
Former San Diego Padres pitcher Trevor Cahill is officially hanging up the cleats.
The pitcher’s agent, John Boggs, announced to Newsweek Sports Friday afternoon that his client would be retiring after 13 years in Major League Baseball.
Drafted 66th overall in the second round of the 2006 MLB Draft by the Oakland Athletics, Cahill would debut for the team in April 2009 and also play the 2010 and 2011 seasons with the club, claiming an All-Star selection in 2010 and also finishing ninth in the AL Cy Young Award voting. He would later return to Oakland for a single season in 2018.
After leaving Oakland the first time, the righty would spend the next three seasons with the Arizona Diamondbacks, before embarking on a journeyman-like career that started with the Atlanta Braves in 2015, before spending two years with the Chicago Cubs, then splitting the 2017 season with the San Diego Padres and Kansas City Royals.
After his second stint with the A’s, he would spend a season each with the Los Angeles Angels, San Francisco Giants, and Pittsburgh Pirates.
His final MLB appearance came with Pittsburgh on June 11, 2021.
After his years in the game, Cahill finishes with an 86-99 record, a 4.26 earned run average, and 1,151 career strikeouts.
