Former New York Mets’ outfielder Jay Bruce announced on Sunday that he will be retiring from MLB after a 14-year career.

Bruce, 34, signed as a free agent with the New York Yankees back in February, and has appeared in 10 games in 2021 with the Bombers, but has hit to just a .118/231/.235 clip with one home run in 39 plate appearances.

Bruce released the following statement on his retirement:

The Beaumont, Texas native was selected in the first round (No. 12 overall) by the Cincinnati Reds in the 2005 MLB draft out of high school.

Bruce debuted in 2008 with Cincinnati and stuck with the team until 2016 when he was shipped to the Mets for minor league pitcher Max Wotell and infielder Dilson Herrera at that year’s trade deadline.

The outfielder spent the rest of ’16 and a majority of 2017 with the Mets before he was traded to the Cleveland Indians in an August trade for minor league pitcher Ryder Ryan.

Bruce re-upped with the Mets that offseason on a three-year pact, but got through just year one. That offseason, he was traded as part of the blockbuster trade that saw top prospect Jarred Kelenic be shipped off to the Seattle Mariners and Robinson Cano and Edwin Diaz heading back to New York.

Bruce was again traded, as Seattle sent him to the Philadelphia Phillies in 2019, where he stayed through the 2020 season.

Overall, Bruce appeared in three All-Star Games, clubbed 319 home runs, won two Silver Slugger awards and played with six different ballclubs.

The retirement will be official after the Yankees contest on Sunday with the Tampa Bay Rays