MLB Closer Watch 2010

Baseball closer is not a position with much job security. We update our Closer Watch grid daily in-season (and pretty often off-season) so you know who's in line for saves with each MLB club.

* Update: MIN -- 7/29/2010

The Twins have acquired closer Matt Capps from the Nationals. Capps should step into the Twins closer role immediately, bumping the less-dominant Jon Rauch back to a more-comfortable setup role.

Updated 7/30/2010

Closer Leaning In Notes
BAL BAL
Simon 

Uehara 
MGonzalez (DL) 
Johnson 
DHernandez 
Ohman 
The surprise signing of expensive ex-Brave Mike Gonzalez solidified a confused Baltimore bullpen for 2010. Behind him will be some capable arms: Jim Johnson held down the job adequately after the trade of George Sherrill in late 2009, but didn't exactly blow anyone away. Import Koji Uehara has experience closing in Japan and could be called upon if needed in America, too. Rookie Kam Mickolio has an outside shot at taking over sometime, but probably not until 2011.
BOS BOS
Papelbon 

Bard 
Okajima 
RRamirez 
Delcarmen 
Papelbon continues season-to-season in Boston, but expect to hear fans clamoring for the fashionable Dan Bard early and often, especially if Papelbon's two seasons of fading effectiveness become a real trend. A dropping strikeout rate and a rising price tag is not a good mix for a developing arm. Other than Bard, the relievers in waiting are a solid bunch of young veterans who won't break radar guns, but they can get the job done.
NYY NYY
Rivera 

Chamberlain 
Marte 
Melancon 
Robertson 
In the least-exciting closer 'battle' in baseball, future Hall of Famer Rivera will be holding the league in check once again. Phil Hughes blossomed as an eighth-inning type in 2009, but many mumble that he doesn't have the confidence or guile to work as an everyday closer. He could be moved back to starting action at any time, while Joba Chamberlain might be back in the bullpen once again.
TOR TOR
Gregg 

Frasor 
Downs 
Accardo 
Reinecke 
Frasor and Downs swapped places a few times in 2009 as injuries and ineffectiveness seemed contagious in the Toronto bullpen, though both were capable enough during the bulk of their duties. The less-expensive Frasor looks like a slightly better bet entering 2010, but there must have been a reason Toronto found it necessary to sign the 'established' (but not very good) Kevin Gregg. From here, it looks like they just turned a two-way battle into a three-way one. Deeper down, Toronto is stacked in hot young pitching, so this job will not be very stable long-term, either.
TB TB
Soriano 

Wheeler 
Balfour 
Howell 
Davis 
The surprise availability of Rafael Soriano threw a sharp curve into Tampa's options for 2010, and the team responded swiftly, sending baby closer prospect Jesse Chavez to the Braves at the first opening. Until Soriano's arrival, this was probably Wheeler's job to start 2010, and he remains the obvious fallback. The rumored conversion of Wade Davis to bullpen work also looks like a nice sleeper option.
OAK OAK
Bailey 

Ziegler 
Devine 
Wuertz 
HRodriguez 
Rookie breakout artist Andrew Bailey, a great success after being converted from starting duties, is the favorite to hold down the ninth inning in 2010, too. But the A's are nothing if not resourceful, and the arms behind him are all capable of taking over at any time. Oakland's closer situation has to be considered one of the least stable in baseball, no matter how good the incumbent performs: Bailey's unlikely to be the only A notching saves in 2010.
LAA LAA
Fuentes 

Rodney 
FRodriguez 
Jepsen 
RRodriguez 
Proving that it's the team that makes a closer, newcomer Brian Fuentes led all of baseball in saves in 2010 despite some pretty average ancillary numbers. The arms behind him were better, and youngster Kevin Jepsen in particular took a step forward. Keep an eye on young Rafael Rodriguez and 'the other' Francisco Rodriguez, too. They both have the stuff and ego to succeed in pressure situations.
SEA SEA
Aardsma 

League 
Kelley 
Lowe 
Fields 
Cordero 
New GM Jack Zduriencik didn't wait long to shake things up in Seattle, sending ace closer JJ Putz and reliever Sean Green to the Mets in exchange for six young players. After bouncing between half a dozen options in spring and experimenting with Brandon Morrow as their closer, the team settled on young journeyman David Aardsma, a fine fastballer. Aardsma proved that any cool head can hold down closing duties by being one of the AL's best in 2009. He's a lock to get the job again in 2010.
TEX TEX
Feliz 

Francisco 
ODay 
Ray 
Fukumori 
Franky Two-Times ended the 2009 season as the best bet in Texas, but the 102mph explosions coming from rookie Neftali Feliz can't be doing much for his confidence. If Texas leaves Feliz in the bullpen, rather than attempting to stretch him out and return him to starting duties, he's going to be hard to keep in the eighth inning for long. Lefty CJ Wilson remains a solid backup choice, especially if his adventures in the starting rotation don't hold up to the long grind. Ex-Angel Darren O'Day is also equipped with closer stuff and the necessarily hard-nosed mentality.
CHW CHW
Jenks 

Thornton 
Putz 
Pena 
The always-shaky but usually-successful Jenks will probably return to closing duties in 2010, with new acquisition JJ Putz and the always-capable Matt Thornton there to back him up if he stumbles again.
CLE CLE
Wood 

CPerez 
Smith 
JLewis 
RPerez 
The always-exciting Kerry Wood will remain to save what few victories the Tribe can scrape out in 2010. On the horizon, onetime Cardinal closer-of-the-future Chris Perez is the obvious candidate in waiting, with Joe Smith likely to ascend to righthanded-setup duties. Jensen Lewis and Rafael Perez have also both shown they can handle the load. If (when) Wood is hurt, this one could get messy.
DET DET
Valverde 

Zumaya 
Schlereth 
Perry 
Fien 
It looked like the Tigers might finally give fragile but fiery Joel Zumaya a chance to close in 2010, at least until they signed Jose Valverde to be a safer saver. Longer term, youngsters Ryan Perry and Casey Fien are decent gambles for the future, and newcomer Daniel Schlereth is nothing to sneeze at, either.
KC KC
Soria 

Farnsworth 
Cruz 
Yabuta 
Probably the best closer everyone forgets about, Joakim Soria has a lock on the job once again for 2010, and he's bound to deliver another Mariano-Lite season. Right now, Professor Farnsworth looks like the backup plan, but (good news, everyone!) KC will also try to add some more reliable arms behind him during the winter.
MIN MIN
Capps 

Guerrier 
Rauch 
Crain 
Slama 
Mijares 
Nathan (DL) 
Jon Rauch filled in well for Joe Nathan for 2010's first half, but the Twins traded for Matt Capps at the deadline to take over in the second half. Behind Capps and Rauch, the seasoned young lefty Jose Mijares, the flame-throwing Jesse Crain and the reliable Matt Guerrier provide some nice, safe bullpen depth.
ARZ ARZ
Heilman 

Qualls 
Gutierrez  
Demel 
Zavada 
Rosa 
Qualls was the technical closer to start the season but never had much of a firm footing. The bullpen was always likely to be churning flow of bullpen candidates. It seems likely that Arizona will keep tinkering, as the team always seems to have a surplus of adequate arms, but no standout performers.
COL COL
Street 

Corpas 
Buchholz 
Weathers 
Morales (DL) 
Huston Street will be expensive in arbitration, but the Rockies don't have anyone else who's really ready yet. Franklin Morales had moments of greatness in spot duty but didn't show the poise or polish needed for a regular job. Manny Corpas and Taylor Buchholz, both capable closers, will be on the shelf recovering from injuries and off-season surgeries until at least the All Star Break. Casey Weathers, a college closer working his way up the farm system, won't be ready until 2011 or later.
LAD LAD
Broxton 

Sherrill 
Kuo 
Troncoso 
Belisario 
Broxton was on-again, off-again in 2009. Practically unhittable at Dodger Stadium, he was awful on the road, posting an ERA high enough to make him the absolute worst closer in baseball when away from his friendly fans. George Sherrill can do the job if necessary, but the real question is whether the Dodgers really need three veteran lefties (Sherrill, Kuo, Elbert) in their full-season bullpen. Moves to bring in a strong righthanded setup artist could be in the offing.
SD SD
Bell 

Adams 
Gregerson 
Mujica 
Russell 
Heath Bell might not seem like major league closer material, but he looked pretty damn fine in 2009. So good, in fact, that he's about to get arbitration-expensive, which means the ever-poor Padres could go looking for cheaper in-house options like Mike Adams, Luke Gregerson or Adam Russell.
SF SF
Wilson 

Romo 
Affeldt 
Runzler 
Wilson did a commendable (if high-ERA) job again in 2009, so he's a lock to keep his job again in 2010. Sergio Romo, who has often looked like the Giants' best pitcher, needs to find a consistent groove if he's going to be second-in-command. SF is likely to add some bullpen depth in the winter, but it'll be for setup and innings-eating purposes.
CHC CHC
Marmol 

Marshall 
Grabow 
Carlos Marmol has been given many opportunities to lock down the Cubs' closing job, but has failed to do it thanks to his come-and-go approach to command and control. With this rare development experiment still faltering, the Cubs spent most of the 2010 winter in the market for a premium closer (which would have pushed Marmol back to setup work), but failed to come up with a better option. And so Marmol's high strikeout, high walk, high drama approach to the ninth inning will continue...
CIN CIN
Cordero 

Burton 
Masset 
Bray 
By signing Francisco Cordero last year, the Reds stabilized a bullpen that was once a wild ride of ever-changing players. With Cordero at the end, the other wannabe-closers in Cincinnati suddenly look like a solid bunch of setup guys: all capable, none standout-ish. But they're all young enough that a blossom could yet bloom. If that happens, look at Cordero to get moved for maximum value at mid-season.
HOU HOU
Lindstrom 

Lyon 
Sampson 
Brocail 
The acquisition of Matt Lindstrom from Florida this winter sent a strong signal that the Astros were prepared to move on without closer Jose Valverde, and when they backed him up with ex-Tiger Brandon Lyon, the deal was pretty much sealed. Lyon is a gamer who gets by on average stuff, making him the safe bet, while Lindstrom is a hard-throwing classic closer who suffers from control problems and the occasional meltdown, which means he's your prototypical high-ceiling risk. Either can do a good enough job here; it's not as if the Astros will be contending in 2010 anyway.
MLW MLW
Axford 

Braddock 
Hoffman 
Villanueva 
Riske 
Coffey 
Trevor Hoffman might be in the decline of his career, but he should be able to duct-tape together another successful season. If not, the arms behind the veteran Hoffman are talented, and feisty Carlos Villanueva filled in admirably for Hoffman more than once in 2009. That should be more than enough until future closer Zach Braddock (a lefty) is ready to take over in 2011 or so.
PIT PIT
Dotel 

Meek 
Hanrahan 
Grabow 
The arbitration-eligible Capps was shown the door in winter to make room for a new closer in Pittsburgh, and by the time Pittsburgh got around to signing one, Octavio Dotel was the best player available. Of course, since the team is nowhere close to competitive yet (despite an improved farm), it doesn't much matter who the Pirates trot out in 2010's ninth innings. Evan Meek remains the best of the home-grown options, should the Pirates ever decide to take rebuilding seriously.
STL STL
Franklin 

Motte 
McClellan 
Kinney 
Chris Perez is out of the mix and toiling in Cleveland, but Ryan Franklin and Jason Motte are both back to fight over the closing job for 2010, with Franklin's incumbency guaranteeing the first opportunity. A capable stable of workhorses will return behind them.
ATL ATL
Wagner 

Saito 
Kimbrel 
Venters 
Chavez 
Medlan 
The Braves made a big splash early in the winter by signing elite relievers Billy Wagner and Takashi Saito to shore up their bullpen. Veteran Saito provides handy cover, too: While Wagner looked strong after returning from surgery in 2009, he still has to be considered one of the more fragile closers entering 2010. Craig Kimbrel, regarded as Atlanta's closer of the future, should get some looks in 2010 as the team thinks about the future.
FLA FLA
Nunez 

MacDougal 
Sanches 
Meyer 
Leo Nunez took the job away from Matt Lindstrom late in 2009, but don't feel too bad if you didn't notice that: neither was very effective, and no job is very secure here. The Marlins didn't do much to replace Lindstrom, but they did sign veteran Mike MacDougal (who has some closing experience) in the spring, so there should a nominal closer battle early on. Of course, the Marlins will also bring their customary collection of young 99mph arms to spring training, and at least one or two should break onto the roster and into that same competition for the closing job, as usual.
NYM NYM
Rodriguez 

Feliciano 
Mejia 
Igarashi 
His numbers don't look as good as they usually do, and a three year slide in his eponymous statistic has some observers worried, but K-Rod still got the job done in his first year as a Met, and there's no reason to think he won't have the job once again. The Mets will work to bolster the bullpen behind K-Rod, of course, but the way luck runs in Brooklyn, half of the bullpen will be on the DL by June anyway.
PHI PHI
Lidge 

Contreras 
Madson 
Baez 
Romero 
You dance with the one what brung you, and that means Brad Lidge will be back as the Phillies closer in good times and in bad. Brett Myers was probably a better choice all along, but now that he's in Houston, Ryan Madson is the next-best thing, while new Phil Danys Baez provides some backup closer experience for the NL Champs.
WAS WAS
Storen 

Clippard 
Bruney 
Burnett 
Perez 
Mike MacDougal did an exemplary job closing for the Nationals at the end of 2009, though of course nobody really noticed that. Rather that retaining him for 2010, the Nats went out to sign ex-Pirate Matt Capps on a one-year deal that has 'holding measure' written all over it. The Nationals hope that Drew Storen, just picked up in the 2009, will be ready to close soon, but 2011 looks like his arrival time from here.

Notes and Updates

Click here for older updates


* Update: MIN

The Twins have acquired closer Matt Capps from the Nationals. Capps should step into the Twins closer role immediately, bumping the less-dominant Jon Rauch back to a more-comfortable setup role.


Update: BAL

Mike Gonzalez returned to the Orioles tonight, facing four batters in a 5-0 loss. He looks almost ready to retake the closer's role, and Baltimore is almost certain to let him have it.


Update: MIN

As if a pair of back-to-back bad outings wasn't enough, Twins closer Jon Rauch is day-to-day after suffering a bruised ankle on a comebacker in Monday's game. Matt Guerrier looks like the obvious fill-in for the rest of this week, though Jesse Crain has also looked sharp recently.


Update:

According to Brewer sources, uber-closer Trevor Hoffman is 'pretty much back where he should be' with his mechanics, and could be reinstalled as the regular closer very shortly. It looks like the end of a nice little run could be coming for John Axford and his moustache, who have shown they can do the job in a pinch.


Update: ARZ

No surprises here: the Diamondbacks are pulling the plug on Chad Qualls, at least for now, and will let Aaron Heilman close out 'the majority of chances' for now, according to manager A.J. Hinch. It sounds like Hinch will be willing to use Heilman in the first high-leverage situation, whether that's in the 7th, 8th or 9th inning. While clearly motivated by panic in Arizona, it's not a bad approach to closing games in general, and one that more teams should consider before turning to their third-best reliever when the bases are loaded in the 7th inning.


Update: BAL

They must be shooting for some sort of single-season record in Baltimore, where they have now called upon David Hernandez as the team's 'temporary' closer. He's the sixth pitcher to be so-named, after Wil Ohman's ineffectiveness and injuries to Mike Gonzalez, Jim Johnson, Alfredo Simon and Koji Uehara. He's got the stuff to succeed, so it's possible he holds the job for awhile... though in Baltimore that might not mean much.

Click here for older updates

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

...

Top Draft Picks Promise Quick Returns

First Players Taken Expected to Make an Impact Soon

Blowin' in the Wind

Today's Park Factors Change with the Weather

Top 1B: Best First Base Prospects for 2010

Big Corner Bats are Coming, and Coming Soon!

Top SS: Best Shortstop Prospects for 2010

Fast, Slick-Fielding Youngsters Invigorating Position

Top C: Best Catching Prospects for 2010

A Once-Shallow Position is Getting Deep Fast

Top OF: Best Outfield Prospects for 2010

Big Bats, Hot Wheels and Plenty of Future Tools

Oakland Athletics: Top 2010 Prospects

Are the Bats Ready to Match the Arms?

Boston Red Sox: Top 2010 Prospects

Every Year, the Red Sox Get a Little More Local

Disaster in Minnesota?

Five Backups to Nathan, Plus One Sleeper Candidate

< Older Features

< Back to Home Page