
By MATT PIKE
Following a trade that sent left handed reliever Angel Zerpa to the Milwaukee Brewers, the Kansas City Royals turned up the search to find new left handed help in their bullpen, and turned to a familiar face, acquiring Matt Strahm from the Philadelphia Phillies in a trade.
In return, the Royals sent right hander Jonathan Bowlan to Philadelphia. The 29 year old Bowlan pitched in parts of the last three seasons with the Royals, appearing in a career-high 34 games last season. The club transitioned him to a full-time reliever over the past year and he bounced back and forth between Triple-A and the Majors for much of the year.
Strahm has turned into one of the better lefty setup men in the league, and in the past three seasons with the Phillies, he posted a 2.71 ERA across 188 appearances. The 34 year old lefty was an All-Star in 2024 and finished that year with a 1.87 ERA, and last season, he posted a 2.74 ERA across a career-high-tying 66 appearances in 62 1/3 innings with a career-best 22 holds. In the last four seasons since 2022, Strahm ranks third among all left-handed pitchers with a 2.90 ERA, trailing only Tyler Holton (2.63) and Alex Vesia (2.74).
Strahm’s career began with the Royals, who drafted him in the 21st round of the 2012 MLB Draft out of Neosho County Community College. He made his debut with the Royals in 2016 and pitched two seasons in Kansas City before being traded to the Padres with Esteury Ruiz and Travis Wood for Brandon Maurer, Ryan Buchter and Trevor Cahill.
Nearly nine years after he left Kansas City, Strahm couldn’t be happier to reunite with his former team that’s now looking to be a sustainable winner.
“This all feels like a movie to me,” Strahm told MLB.com writer Anne Rogers. “This all started here in Kansas City. It’s gone full circle. With my family, I’ve been talking about the montage of my Spring Training profile pic over the [past] 10 years — it’s going to be a good one to go from Royal to Royal.”
In his career, Strahm has held left-handed batters to a .239/.302/.376 slash line, and actually has better numbers against righties, who have slashed .212/.279/.370 against him. In 2025, lefties hit .233 with a .673 OPS against Strahm, while righties hit .196 with a .585 OPS. With the Royals, Strahm figures to be the go-to lefty in high-leverage situations, joining the back end of the bullpen that includes Lucas Erceg and closer Carlos Estévez, who are both right handers.

Strahm wasn’t the only move Kansas City made on Friday. The Royals also added some depth potential for their bench, signing Abraham Toro to a minor league contract along with an invite to spring training.
Toro has appeared in the past seven big league seasons as a part-time, multi-positional player. He was with the Boston Red Sox in 2025 but he was outrighted off the roster in August. He became a free agent at season’s end, which allowed the Royals to sign him to this deal. He has 1,582 plate appearances over those seven campaigns with a combined .223/.285/.356 line over that time.
Defensively, he has logged hundreds of big league innings at the non-shortstop infield positions, with brief looks in the outfield corners as well. Kansas City currently has Nick Loftin and Tyler Tolbert on the roster as potential bench infielders but both are still optionable. If the Royals would prefer those guys to get regular playing time, they could be sent to Triple-A. The Royals have added Kevin Newman and now Toro as veteran infielders on non-roster pacts who could potentially take over a bench role.
You can follow Matt on X @KfeqMatt.


