The Nationals are adding another left-handed arm to the mix, with Tom Cosgrove set to have his contract selected, according to Spencer Nusbaum of The Athletic.
Washington already had an open spot on the active roster after putting right-hander Brad Lord on the 15-day injured list yesterday with left side tightness and not making a corresponding move. The wrinkle is on the 40-man side, where the roster is full, so the club will need to clear space there before the move becomes official.
Cosgrove, 30, arrived from the Astros just a week ago. He had opened the year on a minor league deal with Houston and logged 29 1/3 Triple-A innings with a 4.30 ERA and a 21.3% strikeout rate that sits around average.
The bigger issue was the command: he walked 21 of the 136 batters he faced, a 15.4% rate, and also hit nine hitters. In all, 22% of the opponents he saw reached first base without putting the ball in play.
Even with that control problem, Washington sent cash considerations to Houston to bring him in. He has already made one appearance for Triple-A Rochester, throwing a scoreless outing and striking out three of the five batters he faced.
Cosgrove isn’t a power arm. His four-seamer and sinker sit in the 87-89 mph range, but he works from a low slot that has at times given hitters trouble.
The best example came with the Padres in 2023, when he put up a 1.75 ERA across 51 1/3 innings. That season came with some good fortune attached, though, as his .205 batting average on balls in play and 84.6% strand rate both leaned heavily to the lucky side.
The pendulum swung the other way in 2024, when he posted an 11.66 ERA in 14 2/3 innings.
His path since then has bounced around. He was designated for assignment in 2025 and sent to the Cubs, where he appeared in only two games while spending most of his time in the minors. Chicago outrighted him off the roster in September, and he became a free agent after the season, which led to the deal with Houston.
The move comes as Washington tries to patch together a bullpen that has struggled all year. The Nationals’ relief corps owns a 5.04 ERA, which is better than only three teams.
Left-handed depth has been hit especially hard, with Mitchell Parker and Richard Lovelady both landing on the injured list recently. Parker is expected to need Tommy John surgery and miss the rest of the season, while Lovelady is dealing with a triceps strain and has a less certain timetable.
In response, the Nationals have been working to shore up that side of the staff. They picked up Cosgrove, claimed Matt Krook off waivers and signed Konnor Pilkington to a minor league deal. At the major league level, their current left-handed group includes Krook, PJ Poulin and Carson Palmquist, and Cosgrove is next in line to join them.
Washington sits at 48-46 and four games back in the playoff chase. If the club stays in the race, more bullpen help could be on the table before the August 3 deadline. If things go the other way, the Nationals would be more likely to move pitching out.
In Other News...
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Yohandy Morales has done enough at Triple-A to keep forcing the issue, and the numbers are starting to look like those of a hitter who is no longer just knocking on the door. The Nationals prospect is batting .303 with 21 home runs and a .930 OPS, production that stands out even with the usual caveats about contact rate and a ground-ball profile that still need watching.
What has made the conversation harder to ignore is that Morales has also shown signs of tightening up the parts of his game that had been holding him back. His recent strikeout rate has improved, his ball flight has trended in a better direction, and with his Rule 5 eligibility coming this offseason, Washington may soon have to decide how much longer it can keep waiting before making room for him. [Read more 🡒]
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The Nationals pitching pipeline took another turn this week, with the organization making a move that could ripple through the depth chart as the big league club keeps sorting out its relief picture. It comes against the backdrop of a busy minor league slate, where Rochester dropped a tight 8-7 game at Worcester, Harrisburg kept rolling with an 8-3 win over Erie, and Fredericksburg and the FCL Nationals also turned in wins that offered a snapshot of how much arms and bats are being tested across the system.
For Washington, the larger question is less about one box score than about how the club balances immediate needs with long-term depth. The minor league results show a system with some momentum in spots and some frustration in others, but the pitching shuffle is the part that matters most at the top level. However the next round of decisions plays out, it figures to say plenty about which arms the Nationals trust to help now and which ones they want to keep close for later. [Read more 🡒]
