Former Royals Arm Is Forcing An Uncomfortable KC Question

As Jonathan Bowlan returns to his old stomping grounds with newfound success, the former Royals pitcher shares insights on his past and present achievements in a career-defining year with the Phillies.

Jonathan Bowlan’s return to Kauffman Stadium came with a few small reminders that life in baseball has changed fast.

The former Royals reliever had to figure out where the visiting weight room was. He had to settle in on the other side of the park, walking out of the visitors’ bullpen instead of the home side. After eight years in the Kansas City organization, the setting was familiar, but the role was not.

Bowlan is now with the Phillies, and the move has given him something he was chasing for a while: a steady bullpen job. Kansas City was where it started, and Philadelphia is where his career has started to click in a new way.

“The Royals have a special spot in my heart, of course,” Bowlan said. “They gave me an opportunity to live a dream, and I learned all throughout it.

And then, just trying to carry that over to here and be the best version (of myself). I’m always going to be grateful to Kansas City and everything they’ve done for me, my family, and for giving me this opportunity.”

The Royals traded Bowlan to the Phillies this offseason, ending a Kansas City run that included 37 big-league games over three seasons and a 4.32 ERA. He spent plenty of time bouncing between Triple-A Omaha and the majors, filling whatever pitching role the club needed.

There was a time when Kansas City looked at him as a starter. At 6-foot-6, with a five-pitch mix that included a four-seam fastball, slider, sinker, curveball and changeup, Bowlan had the build and the arsenal to make that path interesting. But the Royals’ needs pushed him into a different lane.

In 2025, he moved into full-time relief and turned in a 3.86 ERA across 44 1/3 innings. His command sharpened, and the strikeouts followed, with 46 in limited work.

That progress helped set up the offseason move that sent him to Philadelphia. The Royals made the deal to get left-handed reliever Matt Strahm, and Bowlan ended up on the other side of the swap at a point when his game was moving in the right direction.

“I learned with KC just mentally getting prepared for any type of situation at any time,” Bowlan said. “It’s just coming over here and putting it into action. Just continuing to work on that and just trying to keep my stuff where it is.”

The results in Philadelphia have backed that up. Bowlan is sitting in the 90th percentile in several Baseball Savant categories, has a 30.7% strikeout rate and a 2.57 expected ERA, and has kept the walks down to just six in 27 ⅓ innings.

He also gave the Phillies exactly what they needed Saturday: a scoreless inning, three strikeouts and a fastball that reached 98 mph. On top of that, he leaned on a sweeper that has become a new weapon for him.

“My first half, it’s been pretty good,” Bowlan said. “I mean, of course there’s always room for improvement.

Definitely be better. So it’s continuing to take it day in and day out to be the best version of myself for this team.”

Saturday night brought another layer to the moment. Bowlan pitched in front of his parents, sister and grandfather as the Phillies beat the Royals 6-1.

He hopes to get another shot in the series. Either way, the trip back to Kansas City clearly meant something, even if the bullpen door and the weight room took a little getting used to.

“It’s a journey you know as a ballplayer,” Bowlan said. “So just trying to continue and keep my faith and continue to keep going a day at a time.”

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