The Mets have added right-hander Matt Seelinger from the Tigers in a cash deal, the team announced Monday.
According to Chris McCosky of the Detroit News, Seelinger had an upward mobility clause in his contract with Detroit. That kind of clause can force a player’s current club to make him available to the rest of the league, and it appears the Mets were willing to take him on. New York has not yet formally added him to its 40-man roster, though that move seems likely since the roster is already full.
Seelinger is 31 and has taken a winding path to this point. The Pirates picked him in the 28th round of the 2017 draft, and he later moved through the Pirates, Rays, Giants and Phillies organizations through minor league free agency and the minor league phase of the Rule 5 Draft.
In 2024, he signed with the Atlantic League’s Long Island Ducks, pitched well there, and earned a minor league deal with Detroit during that season. He has since re-signed on multiple minor league deals with the Tigers.
Detroit apparently didn’t have the roster space to accommodate him once his upward mobility clause was triggered. If another team is prepared to put that player on its own 40-man roster, the original club has 72 hours to decide whether to add him itself or let him go. The Tigers chose the latter, sending Seelinger to Queens for what is likely a modest cash return.
On the field, Seelinger has been solid for Triple-A Toledo this season. In 39 1/3 innings out of a long relief and swing role, he has posted a 3.89 ERA with a 29.3% strikeout rate and an 11.4% walk rate.
His fastball sits at 92.4 mph, and he pairs it with an 86.1 mph cutter and an 80.1 mph curveball. He has allowed plenty of hard contact, but he has also generated a 13.6% swinging-strike rate, which is well above the major league average of 11%.
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