The Morning Call (Sunday)

Top prospect Painter has 1 goal for 2024: ‘Just get on a mound’

- By Scott Lauber

CLEARWATER, Fla. — A year ago this week, Ansdrew Painter stood atop the mound on a back field at the Carpenter Complex and unleashed 99-mph fastballs to Kyle Schwarber in a round of live batting practice that qualified as a must-see event in Phillies camp.

“It’s the Painter Show!” outfielder Brandon Marsh said, and everyone laughed because they knew it was true.

But Painterpal­ooza seems like so much longer ago now. The Phillies’ top prospect sprained a ligament in his right elbow last March and had Tommy John surgery on July 25. He only started playing catch again last month after arriving in Clearwater on Jan. 8. Team officials have said he won’t pitch competitiv­ely this season.

Painter is in spring training with the Phillies. But rather than being the center of attention, he’s hiding in plain sight.

Most days, the 20-year-old righty arrives by 10 a.m. and doesn’t leave until 3 p.m., well after the major leaguers are gone. After lockering next to Zack Wheeler in the BayCare Ballpark clubhouse last spring, Painter’s work is confined to the minorleagu­e side of the complex.

For now, that work consists of playing catch four days a week from 75 feet and strengthen­ing his shoulder in the weight room.

“There’s no expectatio­ns right now,” Painter said Friday in his first interview since the surgery. “We haven’t talked about a timetable or anything like that. We don’t want to clog the mind with different scenarios and play the hypothetic­al game. We’re just trying to make sure there’s the least amount of distractio­ns possible and I can just go in and focus on my rehab and make sure I’m getting better every day.”

Indeed, seven months into the tedious recovery from a surgery that typically takes 12 to 18 months to come back from, the end of the tunnel is still too far away for Painter to see it. And he’s trying his best not to squint.

Painter is also trying to avoid one question: What if ?

What if he hadn’t thrown so many cutters, a pitch he added only a few months earlier, in a Grapefruit League start against the Twins last March 1?

What if he had the surgery sooner rather than trying rest and rehab?

On the first point, Painter admitted it’s “hard to say.” But he said he hasn’t second-guessed himself or thought much at all about the game against the Twins.

“I don’t want to say, ‘Oh, it would’ve happened,’ this or that,” he said. “You can’t really play that game. It just is what it is. Can’t control it. That’s the way I look at it.”

On the second point, Painter noted that surgery is never recommende­d until it’s deemed necessary.

And multiple doctors, including prominent Los Angeles-based surgeon Neal ElAttrache, believed the location of the sprain signaled

a greater likelihood of healing without cutting open Painter’s elbow.

“Obviously you don’t want to just go straight into surgery if you don’t need it,” Painter said. “I think you always want to try. Looking back, I’m still glad that we did what we did, just knowing that you gave it a shot and it just didn’t work out.”

Besides, it’s healthier for Painter’s body and mind to take the forward-looking view — and to remember how young he is.

If Painter made the opening-day roster last season, he would’ve been the first 19-yearold to pitch for the Phillies since Mark Davis in 1980. He will turn 21 on April 10.

If he makes his major-league debut before he turns 22, he will still be the youngest Phillies pitcher since Fabio Castro in 2006, the youngest starter since Gavin Floyd in 2004.

“You’ve always got to keep that in mind,” Painter said. “You’ll have days where you’re kind of thinking, especially [when] the long days of rehab gets brutal, you’ve got to look at the future. You’ve got to think about your career longterm.”

 ?? YONG KIM/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Phillies pitcher Andrew Painter won’t be returning to the mound any time soon as the team has recommende­d the top prospect undergo Tommy John surgery.
YONG KIM/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Phillies pitcher Andrew Painter won’t be returning to the mound any time soon as the team has recommende­d the top prospect undergo Tommy John surgery.

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