The start of the 2025 campaign has been a bit of a mixed bag for Brewers right-hander Trevor Megill. The righty seemed like the natural successor to Devin Williams in the ninth inning after Milwaukee’s star closer was traded to the Yankees over the offseason, but a difficult spring appears to have carried over into the regular season. While Megill has struck out 36.4% of his opponents this year, that’s been paired with an 18.2% walk rate and a 5.79 ERA across six appearances.
That’s just 4 2/3 innings of work, a sample small enough for any reliever to run cold and have it be nothing more notable than that. That hasn’t stopped the Brewers and Megill from seeking answers, however. MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy noted last night that Megill has been pitching through a knee issue that proved to be bothersome enough that the club sent him for an MRI. The initial results came back clean, but McCalvy later added this morning that Megill told reporters this morning that he’s seeking a second opinion on his knee after the first look at his recent imaging showed “nothing alarming.”
That’s certainly encouraging news, although the fact that Megill is experiencing enough discomfort that he’s seeking a second opinion is at least somewhat worrying. The righty was down for six days earlier this month before pitching in back-to-back games on Friday and Saturday, after which he opted to seek a second opinion. Until that updated review of Megill’s imaging results comes in, it’s hard to say whether or not an IL stint is in the right-hander’s future. At the very least, it seems likely the Brewers will hold him out of games until those results come back and confirm that he’s healthy enough to pitch. Losing the right-hander for any amount of time would be a significant blow to the bullpen. Since joining the Brewers in 2023, Megill has been nothing short of fantastic with a 3.11 ERA and 2.69 FIP, including a 2.72 ERA in 48 appearances last year.
Those impressive numbers surely helped contribute to the club’s willingness to part ways with Williams this winter rather than hold onto him in his final year before free agency the way they kept shortstop Willy Adames in the fold last year due to his importance to the club’s ability to contend. No internal replacement can reasonably be expected to replace the production of Williams, who is on the shortlist for the very best relievers in all of baseball. Even so, his departure for the Bronx over the offseason makes Megill all the more important for the Brewers in a season where the NL Central figures to be far more competitive than it was last season, when Milwaukee cruised to a division crown with a ten-game lead over the second-place Cubs and Cardinals in the standings.
If Megill were to require a trip to the injured list, the Brewers do have some internal options they could lean on in the late innings. Righty Abner Uribe as well as lefties Bryan Hudson and Jared Koenig have all looked excellent to this point in the season and have past success with the Brewers in leverage situations and any of them could reasonably called upon in the ninth inning if Megill does require a trip to the shelf to address his ailing knee at some point. Elvis Peguero is the only reliever on the 40-man roster who’s available in the minors to be called up should a roster move be necessary, though Deivi Garcia and Vinny Nittoli are among the non-roster players with big league experience the club could turn to if they so desire.
Time for Craig Yoho! That dude’s stuff is nasty.
Second opinions are never good.
I know it’s just a game in April, but if the Brewers knew of his possible condition why was he left in to help blow a 4 run lead in
the 9th inning Saturday?
Arguably the momentum carried over to tonight, and that hurt because the team was on a roll.
How do you not mention Yoho?
Yeah gotta believe it’s Yoyo time. Think that Pegura needs to go too. Might be time to bring up Yoho and Mizo to the bullpen since Woodruff, Myers, and Ashby will be back soon as starters along with Henderson being ready too. So Mizo might best help us in the bullpen. Hopefully Hall will be back by mid-season to help bullpen too
Fun fact: Megill has walked nearly one in every five batters faced this year. Imagine having that as your closer in the 9th inning.
Fun fact, 3/4 of his walks this year came in his last outing when he came in cold with a bum knee.
He walked 1 batter his prior outing, and no walks any other game. Last year he had a 2.7 BB/9.
Old York… Kinda like Devin Williams.
Yoho. for the “Show”/
He went boom boom last night hee hee couldn’t have happened to a surlier gent
“While Megill has struck out 36.4% of his opponents this year, that’s been paired with an 18.2% walk rate and a 5.79 ERA across six appearances.”
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Tripe. Megill was superb in five appearances over 4-1/3 innings: 8K, 1BB, 2H, 0 ER, 0.00 FIP, then got hammered in his sixth outing.
Giving walk and K rates in fewer than five innings is an absurd way to write this.
Are we far enough into the season to delay Yoho’s free agency a year yet?
Trevor Megill Undergoes MRI On Knee, Seeking Second Opinion
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Okay, You’re ugly, too.