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Right Fielder Adolis Garcia Officially Becomes a Free Agent
Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

One minute you’re the toast of Texas, hoisting an ALCS MVP trophy and etching your name in the record books. Next, you’re looking for a new gig. Adolis García, the man who was the heartbeat of the Rangers’ magical 2023 World Series run, has been non-tendered. Just like that, “El Bombi” is a free agent.

It feels like a lifetime ago, doesn’t it? García was a human highlight reel in October 2023, crushing a postseason record 22 RBI and launching eight homers that probably still haven’t landed. He was the hero, the muscle, the swagger of a championship team. But professional sports have a short memory, and the last two seasons have been a brutal reality check.

What Happened To Adolis Garcia?

The simple answer? The bat went cold. After a monster 2023 regular season where he mashed 39 home runs, García’s production took a nosedive. His OPS plummeted into the .600s for both 2024 and 2025. For a guy whose game is built on thunder, the silence was deafening. The strikeouts piled up, the walks disappeared, and pitchers figured out that anything that wasn’t a fastball was basically Kryptonite.

From the Rangers‘ perspective, it’s a tough but understandable business decision. With a payroll already groaning under the weight of massive contracts for guys like Corey Seager and Jacob deGrom, paying a projected $12-13 million for a slumping, 32-year-old power hitter was a gamble they weren’t willing to take. It is a cold, calculated move that stings for fans who remember the postseason glory.

Why Teams Will Still Bet On “El Bombi”

But let’s not write García’s baseball obituary just yet. This isn’t your average washed-up slugger. He still hits the ball with the force of a sledgehammer. His exit velocity and hard-hit rates are still elite, and his arm in right field remains a certified cannon. He’s a Gold Glove-caliber defender who can save runs with his leather.

That’s the tantalizing puzzle for the 29 other GMs out there. Can you fix the approach at the plate? Can you get him to lay off the junk and hunt the fastballs he can still send into orbit? If you can, you’re not just getting a decent player; you’re getting a guy with the proven ability to carry a team through the playoffs. That kind of clutch gene isn’t something you can teach.

So, while the Rangers have closed the book on this chapter, García is far from finished. He’s a high-risk, high-reward lottery ticket with superstar potential still bubbling under the surface. Some team, maybe a contender needing a power surge like the Giants or a team on the rise like the Tigers, is going to roll the dice. And if they hit the jackpot, they might just get the hero of October all to themselves.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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