Adolis García among 66 non-tender
free agents, while Jonathan India tops 34 agreeing to contracts
[November 22, 2025]
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) — Texas outfielder Adolis García, catcher Jonah Heim
and right-hander Josh Sborz were among 66 players who became free
agents Friday when they weren't offered 2026 contracts.
New York Yankees relievers Mark Leiter Jr., Ian Hamilton, Scott
Effross and Jake Cousins also were cut loose along with Boston first
baseman Nathaniel Lowe, Houston infielder/outfielder Ramón Urías and
Chicago White Sox outfielder Mike Tauchman.
“Regardless of what happens moving forward, Adolis, Jonah and Josh
will always be remembered for their contributions to the first World
Series title in franchise history,” Rangers president of baseball
operations Chris Young said in a statement.
Outfielder JJ Bleday was dropped by the Athletics, outfielder MJ
Melendez by Kansas City and right-hander Alek Manoah by Atlanta,
which claimed the 2022 All-Star off waivers from Toronto on Sept.
26. Bleday was the fourth overall pick by Miami in the 2019 amateur
draft.
Bleday, Lowe and Urías had been designated for assignment earlier
this week.
Thirty-four players agreed to contracts ahead of the non-tender
deadline, led by Kansas City infielder Jonathan India ($8 million),
newly acquired Atlanta utilityman Mauricio Dubón ($6.1 million) and
Yankees pitcher Clarke Schmidt ($4.5 million), who will miss all or
most of the season while recovering from Tommy John surgery.

In addition, San Francisco acquired outfielder Joey Wiemer from
Miami for cash. The 26-year-old had three homers and 12 RBIs in 27
games this past season for the Marlins.
After all the moves, 173 players remained eligible for arbitration
and are on track to exchange proposed salaries with their teams on
Jan. 8. Those who don't reach agreements will be scheduled for
hearings before three-person panels from Jan. 26 to Feb. 13 in
Scottsdale, Arizona.
The deadline marked the last time a team could drop an
arbitration-eligible player without committing to at least 30 days
of termination pay if the player is released.
Others reaching deals included:
— Athletics right-hander Luis Medina ($835,000) and left-hander Ken
Waldichuk ($825,000)
— Atlanta second baseman Vidal Brujan ($850,000 in majors, $500,000
in minors) along with left-handers José Suarez and Joey Wentz and
outfielder Eli White ($900,000 each)
— Baltimore All-Star closer Félix Bautista ($2.25 million)
— Chicago White Sox outfielder Derek Hill ($900,000 in major
leagues, $450,000 in minors)
[to top of second column] |

Texas Rangers' Adolis Garcia, surrounded by teammates and staff,
holds up the Commissioner's Trophy during a World Series baseball
championship celebration, Friday, Nov. 3, 2023, in Arlington, Texas.
(AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

— Cincinnati left-hander Sam Moll ($875,000 plus
$50,000 bonus each for 45, 55 and 65 games)
— Cleveland outfielder Nolan Jones ($2 million), third baseman David
Fry ($1,375,000) and right-hander Matt Festa ($1 million)
— Detroit outfielder Matt Vierling ($3,255,000), catcher Jake Rogers
($3.05 million) and right-hander Beau Brieske ($1,157,500)
— Houston right-hander Enyel De Los Santos ($1.6 million plus
$100,000 bonus for 60 games) and outfielder Taylor Trammell
($900,000 in majors, $500,00 in minors)
— Kansas City right-hander James McArthur ($810,000)
— Milwaukee first baseman Jake Bauers ($2.7 million)
— Minnesota right-hander Justin Topa ($1,225,000 guaranteed; $1
million salary for 2026 with $5 million mutual option for 2027 with
$225,000 buyout; the buyout would escalate by $25,000 for active on
the 2026 opening day roster and 50 and 60 games)
— New York Mets outfielder Tyrone Taylor ($3.8 million)
— Yankees infielder/outfielder Oswaldo Cabrera ($1.2 million)
— Philadelphia catchers Garrett Stubbs ($925,000 in majors and
$575,000 in minors) and Rafael Marchán ($860,000)
— Pittsburgh outfielder Jack Suwinski ($1.25 million) and
right-hander Yohan Ramírez ($825,000)
— San Diego catcher Luis Campusano ($900,000)
— San Francisco right-hander JT Brubaker ($1.82 million)
— Tampa Bay right-hander Cole Sulser ($1.05 million in majors,
$600,000 in minors)
— Texas outfielder Sam Haggerty ($1.25 million)
— Washington catcher Riley Adams ($1 million in majors, $500,000 in
minors)
___
AP Sports Writer Stephen Hawkins contributed to this report.
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