The Mariners have shut relievers Matt Brash and Gregory Santos down from throwing for the time being, reports Ryan Divish of the Seattle Times. Neither the team nor Brash would get into specifics regarding his injury, though Divish notes that the M’s don’t believe it to be a serious issue. Brash simply told Divish that he’s “banged up” and “didn’t feel great” after his most recent bullpen session. GM Justin Hollander added that the organizational hope is for Brash to resume a throwing progression next week. Santos, meanwhile, is dealing with some discomfort near his teres major muscle that popped up during his most recent ’pen session. There’s no specific timetable for his return to throwing.
While the team hasn’t yet conveyed significant concerns on either player, both should be watched with a keen eye. Brash quietly emerged as one of the most dominant setup men in the league last season. His 3.06 ERA in 70 2/3 innings is impressive on its own, but that masks a sensational four-month run to close out the season.
Brash posted strong secondary marks but pedestrian run-prevention numbers in the season’s first two months. But from Memorial Day weekend onward, the righty delivered a 2.36 ERA with a 32.4% strikeout rate and 9.7% walk rate. Brash averaged a blazing 98.2 mph on his heater in 2023, saved four games and picked up another 24 holds. He’s expected to be the primary setup man for closer Andres Munoz and is slated for regular high-leverage work; even an absence of moderate length would be a sizable blow for the M’s.
That’s also true of Santos, whom the Mariners just acquired from the White Sox earlier this month (in a trade sending outfielder Zach DeLoach, righty Prelander Berroa and a Competitive Balance draft pick back to Chicago). The Sox’ acquisition of Santos from the Giants flew under the radar last offseason, but he’d pitched his way into the likely closer’s role on the South Side before being flipped to Seattle. Santos pitched 66 1/3 innings in 2023, posting a sharp 3.39 ERA with a 22.8% strikeout rate, 5.9% walk rate and 52.5% grounder rate while averaging 98.8 mph on his fastball. ERA alternatives like FIP (2.65) and SIERA (3.32) generally support his unexpected breakout as an impact reliever.
The team will presumably have updates on both relievers in the days ahead, but they’re critical cogs in manager Scott Servais’ setup corps. The Mariners have a strong bullpen and are generally adept at turning low-profile pickups into successful bullpen arms, but overcoming the loss of both pitchers would be a tall order.
Unfortunately for the Mariners, Brash and Santos aren’t the only ones banged up. Third baseman Luis Urias isn’t throwing for the time being after experiencing some shoulder inflammation while playing winter ball in his native Mexico this offseason (link via MLB.com’s Daniel Kramer). The team believes it’ll be a short-term issue, but there’s still no clear timetable as to when he’ll begin throwing.
Urias, 26, struggled to a dismal .199/.307/.299 slash in 177 plate appearances with the Brewers and Red Sox last year but slashed .244/.340/.426 in 1042 plate appearances with Milwaukee from 2021-22. He’s also a career .276/.353/.442 hitter against lefties. A healthy Urias would be a fine option in the short half of a platoon at either third base or second base, although the acquisition of Polanco at second base paints third base as the obvious place for the Urias/Rojas platoon.
If Urias misses any time or is at all delayed to start the season, Seattle could just stay in-house and give fellow righty-swinger Dylan Moore some platoon work at the hot corner. Moore hasn’t been as good against lefties as Urias, however, and putting him in that role would thin out the team’s bench depth, perhaps paving the way for Sam Haggerty or Samad Taylor to crack the roster. The M’s could also just go with Rojas on an everyday basis at third; he has near-identical splits throughout his career.
Kramer also notes that right-hander Cole Phillips, the 2022 second-rounder acquired from the Braves in the Jarred Kelenic deal, recently underwent his second Tommy John surgery. Phillips also underwent the procedure during his senior year of high school in 2022, just months before the draft. He’d been trending up as a potential first-round pick before blowing out his elbow in ’22 and has yet to throw a pitch in the pros while rehabbing that injury. Unfortunately, his debut will now be delayed even further. Phillips won’t turn 21 until May, so there’s plenty of time for him to get back on track and develop into a contributor for the Mariners, but a pair of Tommy John procedures prior to a pitcher’s 21st birthday is as ominous as it gets for a pitching prospect.
Fred Park
Regarding Brash, all I can say is “gulp”
Well, there are a lot of times with our good young pitchers that make us swallow hard and hope for the best.
Let’s hear it, “The best for Brash!”
lee cousins
That’s a Brash statement Fred.
slund24
Thats false. DeLoach is 26 and was like 10th on the Mariners depth chart for OF. Berroa is 1 year younger than Santos and Santos is exactly what Mariners were hoping Berroa to develop into. THe draft pick was the most valuable piece given up.
BPax
Don’t argue.
HBan22
Not the best start for the Mariners. Their bullpen thinned out a bit over the offseason, so any extended absence from Brash or Santos could be a big blow.
mlb fan
“Not the best start”…Brash got into 78 games last year. That’s a lot. The M’s need to protect some of their young pitching assets; for awhile last year it seemed like Brash was pitching every day. I believe 78 appearances would probably put him in about the 94% percentile of relievers.
C Us Sink
Agreed. Brash is just nasty when he’s on.
mlb fan
“Agreed”…Brash is really good and totally nasty. That’s totally why he’s used so much. A few yrs ago Dellin Betances was making 80 appearances a year and went from elite, high leverage reliever to out of baseball in just a matter of months. Brash is near the Betances level of appearances and you don’t want to burn him out.
bob9988 2
@Bauer Why spout such nonsense when you don’t know what you’re talking about?
Stevil
Seattle couldn’t fix Berroa’s command and DeLoach is a chase & whiff project. If Chicago can get them on track, great, but my money would be on Seattle getting more out of Santos.
Stevil
I still don’t get it.
Zippy the Pinhead
I pre-got it. I just didn’t pre-laugh.
Reynaldo
We all missed that joke; we can clearly see now that you are the bigger joke though.
Stevil
The worst thing anymore can do when someone makes a bad joke, is to acknowledge that there was a joke. I don’t write the rules, but we must honor them.
Regardless, there’s no need for anyone to get upset over it.
bigdaddyhacks
So essentially a post about nothing. This was all reported last week and is pretty typical for early spring.
letsgooakland123
well some of us don’t hear about this news except from this site
yeasties
-especially for news about teams that they are not fans of
Stevil
The shoulder inflammation with Luis was reported a few days ago, but it didn’t sound like it was serious then, either. Maybe it’s more concerning than they’re letting on? It would explain the Anderson contract.
Fraham_
Great job trading for Santos. What a joke!
RunDMC
I really thought SEA got a good one in Phillips for Kelenic, but 2 TJs already is crazy. Wish the guy the best.
Ignorant Son-of-a-b
Would you be so kind as to send Kelenic back to Seattle??? I have the receipt around here somewhere.
Aaron Masser
That’s not close to true.
DeLoach might not even be a AAAA OF & Berroa has control issues even the Ms couldn’t fix.
Zippy the Pinhead
It’s not even March and this is the news from camp? Did the M’s hide injury reports, which all teams do, or did they not know these 3 guys were hurting? Either way, it’s like getting caught up with the starting gate at a horse race.
dano62
Third base could be a serious hole, altho today’s signing of Anderson eases some concerns. Be nice if they had a good prospect at the hot corner.
ayrbhoy
They do! Just a year away
Braves_saints_celts
Ryne stanek is still looking for a job and could be a great bullpen arm in Seattle. Plus he could give some insight into the Astros hitters. He was dominant in 2022, not great, but still okay in 2023. Seattle is known to to wonders with relief pitchers and could probably get him closer to his 2022 stats than his 2023 stats, and now with these potential injuries to two of their most important bullpen pieces it could be a match made in heaven.
Stevil
Seattle has their late-innings relievers, their lefties, and simply don’t need middle-innings relievers. They’ve proven then can fix & develop those rather easily and they have a pretty good collection of options for that eighth spot in the bullpen.
I’d argue they could use more starting pitching depth.
lee cousins
I was going through some old baseball cards the other day when who should I run into? None other than Scott Servais. By golly he was a hansom young man time is surely fleeting. It reminds me. I was in the Dollar store the other day in the check out lane finishing up, I guess I didn’t move fast enough for the guy behind me, The word old timer was said,… What me? I will show him an upper cut follow by a jab to the nose I thought, but then I realized I was only dreaming I must have been in this ⚾ baseball brawl once again.
ayrbhoy
And how much is one year of legitimate, actual PROVEN success vs MLB hitters worth compared to the projected success in the MLB? THATS what the M’s paid for and imo the most important aspect of these discussions.
What’s the point of arguing about the trade value and who “won the trade” when the said players traded have not even played one single game for their new teams!?
Philip5
Where is the Phillips part of the story from the headline?
ayrbhoy
You mean something other than the shocking news that Phillips is having his 2nd TJ Surgery? That Phillips?