“I never wanted to leave Cleveland, not even for a second.”
With that single sentence, Carlos Santana turned what might have been a routine free-agent signing into an emotional gut punch for Guardians fans everywhere. The longtime Cleveland first baseman, one of the most familiar faces the franchise has had over the last decade and a half, is officially moving on once again. Santana has signed a one-year, $2 million deal with the Arizona Diamondbacks, according to MLB.com, closing another chapter in a career defined as much by loyalty as longevity.
For Santana, now 39, the move is both practical and painful. For Cleveland, it’s a reminder that even the most enduring connections in baseball are ultimately at the mercy of roster math, timelines, and hard decisions.
“But baseball doesn’t always give you that choice,” Santana continued in his heartfelt reflection. “Sometimes the game moves on before you’re ready, and all you can do is respect it, keep playing, and be grateful for every inning you were given.”

Those words resonate deeply in a city that watched Santana grow up in real time. He made his MLB debut with Cleveland in 2010 and spent the first eight seasons of his career there, evolving from a raw, switch-hitting catcher into one of the most disciplined and reliable hitters in the American League. Through postseason runs, rebuilds, and rebrands, Santana was a constant — a player whose presence felt permanent, even when baseball reality suggested otherwise.
Santana has now played 11 of his 16 Major League seasons in Cleveland, including most of the 2025 campaign. Last year, he hit .225 with 11 home runs across 116 games for the Guardians. The production was respectable, if unspectacular, and emblematic of where Santana is in his career: no longer a centerpiece, but still useful, still professional, still capable of delivering quality at-bats in big moments.
That wasn’t enough to guarantee his spot. On August 28, the Guardians released Santana, a move that felt abrupt given his history with the franchise. He quickly signed with the Chicago Cubs, but the late-season stint never gained traction. Santana went just 2-for-19 in eight games, and when the season ended, the questions began. Was this it? Was the Cleveland release the final curtain?
Instead, the Diamondbacks stepped in.
For Arizona, Santana represents a low-risk bet on experience. The Diamondbacks are adding a veteran switch-hitter who knows how to grind out plate appearances, handle pressure, and navigate the daily demands of a long season. At $2 million for one year, it’s a calculated move — not about star power, but about stability. Santana won’t be asked to carry a lineup. He’ll be asked to contribute, mentor, and be ready when his number is called.
Still, the emotional gravity of the move cannot be ignored. Santana’s career path has taken him through nearly half the league. He’s suited up for the Philadelphia Phillies, Kansas City Royals, Seattle Mariners, Pittsburgh Pirates, Milwaukee Brewers, Minnesota Twins, and Chicago Cubs. And yet, Cleveland has always been the gravitational center. Even after leaving, he kept coming back — returning for multiple stints, including a third tour that began in December 2024.
That’s what makes this goodbye feel different.
There was no farewell ceremony. No final ovation planned months in advance. No moment designed for closure. Instead, Santana exits Cleveland the way so many veterans do: quietly, efficiently, and emotionally unresolved.
Over 16 MLB seasons, Santana has compiled a résumé that deserves far more appreciation than it sometimes receives. He owns a .241 career batting average, 335 home runs, 1,136 RBIs, and a .777 OPS across 2,204 games. He earned his lone All-Star selection in 2019, but his impact has always extended beyond accolades. Santana’s value was consistency, patience, and leadership — traits that don’t always dominate headlines, but win games.
In Cleveland, Santana was more than numbers. He was a bridge between eras. He played with stars who are now retired and alongside prospects who are just now finding their footing. His calm demeanor, infectious smile, and steady professionalism made him a fan favorite long after his peak seasons had passed.
Now, that presence will belong to Arizona.

For Guardians fans, the reaction has been swift and emotional. Gratitude, sadness, frustration, and acceptance have all collided in the aftermath of Santana’s comments. His words didn’t sound like someone chasing one last paycheck. They sounded like someone who wanted to stay, but understood that baseball rarely grants perfect endings.
Carlos Santana didn’t want to leave Cleveland. Baseball made the decision for him.
As he prepares for his ninth MLB team, Santana does so with the same mindset that carried him through 16 seasons: respect the game, keep playing, and be thankful for every inning. Cleveland may no longer be home on the field, but for Santana — and for the fans who watched him grow — it always will be.