Twins Fans Just Got Another Painful Chris Paddack Reminder

Chris Paddack's journey through the MLB continues to be turbulent as he searches for stability and success after a disappointing stint with the Texas Rangers.

Chris Paddack’s latest stop didn’t last long.

The former Minnesota Twins right-hander, who has spent this season bouncing around the league, was designated for assignment by the Texas Rangers on Tuesday afternoon after making just one appearance for the club. Paddack had debuted on Monday out of the bullpen, working four innings and allowing two earned runs, but it wasn’t enough to earn another turn.

That means he’s now searching for his fourth team of the season, a stunning turn for a pitcher who once arrived in Minnesota with real expectations. For Twins fans, the path from there to here hasn’t been hard to follow.

Paddack came to the Twins from the San Diego Padres in 2022 in a deal that included Taylor Rogers and Brent Rooker. His time in Minnesota never really got off the ground.

He was limited by injuries and inconsistency, then needed his second Tommy John surgery after making five starts in 2022. Overall, he went 10-14 with a 4.88 ERA in 45 appearances, 43 of them starts, before being traded to Detroit last July.

The move to the Tigers was supposed to give Detroit rotation depth for a playoff push, but Paddack’s results only slid further. He finished 2-3 with a 6.32 ERA in 12 appearances, including seven starts, for the Tigers.

This season has been even rougher. Paddack signed with the Miami Marlins last winter, but he was hit with a 7.63 ERA and an 0-5 record before being designated for assignment. He then went to the Cincinnati Reds, where he posted a 6.04 ERA and went 0-2 in six appearances before getting DFA’d again.

His brief Rangers stint followed the same script. The damage on the scoreboard wasn’t overwhelming, but he allowed seven hits in that Monday outing, and Texas opted to go another way by recalling Gavin Collyer from Triple-A Round Rock.

The underlying numbers haven’t offered much relief. Paddack has a 33.3 percent chase rate this season, but hitters are making contact too often, with only a 21.4 percent whiff rate according to Baseball Savant. His 15 percent strikeout rate sits in the seventh percentile among qualifying pitchers.

That’s a tough profile to carry, especially for a pitcher who has shifted into more of a flyball look with a 39.3% ground ball rate and no longer misses enough bats to compensate. At 30 years old, the question now is whether another team is willing to take the same gamble three others already have this season.

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