The Baltimore Orioles reached a two-year, $28 million agreement with right-handed reliever Ryan Helsley on a contract Saturday, according to a league source. The deal includes a player opt-out after the first year.
Helsley, No. 27 on The Athletic’s MLB free agent Big Board, was one of the top free-agent relievers available. His dreadful two-month tenure with the New York Mets did little to deter interest. Roughly 15 teams checked in on Helsley with various levels of interest, including the Detroit Tigers, who viewed the right-hander as a potential starting pitcher.
Helsley, 31, spent the first six seasons of his career with the St. Louis Cardinals, making the National League All-Star team in 2024 while leading the majors with 49 saves. He made 36 appearances for St. Louis in 2025 (converting 21 of 26 save opportunities) before the Cardinals dealt him to the Mets at the trade deadline, but he was unable to replicate the same success. He was tagged for a 7.20 ERA over 22 appearances with New York and struggled so mightily that he was moved out of high-leverage relief spots. In an offseason interview with The Athletic, Helsley cited pitch tipping and being too predictable with his fastball usage as the main issues.
“You’re in the game, and the game speeds up, you’re in the moment, and you’re not thinking about your arm,” Helsley said about his pitch tipping in a recent interview with The Athletic. “You naturally go back to what feels right, but obviously, you’re giving stuff away.”
Helsley added, “I felt great, and the Mets’ models showed I was actually having the best stuff of my career, so it didn’t make sense for me to struggle as bad as I did. But I was being really predictable in certain counts. It was almost a double-confirmation for hitters. They see it with their eyes, and they also had a stat behind it saying I’m more likely to throw this pitch in a certain count. It just gave them that much more comfort in the box, and more conviction.”
Interested clubs were not overly concerned with how Helsley ended his season. He still owns one of the best fastballs in the league and has posted a strikeouts-per-nine-innings rate over 10 in each of the last four seasons.
Orioles president of baseball operations Mike Elias clearly outlined what his offseason priorities were at MLB’s general managers’ meetings earlier in the month: a frontline starting pitcher, a high-end reliever and a veteran hitter. The Orioles acquired outfielder Taylor Ward from the Los Angeles Angels in exchange for Grayson Rodriguez shortly after.
With Helsley set to take over the ninth, Baltimore can shift its focus to the starting pitching market. Several starters remain available, including Framber Valdez, Tatsuya Imai, Zac Gallen, Ranger Suárez and Michael King.
