The Rangers have reached an agreement with veteran starter Johnny Cueto, reports Jon Heyman of the New York Post (X link). It’s a minor league deal, tweets Robert Murray of FanSided. Cueto is represented by Primo Sports Group.
Cueto finds a landing spot after lingering in free agency for the entire winter. It was a marked change from the previous offseason, when he found a solid $8.5MM deal from the Marlins. At that point, the right-hander was coming off a 3.35 ERA showing over 25 appearances for the White Sox. His time in Miami wasn’t nearly as productive, as he missed a good portion of the season to injury and was largely ineffective when he was able to take the mound.
The 38-year-old injured his biceps during his first start of the season. He went on the injured list and essentially missed the first half. Cueto returned around the All-Star Break but would subsequently miss another few weeks due to a viral infection. Around the IL stints, he started 10 of 13 appearances. In 52 1/3 frames, Cueto was charged with a career-worst 6.02 ERA. He surrendered 17 home runs, an average of nearly three per nine innings.
Miami paid a $2.5MM buyout in lieu of a $10.5MM option for the 2024 season. Cueto wasn’t substantively linked to any teams over the offseason, yet MLB.com’s Jon Morosi reported in February that he continued to work out in hopes of prolonging his career. It took a few weeks into the regular season, but he’ll get that chance as a depth option for a Texas rotation dealing with a number of injuries.
The Rangers opened the year with each of Max Scherzer, Jacob deGrom and Tyler Mahle on the injured list. Left-hander Cody Bradford, who started the season as the #5 starter, recently went on the shelf with a lower back strain. Bradford’s injury isn’t thought to be especially serious. Scherzer could be back within a couple weeks, as he’s set to start a minor league rehab stint tomorrow.
Still, there’s sense for the Rangers in adding another upper minors rotation depth. Texas is currently operating with a starting five of Nathan Eovaldi, Jon Gray, Dane Dunning, Michael Lorenzen and Andrew Heaney. The latter has gotten out to a very rough start, pitching to a 6.35 ERA in 17 innings. Texas called on Jack Leiter for a spot start last week, but the former #2 pick was hit hard by the Tigers and subsequently optioned back to Triple-A.
Cueto has 16 years of big league experience. Four of those came when current Texas skipper Bruce Bochy managed him with the Giants between 2016-19. The righty was also teammates with Rangers GM Chris Young as part of the 2015 World Series team in Kansas City. Those connections surely didn’t hurt his chances of getting another opportunity with Texas. While Cueto doesn’t miss many bats at this stage of his career, he still has above-average control and the ability to work multiple innings as a starter or long reliever.