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Come Fan with UsTuesday, June 23, 2026

MLB relief pitchers are cashing in this offseason

10 non-closers have signed multi-year deals as free agents so far this winter.

MLB: ALDS-New York Yankees at Cleveland Indians
MLB: ALDS-New York Yankees at Cleveland Indians
Bryan Shaw is one of several relief pitchers to find the free agent market to his liking so far this winter.
Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports

The winter meetings were kind of slow this year in Orlando, with not many deals going down at baseball’s annual gathering. But there was a rush on middle relief pitchers, who have found this free agent market to be quite lucrative.

Brandon Morrow was the headliner so far this winter, joining the Chicago Cubs on a two-year, $21 million contract that could be worth as much as $30 million over three years if his 2020 option is exercised. Morrow was an excellent setup man for the Dodgers this season, posting a 2.06 ERA in 45 games after signing a minor league deal for $1.25 million last year.

Others to cash in this winter include Bryan Shaw and Jake McGee (3 years, $27 million each) with the Colorado Rockies, Tommy Hunter (2 years, $18 million) with the Philadelphia Phillies and Juan Nicasio (2 years, $17 million) with the Seattle Mariners to name a few. Those four combined for 13 total saves in 2017.

Morrow could close for the Cubs, depending on how the rest of the winter goes, and with just two saves in the last eight seasons, we won’t classify him just yet as a closer.

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Last offseason was a banner year for free agent closers, with Aroldis Chapman (5 years, $86 million), Kenley Jansen (5 years, $80 million) and Mark Melancon (4 years, $62 million) signing the three richest contracts for relief pitchers in history. The rest of the market saw just five multi-year deals with an average annual value of $6 million or more for free agent relievers who weren’t closers:

Free agent relief pitchers, 2016-17 offseason

Player

Team

Years

Total Contract

Average Annual Value

Brad ZieglerMarlins2$16,000,000$8,000,000
Brett CecilCardinals4$30,500,000$7,625,000
Michael DunnRockies3$19,000,000$6,333,333
Junichi TazawaMarlins2$12,000,000$6,000,000
Travis WoodRoyals2$12,000,000$6,000,000
Santiago CastillaAthletics2$11,000,000$5,500,000
Daniel HudsonPirates2$11,000,000$5,500,000
Mark RzepczynskiMariners2$11,000,000$5,500,000

The previous winter was more active in multi-year deals for non-closers, but still saw five such pitchers crack the $6 million barrier in AAV.

Free agent relief pitchers, 2015-16 offseason

Player

Team

Years

Total Contract

Average Annual Value

Darren O'DayOrioles4$31,000,000$7,750,000
Ryan MadsonAthletics3$22,000,000$7,333,333
Tyler ClippardDiamondbacks2$12,250,000$6,125,000
Tony SippAstros3$18,000,000$6,000,000
Antonio BastardoMets2$12,000,000$6,000,000
Mark LoweTigers2$11,000,000$5,500,000
Shawk KelleyBlue Jays3$15,000,000$5,000,000
Steve CishekMariners2$10,000,000$5,000,000
John AxfordAthletics2$10,000,000$5,000,000
Jason MotteRockies2$10,000,000$5,000,000
Jonathan BroxtonCardinals2$7,500,000$3,750,000
Oliver PerezNationals2$7,000,000$3,500,000
Chad QuallsRockies2$6,000,000$3,000,000

In the last two offseasons combined, there have been 10 multi-year contracts for free agent non-closers with an average annual value of $6 million or more. So far this winter we have nine such deals, with several options still on the board. Six of this year’s free agent reliever deals have an AAV of $8 million or more, topping the previous high of the last two winters — Darren O’Day getting $31 million over four years with the Baltimore Orioles.

Free agent relief pitchers, 2017-18 offseason

Player

Team

Years

Total Contract

Average Annual Value

Brandon MorrowCubs2$21,000,000$10,500,000
Bryan ShawRockies3$27,000,000$9,000,000
Jake McGeeRockies3$27,000,000$9,000,000
Tommy HunterPhillies2$18,000,000$9,000,000
Juan NicasioMariners2$17,000,000$8,500,000
Pat NeshekPhillies2$16,250,000$8,125,000
Joe SmithAstros2$15,000,000$7,500,000
Anthony SwarzakMets2$14,000,000$7,000,000
Luke GregersonCardinals2$11,000,000$5,500,000
Yusmeiro PetitAthletics2$10,000,000$5,000,000

Those nine deals this winter don’t include Mike Minor, who rebounded after missing two years to post an excellent season in relief in Kansas City, then cashed in a three-year, $28 million deal to start with the Texas Rangers.

Greg Holland or Wade Davis, both of whom have extensive closing experience, are also on the market and will get paid accordingly.

So are Addison Reed, Tony Watson and others who are still looking to cash in this winter. If this market is any indication, there is still plenty of money left on the table.

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