The Angels need relief pitching, and are ultra-aggressive so far this offseason--a perfect recipe to go all-in on back-end arms heading into 2025. The Angels actually have a solid track record of courting, trading for, and scouting relief pitching. They hit big on Ben Joyce, Carlos Estévez, Luis García, Brock Burke, Raisel Iglesias. Despite the results, they were at least able to sign bigger name relief pitchers like Robert Stephenson, Matt Moore (he was solid in 2023), Aaron Loup, and Ryan Tepera. Again, some of the free agent relievers did not hit, but it represents the Angels' willingness to spend on their bullpen and ability talk pitchers' into signing with the club.
Joyce is the presumptive favorite to man the helm as the Angels' closer in 2025 and beyond. Much like Mike Trout, the Angels need to load manage their fireballer to keep him on the field over the course of a long major league season. Joyce is an oft-injured player, which factored in heavily to him dropping to the third round of the 2022 MLB Draft. Joyce has not shown the ability to pitch back-to-back days, and the Angels have shown no inclination that they want to over-extend this prized gem.
That being said, the Angels very much need a bullpen arm who can accept a set-up role, and also step into the 9th inning on days Joyce is burned. Perry Minasian is highly valuing veteran players, and the relief pitching market is chock-full of effective, older back-end options.
Some of the relievers have too much league-wide interest and will receive too much money to consider the Angels a feasible option. That certainly includes Tanner Scott and Jeff Hoffman. Others will likely want to play for contenders and/or maintain a full-time closer role like Kirby Yates, Kenley Jansen, and Paul Sewald. The Angels need cheaper, swing-men to bolster their bullpen.
Here are the free agent relievers the Angels should consider signing
1. David Robertson
Robertson will be entering his age-40 season next year, but has been able to pitch at least 63.2 innings in each of the last three seasons. His 72 innings pitched last season for Texas were the highest mark of his 16-year big league career, and his 34 holds were tied for the third most in the entire league. ESPN's Kiley McDaniel projected his next deal in the 1 year, $11.5 million range.
His go-to pitch is his cutter, and it was so nasty last season that his fastball run value was in the 97th percentile last year. His 33.3% K% was astoundingly high, as well as his 5.5% barrel%. Robertson is a North-South pitcher that would compliment Ben Joyce well in a set-up role. He should have a solid amount of teams looking to sign him, but he is exactly the kind of pitcher the Angels need. Durable, effective, veteran presence, and can close if needed. Perhaps the Angels can seal the deal with Robertson by selling him on more closing opportunities.