The Cardinals have optioned slumping third baseman Nolan Gorman to Triple-A Memphis and selected the contract of corner infielder Blaze Jordan, as first reported by Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Jordan’s first game for St. Louis will be his MLB debut. Injured infielder Ramón Urías has moved to the 60-day IL to make room for Jordan on the 40-man roster. In other moves, right-hander Hunter Dobbins is heading to Memphis, while the Cardinals have recalled righty Chris Roycroft.
Gorman, 26, made his MLB debut in May 2022 and has spent most of the past five seasons with St. Louis. The former top prospect showed promise in his first full season, hitting 27 home runs and finishing with an .805 OPS and a 118 wRC+ in 464 PA. His 31.9% strikeout rate was high, but that wasn’t hard to ignore when he was walking at an 11.4% clip with a hard-hit rate near 50% and one of the highest barrel rates in the league. He also held his own with the glove at second and third base, finishing with 2.3 FanGraphs WAR.
Unfortunately for Gorman, the swing-and-miss has become an even bigger problem, while his power has trickled away. In just over 1,000 plate appearances from 2024 to ’26, he owns a 34.9% strikeout rate, a .653 OPS, and an 83 wRC+. The Cardinals surely hoped that trading Nolan Arenado and Brendan Donovan this past offseason would give Gorman the consistent playing time he needed to figure things out. Yet, while he has appeared in 62 of his team’s 66 games this season, his .598 OPS and 69 wRC+ are the worst marks of his career. His ninth-percentile xwOBA (.279) doesn’t suggest things are about to get any better, nor does his 3-for-43 (.070) stretch over the last three weeks.
Somewhat surprisingly, the Cardinals are right in the thick of the National League playoff picture in 2026; with a .561 winning percentage, they’d be the NL’s top Wild Card team if the season ended today. So, they seem to have decided they can’t afford to give Gorman any more rope to work on his issues at the major league level. Instead, they’ll see if Jordan can offer the thump that Gorman wasn’t giving them. Third base is the rookie’s primary position, so he should be able to slot right into Gorman’s old role.
Jordan isn’t a top-ranked prospect. The Cardinals acquired him from the Red Sox last summer in exchange for rental arm Steven Matz. However, the 23-year-old has put up strong numbers at Triple-A this year, with 11 home runs and 31 extra-base hits in 57 games. Thanks to an excellent 11.5% strikeout rate, he is hitting .313, while his power has propelled him to a .921 OPS and a 137 wRC+. Some of that success might reflect good fortune in a small sample, but the Statcast numbers show he really has been hitting the ball significantly harder this year.
Dobbins, 26, pitched 13 innings over three appearances in his latest stint in the majors, striking out 15 and walking only two. He gave up four earned runs, three of which came in his outing yesterday. His demotion says less about his performance and more about his team’s roster needs. He was acting as a pseudo sixth starter, and evidently, the Cardinals decided they’d prefer a fresh, more traditional arm for the bullpen in Roycroft, rather than a bulk arm like Dobbins.
Urías has been out since May 5 with elbow issues. The veteran infielder will now be out until at least early July.
