Rangers Keep World Series Reliever in Organization

The Texas Rangers just avoided losing more than a reliever. They kept alive one of the few fallback plans left for a bullpen that may need help sooner than later.

Josh Sborz cleared his opt-out window without landing a major league offer elsewhere, which means he remains in the organization for now.

On paper, that sounds minor. In reality, it gives Texas something it could not afford to lose: a proven postseason arm still sitting inside the system at a time when pitching depth already looks fragile.


More Than Just Depth

Josh Sborz #66 of the Texas Rangers throws a pitch during the sixth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Globe Life Field on March 30, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

GettyJosh Sborz #66 of the Texas Rangers throws a pitch during the sixth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Globe Life Field on March 30, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Sborz is not simply another minor league bullpen piece. He is the pitcher who recorded the final out of the Rangers’ 2023 World Series title run. That alone does not guarantee he can still help a major league staff in 2026. But it does explain why Texas never wanted this experiment to end early.

The Rangers brought him back on a minor league deal because they believed there might still be something useful here. Not nostalgia. Not sentiment. Usable relief depth. That is much harder to find than teams like to admit, especially once injuries start stacking up and bullpen roles begin to shift.

His numbers at Triple-A Round Rock do not demand a promotion. He owns a 4.32 ERA in eight appearances, with 11 strikeouts and six walks in 8.1 innings. That stat line tells two stories at once. The swing-and-miss ability still flashes. The command still creates hesitation. Texas is intrigued, but not convinced.


A Calculated Wait

Josh Sborz #66 of the Texas Rangers celebrates after defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game Five of the World Series at Chase Field on November 01, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

GettyJosh Sborz #66 of the Texas Rangers celebrates after defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-0 in Game Five of the World Series at Chase Field on November 01, 2023 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

That tension explains the Rangers’ recent choices.

When the bullpen needed help, Texas did not turn to Sborz. The club called up other options instead. That decision said a lot. The Rangers are not desperate enough to force this. They want more than flashes. They want proof he can handle major league work again, especially in back-to-back appearances and in higher-leverage situations.

Still, keeping him in the organization was critical because the Rangers do not need him to be ready only today. They need to preserve the chance that he could be ready a few weeks from now.

Bullpen depth rarely becomes a big story until a contender suddenly runs out of it. Texas knows how fast that can happen. Injuries have already thinned parts of the staff, and reliever volatility can wreck a season even for talented teams. Sborz may not be a solution yet, but losing him for nothing would have removed one more option from a team that cannot afford to keep shrinking its margin for error.


The Clock Is Already Ticking

Josh Sborz #66 of the Texas Rangers throws a pitch during the sixth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Globe Life Field on March 30, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

GettyJosh Sborz #66 of the Texas Rangers throws a pitch during the sixth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Globe Life Field on March 30, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

This is not over. Sborz can revisit his situation again in June. So the Rangers did not solve anything permanently. They bought time. Now the pressure shifts back to both sides. Texas has a short window to decide whether Sborz is worth a roster spot, and Sborz has a short window to prove the Rangers cannot keep waiting.

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That is what makes this more than a transaction note. It is a quiet deadline that could turn into a much bigger bullpen decision before long.

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This article was originally published on Heavy Sports


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