You know the Royals are in a differYou know the Royals are in a different era when they enter camp with few roster spots on the line, rather than holding an open tryout for the lineup. The Royals are pretty much set with their starting nine and rotation, but if there are roster spots to be won, they’ll be in the bullpen. The Royals have the late innings figured out – Lucas Erceg and Carlos Estévez will shut things down late in games. Matt Strahm will likely set those two up, and face the tough lefties. The middle innings will likely be John Schreiber and Nick Mears.
That leaves some jockeying for position for the last three spots in the pen when the team begins the season in Atlanta on March 27. For once, the question isn’t whether the Royals have enough arms — it’s which capable arms won’t make the team. Here’s who could be competing.
The favorites
Alex Lange led the Tigers with 26 saves in 2023 before suffering lat injuries that derailed his career over the last two seasons. The Lee’s Summit native grew up a Royals fan and can miss bats with a 96 mph fastball and a knuckle-curve that opponents hit just .178 against in 2023. But his injuries are a concern, and he has had trouble throwing strikes at times with a high walk rate and a league-high 15 wild pitches in 2022. He pitched just one big league game, spending most of the second half of last year in the minors. Lange has an MLB contract, but has an option year remaining, so the Royals could give him some time to get acclimated in the minors.
Daniel Lynch IV seems like a good bet to be in the big leagues, but with the acquisition of Bailey Falter last summer, he seems somewhat redundant as a left-handed long reliever. Lynch posted a 3.06 ERA in 57 games last year, but he had the third-lowest strikeout rate among relievers and pitched primarily in low-leverage situations. He has an option year remaining as well, but he could become a trade asset with the Royals looking to sell high on his performance last year.
Starter or reliever?
Ryan Bergert would have a chance to crack the starting rotation for many other teams, but will likely be on the outside looking in with the Royals. He flashed some great stuff last year, but had some inconsistent results, so the Royals could very well have him stretched out in Omaha to be the de facto sixth starter. However, he did make four scoreless relief appearances last year, and if they feel like his stuff could be a weapon in the pen, he could make the team.
Mason Black was acquired from the Giants this offseason after making eight starts for San Francisco the past two years. He has struggled both at the big league level and in the upper minors, but could be a good project for Brian Sweeney and the coaching staff. Black throws from a lower arm angle, which could give hitters a different look if he comes out of the pen. Black has an option year, so he’s likely to begin in the Omaha rotation as a depth piece.
Bailey Falter no longer has options remaining, unlike Bergert or Stephen Kolek. That will likely mean he makes the team, although they could try to pass him through waivers and hope no team is willing to take on his $3.6 million salary. Falter was solid in 50 starts for the Pirates in 2024 and 2025, although with a low strikeout rate. But he struggled after being traded to the Royals last July, ending the year on the Injured List. Falter has much better strikeout numbers in his 31 career relief appearances than he does as a starter, so he could prove to be more useful in that role.
Stephen Kolek, like Bergert and Falter, was acquired last summer, but Kolek had the most success with a 1.91 ERA in five starts with the Royals. He doesn’t miss many bats either, but he throws strikes and gets groundballs. He wants to rely on his four-seamer to get more whiffs, and he did have a noticeably higher velo and strikeout rate in 2024 when he worked exclusively as a reliever. Kolek has an option year and seems likely to be sent to the minors to keep him stretched out as a starter, but an impressive spring may make it hard not to carry him in the pen.
Mitch Spence was acquired earlier this month as rotation depth, but he made 24 relief appearances with the Athletics last year. He was solid in 2024, but had mixed results last year, although a lot of that could be due to poor numbers at the home ballpark in Sacramento. He has a high chase rate and a groundball rate of 46 percent, and was more effective as a reliever than a starter last year. He has an option year, but the Royals love his flexibility, and he could be used out of the pen.
Competing for a spot
Luinder Avila is one of the top pitching prospects in the organization and impressed in a cup of coffee last year with a 1.29 ERA and 16 strikeouts in 14 innings. He brings an electric four-seamer with a hammer curve and a cutter with good break, giving him a three-pitch mix that produced a 50 percent groundball rate in his limited action. Manager Matt Quatraro has suggested the 24-year-old could be a front-of-the-rotation pitcher someday, but for this year, he could cut his teeth in the big leagues as a reliever.
Steven Cruz turned a corner in 2025, reducing his walk rate and making 47 appearances in the big leagues with a solid 3.74 ERA. He doesn’t strike out as many hitters as you would expect for a large-framed right-hander with a fastball in the high-90s. He could rely more on his slider this year, as big league hitters struggled to touch it, hitting just .156 against it with a 24.5 percent whiff rate.
José Cuas was effective for the Royals over 2022-23, but has had trouble throwing strikes since they traded him away. He has returned as a non-roster invitee, so the Royals would need to clear a 40-man roster spot to add him to the team. His sinker has been pretty ineffective the last few years, but if he can get back to throwing strikes and getting groundballs, he could be an option for the Royals.
James McArthur led the Royals with 18 saves in 2024, but lost his effectiveness and suffered an elbow injury late in the year that required surgery. He sat out all of last year, and will look to recapture his 2023 performance, when he had a 23-to-2 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 18 games. McArthur has an option year, and could begin the year in the minors to work his way slowly back to the big leagues, but the Royals hope his curve can be a weapon later this year.
Eli Morgan was a pretty savvy signing, joining the Royals on a minor league deal. He had a 1.93 ERA in 32 games with Cleveland in 2024, but appeared in just seven games with the Cubs last year due to an elbow injury. Morgan mixes a 92 mph four-seamer with a slider and changeup, and if healthy, he provides another veteran bullpen arm that throws strikes.
Héctor Neris had 17 saves for the Cubs in 2024, but had an ugly 6.75 ERA last year in 35 games. Despite that, he had a very high strikeout rate, so the Royals will bring the 36-year-old right-hander in to see if he has anything left in the tank. Neris has been plagued by control issues the last few years, but he does miss bats with a solid splitter that opponents had a 36 percent whiff rate against last year.
Long shots
Eric Cerantola is on the 40-man roster, which could give him a leg up, and he did have an intriguing strikeout rate of 11.6 per-nine-innings in Triple-A Omaha last year. He also missed six weeks with injury and had mixed results overall with a 4.04 ERA and a high walk rate. He will be pitching with Team Canada in the World Baseball Classic, which could hurt his chances of making the team, but realistically, his hope is to pitch well in Omaha and become a factor in the pen later this year.
Helcris Olivárez is a 25-year-old the Royals signed in the offseason who has pitched in the Rockies, Red Sox, and Giants organizations, but has yet to make his MLB debut. He’s a lefty who throws in the mid-90s and held opposing lefties to a .136 batting average in the minors last year. He’s almost certainly ticketed to Omaha, but lefties are always needed and it wouldn’t be a total surprise to see him in Kansas City at some point.
Aaron Sanchez faced the Royals in the 2015 ALCS as a member of the Blue Jays and was an All-Star the following year, but has not pitched in the big leagues since 2022. Right shoulder injuries have kept him out of action, and he did not even pitch in the minors last year, but he impressed scouts with his performance in the Dominican Winter League over the offseason, winning Pitcher of the Year honors. A former starter, Sanchez seems likely to be used as a reliever at this point in his career, but he will need to show he can stay healthy and induce groundballs the way he did a decade ago.