BRAEDEN OGLE, LEFT HANDED PITCHER
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Born: July 30, 1997 Height: 6’2″ Weight: 215 Bats: Left Throws: Left Drafted: 4th Round, 135th Overall, 2016 How Acquired: Draft High School: Jensen Beach (FL) HS Agent: N/A |
WTM’s PLAYER PROFILE |
The Pirates drafted Ogle in 2016 as a projectable prep lefty. He got a lot of attention when his velocity jumped to 96 early that season, but he eventually sat at 91-93. He dropped his curve for a slider while still in high school and was also working on a change when he was drafted. Ogle was rated 69th in the draft class by Baseball America and 83rd by MLB.com. He was committed to the University of Florida, but signed for $374,300 over the slot amount. By 2017, he was sitting in the mid-90s and the change had become his best secondary pitch. Ogle’s command has never been a strong point. The Pirates eventually traded him to the Phillies, then signed him after he became a minor league free agent.
2016 Ogle made eight starts, generally pitching well, with some control issues. Five of the eight earned runs he allowed came on one outing. He held left-handed hitters to a .345 OPS. 2017 Ogle had an encouraging season at Bristol. He had some shaky starts early, including one in which he walked five. In his final two starts, though, he allowed no earned runs over ten innings on just five hits, with a dozen strikeouts. Opponents had just a .661 OPS against him and he was nearly as effective against right-handed as against left-handed hitters, with opponents’ OPS figures of .665 and .625, respectively. He missed his final three starts due to minor knee surgery. 2018 Ogle opened the season in the West Virginia rotation. Despite some control problems, showed a lot of promise. After four starts, though, he went on the disabled list with shoulder inflammation. He had repeated setbacks during his rehab and was never able to return. 2019 Ogle started the season in the Greensboro rotation, but after two starts the Pirates moved him to the bullpen, apparently out of concern over his workload and shoulder. He pitched well apart from some gopher ball problems. Those may have resulted from Greensboro’s HR-prone park, as five of the six he allowed came at home. The Pirates moved him up to Bradenton in late June, but he was shut down for almost six weeks at the beginning of July. He gave up three runs in his first game back, then finished the season with four perfect innings over three outings. Overall, he showed much better control and had no platoon split. 2020 2021 After the missed season, the Pirates sent Ogle to AAA. Apart from control issues, he pitched well over the first four months of the season, entirely in relief. That included a high K rate. In July, the Pirates agreed to a trade with the Phillies in which they’d give up Tyler Anderson for catching prospect Abrahan Gutierrez and another player, but the trade fell through due to the other player’s physical. The Pirates then agreed to trade Ogle for Gutierrez. After the trade, things fell apart for Ogle in AAA with the Phillies. The control problems continued and he got hit very hard, including better than a home run every four innings. 2022 Back in AAA, Ogle continued to struggle, although not nearly as much as he had late in the 2021 season. His walk and K rates were bad. After the season he became a free agent. The Pirates spent the latter part of the 2022-23 off-season signing every minor league lefty they could find, including Ogle, to minor league deals. |
CONTRACT INFORMATION
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2023: Minor league contract |
PLAYER INFORMATION
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Signing Bonus: $800,000 MiLB Debut: 2016 MLB Debut: MiLB FA Eligible: 2023 MLB FA Eligible: Rule 5 Eligible: Eligible Added to 40-Man: Options Remaining: 3 MLB Service Time: 0.000 |
TRANSACTIONS
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June 10, 2016: Drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 4th round, 135th overall pick; signed on June 20. July 30, 2021: Traded by the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Philadelphia Phillies for Abrahan Gutierrez. November 10, 2022: Became a free agent. February 22, 2022: Signed as a minor league free agent by the Pittsburgh Pirates. |