Pirates Outfield Depth Just Took Another Hit At The Worst Time

Dominic Fletcher's prompt contract opt-out leaves the Pittsburgh Pirates adjusting their outfield strategy amidst ongoing player injuries.

Dominic Fletcher is moving on from the Pittsburgh Pirates after taking the first exit ramp available to him.

The Pirates outfielder exercised the opt-out in his minor league contract on July 1, the first day he was eligible, according to Robert Murray of FanSided. Fletcher had signed with Pittsburgh this offseason on a minor league deal and came to camp as a non-roster invitee, then spent most of his time at Triple-A Indianapolis.

Now he’ll look elsewhere for his next opportunity, with the chance to latch on with another club and try to carve out a bigger major league role in 2026.

Fletcher brought plenty of big-league mileage with him when he joined the Pirates. Over the last three seasons, he has appeared in 112 major league games, including 84 games across the past two years with the Chicago White Sox and 28 games with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2023.

His departure isn’t exactly a stunner. The opt-out was built into the deal, and Fletcher used it the moment it became available.

Pittsburgh’s outfield picture also helps explain why the move makes sense. The club has a strong trio in left fielder Bryan Reynolds, center fielder Oneil Cruz and right fielder Ryan O’Hearn, all of whom have been producing at the plate and anchoring one of the better lineups in baseball.

Cruz is sidelined right now with a left hand fracture and isn’t expected back until sometime later in July, so Jake Mangum has stepped into center field as the fourth outfielder. O’Hearn has shifted to first base after Spencer Horwitz’s injury, opening the door for rookies Tyler Callihan and Esmerlyn Valdez to handle right field.

The Pirates still have depth options around the roster, too. Billy Cook can cover all three outfield spots, and Jhostynxon Garcia remains in the minors as a right-handed power bat after spending nearly three weeks with the big club from May 19 to June 7.

Pittsburgh also used a similar minor league depth approach with infielder Davis Wendzel, who signed a minor league contract this offseason and was added to the 40-man roster and major league roster on June 7 after an injury scare to second baseman Brandon Lowe.

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