

In an expected move, Don Mattingly has been hired as the Philadelphia Phillies’ bench coach, the team announced on Monday morning. (MLB.com report)
“I am excited to welcome Don Mattingly to Philadelphia,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson, who spent time working with Mattingly in the Yankees organization, said in a statement. “Having known Don for years and having worked closely with him in New York, I know that his knowledge of the game and his character make him a great addition to our tremendous coaching staff.”
Mattingly, 64, replaces Mike Calitri, who moved into a new role as Major League field coordinator. Mattingly has extensive managerial and coaching experience. He managed the Dodgers from 2011–15 and the Marlins from 2016–22, winning the National League Manager of the Year Award in 2020. Mattingly served as the Blue Jays’ bench coach the past three seasons. He was a coach under former Yankees and Dodgers manager Joe Torre from 2004–10.
As a player, Mattingly was a six-time All-Star and the 1985 American League Most Valuable Player during 14 seasons playing first base for the Yankees. He also won nine Gold Glove Awards.
Mattingly’s move comes with a unique family connection: he joins his son, Phillies general manager Preston Mattingly, inside the organization. It’s a rare father-son alignment at the top levels of a big-league club — and a storyline that will follow Philadelphia into 2026.
Breaking down the best free agents available as 2026 begins
We have seen a couple of notable free agents — Japanese stars Tatsuya Imai and Kazuma Okamoto — agree to deals in the first few days of 2026. But with only about five weeks left before pitchers and catchers report for Spring Training, a lot of quality players remain on the open market. (MLB.com rundown)
Here’s a quick run-through of the top free agents still available, separated into six categories. For more offseason tracking, MLB.com is following every free agent by position and ranking the Top 30 free agents.
1) The star position players
Kyle Tucker, Alex Bregman, Bo Bichette, Cody Bellinger. Four of the top five free agents in this year’s class, according to MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand, are without a home for ’26 and beyond.
Tucker is viewed as the biggest prize after recording five consecutive seasons with at least 4.0 FanGraphs WAR, even as he dealt with injuries in 2024 and ’25. (Here’s a quick explainer on what WAR measures.) The Blue Jays could be a prime landing spot for him. The Yankees and Mets have also reportedly checked in on Tucker, but they seem to be more focused on Bellinger, who is viewed as the more affordable alternative and offers more versatility — Bellinger can play all three outfield spots and first base.
Bichette enjoyed a rebound year in 2025, batting .311 with an .840 OPS and 18 home runs after an injury-marred 2024. The Blue Jays have been linked to him throughout the winter, but Toronto’s deal with Okamoto may make a reunion less likely.
The Red Sox can’t be ruled out for Bichette, but their pursuit might hinge on whether or not they re-sign Bregman. Boston has reportedly made an “aggressive offer” to Bregman, who registered an .822 OPS over 495 plate appearances and was lauded for his leadership during his first season with the Red Sox.
2) The top starting pitchers
Framber Valdez, Ranger Suárez, Zac Gallen. Dylan Cease’s monster contract with the Blue Jays provided the starting pitcher market with a jolt early in the offseason, but it was pretty quiet on that front until Imai agreed to terms with the Astros.
Imai’s signing likely signifies the end of Valdez’s tenure in Houston. The left-handed workhorse ranks second in the Majors since 2022 with 767 2/3 innings. He owns a solid 127 ERA+ over that span. Valdez’s 3.66 ERA last year was his worst in a qualified season, but few starters induce more ground balls than the 32-year-old, who had a 59.4% grounder rate in 2025 and 62.5% for his eight-year career.
Gallen’s 734 innings since the beginning of 2022 sit right behind Valdez for third-most in the bigs. Last season was a largely forgettable one for the 2023 NL Cy Young Award finalist. However, Gallen looked more like his old self over the final two months, recording a 3.32 ERA and a 3.95 FIP over his last 11 starts. He served up eight home runs during that 65-inning stretch, which was a big improvement from his first 127 innings (23 homers allowed).
Although Suárez doesn’t often break 90 mph on the radar gun, he has been one of the better starters in the game over the past two years, logging a 129 ERA+ across 308 innings. Armed with a six-pitch mix that induces a lot of soft contact, Suárez may be more appealing than fellow southpaw Valdez to some teams since the former is two years younger.
3) Mid-tier position players who can fill a specific need
J.T. Realmuto, Eugenio Suárez, Harrison Bader, Luis Arraez. Just below those marquee position players resides a group of free agents that has something for any club.
Realmuto’s bat was below league average (91 OPS+) for the first time in a decade in 2025. His blocking and framing skills have declined in recent years, but the 34-year-old catcher, who has spent the past seven seasons with the Phillies, is still quite effective at cutting down opposing baserunners.
Suárez is the best pure power bat left on the market. He’s coming off a year split between the D-backs and Mariners in which he crushed 49 homers, although 36 of them came before he was traded to Seattle on July 31. From that point, Suárez batted just .189 with a .683 OPS and an unsightly 35.9% strikeout rate. Whiffs have always been a big part of his game, but Suárez has hit at least 30 home runs in six of the past seven non-shortened seasons.
Arraez is kind of the anti-Suárez at the plate: a whole lot of contact but with very little authority. The three-time batting champion — and the only player to win one title each with a different team — presents a very intriguing free-agent case. No player puts bat to ball more frequently, but Arraez’s 16.7% hard-hit rate last season was the lowest by a qualified player since 2022.
Bader was a surprising standout at the plate with the Phillies during the final two months of 2025, slashing .305/.361/.463. But superb outfield defense is his calling card, and he recorded seven outs above average last year. A 2021 Gold Glover, Bader ranked third in outfield OAA over the past four seasons.
4) Future Hall of Fame candidates
Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, Paul Goldschmidt, Andrew McCutchen. Both three-time Cy Young Award winners, Verlander and Scherzer showed last season that they have something left in the tank.
Verlander, who will turn 43 on Feb. 20, produced a 3.85 ERA across 152 innings and 29 starts for the Giants. Scherzer, 41, threw just 85 regular-season innings for the Blue Jays as he was sidelined for nearly three months by right thumb inflammation. But he had a 3.60 ERA through his first 11 starts and ended the year by starting Game 7 of the World Series against the Dodgers, allowing one run over 4 1/3 frames.
Goldschmidt was fantastic for the Yankees in the early months of 2025. He entered June with a .338 average and an .889 OPS. But from there, the 38-year-old first baseman turned in a .226/.277/.333 slash line over 302 plate appearances. He hit 10 home runs on the year and is 28 dingers shy of 400 for his career.
It seems like it’s Pittsburgh or bust for McCutchen at this point in his decorated career. The Pirates legend has signed one-year deals with the club in each of the past three offseasons. The active leader in games played (2,262), the 39-year-old launched 13 homers and had a .700 OPS in 135 games last season while spending most of his time at designated hitter.
5) Other notable starting pitchers
Chris Bassitt, Lucas Giolito, Zack Littell, Walker Buehler, Nick Martinez, Jose Quintana, Jordan Montgomery. There are some reliable veterans in this tier of starting pitchers. Quintana and Littell each have a sub-4.00 ERA while throwing more than 300 innings since the beginning of 2024. Bassitt finished last season with a 3.96 ERA and has exceeded 170 innings in each of the previous four seasons.
There are also a couple of wild cards here in Buehler and Montgomery. The 31-year-old Buehler isn’t that far removed from being a frontline hurler, but his 2025 season with Boston was so bad that he was released in August after recording a 5.45 ERA over 112 1/3 innings.
Last time we saw Montgomery, he had a 6.23 ERA and a 1.65 WHIP for the D-backs in 2024. He then missed all of last season after undergoing Tommy John surgery in April. He should be able to get back on the mound in the early portion of 2026 and will look to recapture the form that made him a postseason hero with the World Series champion Rangers in 2023.
6) What’s left of the reliever market
Seranthony Domínguez, David Robertson, Jakob Junis, Michael Kopech, Danny Coulombe, Liam Hendriks. It’s fairly slim pickings if you are a team that needs an impact bullpen arm. Most of the best free-agent relievers signed early in the offseason.
Domínguez finished above the 90th percentile in whiff rate and strikeout rate while throwing 62 2/3 innings split between the Orioles and Blue Jays last season. Junis and the left-handed Coulombe both posted sub-3.00 ERAs.
Kopech was limited to only 11 innings with the Dodgers because of right shoulder and right knee injuries. But the 29-year-old fireballer allowed only six hits (all singles) in 40 at-bats. Speaking of 40, Robertson produced a 4.08 ERA in his age-40 campaign with Texas last year. Next season would be his 18th in the big leagues.










