Rockies Are Turning To Ryan Hughes In A Familiar Spot

As the Rockies prepare for his much-anticipated Major League debut, No. 16 prospect Hughes is making waves with a polished mindset and refined pitching strategy.

The Rockies are about to give No. 16 prospect Hughes his shot.

Colorado called up Hughes on Wednesday after a strong run back in Triple-A Albuquerque, where the right-hander has worked three starts since returning to the starting rotation from a left oblique injury. In 15 2/3 innings, he has struck out 16, allowed just four hits, walked five and kept opponents off the board.

The stat line looks tidy. Hughes is more interested in what sits underneath it.

“My first two outings back in Triple-A had really good results, and weren't the best-executed games,” said Hughes, who was called up by the Rockies on Wednesday. “I didn't have a ton of first-pitch strikes, didn't get a ton of 1-1 [count] strikes.

“It’s really kept things in perspective and allowed me to understand, ‘I got away with it today, but I need to be making sure that I'm still doubling down on my process.’ I need to make sure I’m not letting, ‘Oh, I went five scoreless, 4 2/3 scoreless,’ become like, ‘I know what I’m doing.’”

That mindset has been part of the package for Hughes, who turns 25 on Aug. 22 and has already had to navigate plenty. A 2023 Tommy John surgery and an early-season setback this year have delayed the moment, but his major league debut is now close.

To keep himself centered, Hughes has built a routine meant to shut out the noise. He has leaned on Brian Cain, a mental skills coach who works with multiple professionals, including Rockies pitcher Chase Dollander. He’s also found that Colorado’s new pitching coaches and expanded information staff have made the game plan easier to digest.

“It has really helped me simplify my thinking about the game - I'm getting ahead, I'm staying ahead, and then I'm finishing the at bat,” he said. “Pre-two strikes, I'm filling up the zone. Two strikes, I'm getting a little outside the zone for swing and miss, and for weak contact.”

Hughes has also come to terms with another piece of the puzzle: the fastball that scouts once saw at Gonzaga University. They have not seen that upper-90s version in pro ball or since the injury, but he no longer treats that as the defining issue.

“This year, I've been able to go out and get better numbers than I did last year, and better than I did the years before, so I don't think it's the end-all be-all,” said Hughes, who faced Team USA’s World Baseball Classic entry during Spring Training. “If I was constantly trying to chase who I was before surgery, I would really be miserable. I would be constantly trying to become who I was four years ago, instead of accepting and understanding where I'm at today, and working to maximize that.”

There has been progress, even if velocity is not the headline for him. In his most recent start, Hughes averaged 93.2 mph on his four-seam fastball - his highest mark of the season - while throwing six scoreless innings with six strikeouts, two hits and one walk in a win over Salt Lake.

By his own standards, that outing checked a lot of boxes.

“Under my personal definition of execution, it was something around 72 percent,” he said. “First-pitch strikes were right about 71 percent, and getting to 1-2 as opposed to 2-1, I was right around 70 percent. Seventy percent is what I'm shooting for in all three of those categories.”

Even on a day he’s pitching, Hughes still makes room for one of his favorite prep habits. Before he heads out, he watches a short reel of swing-and-miss pitches he has recorded, then keeps it fresh by updating it every couple of weeks.

“The day that I pitch, in that couple hours before I go out, one of the things I do is watch this five-minute video of pitches I’ve gotten for swings and misses,” Hughes said. “Every couple of weeks, I’ll go through and update it.”

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