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Cleveland Guardians release longtime first baseman Carlos Santana

Cleveland Guardians release longtime first baseman Carlos Santana

Cleveland Guardians release longtime first baseman Carlos Santana

Seattle Mariners infielder Carlos Santana runs to first base against the Oakland Athletics at the Oakland Coliseum. Oakland^ California - August 21^ 2022

The Cleveland Guardians announced Thursday that they have released longtime first baseman Carlos Santana. In a corresponding move, the Guardians reinstated utility player Daniel Schneemann from the paternity list to take the 26-player roster spot vacated by Santana.

The veteran first baseman, who signed a one-year, $12 million contract ahead of the season, cleared waivers this week but was ultimately released by the club, making him a free agent. Other teams had the chance to claim Santana during a 48-hour waiver period, though doing so would have meant absorbing the roughly $2 million remaining on his deal with Cleveland.

Santana, 39, was batting .215/.316/.333 with 10 doubles, 11 home runs and 52 RBI in 455 plate appearances for the Guardians this season. However, he hasn’t been a regular part of Cleveland’s lineup in recent weeks; in that limited time, he’s batted .186 with a .503 OPS.

Santana was originally acquired in 2008 by Cleveland from the Los Angeles Dodgers in a trade that sent Casey Blake west, and was a fixture in the lineup from 2010-2017. After a brief stint with the Philadelphia Phillies, he returned in 2019 via a three-team swap involving the Seattle Mariners and Tampa Bay Rays, playing two more seasons in a Guardians uniform.

Across his career, Santana spent time with the Kansas City Royals, Pittsburgh Pirates, Milwaukee Brewers, and most recently the Minnesota Twins, where he captured a Gold Glove Award for his work at first base in 2024.  Over 15 seasons in the majors, Santana has compiled a steady offensive record: a .241 batting average, .352 on-base percentage, and .426 slugging percentage, along with 335 home runs, 403 doubles, 1,134 runs batted in, and 1,130 walks.

Editorial credit: Conor P. Fitzgerald / Shutterstock.com

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