BREAKING: Seattle Mariners Confirm the Release of 27-Year-Old Struggling Pitcher

As every Major League Baseball season wraps up, a flood of overlooked players enters free agency.

Right-hander of the Seattle Mariners system, is a prime example. He has yet to pitch in a major league game — in fact, he hasn’t even reached Triple-A. But just a couple of weeks shy of turning 28, he earned another opportunity with a new club, boosted by the strong strikeout numbers he posted this past year.

Per the transactions listed on his MLB.com profile, Floyd agreed to a minor-league contract with the Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday. It marks his fourth organization and gives him another chance to chase a long-awaited big-league debut as he enters his eighth professional season.

 

Reds sign minor league journeyman in quiet attempt to strengthen pitching depth

Taylor Floyd joins Reds on minor-league deal

Floyd pitched to a 4.53 ERA with Double-A Arkansas this past season, but the Mariners’ minor-league pitching coaches found a way to boost his strikeout totals. He went from striking out 8.9 batters per nine innings last year to 10.6 this year.

Once a 10th-round draft pick for the Milwaukee Brewers, Floyd was traded to the Minnesota Twins in 2023, then picked up in the minor-league phase of the Rule 5 Draft by the Mariners last December. He elected free agency on Nov. 6.

All told, Floyd wound up throwing just 57 2/3 innings in the Mariners organization, striking out 68 batters, walking 19, and allowing 63 hits.

Nothing is guaranteed, of course, but Floyd may see an opportunity in the Reds organization that he wasn’t getting with the Mariners. The flip side, of course, is that the Mariners may not think rostering a 28-year-old righty in Double-A makes sense with whatever pitching talent they have coming through the middle levels of the pipeline.

Seattle is obviously well-set in the pitching department, so losing Floyd is unlikely to prove costly in the long haul. But it’s interesting to watch talent bounce around in the offseason, because we never know which signings that seem inconsequential will prove crucial.

 

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