DENVER -- The Rockies completed a deal on Thursday to acquire right-hander Seunghwan Oh from the Blue Jays.
The Rockies sent outfielder Forrest Wall, the Rockies' No. 13 prospect per MLB Pipeline, and first baseman Chad Spanberger, the team's No. 24 prospect, to the Blue Jays. Toronto also will get cash or a player to be named later.
Wall, a left-handed hitter, batted .260 with nine homers and 31 RBIs across two Minor League levels. The left-handed-hitting Spanberger, a sixth-round pick in the 2017 MLB Draft, is hitting .316 with 22 home runs and 75 RBIs for Class A Asheville.
Oh, 36, pitched in Korea and Japan before joining the Cardinals in 2016. Entering Tuesday, he ranked fifth in the American League with 48 appearances this season.
 
Rockies acquire Seunghwan Oh from Blue Jays
 
Oh is 4-3 with a 2.68 ERA, two saves, 55 strikeouts and 10 walks in 47 innings.
Oh went 7-9 with a 2.85 ERA with the Cardinals from 2016-17. He is making $1.75 million this season and has a club option for 2019 that can automatically vest if he reaches 70 appearances.
Colorado's bullpen has shown improvement after struggling for much of June. From June 26 to Tuesday's loss to the Astros, the relievers combined for a 4.10 ERA. But in the 15 wins during that stretch, the bullpen's ERA was 2.66.
The Rockies have relied heavily on right-handed setup men Scott Oberg and Adam Ottavino, as well as closer Wade Davis. While righty Bryan Shaw, who struggled early, has shown improvement since returning from a right calf strain, the Rockies still needed depth.
The lefties in Colorado's bullpen have struggled. Jake McGee and Chris Rusin have lacked consistency, and Rusin was placed on the 10-day disabled list Tuesday with right foot plantar fasciitis.
Oh's closing experience is attractive -- he had 19 saves in 2016 and 20 in '17 with the Cardinals.
This season, Oh has fared much better against right-handed batters (.168 average against) than lefties (.315). His career numbers are just as strong against righties (.208/.242/.316 slash line against), but not as lopsided against lefties (.257/.328/.415).
Thomas Harding/MLB.com
 

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