The Diamondbacks’ two biggest offseason moves took place in late December, as the team surprisingly landed Corbin Burnes on a six-year, $210MM deal and acquired Josh Naylor in a trade with the Guardians. Those headline-grabbing transactions, however, only reinforced an already-deep rotation and filled a hole at first base that was left open when Christian Walker signed with the Astros.
As such, two of the Snakes’ chief offseason goals remain unaddressed, as president of baseball operations Mike Hazen told the Arizona Republic’s Nick Piecoro that the D’Backs are still looking to add a high-leverage arm to the bullpen and a right-handed hitter to help balance out the lineup. Adding the left-handed hitting Naylor in for the right-handed hitting Walker tilted Arizona’s lineup a bit further to the left side, and the Diamondbacks have been linked to such free agent relievers and trade targets as Devin Williams, Ryan Helsley, and Kirby Yates over the course of the offseason.
Interestingly, Hazen implied that the D’Backs could address these needs in free agency, saying “I still am in a position to add to the team, yes” when asked if more payroll space was available. The unexpected Burnes signing sent the Diamondbacks’ payroll beyond the $193MM mark (as per RosterResource’s estimates), which is easily the highest payroll in franchise history. This spending increase comes on the heels of another payroll surge, as Arizona’s Opening Day payroll went from $116.1MM in 2023 to $163.3MM last season.
It is probably safe to assume that Hazen’s remaining payroll flexibility is fairly limited, as he noted that “I don’t have that ability to just go, you know, take care of it with one swipe of the pen. So those are probably the complicating factors relative to what we’re trying to get done, but there’s still opportunity.” This could make trades the more likely path to further roster upgrades, though Hazen said that rival teams have been asking for too much in return.
Still, Hazen said that the D’Backs might be willing to use its rotation depth for trade-chip purposes, noting “that could be in some of the areas where your reliever trade comes in.” Arizona’s starting pitchers had been drawing trade interest even before Burnes joined the roster, and one arm has already been dealt, as Slade Cecconi was sent to Cleveland as part of the Naylor deal.
This being said, Hazen is reluctant to move too much pitching, whether from the more established veterans in the rotation to younger arms slated for Triple-A or the bullpen. Injuries concerns are omnipresent, since “as you know in starting pitching, it could be as much as missing a couple of bullpens somewhere in camp,” Hazen said. “And that sometimes takes the potential ability for somebody to make the team on Opening Day impossible, and that happens pretty frequently.”
The Diamondbacks are therefore fine taking all seven of their starting pitching candidates into the start of Spring Training, Hazen said, but Piecoro notes that Jordan Montgomery is still available in trade talks. Arizona’s efforts to move Montgomery have been a well-documented subplot of the team’s offseason, but there hasn’t been much public buzz around specific teams interested in the left-hander’s services. Granted, that isn’t a shock given Montgomery’s $22.5MM salary in 2025 and his injury-hampered 6.23 ERA over 117 innings in 2024.
Williams was traded from the Brewers to the Yankees, Yates is seemingly close to a deal with the Dodgers, and the Cardinals (somewhat curiously) aren’t planning to trade Helsley, even though the closer is a free agent next winter and hasn’t had any extension talks with the St. Louis front office. The D’Backs also had some interest in re-signing old friend Paul Sewald, but Arizona’s ex-closer signed with the Guardians earlier this week. Among the remaining members of the free agent bullpen market, Carlos Estevez, Kenley Jansen, David Robertson, and Craig Kimbrel are among the more notable pitchers with closing experience, plus any number of relievers might be available in trade talks.
Arizona had arguably the league’s top offense last season, but even with Naylor replacing Walker, the D’Backs are missing a couple of key contributors. Joc Pederson signed with the Rangers, though Randal Grichuk is still a free agent, and a reunion with the outfielder would directly address the Diamondbacks’ need for a righty bat. Grichuk’s ability to play the outfield also makes him a fit, as Hazen said the team isn’t looking specifically for a right-handed hitting DH option. Pavin Smith figures to take Pederson’s spot as the left-handed hitting side of the DH platoon, but Hazen wants to keep the designated hitter position relatively open in order to give multiple players possible rest days.