There has been some concern about the Chicago Cubs’ bullpen, as the bulk of it — Brad Keller, Caleb Thielbar, and Drew Pomeranz — could all be departing the roster.

Management made its first move to address the situation by signing Phil Maton to a two-year deal on November 21, but it hasn’t secured anyone else since then, until now.

On December 11, news broke from multiple sources that the Cubs had signed veteran left-handed reliever Hoby Milner, who spent last season with the Texas Rangers. The organization isn’t known for giving multi-year contracts to their bullpen, so it comes as no surprise that Milner’s deal is a one-year, $3.75M agreement with incentives.

Hoby Milner has agreed to a one-year, $3.75 million deal with the Cubs, per source. The deal also includes incentives.

— Mark Feinsand (@Feinsand) December 11, 2025

However, this wasn’t the only recent addition, as the Cubs also picked up Collin Snider, who has spent the last two seasons with the Seattle Mariners, a day earlier. Snider will start in Triple-A, but he does have an invite to spring training.

A look at Hoby Milner’s career

The soon-to-be 35-year-old has been playing in the majors since he made his debut back in 2017, five years after being drafted by the Phillies. But he didn’t take on a role as a primary reliever until 2022 with the Brewers.

Hoby Milner throwing a pitch for the Rangers out of the bullpe

William Purnell-Imagn Images

In his last four seasons, Milner has been a workhorse for both the Brewers and the Rangers, and in three of those seasons, he posted an ERA under 4.00.

In 2025, Milner went 3-4, posting a 3.84 ERA in 73 appearances (70.1 innings) and tallying 58 strikeouts. He also kept opponents to a .256 batting average.

And with a 1.62 groundout-to-airout ratio (meaning batters hit ground ball outs more often), Snider plays into the Cubs’ defensive strengths.

Who is Collin Snider? Collin Snider throwing a pitch against the Athletics for the Mariners out of the bullpe

Dennis Lee-Imagn Images

Snider has 128 appearances over four seasons in the league. In 2025, he posted a 5.47 ERA across 26.1 innings pitched in 24 games. The Cubs likely took his 2024 season into consideration, as he took on a larger workload, posting a 1.94 ERA across 41.2 innings pitched in 42 appearances.

There isn’t a team in baseball that can’t benefit from adding arms to the pen at a bargain price, and both of these additions are low-risk, high-reward moves for the Cubs.

The Latest Chicago Cubs News

Cubs Were Devin Williams’ Top Choice Before One Detail Killed The Deal

MLB Insider Reveals The Free Agent Pitcher The Cubs Are Linked To “The Most”

Chicago Cubs Acquire Three Players In Rule 5 Draft

Cubs Boss Craig Counsell Sheds Light On Justin Steele’s Return Timetable