The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Weird 2020 puts emphasis on pitching depth in 2021

- By Chelsea Janes

When a young starting pitcher is ready to secure his place in a majorleagu­e rotation, most organizati­ons begin a complicate­d equation to determine how much work he will receive. They look at the number of innings that pitcher threw in the minor leagues in the previous season, they factor in prior injury and they account for the added stress of major-league innings.

Many teams have long-standing internal policies about what percentage of innings increases they’re willing to place on an untested arm. Normally, those numbers top out around 30% to 40%. Anything more, consensus holds, and the risk of injury becomes too great.

This season, nearly every majorleagu­e starter who participat­ed in the 2020 pandemic-shortened campaign will increase their innings by a much higher percentage — in many cases, by 100% or more. In a sport where teams’ fates are so often guided by the health of a starting rotation, the prospect of such a collective increase also has increased concerns leaguewide about pitchers’ durability.

“For pitchers, arm safety is going to be critical to build these guys up properly and get off and going,” San Diego Padres manager Jayce Tingler said. “In 2021, certainly with the pandemic, the challenge of 162 games after playing 60, there’s going to be real value in depth.”

In 2019, the median innings count was 111⅓ for starters who threw more than 30 innings. No starter threw more than 84 innings last season. The median innings count was 54.

An optimist could argue the shortened season saved veteran arms more than a half-season of wear and tear. For veterans accustomed to building up each spring, the jump will represent more of a return to normal than a shock to the system.

New York Yankees ace Gerrit Cole, for example, said he considered this offseason “normal” despite the fact that he threw about one-third the number of innings in 2020 (73) as he did for Houston during the Astros’ 2019 World Series run (212).

“I’m not anticipati­ng a lot of big changes. There’s going to be a lot of managing how people feel throughout the season,” Cole said. “It’s the manager’s job, the pitching coach’s job, the organizati­on to keep that big picture at the forefront of their minds and understand how they want to head about that process.”

Chicago Cubs veteran Kyle Hendricks said his innings count last season did not reflect his actual workload since he threw extra bullpen sessions out of concern he wasn’t throwing enough. Many pitchers, including Hendricks, Los Angeles Angels righthande­r Andrew Heaney and Los Angeles Dodgers star Walker Buehler, among others, started throwing earlier than usual this winter.

New York Mets manager Luis Rojas said Friday he has already noticed an encouragin­g pattern among his veteran pitchers. In the few early bullpen sessions Rojas has watched, he said many of the pitchers who may have been caught off-guard by the uncertaint­y of 2020 have come to camp sharp. “They didn’t want to get surprised again,” Rojas said.

But not everyone was able to replicate a normal offseason. For every player that headed to elite training facilities in Arizona or Florida, another had to get creative to continue throwing in the face of pandemic-imposed constraint­s.

Cincinnati Reds reliever Amir Garrett, for example, said he played catch every day with one ball in his backyard. Occasional­ly, his dog would retrieve the ball for him, which often meant he needed another ball shortly after. But usually, Garrett would have to retrieve the ball himself between each throw.

“I just adapted to that kind of routine that I have. It’s not ideal, but you got to adapt to the situations at hand, man,” Garrett said.

Exactly how teams will adapt remains to be seen. Over the past few days, most managers dodged the question of whether they would employ a six-man rotation, though fewer ruled it out than might have been the case in years past. Almost all of them touted the importance of depth.

Some teams stocked up more than others. The Mets had already bolstered their formidable rotation with the addition of Joey Lucchesi from the Padres and Carlos Carrasco from the Cleveland Indians. But not a week after swingman Seth Lugo went down with an elbow injury, they agreed to terms with right-hander Taijuan Walker to offer further depth.

The Braves have brought in Charlie Morton and Drew Smyly.

The Padres, too, added depth on depth when they traded for Cy Young Award winners Yu Darvish and Blake Snell on back-to-back days, adding to a rotation that was already dripping with young talent. The Dodgers added Cy Young Award winner Trevor Bauer to their already overflowin­g arsenal. The Yankees added several veterans, including recently injured former stars Corey Kluber and Jameson Taillon.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone acknowledg­ed his team has to be “more conscious of the incrementa­l buildup” with younger pitchers than older ones.

For teams like the Washington Nationals, whose rotation centers on four well-worn starters over age 31, staying healthy would be a concern in any season. Besides, any attempt to tell a veteran such as Max Scherzer to limit his innings would be a very short conversati­on.

“We’re going to prepare the same way. But the difference between the veteran pitchers and the young pitchers are that we hope that the veteran pitchers are a little bit more cautious and intelligen­t on their own workload,” Nationals GM Mike Rizzo said. “So obviously, we’re going to listen to Max and (Stephen Strasburg) and Patrick (Corbin) and ( Jon) Lester because they’ve been through the rigors of full seasons before.”

Maintainin­g depth this season may be tricky. A Triple-a season will start April 6 and the lower minor-league levels on May 4, but some around the league worry that COVID-19 concerns could limit those seasons, reducing the number of places where teams can stash pitching depth and keep arms sharp. Stockpilin­g pitchers is one thing, but they need work to be ready to step in at a moment’s notice.

 ?? ROB CARR/TNS ?? Gerrit Cole said he considered this offseason “normal” despite the fact that he threw about one-third the number of innings in 2020 (73) as he did for Houston during the Astros’ 2019 World Series run (212).
ROB CARR/TNS Gerrit Cole said he considered this offseason “normal” despite the fact that he threw about one-third the number of innings in 2020 (73) as he did for Houston during the Astros’ 2019 World Series run (212).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States