Gregory Soto Signs 1-Year Deal With Pittsburgh Pirates
According to reports, the Pirates and veteran reliever Gregory Soto have shaken hands on a one-year, $7.75 million contract for the 2026 season. It’s a move that felt inevitable, mostly because the alternative was entering the season with a bullpen completely devoid of left-handed experience, but it’s also a move that brings a serious jolt of electricity to PNC Park.
What Soto Brings To the Table
Let’s be real for a second: watching Soto pitch is not for the faint of heart. It is a full-blown spectator sport within the sport. The two-time All-Star is a classic high-octane reliever. We’re talking about a guy who throws a bowling-ball sinker that averages nearly 97 mph and pairs it with a slider that can make professional hitters look like they’ve never held a bat before.
When he is on, he is unhittable. During his peak years with the Detroit Tigers (2021-22), he was a legitimate closer, racking up 48 saves and earning back-to-back trips to the All-Star Game. The Pirates are banking on that version of Soto showing up in the ‘Burgh.
However, the 30-year-old comes with the kind of rollercoaster volatility that makes managers age in dog years. His command comes and goes. Last season, split between the Orioles and the Mets, he posted a 4.18 ERA.
He was solid in Baltimore but hit a speed bump in Queens, struggling to a 4.50 ERA with the Mets. But here’s the thing: he misses bats. His strikeout numbers are tantalizing, and for a Pirates team that needs swing-and-miss stuff in high-leverage spots, Soto fits the bill.
A Desperate Need Filled
This signing wasn’t just a luxury; it was a necessity. Before grabbing Soto, the Pirates’ 40-man roster was a desert when it came to left-handed relief pitching. The only other name on the list was Evan Sisk. By bringing in a veteran who has taken the ball at least 60 times in five consecutive seasons, the front office is adding durability to a unit that desperately needs it.
Soto absolutely feasts on left-handed hitting, holding them to a microscopic .192 average last year. In a division with some dangerous lefty bats, having a guy you can summon from the pen to shut that down is worth every penny of that $7.75 million.
The Verdict
Is Soto going to be perfect? Probably not. Is he going to walk the bases loaded once or twice and make you question your life choices? Almost certainly. But he gives the Pirates a legitimate, experienced arm with high upside. If Pitching Coach Bill Murphy can help him harness that electric sinker, this could be the steal of the winter. At the very least, the late innings in Pittsburgh just got a whole lot more interesting.
