The Red Sox are getting Patrick Sandoval back at last, and they’re making room for him by trimming both the active roster and the 40-man.
Boston reinstated the left-hander from the 60-day injured list and plans to have him pitch Thursday, according to Chris Cotillo of MassLive. To make that happen, fellow southpaw Alec Gamboa was optioned to Triple-A Worcester, while right-hander Jack Anderson was designated for assignment.
For Sandoval, the outing will mark his first big league appearance in more than two years. His last game action came with the Angels in June of 2024, and he needed surgery on the ulnar collateral ligament in his elbow soon after. Los Angeles non-tendered him the following offseason, and the Red Sox later signed him to a two-year, $18.25MM deal.
Boston’s hope was that Sandoval could return late in 2025 and then give the club a full season in 2026. Instead, the rehab path got bumpy. He never made it off the injured list in 2025, and he has already spent more than half of 2026 on the shelf.
Even so, the timing works for the Red Sox now. Their rotation has been hit hard all year, with Garrett Crochet, Kutter Crawford, Johan Oviedo and Tanner Houck missing most or all of the season.
Connelly Early joined that group on the IL a week ago, and Boston’s current rotation has been Sonny Gray, Ranger Suárez, Payton Tolle and Jake Bennett. Suárez is also dealing with adductor tightness after leaving last night’s game.
Whether Suárez lands on the injured list is still up in the air, but Sandoval is positioned to slide into Early’s spot either way. He’s coming off a rehab assignment that covered 18 1/3 innings with a 1.96 ERA, and his most recent outing was a five-inning, scoreless Double-A start on Saturday in which he threw 68 pitches. That suggests he should be ready for something close to a normal starter’s workload when he takes the ball Thursday.
There had been some buzz last week that rival clubs were scouting Sandoval with an eye toward a possible trade. That was before Early went on the IL and before Suárez’s latest issue surfaced.
Now the Red Sox need him more than they did then, especially with the club playing better lately. Boston has gone 8-2 over its last 10 games and, despite a 40-48 record, sits just four games back in the weak American League Wild Card race.
Sandoval is still a rental, which keeps him in the trade conversation if the Red Sox decide to sell before the August 3rd deadline. For the moment, though, the injuries and the standings both point toward keeping him in the rotation and seeing how it plays out. Clubs looking for pitching will also know the track record is there: from 2021 to 2024, he logged 460 innings for the Angels with a 3.80 ERA, a 10.2% walk rate, a 22.6% strikeout rate and a 47.3% ground ball rate.
What he does over the next few weeks will matter for Boston and for any team watching the deadline market. His deal is back-loaded, and he’s making $12.75MM this year, leaving a bit under $4MM to be paid out as the deadline approaches. Even a few strong starts probably wouldn’t make the money easy to move without Boston covering part of it, especially after all the time he’s missed.
Anderson’s departure opens the 40-man spot. The 26-year-old was only added a few months ago and has spent most of his time on optional assignment.
His major league résumé is still just eight innings across three games, with three earned runs allowed. He has also been viewed as a step below prospect status, in part because his fastball barely averages 90 miles per hour.
In Triple-A this season, he has thrown 58 innings with a 4.81 ERA, a 20.5% strikeout rate and an 8.4% walk rate.
He figures to hit waivers in the next few days. Anderson does have a full set of options, so another club could take a shot on him as a fresh arm. If he clears, he can remain with Boston as non-roster depth, since he does not have the service time or outright history needed to elect free agency.
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What makes the chatter harder to dismiss is the timing and the contract control attached to both arms, which gives the Angels more flexibility than they usually have with pitchers of this caliber. If the organization is truly shifting its trade approach under Mozeliak, the next step could say a lot about whether the priority is keeping the rotation intact or using one of those starters to reshape the roster for the long run. [Read more 🡒]
