber season from star catcher Cal Raleigh, the Mariners surged ahead of the pack in the AL West last year and fell just one game short of reaching the World Series. Eugenio Suárez and Jorge Polanco departed via free agency, but the rest of that team is more or less intact. A rotation led by Logan Gilbert and Bryan Woo figures to once again be among the very best in baseball, and they’ll be backed up by a bullpen that added lefty Jose A. Ferrer to pair with Andres Munoz and Matt Brash in high-leverage situations. The big addition to the offense is utilityman Brendan Donovan, who’ll primarily play third base and help lengthen a lineup featuring Raleigh, Julio Rodriguez, Josh Naylor, Randy Arozarena and breakout slugger Dominic Canzone. The offense could improve even more if young second baseman Cole Young and/or top prospect Colt Emerson prove they can be impact players in 2026, but it’s easy to make the argument that Seattle remains the most well-rounded team in the division even without those improvements.
Houston Astros (87-75)
The Astros missed the postseason for the first time since 2016 last year, and the team was not as aggressive as one might have expected this winter. That’s not to say the Astros were inactive. They replaced Framber Valdez at the top of the rotation with Tatsuya Imai and brought in Mike Burrows from the Pirates to add further depth to a rotation that was often held together by duct tape and bubblegum last year. Houston will bring back a nearly identical offense, only swapping Mauricio Dubon for Nick Allen and Jesus Sanchez for Joey Loperfido while going to internal backup Cesar Salazar as a replacement for Victor Caratini. The Astros explored trades of infielder Isaac Paredes and tried to get another left-handed bat, but they’ve come up empty to date. The uncertain health of closer Josh Hader only adds to the question marks facing Houston as they look to return to the top of this division.
Texas Rangers (81-81)
After a second consecutive disappointing season, the Rangers moved on from second baseman Marcus Semien, outfielder Adolis Garcia, and catcher Jonah Heim. Semien was traded to the Mets for outfielder Brandon Nimmo, who will take over right field following Garcia’s non-tender. Heim, also non-tendered, will be replaced by catcher Danny Jansen. Nimmo and Jansen should be upgrades over Heim and Garcia, though the team lost some positional depth by forcing Josh Smith into the everyday role at second base. The addition of MacKenzie Gore to an already talented rotation should allow the Rangers’ starters to once again be among the best in baseball, but they’ll need better health from Corey Seager and more production from Joc Pederson and Josh Jung if they’re going to compete for the division title this year.
The Athletics (76-86)
While it’s been a busy and exciting offseason for fans of the A’s, that excitement has mostly been focused on extensions. Long-term deals for Tyler Soderstrom and Jacob Wilson are encouraging for the long-term health of the franchise but don’t move the needle in 2026. The A’s added Jeff McNeil to help the offense at second base, and a full season of Nick Kurtz in the majors won’t hurt. Strong as the offense looks, the club’s lack of pitching additions for a roster that struggled to prevent runs even before losing Mason Miller at the trade deadline creates plenty of concern. They’ll need a lot to break right, particularly in the bullpen.
Los Angeles Angels (72-90)
As is often the case with the Angels, it’s not impossible to squint and see the bones of a solid team. Mike Trout was healthier last season than he’s been in a very long time. Jo Adell slugged 40 homers in 2025. Jorge Soler remains a potential middle-of-the-order force when healthy. Josh Lowe was a high-upside addition, and it’s not impossible to imagine any of Nolan Schanuel, Reid Detmers, and Christian Moore following in the footsteps of Zach Neto to become high quality regulars. Unfortunately, fans in Anaheim know that the club has been in this situation virtually every year for the past decade. They’ve seen far too many potential-laden teams undercut by a lack of depth before finishing the season underwater and failing to reach the playoffs. Perhaps this year will be different, but Angels fans have earned their skepticism, especially following an offseason where Lowe, Kirby Yates, and Grayson Rodriguez (the latter of whom is already injured) were the club’s biggest additions.
How do MLBTR readers think the AL West will shake out this year? Will the Mariners continue to reign supreme? Will the Astros find a way to reestablish themselves as the class of the AL? Was the Rangers’ roster shakeup enough to get them back to the playoffs? Or could the A’s or Angels surprise with a big season? Have your say in the poll below:
Who will win the AL West in 2026?
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Seattle Mariners 66% (3,469)
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Houston Astros 11% (553)
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Texas Rangers 8% (444)
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The Athletics 8% (441)
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Los Angeles Angels 6% (329)
Total votes: 5,236
Grayson Rodriguez To Begin Season On Injured List
TODAY: Suzuki told reporters (including Jack Janes) today that Rodriguez will indeed be placed on the IL. This sets Kochanowicz and Johnson up as rotation members, and Walbert Urena will also make the team in a long relief role. The 22-year-old Urena will be making his big league debut whenever he makes his first appearance for the Halos.
MARCH 19: Angels right-hander Grayson Rodriguez may begin the season on the injured list. Manager Kurt Suzuki told reporters, including Jeff Fletcher of the Orange County Register and Rhett Bollinger of MLB.com, that Rodriguez has a “dead arm” and will be slowed down. With Opening Day now just a week away, that makes it possible Rodriguez starts the season on the 15-day injured list, depending on how things progress in the coming days.
At this point, it doesn’t appear to be a major issue. Rodriguez isn’t even being shut down, with Fletcher noting that he still threw today, but it’s concerning nonetheless. Injuries have been in the spotlight for Rodriguez in recent years. He made 43 starts for the Orioles in 2023 and the first half of the 2024 season. He hasn’t made an official start since July of 2024, primarily due to shoulder issues.
He underwent elbow debridement surgery in August of last year. He was flipped to the Angels early this offseason in a one-for-one-trade for outfielder Taylor Ward. After that deal, Rodriguez spoke about his health and seemed optimistic. He said that he had been dealing with bone spurs in his elbow for three or four years. He believed this was adding stress to his shoulder and causing his numerous problems with that part of his arm.
For Rodriguez to now be dealing with arm problems once again is less than ideal. Perhaps it will remain a fairly minor issue but the Angels don’t have a lot of margin for error. They came into camp with a rotation projected to include José Soriano, Yusei Kikuchi, Reid Detmers, Alek Manoah and Rodriguez. Soriano and Kikuchi are fine but the group is fairly questionable after that.
Detmers had a 3.96 ERA in relief last year but a 6.70 ERA as a starter the year prior. He has a 7.27 ERA in spring training so far. Like Rodriguez, Manoah is looking to bounce back after a lengthy injury absence, but he has a 9.39 ERA this spring.
If Manoah gets optioned or Rodriguez needs to spend some time on the IL, that could open a spot for Jack Kochanowicz. He’s having a good spring but posted a 6.81 ERA in the big leagues last year. Fletcher suggested yesterday that Ryan Johnson has a chance to earn a spot, getting an aggressive Opening Day nod yet again. The Angels gave him a spot in their bullpen to begin last season even though he hadn’t yet played a game as a professional. He posted a 7.36 ERA through early May, at which point he was optioned down to High-A.
It’s worth reiterating that there’s still nothing to indicate Rodriguez is dealing with any kind of major issue. He may still avoid the IL if he feels better in the coming days. Even if he lands on the shelf, Opening Day IL stints can be backdated three days, so he could be back in less than two weeks.
But the Angels are going into a season where they hope to contend but need a lot of things to go right in order to that to be possible. They went 72-90 last year and didn’t make strong moves to upgrade the roster this winter. The Playoff Odds at FanGraphs give them just a 4.9% chance of cracking the postseason. The PECOTA Standings at Baseball Prospectus are even more pessimistic, giving the Halos just a 0.1% chance.
A minor setback for a club’s fourth starter wouldn’t always be a cause for worry but it looms larger for the Angels than with other clubs since any setback can further diminish already-slim those odds.
Photo courtesy of Allan Henry, Imagn Images
Angels Release Hunter Strickland
The Angels announced that right-hander Hunter Strickland and utilityman Chris Taylor have been released. Taylor was known to be on the way out after he opted out of his minor league deal with the team yesterday, and Strickland may well be in the same situation as another veteran player in camp as a non-roster invite.
Strickland was making a good case for himself by posting a 1.80 ERA over five innings in Cactus League ball this spring, but it apparently wasn’t enough for the 37-year-old to land a spot in the Los Angeles bullpen. This release marks the end of what is technically Strickland’s fourth different stint with the Angels, and this familiarity could perhaps hint at another contract in the near future.
Because Strickland’s first opt-out date fell this weekend and the Angels had to make a decision, this release could be a way of navigating that deadline and getting the righty back in the organization on another minors deal soon. It would depend on how comfortable Strickland feels with the Angels, if he perhaps has gotten assurances he’ll be called up to the majors in short order, or if he can perhaps find another opportunity elsewhere.
Over 95 1/3 innings with the 2024-25 Angels, Strickland has posted a 3.30 ERA, though his 18.4% strikeout rate and 8.8% walk rate are nothing special. These secondary metrics and Strickland’s age perhaps limited him to non-guaranteed offers this winter, and it didn’t help that he missed a big chunk of the 2025 campaign with a shoulder injury. He has looked healthy this spring, and his solid numbers in camp may draw some attention from another team if he indeed doesn’t end up back in Anaheim.
Kirby Yates, Drew Pomeranz, Jordan Romano, and Brent Suter will all be part of the Angels’ bullpen, as the team loaded up on other veteran relievers on one-year contracts. The rest of the relief corps is a little uncertain, as much hinges on the health of rotation candidates Grayson Rodriguez and Alek Manoah. Jack Kochanowicz and Ryan Johnson will be on the 26-man roster in some capacity, either in the pen or as starters if either of Rodriguez or Manoah begin the season on the 15-day injured list. Walbert Urena is also on the radar for a starting or relief role, adding to the Halos’ decisions heading into Opening Day.
Angels Release Chris Taylor
TODAY: The Angels officially announced Taylor’s release.
MARCH 20: Veteran infielder/outfielder Chris Taylor was in camp with the Angels on a minor league deal. Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic reports that Taylor has opted out of his deal and has been informed that he will not make the club. He’ll be a free agent whenever he is officially released. He was one of several veterans who could opt out of minor league deals this week.
Taylor, 35, spent many years with the Dodgers as the league’s top super utility guy. From 2017 to 2023, he hit .256/.336/.444 while stealing 76 bases and playing every position outside of first base and the battery. But he hit just .202/.298/.300 in 2024 and was worse in 2025, getting released. He ended up with the Angels but finished the season with a combined .186/.256/.301 line.
He returned to the Angels this offseason but had to settle for a minor league deal. He had a good showing in camp, putting up a .231/.388/.410 line in 49 plate appearances, but it appears the Angels are putting more stock in his larger sample of regular season work over the past two years.
The Halos have had an open battle for their second base job this spring and the decisions appear to be coming into focus. Christian Moore was optioned a few days ago. Vaughn Grissom has a left hand injury and may start the season on the injured list.
With Taylor now out, that seemingly leaves Adam Frazier to get the job. He has hit .310/.429/.414 this spring and his left-handed bat would help to balance a lineup that otherwise skews to the right. Oswald Peraza has had a nice spring and seemingly earned a job on the bench. Switch-hitter Jeimer Candelario could also get a roster spot if Grissom does indeed hit the IL.
If Frazier and Candelario both make the team, they would need spots on the 40-man roster. One spot can easily be opened by placing Anthony Rendon on the 60-day IL, since he’s not expected to play this year. Robert Stephenson could be another 60-day IL candidate since he may have damage in the ulnar collateral ligament in his throwing elbow.
Taylor will head to the open market and to see what opportunities await him. He won’t be helped by his performance in 2024 and 2025 but his defensive versatility could help him fit with many clubs and his bat looked a bit better in camp just now, for whatever that’s worth.
Photo courtesy of Gary A. Vasquez, Imagn Images
Offseason In Review: Los Angeles Angels
The Angels made a managerial change and overhauled the coaching staff. They otherwise did little to improve a 90-loss roster and again enter the season as one of the American League’s worst teams on paper.
Major League Signings
- RHP Kirby Yates: One year, $5MM
- 3B Yoán Moncada: One year, $4MM
- LHP Drew Pomeranz: One year, $4MM
- RHP Jordan Romano: One year, $2MM
- RHP Alek Manoah: One year, $1.95MM
- LHP Brent Suter: One year, $1.25MM
2026 spending: $18.2MM
Total future spending: $18.2MM
Trades and Claims
- Traded OF Taylor Ward to Orioles for RHP Grayson Rodriguez
- Acquired OF Josh Lowe from Rays in three-team trade that sent LHP Brock Burke to Reds and minor league RHP Chris Clark to Tampa Bay
- Acquired 2B Vaughn Grissom from Red Sox for minor league OF Isaiah Jackson
- Claimed RHP Kaleb Ort off waivers from Yankees (later outrighted to Triple-A)
- Claimed OF Wade Meckler off waivers from Giants (later outrighted to Triple-A)
- Acquired LHP Jayvien Sandridge from Yankees for cash
- Claimed RHP Osvaldo Bido off waivers from Marlins (later lost on waivers to Rays)
- Claimed RHP Cody Laweryson off waivers from Twins (subsequently released)
Option Decisions
- None
Extensions
- None
Notable Minor League Signings
- Shaun Anderson, Gustavo Campero, Jeimer Candelario, Adam Frazier, Nick Madrigal, Trey Mancini, Omar Martinez, Sebastian Rivero, Angel Perdomo, Yolmer Sánchez, Nick Sandlin, Tayler Saucedo, Jose Siri, Hunter Strickland, Chris Taylor, Donovan Walton, Huascar Ynoa, Aneurys Zabala
Notable Losses
- Taylor Ward, Kenley Jansen, Brock Burke, Kyle Hendricks (retired), Tyler Anderson (still unsigned), Luis Rengifo, Luis García, José Ureña, Andrew Chafin, Sammy Peralta (lost on waivers), Carter Kieboom (outright), Logan Davidson (outright), Connor Brogdon (outright), Carson Fulmer (outright)
At the end of their 10th straight losing season, the Angels announced they were making a managerial change. Neither Ron Washington nor interim skipper Ray Montgomery — who took over in the second half while Washington recovered from bypass surgery — would be back. Montgomery remained in the organization in a front office role, while Washington would land in San Francisco as infield coach on Tony Vitello’s first MLB staff.
Albert Pujols was the early frontrunner. Talks fizzled out a couple weeks later, reportedly after Pujols and owner Arte Moreno couldn’t agree on coaches and financial terms. The Halos also interviewed longtime center fielder Torii Hunter before landing on former catcher Kurt Suzuki as their new manager. Suzuki was highly respected as a player and has spent three seasons with the organization in a special assistant role, though he has no prior coaching or managerial experience.
Suzuki signed a one-year contract, which is rare. Most teams tend to give their top front office personnel and their manager multi-year security. Suzuki evidently didn’t have that kind of bargaining power. There’s nothing inherently wrong with a one-year contract, but that didn’t lead to much optimism that Moreno would be willing to spend on a roster littered with holes — especially after talks had collapsed with the candidate whom they initially targeted.
General manager Perry Minasian is entering the final guaranteed year of his contract, which has a club option for 2027. Moreno may be keeping his options open for wholesale changes next winter. There’s also some thought that the owner may be averse to any kind of multi-year commitments when the ’27 season could be impacted by a lockout.
In the interim, the front office and coaching staff can only try to make the best of the situation. Suzuki made a handful of noteworthy coaching hires. He tabbed John Gibbons as bench coach. They hired well-respected pitching coach Mike Maddux away from the Rangers.
The boldest hire was to bring in three-time All-Star Brady Anderson as hitting coach. Anderson is a first-time hitting coach who hadn’t worked in affiliated ball since 2020, but he clearly has a wealth of playing experience from which to draw. Recently retired players Adam Eaton and Max Stassi also joined the staff as first base and catching coach, respectively.
They’re going to have their work cut out for them. The managerial process indeed foreshadowed a quiet offseason. Like many teams, the Angels found themselves with broadcast revenue uncertainty after their renegotiated TV deal with Main Street Sports collapsed. The Halos wound up creating their own network and streaming arrangement, but they’re no longer working with fixed rights payments. Their revenue will be tied to subscriptions.
That provided a simple justification to more or less eschew free agency. They spent a total of $18.2MM over six one-year contracts, none of which exceeded $5MM. That’s despite a pair of moves that created plenty of short-term cash savings.
The first, their most significant transaction of the winter, was the Taylor Ward trade. The Angels had one too many right-handed hitting corner outfielders. Playing Jo Adell as a regular center fielder isn’t viable. Mike Trout wanted to return to playing defense. Jorge Soler will get a rebound opportunity between DH and right field.
Trading one of Ward or Adell for starting pitching felt like a must. The Angels lined up a one-for-one swap sending Ward to the Orioles for righty Grayson Rodriguez. Once the top pitching prospect in MLB, Rodriguez pitched pretty well between 2023-24 before elbow and shoulder injuries threw his career off track.
The Angels control the 26-year-old Rodriguez for at least four seasons. He also has a pair of minor league options that give the team some flexibility if he struggles after a lost ’25 campaign. There’s risk given the health history, but this is the kind of upside play the Angels should be taking. They’ll need a lot of players to hit the higher end of their realistic range of outcomes to be competitive. Rodriguez has a ceiling that few of their internal arms possess. His command has understandably been erratic this spring, but he’s averaging 95 mph on the fastball and should open the season in the rotation.
It comes at a cost, of course. Ward hit 36 home runs a year ago. He has been an above-average offensive player in five consecutive seasons. Still, this was the one area of MLB depth the Angels could leverage in a trade. Ward’s general profile — a righty power bat with middling on-base marks — is also one the Angels had in abundance.
They ranked fourth in MLB last year in home runs and easily led the league with 188 homers from righty batters. No team struck out more often or had a lower batting average, while only the Rockies and Guardians had a worse on-base percentage. There’s something to be said for breaking up that redundancy, at least once the opportunity to acquire a talented starting pitcher with cost control presented itself.
They also cleared nearly $12MM between Ward’s final arbitration salary and Rodriguez’s pre-arbitration sum. They saved more money in the short term by closing the book on Anthony Rendon’s tenure. The Angels and Rendon negotiated a buyout to defer his $38MM salary at $7.6MM annually over the next five years. Rendon will still get paid in the long run, but the buyout reduces the net present value while shifting more than $30MM of the team’s commitments from this year to future seasons.
Tyler Anderson ($13MM), Kenley Jansen ($10MM), Evan White ($8MM), Luis Rengifo ($5.95MM) and Kyle Hendricks ($2.5MM) all came off the books as free agents. Some of those savings would be reallocated to raises among the arbitration class, but the Angels would have had a lot of spending capacity if ownership were willing to match last year’s level.
Instead, the rest of the offseason featured lower-ceiling moves. Alek Manoah’s third-place Cy Young finish in 2022 might make his signing seem like an upside play, but there’s not much reason for optimism he’ll get close to that level again.
Manoah’s stuff hasn’t returned since he battled elbow injuries that required Tommy John surgery in 2024. A fastball that once averaged around 94 mph is in the 91-92 range this spring. Pitching-starved clubs like the Rockies and Nationals passed on the chance to claim Manoah off waivers last fall. The Braves, whose lack of rotation depth decimated them last year and remains an issue, declined to tender him an arbitration contract in the $2-3MM range. Teams clearly don’t have much optimism.
The Angels signed Manoah for $1.95MM, so it’s not as if the deal itself is going to cripple them. The problem is the Angels didn’t make any other moves to add a clearer upgrade at the back of the rotation. Manoah entered camp as the projected fifth starter. A rough Spring Training (16 runs with 14 walks over 15 1/3 innings) might push him back to Triple-A.
Manoah as a seventh or eighth starter would be fine. It doesn’t work as well for a team that was counting on him to win a season-opening rotation spot. José Soriano and Yusei Kikuchi return as the team’s top two starters, with the former tabbed for his first career Opening Day assignment. Reid Detmers is moving back to the rotation after a strong season in relief. He’s the third starter, likely followed by Rodriguez.
If they send Manoah down, the last spot falls to one of Jack Kochanowicz, Sam Aldegheri or an aggressive promotion for a prospect like George Klassen or Ryan Johnson. Jeff Fletcher of The Orange County Register wrote yesterday that Kochanowicz and Johnson appear to have pulled ahead.
Kochanowicz had a near-7.00 ERA across 23 MLB starts a year ago. Johnson, a 2024 second-rounder, broke camp as a reliever last season without previously pitching in a minor league game. He struggled and was demoted all the way to High-A in May. He built back up as a starter and turned in a 2.05 ERA with a near-30% strikeout rate across 57 1/3 innings. He’s a good prospect who is having an impressive spring, but he hasn’t started a game above A-ball.
Shaky as the rotation depth seems, the bullpen might be in worse shape. None of last year’s three best relievers are returning to the late innings. Jansen signed an $11MM free agent deal with the Tigers. Detmers is back in the rotation. They traded Brock Burke to the Reds in a three-team deal to acquire outfielder Josh Lowe from Tampa Bay.
The Angels added four veteran relievers via cheap free agent contracts. Kirby Yates, Drew Pomeranz, Brent Suter and Jordan Romano all signed one-year deals. Yates and Romano are former All-Star closers who are reclamation projects. The soft-tossing Suter had a career-high 4.52 ERA over 67 2/3 innings with Cincinnati. Pomeranz was easily the best of this group last year, tossing 49 2/3 innings of 2.17 ERA ball with a 28% strikeout rate for the Cubs. He’s also 37 years old, has an extensive injury history, and didn’t pitch in MLB between 2022-24.
That magnified the importance of getting Ben Joyce and Robert Stephenson back in high-leverage situations. Joyce underwent shoulder surgery last May and will open the season on the injured list, but he’s throwing bullpen sessions and could be back a few weeks into the year.
Stephenson’s first two seasons with the Halos were ruined by elbow issues and a bout with thoracic outlet syndrome. He seemingly entered camp healthy but unfortunately suffered yet another elbow injury last week. The team hasn’t announced a diagnosis, but the right-hander acknowledged the brutal news that he’s dealing with more ligament damage. He’s evaluating his treatment options and another season-ending surgery seems possible.
Suzuki suggested the Angels will open the season with a closer committee between Yates, Romano and Pomeranz. It’s less than ideal. They’ll hope for the flamethrower Joyce to take the job midseason. The middle relief group is wide open. Minor league signees Hunter Strickland and Nick Sandlin are competing with holdovers Ryan Zeferjahn, Chase Silseth and Sam Bachman.
There wasn’t a ton of turnover on the position player side. Lowe replaces Ward in the outfield mix, adding some balance by bringing in a lefty bat. Lowe has fought oblique issues for a couple seasons and is coming off a tough year, hitting .220/.283/.366 over 435 plate appearances. He had a 20-30 campaign with the Rays back in 2023 and is under arbitration control for three seasons. The Angels parted with a solid middle reliever in Burke and a mid-tier pitching prospect (Chris Clark) to see if they can get Lowe back on track.
Although Minasian said the Halos were comfortable using Lowe in center field, he’s better served replacing Ward in left. It certainly looks like Trout will be back in center. The Angels moved the three-time MVP to right field last year, hoping it’d reduce the physical toll he has taken. Trout sustained a bone bruise in his left knee by the end of April anyway. He missed a month and was a full-time designated hitter for the rest of the season.
Trout said last month he wants to return to center field. The Angels are open to the idea and have started him in center seven times this spring. He has played four games as a DH and twice in left field — a position he hasn’t played in the regular season since 2013. It seems safe to assume Trout isn’t starting 140 games as a center fielder, but he’ll be out there more often than not for as long as he’s healthy. They’ll have a corner pairing of Lowe and Adell while occasionally starting Soler in a corner and using Trout as a DH.
Two spots on the infield were locked in. Nolan Schanuel and Zach Neto will play almost every day at first base and shortstop, respectively. The Halos opted for stability at the hot corner, re-signing Yoán Moncada to a $4MM deal. The switch-hitter hasn’t topped 104 games in a season since 2022. He was reasonably productive when healthy last year, though, batting .234/.336/.448 in around half a season of playing time.
Moncada will begin the season at third base. There’s a decent chance they’ll need players to fill in there throughout the year given his injury history. Second base was wide open with Rengifo hitting free agency and certainly not coming back after a tough season.
The Angels took a flier on Vaughn Grissom, who is out of options. Grissom is a former highly-regarded prospect whom the Red Sox acquired from the Braves for Chris Sale. It turned out to be one of the most lopsided trades in years, as Grissom hit .190 without a home run in 31 games in a Boston uniform. He didn’t appear in MLB last season, batting .270/.342/.441 across 418 Triple-A plate appearances.
It’s a fine change-of-scenery move that echoes last summer’s deadline trade for Oswald Peraza. The prospect cost was minimal. They sent last year’s eighth-round pick, Isaiah Jackson, to Boston. Grissom is in his mid-20s and battled injuries throughout his Red Sox tenure. He had a pair of hamstring strains in 2024 and missed the final month last year with plantar fasciitis. He has been banged up again this spring, recently receiving a cortisone shot for a left hand issue.
The Angels already optioned Christian Moore, taking him out of consideration for the season-opening second base job. Peraza and Grissom each need to be on the MLB roster or injured list if the Angels don’t want to expose them to waivers. Adam Frazier, Jeimer Candelario and Chris Taylor are all in camp on minor league contracts. Frazier seems likeliest to make the team, largely because he’s a left-handed contact bat in a lineup that doesn’t have many of those.
Behind the plate, it’ll be a Logan O’Hoppe/Travis d’Arnaud combination for a second straight year. O’Hoppe’s performance on both sides of the ball took a major step back last season. There’s not much to do but hope for a rebound from the 26-year-old catcher, whom the Halos control for another three seasons.
As Spring Training got underway, Moreno met with the media to attempt to justify the quiet offseason. He pointed to the TV revenue drop as necessitating the payroll cut while rhetorically asking whether “one or two players substantially (changes)” the team’s record. It’s almost certainly true that the Angels are more than one player away from being competitive, but that’s in large part because Moreno’s own impatience has kept the team from building the kind of minor league pipeline needed for consistent success.
Ironically, those were Moreno’s less irksome comments. He also claimed that “winning is not in (fans’) top five” priorities when attending a game. That’s clearly not true of the entire fanbase, even if there are surely some whose only concern is a fun day at the park. It wouldn’t be a surprise if some players or coaches privately bristled at the comment as well.
It leaves the Angels in a similar spot as they’re in almost every year. They have a few talented players but one of the thinnest rosters in the American League. FanGraphs projects them for 72 wins with roughly 5% playoff odds. Baseball Prospectus is even more bearish, with a 66-win forecast that has them as the worst projected team in the AL (better only than the Rockies overall). They don’t look any closer to snapping an 11-year playoff drought.
How would you grade the Angels' offseason?
