Free-agent left-handed pitcher Francisco Liriano announced his retirement on Monday after 21 seasons in Major League Baseball, according to his agent, Mike Maulini. Liriano spent most of his playing days pitching for the Minnesota Twins (seven years) and Pittsburgh Pirates (five years). The southpaw was an All-Star just once, and it came in his first full season with Minnesota in 2006. Liriano had his best seasons in his first four years with Pittsburgh, when he had under a 3.50 ERA in each of the team's playoff-bound campaigns from 2013-15. He won his first and only World Series ring as a reliever for the Houston Astros in 2017. Liriano finished his impressive career with a 4.15 ERA in 419 games (300 starts) and recorded 1,815 career strikeouts in 1,813 2/3 innings pitched for six different teams.
Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Francisco Liriano was granted his release on Monday. He had an opt-out clause in his minor-league contract which he chose to exercise after he learned he would not be making the club out of the spring. The veteran left-hander pitched well this spring and did not allow a run in 7.1 innings. He had a 6-3 K-BB ratio with four hits allowed. Liriano became expendable with the re-emergence of fellow southpaw Tim Mayza who is returning from Tommy John surgery. The Blue Jays also received good results from lefty Travis Bergen, who will open the year at the alternate training site. The club is also facing a 40-man roster crunch.
The Toronto Blue Jays agreed to terms with free-agent left-handed pitcher Francisco Liriano on an undisclosed deal on Tuesday night, according to a source. Liriano will be a non-roster invitee to spring training. The southpaw was traded to the Astros in 2017 for young outfield prospect Teoscar Hernandez. He sat out the entire 2020 season due to concerns surrounding COVID-19. The 37-year-old last pitched in the big leagues in 2019 with the Pirates, making 69 relief appearances and posting a 3.47 ERA and 1.36 WHIP while striking out 63 and walking 35 in 70 innings. The 14-year veteran made 26 starts as recently as 2018 with the Tigers, but Liriano would mostly represent bullpen depth if he were to crack the major league roster out of spring training with Toronto. The Dominican southpaw can be avoided in all fantasy formats, even if he wins a job in the Jays bullpen.
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Francisco Liriano will report to summer camp on Wednesday, according to a source with direct knowledge. Liriano has been absent from camp the last two days and has been evaluating whether he wants to play this season amid the coronavirus pandemic. The 36-year-old veteran left-hander could still change his mind later, but for now he will report to camp. Liriano had a 3.47 ERA, 1.36 WHIP and an 8.1 K/9 in 70 relief innings for the Pirates last year. He has 300 career starts in his 14-year career, but he's most likely to serve in a relief role if he makes the club's Opening Day roster. You can ignore Liriano in all fantasy leagues for the time being.
The Philadelphia Phillies agreed with relief pitcher Francisco Liriano on a minor league deal on Wednesday, according to sources. Liriano can make $1.5 million with $1.25 million in incentives if he makes the major league roster. The veteran left-hander made 69 relief appearances for the Pirates in 2019 and had a 3.47 ERA, 1.36 WHIP, 63 strikeouts and 35 walks in 70 innings pitched for the Bucs. Liriano has made 300 starts in his career, but at this point he's a bullpen arm that the Phillies will take a chance on. If he makes the Opening Day roster as a reliever, he won't have much fantasy appeal at all.
Francisco Liriano and Melky Cabrera Make Opening Day Roster
Pittsburgh Pirates veteran starting pitcher Francisco Liriano and outfielder Melky Cabrera have been assured by the team that they have made the Opening Day roster. Liriano played last season with the Detroit Tigers, finishing with a 4.58 ERA and 18.8 K%. Cabrera played 78 games with the Cleveland Indians last year, slashing .280/.335./.420 with six home runs and 39 RBI. Neither veteran is likely to be a fantasy relevant option this season. The Pirates have not announced who will be dropped from the 40-man roster to create room.
The Pittsburgh Pirates are expected to use pitcher Francisco Liriano as a reliever heading into spring training after signing him to a minor league deal on Monday. It makes more sense to use the aging left-hander as a lefty specialist rather than a starter given his splits against lefty hitters (.219 average) in his career and the fact that he's just been unreliable as a starter for the last few seasons with several different teams. Liriano would've only had fantasy value in deep NL-only leagues as a starter, so he won't be attractive at all in a relief role.
The Pittsburgh Pirates agreed to an undisclosed deal with free-agent starting pitcher Francisco Liriano on Monday, according to sources. The 35-year-old left-hander was an ugly 5-12 with a 4.58 ERA, 1.49 WHIP and mediocre 7.4 K/9 in 27 outings (26 starts) for the Tigers in 2018. He was even worse in 2017 (5.66 ERA, 1.63 WHIP) for the Blue Jays and Astros and might not be guaranteed a rotation spot in his return to Pittsburgh -- he spent the 2013-2016 seasons with the Bucs. Liriano has also struggled mightily with his control throughout his career and should be avoided in all mixed leagues.
Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Francisco Liriano made an appearance out of the bullpen on Sunday, tossing two innings of scoreless relief against the Indians. Liriano was called upon after Jordan Zimmermann lasted just the first three innings, and was available because Blaine Hardy had taken Liriano's spot in the rotation on Saturday as Liriano was under the weather. He was apparently healthy enough to work on Sunday, but don't read too much into this bullpen appearance. Liriano should be back in the starting rotation the next time through, and Hardy will be back to the bullpen.
The Boston Red Sox were scouting Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Francisco Liriano during his start against the Royals on Wednesday. Boston is seeking bullpen help and currently do not have a lefty in their bullpen. The veteran lefty is 3-5 with a 4.73 ERA, 1.43 WHIP and only 69 strikeouts in 83 2/3 innings, but he's been dynamite against lefties. If traded to Boston, he'd be in the bullpen but could also be an emergency option for the rotation. Liriano hasn't been much help to fantasy owners this year, especially not in mixed leagues, and pitching in relief wouldn't do him any favors.