Former Rays Reliever Makes Tough Admission About How His Career Ended

Ryan Sherriff opens up about his emotional decision to hang up his cleats after a diverse 13-season baseball career.

Ryan Sherriff’s final call on baseball didn’t come with a dramatic announcement or a farewell tour. It came after the body and the mind simply stopped lining up.

The former Red Sox left-hander, now 36, said in a June 29 post on his Substack page that retirement was no longer really his choice.

“My arm and my mentality couldn’t keep up and I knew it,” Sherriff wrote. “I knew it in a way I hadn’t let myself know it before. It was time.”

Sherriff had still been pitching professionally as recently as a year ago, working in Mexico after his last big league appearance with Boston in 2023. But he has been out of baseball this year and recently started writing about his career experiences.

His career line tells the story of a journeyman reliever who carved out a real run in the game: a 3-2 record, 3.53 ERA (121 ERA+) and two saves across 49 major league games with the St. Louis Cardinals from 2017-18, the Tampa Bay Rays from 2020-21 and the Red Sox in 2023.

He also had one of those October moments players remember forever. Sherriff, a left-handed reliever, threw two scoreless innings for Tampa Bay in the 2020 World Series, appearing in Games 3 and 5 against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Those were the only postseason outings of his career.

All told, Sherriff spent 13 seasons in professional baseball. His final stretch in affiliated ball ended after he was released from a minor league contract with the Dodgers in August 2023, following his last two appearances with the Oklahoma City Comets.

He kept trying after that. Sherriff made a comeback bid in the 2024-25 Dominican Winter League and later spent a month with Leones de Yucatan in the Mexican League last year before deciding to walk away.

In his post, Sherriff also looked back on a moment with the Red Sox in spring training 2023 that clearly stayed with him. He described being told he was being sent down to minor league camp by the team’s top brass in a room filled with silence.

“The GM, the manager, the pitching coach. All in the room.

I sit down and there’s complete silence. Nobody says anything.

Then the GM breaks the ice - they’re sending me down to minor league camp. I looked around the room.

Alex Cora - the manager - put his head down and said something like, ‘Yeah, I got nothing. ‘

“That stuck with me. Not in a bad way toward Alex. But that moment - that silence, that head drop - left a sour taste in my mouth that never really went away.”

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