AN UPDATE ON THE
JORDAN LYLES SIGNING
The Pittsburgh Pirates made multiple moves
yesterday which included a couple of pitchers. Here is an update on the
free agent they signed.
The Pittsburgh Pirates were
one of the more active teams yesterday at the Major League Baseball Winter
Meetings in Las Vegas. The team actually traded away one of their
starting pitchers and quickly signed another pitcher to a contract.
The day started off with the
Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago White Sox swinging a trade. The Bucs
sent their number starter Ivan Nova to the Chicago White Sox.
Coming back in the trade was $500,000 in International Bonus Slot Money
and a 19-year-old pitching prospect by the name of Yordi Rosario. By making the move,
the Pittsburgh Pirates were able to unload $9.1 million off their books.
The trade itself was a salary dump, but the team quickly turned around
and reinvested some of that money.
Not even an hour after the
Pittsburgh Pirates traded Nova, it was reported by Joel Sherman that
they had an agreement in place with pitcher Jordan Lyles. Jon Heyman of
FanCred confirmed that the deal was in place and the team
was just waiting for Lyle’s to pass his physical. However, that was the
only details Pittsburgh Pirates fans were given until late last night.
Late last night,
Robert Murray of The Athletic brought the more important details of the
Pittsburgh Pirates signing. First, he tweeted that
the team would be paying Lyles just over $2 million. Heyman later confirmed that
Lyles would be getting $2.05 million for the 2019 season. Robert
Murray also released how the Pittsburgh Pirates plan to use Jordan Lyles next
season:
This would be surprising.
Lyles was once a top prospect, but that was over eight years ago at this
point. He has bounced around to multiple major league teams and spent
2018 with the San Diego Padres and was later traded to the
Milwaukee Brewers. Lyles has not been very effective as a major
league starter in his career, throwing over 600 innings as a starter and
posting a 5.28 ERA.
Last year, he had one of his
better seasons. He made 24 appearances for the Padres last year, including
eight starts and posted a 4.29 ERA before being dealt to the Brewers. The
Brewers used him strictly as a long reliever and he pitched to 3.31 ERA in 16.1
innings. All in all, Lyles’ ERA as a starter last year was 4.79 while his
relief ERA was 3.32.
The key piece here is that he
will be “given the chance to start.” Hopefully, this means he will be given a
shot in Spring Training to throw extended innings and just build up his innings
to be able to pitch as a swingman out of the bullpen. Also, he most
definitely could be used as a spot starter or for depth if an arm goes on the
disabled list. Regardless, the Pittsburgh Pirates should still look to
bring in a better starting pitching this offseason.
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