Rays right-hander Taj Bradley, who underwent an MRI after being scratched from yesterday’s spring start, will open the season on the 15-day injured list after being diagnosed with a pectoral strain, manager Kevin Cash announced this morning (X links via Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times). Bradley will be shut down from throwing entirely for “at least” the next two weeks and will be reevaluated at that point. Even in a best-case scenario where he’s cleared to resume throwing at that point, he’d need to build back up and go on a minor league rehab assignment before he’s an option to rejoin the big league rotation.
Bradley’s pec strain is the latest in a series of health troubles for a Rays rotation that is among the most talented in the sport but is also currently among the most injury-ravaged. He’ll join Shane McClanahan (Tommy John surgery in August), Jeffrey Springs (Tommy John surgery in April) and Drew Rasmussen (internal brace surgery in July) on the injured list for a Tampa Bay club that is still awaiting the return of former top pitching prospect Shane Baz, who underwent his own Tommy John procedure in 2022.
On the surface, Bradley’s loss may not seem critical. The 22-year-old debuted to considerable fanfare in 2023 but turned in an uneven season, ultimately finishing the year with a 5.59 ERA in 104 2/3 big league frames. For a pitcher who entered the season widely considered among the sport’s top 50 to 75 overall prospects, it wasn’t the most exciting debut. Bradley had his share of strong performances but struggled more often than not in his first taste of the majors.
Despite the shaky bottom-line run prevention numbers, however, Bradley offered plenty of reason for optimism. His 28% strikeout rate is well north of the league average, while his 8.5% walk rate is solid. He averaged a strong 96.2 mph on his heater and posted slightly better-than-average marks in swinging-strike rate (11.3%) and opponents’ chase rate (32%). His primary issue last year, both in the big leagues and in Triple-A, was seeing an inordinate percentage of his fly-balls end up leaving the yard (19.2% in the majors, 23.1% in 10 Triple-A starts).
That hasn’t been an issue for Bradley at all in the past, however, even in his first run through the Triple-A level in 2022. Prior to the ’23 season, Bradley actually had posted a considerably lower-than-average HR/FB mark throughout his minor league career. Metrics like xFIP and SIERA, which normalize a pitcher’s HR/FB rate, viewed him in a far more favorable light (3.83 and 3.82, respectively). And with 142 1/3 innings pitched in 2023, Bradley was set to enter the 2024 season without any real limits on his workload. A breakout season seemed quite plausible.
Any such steps forward will be placed on hold indefinitely for the time being, which is a major setback for a Rays club that’s already uncharacteristically thin on rotation depth. Tampa Bay will enter the season with Zach Eflin, Aaron Civale and converted reliever Zack Littell in the top three spots of the rotation. Twenty-six-year-old Ryan Pepiot, acquired from the Dodgers in the Tyler Glasnow trade, will likely grab the No. 4 spot on the staff. He’s long been a touted prospect himself and carries excellent results in the majors to date, but injuries have regularly limited him as well. He opened 2023 on the 60-day IL with a Grade 2 oblique strain and pitched just 64 2/3 frames overall.
Rotation alternatives in camp include Jacob Lopez, Tyler Alexander and Chris Devenski, all of whom are on the 40-man roster. Alexander has started games for the Tigers in the past and had been ticketed for a swingman role with Tampa Bay, but he could conceivably get a look early in ’24 now. He and Devenski were both being stretched out to handle at least three innings at a time in camp anyhow, and either could be pushed beyond that point.
In terms of non-roster players, former NPB starter Naoyuki Uwasawa and prospect Mason Montgomery are the most interesting candidate names in the group. Uwasawa, 30, has a career 3.19 ERA in nine NPB seasons and tossed 170 innings of 2.96 ERA ball for the Nippon-Ham Fighters in 2023, but he’s a soft-tosser with sub-par strikeout rates even in Japan. He’s been rocked for 13 runs in just 5 2/3 innings in spring training thus far. Montgomery, meanwhile, has just 16 innings above the Double-A level under his belt and has been tagged for three runs in his 4 1/3 spring frames.
Cash indicated that the Rays will consider several in-house options to replace Bradley in the rotation, though another injury on an already thinly stretched pitching staff will undoubtedly lead to both speculation and some internal discussions about adding from outside the organization. The Rays’ projected $99MM Opening Day payroll (via RosterResource), somewhat incredibly, is already a franchise-record for the club. That casts doubt on whether they’d even be able to bring in one of the second-tier remaining arms in free agency, such as Michael Lorenzen or Mike Clevinger.
That said, there will also be several veteran arms on minor league deals elsewhere in the league who’ll likely opt out in the latter stages of camp, plus a slew of pitchers made available via DFA and waivers as other clubs set their Opening Day rosters. It wouldn’t be terribly surprising to see the Rays add some extra depth in some form between now and Opening Day, particularly if they begin to get the sense that Bradley’s injury will require a longer shutdown period than that best-case outlook of two weeks.
Buff Barnacles
Quite a few free agents remain; but at this time in the season The Rays are still same spot. Lots of internal names to root for. Pepiot a very intriguing story.
Steinbrenner2728
MLBTR, can you guys please do something about “The Former_ Player” as he keeps changing his username, copy-pasting the same schtick, and just being a general menace with his “Trevor is waiting. Sign him now.” comments.
acoss13
I second this as well please. You know he’s going to show up on this article too…
User 4204968895
+1 I’ve had enough with the Bauer nonsense.
People that use this site know who Trevor Bauer is. We don’t have to debate this under literally every story about pitchers. It’s a tired routine.
CeruleanDrew
Greenwell, the mute button is a beautiful thing. Seriously. If you haven’t already put the tool down however times necessary. Plus it’s free.
User 3014224641
Come on Big Stein, they aren’t going to ban Bauer’s account. They should though.
CleaverGreene
We all know what kind of males are Trevor supporters. The problem is: they haven’t figured it out yet.
Tom the ray fan
He’ll be alright pec way better than any type of arm/shoulder injury. Rays are likely to limit his innings anyway.
brocnessmonster
Seems like the wrong Mason Montgomery is tagged here.
Steve Adams
Thanks. Not sure why B-Ref’s auto-link script would grab a college player rather than the guy who’s actually on the cusp of the majors, haha, but I’ve updated it and will make a mental note to check the links to both him and Spencer Jones when mentioning them, as it seems their auto-linker likes to grab the wrong one for both prospects at times.
Appreciate the heads up!
CubsWin108
bauer to rays? its not like tampa cares bout reputation much, it would fill alot of seats and he would probably excell with the rays
Karensjer
You are right about them not caring about reputation. They will sign anybody regardless of their reputation as long as they are cheap. Josh Hamilton, Elijah Dukes, Delmon Young, Josh Sale, Brandon Martin, Toe Nash, and Wander Franco among others. Why not just actually sign a few free agents who actually have a chance to produce and win the club a championship and also aren’t a liability outside of the clubhouse. This team will be cursed with first round playoff exits until they retain good players and build around them with decent free agent signings. Rays Up!!
CubsWin108
I think Bauer would produce good for them, people really forget how good he was in 2021. 2.59 ERA in 107 IP… but no because some barstool guy got a base hit in a laidback batting practice all the sudden hes washed.
User 4204968895
Scroll up
CubsWin108
ok
User 4204968895
Stop wasting everyone’s time with this garbage.
CubsWin108
just mute me \-_-/
CleaverGreene
The Cubs should take him then. They have an owner that fits the profile.
CubsWin108
why are we allowing politics to interfere with sports?
Rsox
Jake Odorizzi is still available and may welcome a chance to return to the Tampa Bay pitching machine.
A starting rotation really doesn’t matter in Tampa because Cash will throw a bunch of openers anyway. The top for decent if not a little underwhelming.
Johnny utah
Glasnow, mclanahan, rasmussen, springs, baz, taj. All within 2 years
The f are they drinking down in tampa?
Karensjer
Focusing too much on maximum spin rate. Kyle Snider just needs to let them pitch and screw what the analytics nerds think. David Price won 20 games with them without worrying about spin rate and he never got hurt as a Ray.
Johnny utah
They better not f up pepiot too!
Rishi
When you pitch poorly they write good things about you if you K guys. Obviously his K numbers show great promise but he was bad…there is no getting around that. Everything he did was below average except for K stats. He likely made a ton of mistakes, not uncommon for a young pitcher. Really don’t see why they called him up when he was pitching so badly. I do think it can be an ego boost to a guy struggling tho. Anybody who has that type of stuff is going to have good swing/miss numbers, Krates, etc. You can still pitch very badly (ask Lance Lynn).
MLBTR needs to hire editors
“Meanwhile” has to START the sentence. It can’t come in the middle, between commas.