The Diamondbacks have added four players to keep them out of the Rule 5 draft: pitchers Kohl Drake, Mitch Bratt and Dylan Ray and infielder Jose Fernandez. Arizona only had three openings on the 40-man roster, so they designated lefty Tommy Henry for assignment.
Henry, 28, pitched just 6 2/3 innings in the big leagues this year. He has 181 innings of 5.07 ERA ball under his belt in the majors but wasn’t going to be a factor on next year’s staff after undergoing Tommy John surgery in late June. Henry had a decent showing with the ’23 D-backs, tossing 89 innings of 4.15 ERA ball, and he posted similar numbers in Triple-A the following season. However, he was clearly pitching through something in 2025, posting an 8.12 ERA in 11 Triple-A starts before hitting the injured list and ultimately undergoing surgery.
Any team can now claim Henry, but he’d need to be carried on the 40-man roster all winter before the 60-day IL becomes available again in spring training. Given his lack of consistent big league success to date and that lengthy injury rehab, there’s a good chance he’ll pass through waivers unclaimed. If Henry becomes a free agent, he’ll be an option to sign with the D-backs or another club on a minor league deal. He still has four-plus seasons of club control remaining.
Drake is one of the prospects the D-backs acquired when trading Merrill Kelly to the Rangers this past July. The 25-year-old was an 11th-rounder in 2022 and has put himself on the prospect map with solid performances in each of the past two seasons (2.29 ERA across three levels in ’24, 4.23 ERA between Double-A and Triple-A this past season). Drake punched out more than 35% of his opponents in 2024 and more than 28% at higher levels in 2025. He sits 92-94 mph with his heater and has three secondary pitches as well as solid command. A big league debut in 2026 seems likely.
Like Drake, Bratt came to the Snakes in that Kelly trade. Texas drafted him in the fifth round back in ’21. He pitched 122 1/3 innings with a sharp 3.38 ERA at the Double-A level in 2025 and logged even more encouraging rate stats: 29.3% strikeout rate and 4.2% walk rate. As with Drake, he could get his first big league look next year, though the D-backs may want to give him some run in Triple-A before that point.
The 24-year-old Ray was Arizona’s fourth-round selection in 2022. The 6’3″, 230-pound righty out of Alabama pitched well for 10 starts in a pitcher-friendly Double-A setting before being torched for a 6.30 ERA through 18 starts in an exorbitantly hitter-friendly environment in Triple-A Reno. He set down 20.1% of opponents on strikes and issued walks at a 9% clip. Both are worse than league-average, but Ray draws praise for a smattering of roughly average offerings and could be a back-end starter or swingman.
Fernandez is an infielder — primarily shortstop and third base — who spent his age-21 season in Double-A this past year. In 511 plate appearances, he hit .272/.321/.454 (99 wRC+) with 17 homers, a dozen steals, a 20.4% strikeout rate and a 6.3% walk rate. This was the first season he’s shown any semblance of power, as he’d previously been touted more for his athleticism, raw tools and projection more than his performance. He’ll hope for a big season in Triple-A next year, and he could factor into the big league mix either at third base or in a utility capacity if he can manage that.
