The St. Louis Cardinals have been actively retooling the pitching staff this winter to help turn things around next season. It's safe to say that St. Louis is poised to bounce back in 2024 after landing three veteran starters, trading for right-hander reliever Andrew Kittredge and signing free-agent hurler Kenyan Middleton this offseason.
The St. Louis Cardinals have been on a mission this winter to retool their pitching staff after a disappointing 2023 season. The club has landed three proven starters and added two notable relievers by trading for right-hander Andrew Kittredge and recently signing free agent Keynan Middleton.
The St. Louis Cardinals have been quiet as of late after adding three free-agent starting pitchers earlier this offseason. Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak's only notable addition following his rotation revamp was right-hander Andrew Kittredge, who came over from the Tampa Bay Rays via trade.
The St. Louis Cardinals already have added to the bullpen this offseason, but more work needs to be done. St. Louis landed former All-Star Andrew Kittredge
The Cardinals swapped with the Rays on Friday to bolster their bullpen. In case you missed it, the St. Louis Cardinals made another move on Friday sending Richie Palacios to the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for right-handed reliever Andrew Kittredge.
Tt’s not entirely clear what the Cardinals’ bullpen plans are following the addition of Andrew Kittredge.
Kittredge should take over a high-leverage role with his new team
Sources confirm the deal is completed. According to multiple sources, including Ken Rosenthal and Katie Woo of The Athletic, the Cardinals have completed a trade with the Tampa Bay Rays to acquire veteran reliever Andrew Kittredge.
Multiple veterans are now on rehab assignments, and the Tampa Bay Rays return a valuable bullpen arm. Here’s what to know about today’s MLB transactions.
The Tampa Bay Rays activated right-hander Andrew Kittredge from the 60-day injured list Thursday and designated right-hander Hector Perez for assignment.
The Tampa Bay Rays appear set to get back another valuable pitcher from the injured list in time for the stretch run. The following update on reliever Andrew Kittredge comes from the Rotowire fantasy baseball portal: Kittredge (elbow) has thrown 8.2 innings on his rehab assignment and is hoping to return in mid-to-late August, MLB.com reports.
The Rays announced Wednesday that they’ve selected the contract of right-hander Trevor Kelley, who signed a minor league deal over the winter and has been in camp as a non-roster invitee.
The Rays announced Thursday that they’ve selected the contract of right-hander Trevor Kelley, who’d been in camp on a minor league deal. Fellow righty Andrew Kittredge, who’s recovering from Tommy John surgery, was transferred to the 60-day injured list in order to open a spot on the 40-man roster.
“Stable” reinforcements are on the way The Rays are known for finding bullpen talent. Pitchers like Jason Adam, Andrew Kittredge, the 2019 Nick Anderson, were at best unheralded, and in some cases close to forgotten.
Danny addresses the decision of some players to opt out of Pride Night On this week’s episode of Rays Your Voice I am joined by DRB Managing Editor Danny Russell.
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — Injuries are a part of baseball, and no one knows that better than the Tampa Bay Rays. They deal with it and move on, but let's make no mistake about this.
The Tampa Bay Rays could be without the All-Star closer until the second half of the 2023 season.
Soon after hearing that All-Star relief pitcher Andrew Kittredge was headed to the injured list on Thursday, Tampa Bay Rays fans got more bad news regarding the righty.
The Tampa Bay Rays will be without one of the most formidable members of their bullpen for the foreseeable future.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Andrew Kittredge is a critical piece in the Tampa Bay Rays' bullpen, but some lower back tightness has sent him to the injured list, a place he hates to me.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Tampa Bay's banged-up offense is struggling right now, and it was a problem again on Monday night in the series opener against the Detroit.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Andrew Kittredge's work day was done. A double play and a fly ball in the ninth inning, and he had himself another save, his fifth of the season, in Tampa Bay's series-clinching 3-0 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.
Sometimes a home run isn’t needed to get the job done. Sometimes all you need to do is get your bat on the ball. That was the case for Aaron Judge on Sunday.
After four inconsistent years as a reliever, starter and opener with the Rays, Kittredge rejoined the team on a minor-league deal, looking to rebound after a 2020 season shortened by a UCL injury. The results have been startling
The Rays have re-signed right-hander Andrew Kittredge to a new minor league deal.
Kittredge, 30, has spent parts of the past four seasons with Tampa Bay, pitching to a combined 4.93 ERA and 4.25 FIP in 111 1/3 innings. Those numbers are skewed a bit by a nightmarish 2018 campaign.
Kittredge only earned the first save of his MLB career on Monday against the Red Sox. He was the opener for Tuesday's bullpen game.
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