Mariners right-hander Matt Brash has been shut down indefinitely from his rehab process, GM Justin Hollander told reporters this evening (including Ryan Divish of The Seattle Times). The righty had thrown yesterday ahead of a rehab assignment that was expected to begin this weekend, though now he’ll visit Dr. Keith Meister to determine next steps.
Brash, 26 next month, was shut down due to elbow inflammation early in Spring Training amid concerns that he may miss the entire 2024 season. Following his diagnosis with elbow inflammation, however, Brash was cleared to resume throwing in early March and has been rehabbing the injury ever since. Per Hollander, that injury has taken a turn for the worse in recent days as he’s begun to feel “tightness” in the aftermath of bullpen sessions that has begun to last longer after each throwing session.
The ominous update is a potentially brutal blow for the Seattle bullpen, which has been without Brash and fellow set-up man Gregory Santos all season. Brash made his debut with the Mariners as a starter back in 2022 but struggled in the role and was quickly moved to the bullpen, where he’s been nothing short of dominant ever since. Across 112 relief innings in his career, the flamethrower has posted a sterling 2.84 ERA with an even better 2.18 FIP eye-popping 34.5% strikeout rate in 101 1/3 innings of work. That’s good for the ninth-highest strikeout rate and second-lowest FIP of any reliever with at least 80 innings of work over the past two seasons.
Given Brash’s utter dominance out of the bullpen throughout his career, he was all but certain to act as the primary set-up man to closer Andres Munoz this season, forming perhaps the strongest one-two punch of relievers in the majors. Those plans will have to be put on hold for an uncertain amount of time, however, with Brash expected to meet with Meister for the second time this season in the coming days. Seattle has relied on Ryne Stanek and Gabe Speier to set up for Munoz in the absence of Brash and Santos.
While elbow issues of any kind bring to mind the possibility of Tommy John surgery for many fans, there’s been no indication of damage to Brash’s UCL to this point, however and it won’t be clear exactly what the prognosis is for Brash and what his timetable for return could look like until he meets with Meister. With all that said, it seems fair to expect the Mariners to be without their top set-up man for quite some time given the right-hander’s difficulties bouncing back between throwing sessions nearly two months after being cleared to resume a throwing program.
If there’s any silver lining for Mariners fans, it’s that the club’s bullpen has been performing just fine even without Brash in the mix. Seattle relievers rank first in the majors with a 2.40 ERA this season while they rank eighth with a 24.9% strikeout rate and ninth with a 3.68 FIP. That strong performance has involved almost universally solid numbers from the club’s relief corps: among the 11 players the club has used out of the bullpen so far this season, only right-hander Collin Snider and infielder Josh Rojas (the latter of whom pitched in a pair of blowout games early in the season) have posted an ERA above 3.09 entering play today. If the club’s relief corps can remain even close to that effective in the coming months, it’s possible the Mariners won’t miss Brash as much as it might seem on the surface even in the event of an extended absence.
For Love of the Game
Dr. Keith “TJ” Meister
PoopMonster
MLB pitcher careers are becoming like those of NFL running backs. Only a small percentage of pitchers pitch long enough to make enough money to make up for lifelong joint damage.
ChuckyNJ
The lack of logic on that point is astounding.
rememberthecoop
You do know that even the minimum mlb salary is like 7x’s what an average person makes, right?
Old York
The pitch clock is even affecting those in rehab.
/s
Acoss1331
The elbow inflammation has lead to tightness now. That’s terrible news for Brash. That’s going to suck if this gets the dreaded TJ surgery…
dasit
he was proctor-ed
anyone with more than 75 appearances in a season becomes a time bomb
BigRedMachine
Back to the sport we love, please. This stinks. You could make the case that when healthy, Matt Brash is our best reliever. I hope that the Mariners can make a trade, I personally think they don’t have enough in the bullpen, it has been good but not enough. I would also like to see Gabe Spiers be our 8th Inning guy and not Stanek. Move Stanek to the 7th, not the set up guy. If we reached out to teams like the White Sox or Rockies to inquire about their best reliever and possible trade, would those teams, even though they are done, would they come across wrong to their fans, like they have giving up, if they made a move this early? So not do it? We have a good team, I believe that the hitting will pick up, We need another good and dependable, consistent arm in the pen, especially if you want to go on winning streaks.
Stevil
Yeah, I flagged the source of that nonsense. Unfortunately, MLBTR either ignored it, or doesn’t have anyone monitoring the flags.
Regarding Seattle’s bullpen, I don’t think they need to add anything but depth.
It’s weird to think that this pitching staff is missing a starter and two of their best relievers and are still dominant.
Imagine them at full strength!