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Kansas City Acquires Matt Strahm to Remove Late-Inning Uncertainty

December 19, 2025 by Last Word On Baseball

On Friday, the Kansas City Royals acquired left-handed reliever Matt Strahm from the Philadelphia Phillies in a trade, sending back right-hander Jonathan Bowlan, as first reported to MLB.com.
The trade directly addresses a quiet but persistent weakness that surfaced repeatedly during the Royals’ 2025 season.
The Royals did not acquire Strahm to add bullpen depth. The front office acquired him to reduce uncertainty in innings that determine outcomes. Modern bullpen rules require relievers who can pitch full innings, not just single matchups. This move reflects Kansas City’s decision to control the late innings rather than evaluate talent.
Oct 9, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Matt Strahm (25) reacts after the ninth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers during game four of the NLDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

The Royals’ Motivation Behind the Matt Strahm Trade

The Three-Batter Minimum Changed Bullpen Value

Major League Baseball implemented the three-batter minimum beginning with the 2020 season, reshaping how teams build their bullpens. Under Official Baseball Rules 5.10(g), a pitcher who enters a game must face at least three batters or pitch until the half-inning ends unless injury or illness forces removal.

MLB outlined the rule as part of its pace-of-play changes.

This rule eliminated the traditional LOOGY (lefty one-out guy) role. Teams can no longer carry relievers designed for one matchup and a quick exit. Every bullpen arm now has to manage innings, not isolated moments.

That reality shapes how teams evaluate relievers like Strahm. Kansas City did not just target a situational left-hander. The Royals selected a reliever whose skill set fits the rule environment that the league established.

Matt Strahm Is a Leverage Reliever, Not a Specialist

Strahm’s 2025 performance supports that statement. Strahm posted a 2.74 ERA across 66 relief appearances for Philadelphia in 2025. FanGraphs credits him with a 2.99 FIP and a strikeout rate above 27 percent, reinforcing that his results came from execution rather than a defense behind him.
Strahm also handled right-handed hitters without protection. Under the three-batter minimum, that ability matters. His splits on FanGraphs show consistent effectiveness against right-handed batters, which will allow skipper Matt Quatraro to deploy him in leverage situations without worrying about lineup manipulation.
Phillies manager Rob Thomson referenced Strahm’s reliability in late-inning roles during bullpen discussions covered by MLB.com, reinforcing that Philadelphia trusted him in meaningful innings rather than matchup-only situations.

Why This Mattered for the Royals Specifically

The Royals stayed competitive in 2025 because their rotation kept games close and their infield provided excellent defense. The bullpen, particularly from the left side, never fully locked in.
Kansas City cycled through left-handed relief options without establishing a dependable late-inning answer. That inconsistency surfaced in narrow losses and in extended series where high pressure and crucial game situations accumulated.
FanGraphs bullpen data shows Kansas City ranking in the lower tier of MLB in late-inning run prevention from left-handed relievers during the 2025 season. Kansas City did not need a blockbuster trade to address the issue. It needed clarity. Strahm supplies that clarity.

Cost, Control, and Intent

Spotrac lists Strahm’s 2025 salary at $7.5 million, with a conditional option tied to 60 innings pitched and health in 2026. The structure avoids long-term financial risk while preserving the club’s future value.
Kansas City sent Jonathan Bowlan to Philadelphia, a controllable arm who provided depth but never anchored the Royals’ roster core. The front office made a deliberate move that balanced intent with restraint.

What This Signals About Kansas City

Good teams do not hope the seventh inning works itself out. They assign it.
By acquiring Strahm, who started his big-league career in Kansas City, the Royals signal that high-stakes innings are no longer a developmental sandbox. The club chose to gain experience rather than wait for it to develop in the farm system.

Y’all ever put on an old hat and forgot how well it fit!? @Royals #BackToTheK #NewProfilePic pic.twitter.com/xnVdVJ2OHY

— Matt Strahm (@MattStrahm) December 19, 2025

This trade aligns with how games are won under modern bullpen rules. The three-batter minimum demands relievers who can navigate complete innings under pressure. Kansas City now has another arm in the pen, proven and ready for that reality.
The Royals did not chase a flashy player. They chose reliability. In the AL Central, which is decided by margins, that choice matters if you want to be part of the conversation at the end of the season.
Main Photo Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

The post Kansas City Acquires Matt Strahm to Remove Late-Inning Uncertainty appeared first on Last Word On Baseball.

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