Rockies add veteran right-hander Sugano to rotation

Bryant placed on 60-day injured list

34 minutes ago

DENVER -- The Rockies addressed the need for experience in the starting rotation by reaching a one-year agreement with right-hander , who pitched last season with the Orioles after 12 seasons as the ace of Japan’s Yomiuri Giants.

They also addressed a nagging question by placing veteran on the 60-day injured list, meaning the fifth year of his seven-year, $182 million contract will begin in the manner of the previous four -- with Bryant rehabbing chronic back issues.

Sugano, 36, went 10-10 with a 4.64 ERA and 106 strikeouts in 157 innings for the Orioles, as a dependable figure during the team’s down year. Sugano will be pitching for Team Japan in the World Baseball Classic alongside Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Yusei Kikuchi. Then he will join a Rockies team that sought a seasoned starter.

The Rockies had largely bowed out of the market for veteran starters in recent years. But under new president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta and general manager Josh Byrnes, the club has signed righty Michael Lorenzen, 34, to a one-year contract, and now Sugano. According to ESPN’s Jeff Passan, Sugano's deal is worth $5.1 million.

The Rockies' goal was to increase the experience level for manager Warren Schaeffer, who was interim manager for the final five months of last season. Sugano joins Lorenzen, longtime Rockies rotation lefty Kyle Freeland -- who will turn 33 on May 14 -- and Ryan Feltner, 29, as starters on the 40-man Major League roster who last season were beyond their rookie years in the Majors. Antonio Senzatela, 31, made 23 starts in his 30 appearances last season, but the club announced at the end of last season that he will be converted to relief.

Sugano earned 2017 and '18 Sawamura Awards -- Japan’s equivalent of the Cy Young Award -- and Most Valuable Player Awards in '14, '20 and '24 in Nippon Professional Baseball before coming to the Majors. He was an eight-time All-Star and led his league in ERA four times and in strikeouts twice. In 276 NPB games, Sugano went 136-74 with a 2.43 ERA and 1,585 strikeouts in 1,857 innings.

Sugano has a large pitch arsenal, throwing six different pitch types: a four-seam fastball, sinker, cutter, sweeper, curveball and splitter. At this stage of his career, he doesn't have high velocity -- his fastball averaged just under 93 mph in 2025 -- but he gets outs by mixing all six of his pitches.

Sugano's best pitch is his splitter -- the wipeout pitch of many Japanese aces -- which he threw more often than any other pitch in 2025 and used to record 50 of his 106 strikeouts.

In his first season in MLB, Sugano was excellent at limiting walks -- his 5.3% walk rate was seventh-lowest among pitchers who threw at least 150 innings last season -- but he was vulnerable to the long ball, allowing an American League-high 33 home runs.

Bryant, 34, was limited to 11 games last season (.154 BA, 0 HR, 1 RBI) before the club announced in April that he was dealing with lumbar degenerative disk disease. Year-long examinations and rehab could not get him back on the field. Bryant has been limited to 170 games (.244 BA, 17 HR, 61 RBIs) since signing his contract during Spring Training 2022.