West Point training serves Rowley well
TORONTO — Trying to maintain his throwing arm in the midst of a 30-month stint with the U.S. army often proved challenging for Toronto Blue Jays right-hander Chris Rowley. Fortunately, his company medic was willing to co-operate.
The first West Point graduate to reach the majors, Rowley pitched one-run ball over 5 1/3 innings to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates in his debut Saturday, leaving the field to a standing ovation in the interleague baseball contest.
“It still feels pretty surreal,” Rowley said Sunday. “I’m slowly processing it. I’m still in that initial surge. My phone is getting blown up, I have all these interviews. Twenty-four hours ago, relatively nobody knew my name. Now all of a sudden this has blown up. I’m trying to handle the surreal aspect of it.”
Working off a major league mound wasn’t an option for Rowley in the summer of 2015, when he was stationed in Bulgaria and Romania as part of Operation Atlantic Resolve, aimed at reassuring NATO’s European allies in light of Russia’s invasion in Ukraine. A first lieutenant, his job as a fire support officer in the field artillery branch was the priority, but Rowley and his medic still found time for the occasional game of catch.
“It was unusual,” Rowley said. “He played infield in high school so he wasn’t a catcher, but he did a fine job. I was just trying to keep the arm moving and do something to not lose anything.”
Those sessions proved helpful once Rowley left the Army in January 2016, having received an exception to the remainder of his service. While he remains on individual ready reserve, he was free to return to the Blue Jays, rejoining the organization at spring training.
“I felt fine, I felt like I was getting guys out and competing,” Rowley said of his comeback after missing all of 2014 and 2015. “I think I got away with a lot … I was tossing in 87 m.p.h. heaters and hoping nobody would hit them. I felt like I was pretty comfortable coming back but it might have been a little bit unfounded.”
Showing few signs of rust, Rowley went 10-3 at Class A Dunedin in 2016. This year, he started at Double-A New Hampshire, going 3-2 with a 1.73 ERA before being promoted to Triple-A in mid-June. Rowley was 3-4 with a 2.82 ERA in Buffalo before getting the call to join Toronto’s injury-ravaged rotation.
Blue Jays catcher Mike Holman teamed with Rowley at Triple-A and also was behind the plate.
“All the respect to him for the service he did for our country and putting that first and foremost, before a baseball career,” Ohlman said. “He throws a lot of strikes, fills up the zone, gets a lot of ground balls.”
Rowley’s paternal grandfather enlisted in the Army and served in Korea, while his maternal grandfather was in the Air Force. “I wanted to play baseball at the next level,” Rowley said. “It wasn’t like I had this calling. The desire to serve with my brothers and sisters in arms, that came later.” Much of that maturation was due to the tightly controlled life he experienced as a cadet.
“Everything is regimented and you have to be somewhere at a certain place at a certain time in a certain uniform,” Rowley said. “It teaches a lot of accountability and professionalism.”
Blue Jays manager John Gibbons, the son of an Air Force colonel, said he was impressed with Rowley’s confidence and credited his military background for his composure.
“That’s just how they groom ‘em,” Gibbons said. “He’s been through some things.”