The Diamondbacks are ready to bring Brandon Pfaadt back into the rotation.
Manager Torey Lovullo told reporters, including Alex Weiner of Arizona Sports, that Arizona will recall Pfaadt to start tomorrow’s game against the Giants. To make room on the active roster, the club will need to option a pitcher while carrying a nine-man bullpen.
For Pfaadt, the move sends him back to the starting five for the first time since April. He opened the year in the rotation while Merrill Kelly was on the injured list, but two rough outings in his first three starts pushed him to the bullpen once Kelly returned. Michael Soroka, who was lined up for long relief, had been getting better results early on and passed him in the pecking order.
Arizona’s rotation settled for a while with Kelly, Zac Gallen, Eduardo Rodriguez, Soroka and Ryne Nelson. Pfaadt spent six weeks working out of the bullpen before the Diamondbacks optioned him to Triple-A so he could build back up as a starter.
Not long after that, the rotation took hits when Soroka and Nelson went down with injuries in quick succession. Soroka is dealing with a left glute strain and could return by late July, while Nelson has a partial flexor tear and is expected to be sidelined into September.
Those injuries opened the door for others. Rookie right-hander Jose Cabrera stepped into one of the vacant rotation spots, and southpaw Mitch Bratt made a spot start in his MLB debut last week. Bratt had only just come back from a minor league injury and was under a pitch limit, so he went only three innings before Arizona optioned him out the next day.
Pfaadt wasn’t ready for the rotation when that shuffle happened. Even now, he still hasn’t gotten through four full innings over three starts at Triple-A Reno.
Still, his tune-up has gone well enough: 10 innings, three runs allowed, seven strikeouts and two walks. In the majors this season, he’s sitting on an ERA close to 6.00 across 38 innings.
The recall comes after Arizona opened the series with a win behind another strong outing from Rodriguez. That pushed the Diamondbacks back to 42-42 after a weekend sweep by the Rays had knocked them under .500 for the first time in six weeks.
They’re 2.5 games out in a crowded NL Wild Card race, and general manager Mike Hazen has said the club is hoping to buy, with a left-handed bat and bullpen help viewed as the likeliest targets. Hazen also downplayed the need for a starter in early June, though that was before the injuries to Nelson and Soroka changed the picture.
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