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The Nationals continued shaping their offseason roster today, announcing that four players have cleared waivers and been sent outright to Triple-A Rochester: right-handers Eduardo Salazar and Mason Thompson, left-hander Shinnosuke Ogasawara, and catcher CJ Stubbs. Both Salazar and Thompson have elected free agency.

These procedural moves are common at this point in the offseason. Once the World Series ends, teams must reinstate players from the 60-day injured list to their 40-man rosters—often forcing a numbers crunch. According to RosterResource, Washington was projected to have 42 players for 40 spots, making some roster trimming inevitable.

Thompson, 27, was the most experienced player of the group. Originally debuting with the Padres in 2021, he joined the Nationals that summer in the Daniel Hudson trade. After missing all of 2024 recovering from Tommy John surgery, Thompson returned in 2025 but posted a 5.21 career ERA over 114 big league innings. His strong 50.6% ground ball rate couldn’t offset below-average strikeout (17.8%) and walk (11.1%) numbers. With no minor league options remaining for 2026, the right-hander was likely on the roster bubble and opted instead to pursue free agency.

Salazar, also 27, joined Washington via a midseason waiver claim in 2024. The journeyman righty has pitched 70 2/3 MLB innings across stints with the Reds, Dodgers, and Nationals, carrying a 5.99 ERA. Like Thompson, he pairs a solid ground ball rate (52.8%) with below-average strikeout and walk metrics. Having previously been outrighted by Cincinnati, Salazar had the right to reject another outright assignment and hit the open market.

Ogasawara, 28, completed his first season stateside after signing a two-year, $3.5 million deal with the Nationals last winter, which also included a $700,000 posting fee to Japan’s Chunichi Dragons. The left-hander struggled in limited big league action, posting a 6.98 ERA over 38 2/3 innings while spending a considerable portion of the year in Triple-A. Unless his contract contains special language allowing him to elect free agency—a clause occasionally seen in deals with players coming from Asia—he’s expected to remain in the organization as non-roster depth heading into 2026.

Washington’s roster will likely see further turnover in the coming weeks as the club finalizes its 40-man ahead of the Rule 5 Draft deadline and prepares for another critical offseason of roster evaluation and rebuilding.

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