Brewers right-hander Trevor Megill was placed on the 7-day concussion list this morning, the team announced. Right-hander JB Bukauskas is up from Triple-A Nashville to take his spot on the roster. The injury occurred in bizarre and frightening fashion, per Curt Hogg of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel (X link) Megill contracted food poisoning last weekend and in the aftermath felt light-headed, fainted and wound up suffering a concussion when his 6’8″ frame dropped to the ground.
It’s another tough loss for a Milwaukee bullpen that’s without closer Devin Williams for at least the next couple months. Megill, 30, was an unheralded acquisition by the Brewers last offseason who’s tossed 36 2/3 innings with a 3.44 ERA with a massive 35% strikeout rate against a solid 8.3% walk rate. With Williams sidelined, Megill, Joel Payamps and young flamethrower Abner Uribe were slated for significant late-inning work in first-year skipper Pat Murphy’s bullpen.
The Brewers didn’t provide a timetable for Megill’s return, which is plenty understandable given the nature of his injury. Concussions are difficult to predict, and the severity can vary greatly. Even ostensibly minor concussions can have lingering effects that impact a player for extended periods of time.
In Bukauskas, the Brewers will turn a bullpen spot over to a 27-year-old former top prospect whom they acquired off waivers early in the 2023 season. He pitched six shutout innings for Milwaukee last year but carries a 5.92 ERA in a tiny sample of 24 1/3 big league innings. Rough as that may look, Bukauskas also logged a 2.92 ERA, 26.8% strikeout rate and 6.4% walk rate in 37 Triple-A frames for the Brewers last year, and he fanned 16 of his 41 spring opponents (39%) en route to a 3.72 ERA. There’s plenty of uncertainty in the final few spots of the Brewer bullpen, so it stands to reason that with a strong first impression, Bukauskas could potentially carve out a role for himself. He’s controllable for another five seasons if he’s able to do so.
Megill’s injury will only further open the door for the 23-year-old Uribe to establish himself as a viable high-leverage option. He’s 3-for-3 in save opportunities on the young season and, dating back to last year’s MLB debut, carries a 1.87 ERA and 29.9% strikeout rate in 33 2/3 innings. Command is an issue for Uribe, who’s walked 15.3% of his opponents, plunked a hitter and unleashed six wild pitches in his young career. However, he’s also averaged 99.4 mph on his blazing sinker and induced grounders at a hearty 53.4% clip, showing clear late-inning promise.
The Journal-Sentinel’s Todd Rosiak spoke to Uribe and his teammates about the impressive young righty’s rise to meaningful late-inning work. “I live for it,” Uribe said of pitching in adrenaline-charged scenarios like the save situations he’s encountered thus far. Murphy tells Rosiak he’s been impressed with the right-hander’s demeanor despite his youth, noting that Uribe “has learned so far and really kept his emotions under control and focused on his task.”
Payamps has picked up one save in the Brewers’ first four wins of the year as well, but it seems Uribe will be the preferred option for ninth-inning work while Williams and Megill mend. Presumably, when Williams is able to return, Uribe will slide back down into a setup role. It’s always possible the command struggles will flare up and lead to a particularly rough patch, but at least this far in his young career, Uribe looks the part of a legitimate late-inning arm who can stick at the MLB level. If that’s indeed the case, Milwaukee can control him all the way through the 2029 season and he won’t be arb-eligible until after the 2026 campaign.
Elsewhere in the organization, the Brew Crew is still in the early stages of navigating a shoulder injury for touted catching prospect Jeferson Quero. The 21-year-old suffered the injury in Nashville’s season opener, and GM Matt Arnold this week announced that Quero has been diagnosed with a subluxation in his right shoulder (link via Adam McCalvy of MLB.com). He’s had one MRI and is receiving a second opinion to determine the severity of the issue and get a clear sense of his rehab plan. The Brewers haven’t announced a timetable for his return or whether surgery might be required.
Quero is widely regarded not only as one of the Brewers’ best prospects but the best prospects in all of baseball, landing on top-100 lists at The Athletic (No. 12), ESPN (No. 32), Baseball America (No. 33), MLB.com (No. 35), Baseball Prospectus (No. 38) and FanGraphs (No. 40). The Athletic’s Keith Law calls Quero a likely plus defender behind the plate with the potential for 20-homer power during his prime years.
Quero spent the 2023 season as one of the youngest players in Double-A but more than held his own against older, more advanced competition. In 381 plate appearances, he slashed .262/.339/.440 (107 wRC+) with an impressive 10% walk rate against a lower-than-average 17.8% strikeout rate.
In better injury news, McCalvy tweets that outfielder Garrett Mitchell is on a timeline of four to six weeks to return from the fractured finger in his left hand, which is thus far healing as expected. The 25-year-old has gotten brief looks in the outfield in each of the past two seasons, posting a combined .278/.343/.452 slash (119 wRC+) with five homers and nine steals. It’s very strong production, but those numbers are also propped up by a wildly unsustainable .441 average on balls in play and mask a more ominous 38.3% strikeout rate. It’s only 141 plate appearances, but Mitchell will eventually need to significantly cut back on the strikeouts if he’s to carve out a long-term role in Milwaukee’s outfield.
Buff Barnacles
Pretty neat that Uribe really does look just like the previous Uribe’s!
Dock_Elvis
Funny, I thought he was the missing Boone son. He’s latino…got it.
Fever Pitch Guy
I have the Brewers making the WS against either the Astros or Yankees ….. so far, so good!
Dock_Elvis
I had the Brewers-Orioles. That would be some crazy energy.
Shawnpe
I like Brewers vs. Royals. Dream big!
Dock_Elvis
That’s certainly a big dream. But if you’re in the AL Central that’s atleast a race with slower horses.
mlb fan
I typically only watch the Brewers 1 or 2 times a week and am not a fan per se(until now), but it sure is nice to watch a Brewers team that can actually score runs. Chorio seems legit and I’m hoping the Turang kid is for real too. Go Brew Crew!!
harrycarey
Spectrum store puts Brewer pitcher on the IL. You can’t make it up. Then again I was injured while dealing with my suitcase. Does stuff like this only happen in Milwaukee? The press core never questions what they are told.
stevewpants
I recall that incident with the suitcase…are you Jonathan Lucroy?
Shawnpe
Dock_Elvis
Brewers are a lot of fun to watch. Been overlaying Uecker over their TV stream. National treasure. Their TV team is actually pretty solid too. Most are kinda meh to me.
But this team has some juice in them. Reminds me a LOT of the ’92 team with Scrap Iron Phil Garner managing.
afsooner02
Ueck only calls half the game and likely won’t call much on the road but I’ll take whatever we can get from him. His days calling games are few until he’s done but it’ll always feel right when I listen to him. I grew up with his calls on wtmj in 80s and 90s. It’s even better when Milwaukee is good.
Dock_Elvis
The call of the Chourios HR was nice to hear. Used to get to a lot of games when I was closer.
SharksFan91
Yes, Rock and Levering are a good TV team. It was also nice to not have to listen to Anderson on the TV broadcast for the first several games when not listening to Ueck. Not looking forward to a time when Ueck isn’t an option. Keep hoping BA will go back to golf, the NBA, or take a job with another MLB team.
Lanidrac
Wow, food poisoning AND a concussion! He must’ve had a miserable night!
UWPSUPERFAN77
Mr. Megill recover well. Good Luck! I would not panic on him being off. He has pitched well since joining Milwaukee. However, His career stat are Ham and Egger at best, more likely ham and Egger minus. I hope I am wrong, and He turns it around for the rest of his career!
Manfred’s playing with the balls
Megill should look into psilocybin concussion treatment when they visit Denver. Now that it’s been legalized there and other athletes like NHL’r Riley Cote have had success with it.
MLBTR needs to hire editors
Come on, Adams. It’s “AS tough as that may look,” not “rough as that may look.” It’s not proper English without “as” to start the sentence. Grammar isn’t optional.