The Diamondbacks will be exercising their $7M club option on Merrill Kelly for the 2025 season, according to Nick Piecoro of the Arizona Republic. The team will also be declining its end of a $4M mutual option on right-hander Scott McGough, as McGough will head into free agency with a $750K buyout. He’ll be joined by Joc Pederson, who took a $3M buyout after declining his end of a $14M mutual option for the 2025 campaign.
All three decisions were expected, even with Kelly missing over half of the season due to a teres major strain. The right-hander was limited to 73 2/3 innings over 13 starts, with a 4.03 ERA and some pretty unimpressive Statcast numbers, save for a solid 6.3% walk rate.
Assuming good health for Kelly next year, however, the $6M decision (there was a $1M buyout attached) was still an easy one for Arizona to make, given how well he has generally pitched over his six seasons in a Diamondbacks uniform. Kelly didn’t make his MLB debut until age 30, after the D-backs signed him to return to North America after a successful four-season run in the KBO League. Over the course of two separate contracts with Arizona, Kelly has now earned $37.5M over a seven-year span since returning from South Korea.
The D-backs were hoping for more reclamation success when they signed McGough to a two-year, $6.25M deal in the 2022-23 offseason, as McGough had pitched well over four seasons with the Yakult Swallows of Nippon Professional Baseball. Unfortunately, McGough posted a 4.73 ERA in 70 1/3 innings out of Arizona’s bullpen in 2023, and then a 7.44 ERA in 32 2/3 frames this season. The right-hander’s home run and walk rates were constant issues, while McGough’s strikeout rate also plummeted from 28.6% in 2023 to just 16.7% this season.
Pederson almost exclusively faced right-handed pitching this season, and was utilized only as a designated hitter. Albeit within this limited scope, Pederson enjoyed a monster year, hitting .275/.393/.515 with 23 homers over 449 plate appearances. Among all position-player free agents, only six posted a higher fWAR than Pederson’s 3.0 mark in 2024, and only Juan Soto had a higher wRC+ than Pederson’s 151.
While Pederson resisted being a full-time platoon player or DH earlier in his career, embracing his specialist role has obvious upside, and could lead to another nice payday as he enters his age-33 season. No shortage of teams could use Pederson’s power, and a return to the D-backs is certainly a possibility given how well the veteran slugger performed in his first season in Arizona. Randal Grichuk also declined his end of a mutual option, leaving the Diamondbacks without both pieces of their unofficial lefty-righty platoon. Depending on the asking prices, the D-backs could perhaps look to re-sign one of Pederson or Grichuk, and then look another complementary bat to fill the other side of the virtual platoon.
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