Cleveland Guardians Sign Veteran Right-Handed Hitter to Minor League Deal

The Cleveland Guardians added a right-handed hitter to the organization on a minor league deal with an invite to MLB spring training camp.

There’s no such thing as a bad minor league deal, and the Cleveland Guardians made one on Tuesday as the team announced it has signed INF Carter Kieboom to a minor league contract for the 2026 season, with a non-roster invitation to Major League Camp this February.

The 28-year-old was originally selected by the Washington Nationals in the first round of the 2016 MLB Draft. In 2019, Kieboom was considered the organization's No. 2-ranked prospect before making his big-league debut later that season. 

For a player who was once considered a top prospect and owns a minor league career OPS of .818, Kieboom has never truly panned out at the big league level. In 450 MLB plate appearances since 2019, the right-handed hitter owns a .200/.297/.300 slash line. 

Kieboom spent the entire 2025 season in the Los Angeles Angels organization, where he registered a .817 OPS with 17 doubles and nine home runs at the Triple-A level. 

Sep 28, 2025; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels first baseman Carter Kieboom (17) hits a single during the ninth inning against the Houston Astros at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images
Sep 28, 2025; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels first baseman Carter Kieboom (17) hits a single during the ninth inning against the Houston Astros at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images

He did reach the Majors toward the end of the regular season, appearing in three games in September. In the brief big league appearance, Kieboom recorded two hits in eight at-bats (.250 batting average).

Right now, Kieboom doesn’t have a clear path to the roster. Cleveland’s middle infield has many questions as is, and a player with Kieboom’s resume isn’t jumping prospects such as Travis Bazzana or Brayan Rocchio. Gabriel Arias probably has more to offer as a well-rounded player. 

The big question is, what could the Guardians see, outside of depth, in a 28-year-old outfielder who hasn’t found success at the big-league level?

Outside of all of Kieboom’s shortcomings, he’s still managed to hit left-handed pitching fairly well. The right-handed hitter owns a career .233/.333/.347 slash line against southpaws at the big-league level. 

Cleveland only has four current right-handed hitters on its 40-man roster: Austin Hedges, David Fry, Gabriel Arias, and Jonathan Rodriguez. 

Maybe if Kieboom truly does continue to light up in the minors this season, Cleveland could view him as a potential option against left-handed pitching at the big league level, similar to Will Wilson’s role during the 2025 season. 

At the very least, Cleveland has a veteran infielder it can call at some point throughout the year if it needs more depth. 

Category: General Sports