Jesse Chavez, most traded player in MLB history, retires after Braves designated him for assignment
Chavez, who will turn 42 on Aug. 21, pitched for nine teams during his MLB career. That includes three stints with the Braves, for whom he played the past four seasons. He compiled a 4.67 ERA in 657 appearances (1,142 innings), averaging 8.2 strikeouts per nine innings.
In his final season with Atlanta, Chavez carried a 9.00 ERA in four appearances, allowing eight runs, 14 hits (four of them home runs) and five walks in eight innings.
However, Chavez's claim to fame may ultimately be that he was the most traded player in MLB history. The bespectacled reliever was dealt 10 times during his career. His transactions page on Baseball-Reference is nearly a novel. The last of those trades was in 2022, when he was one of two players the Braves dealt to the Los Angeles Angels for Raisel Iglesias.
Chavez announced his retirement on digital show "Foul Territory" on Thursday. He said he hasn't picked up a baseball since his last game, which was July 13 against the St. Louis Cardinals. He allowed four runs and six hits in two innings.
"As of now, I don't think we're gonna keep going," Chavez said. "This is it. Time to turn the page, focus on the next chapter in life and go help all the young kids, all the stuff that I did so that they don't have to take two steps backwards and take those three steps forward."
Chavez was originally drafted in the 39th round by the Chicago Cubs in 2001, but opted to pitch in college. He was selected the following year in the 42nd round by the Texas Rangers and was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2006. He made his MLB debut two years later.
The list of teams that Chavez played for and in which seasons is as follows:
Pittsburgh Pirates (2008-09)Atlanta Braves (2010, 2021, 2022-25)Kansas City Royals (2010-11)Toronto Blue Jays (2012)Oakland Athletics (2012-15)Los Angeles Dodgers (2016)Los Angeles Angels (2017, 2022)Chicago Cubs (2018, 2022)Texas Rangers (2018-20)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Mets announce lineup vs San Francisco Giants for Sunday game
The Mets extended their win streak in dramatic fashion on Saturday. Mark Vientos gave them the lead with a two-run double in the sixth inning and the Mets weathered a pair of close calls to emerge with a 2-1 win in San Francisco. Now, the Mets will look to extend their win streak to match a season-high seven games in their series finale with the Giants at 7:10 p.m. on Sunday at Oracle Park. Kodai Senga will look to shake off one of his worst starts of the season. Last time out, Senga allowed four earned runs across three innings against the Angels. He enters with a 7-3 record and 1.79 ERA. The Giants will counter with a bullpen game as Matt Gage opens the finale. With the Mets and Giants finishing their series, here are the lineups for both teams: NY Mets announce Sunday lineup vs Giants Giants announce Sunday lineup vs Mets This article originally appeared on NY Mets announce lineup vs San Francisco Giants for Sunday game


Washington Post
6 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Pirates push Paul Skenes back up to 99 pitches, and he throws 6 more scoreless innings
PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Pirates let Paul Skenes take on a more normal workload again. What did not change was his effectiveness. Skenes struck out nine in six three-hit innings, and the Pirates shut out Arizona for a second straight day, beating the Diamondbacks 6-0 on Sunday. It was the fourth scoreless outing in Skenes' last five starts, but this time he threw 99 pitches — his most in over a month.

Associated Press
6 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Boston closer Aroldis Chapman thinks he'll return soon after back spasm forces him out
BOSTON (AP) — Boston Red Sox closer Aroldis Chapman thinks he'll be able to pitch in a couple of days after walking off the mound with a back spasm in the eighth inning of Sunday's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. 'It's just a spasm. It should be gone in a couple of days,' he said through a team translator after the Red Sox beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3 for a series victory. In to face the top of the Dodgers' order, his velocity was noticeably down to mid-90 mph on his fastball instead of the high 90s to low 100s. Manager Alex Cora and a trainer came out to the mound to visit him after Shohei Ohtani flew out to the left-field warning track. Jordan Hicks entered and got out of a two-on, one-out mess when Teoscar Hernández lined to second and Ceddanne Rafaela dove to the bag, beating Hyeseong Kim for double play. Hicks pitched the ninth for his second save. 'Tight back. He should be OK,' Cora said of Chapman. Both Chapman and Cora said they didn't think there would be a trip to the injured list. 'I was definitely determined to stay out there, work through it,' Chapman said. 'Alex thought it would be better, smarter that we just 'call it' to avoid anything down the line.' The 37-year-old Chapman is having one of his better seasons in the majors with 18 saves and a 1.30 ERA, with much better control. He's walked just 11 in 41 1/3 innings. In early July he earned his 350th career save and said he'd like to reach 400. ___ AP MLB: