Veteran infielder/outfielder Tony Kemp has elected to become a free agent after clearing outright waivers, the Orioles announced (h/t insider Roch Kubatko). Kemp was designated for assignment earlier this week, and he has enough MLB service time to request a return to the open market rather than accept an outright assignment to Triple-A.
Kemp could now be joining his third team in less than two months. The Reds inked Kemp to a minor league deal in February but then released him on March 19, so the 32-year-old a bit of an early start ahead of the wave of players cut loose at the end of spring camps. The Orioles ended up signing Kemp to a guaranteed deal worth $1M, making for a decent payday for what ended up as five games for Kemp in a Baltimore uniform. A new team that signs Kemp would only owe him the prorated minimum salary for his time on a big league roster, while the O’s are on the hook for whatever remains of the $1M.
Apart from two innings at shortstop, Kemp has played exclusively as a second baseman and left fielder over the last five seasons. Kemp has hit .238/.329/.342 over 1,498 plate appearances in that same span, though even that modest production is largely carried by a solid 2021 campaign. Since Opening Day 2022, Kemp has hit only .222/.304/.318 in 987 PA with the Athletics and Orioles.
Despite this lack of recent production, Kemp’s versatility, left-handed bat, and reputation as a clubhouse leader earned him some attention from multiple teams this past offseason, so it seems likely that he’ll land elsewhere in pretty short order. Speculatively speaking, a return to Cincinnati might make sense, given how the Reds’ once-vaunted position-player depth has continued to take hits since Kemp was released.
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