The Cardinals got a welcome update from the minors on Friday, and it centered on one of their most promising arms.
St. Louis announced that left-hander Ixan Henderson, the club’s No. 12 prospect, will start a minor league rehab assignment with the FCL Cardinals. At the same time, the team said right-hander Jefferson Moran has been activated from the 60-Day Injured List.
"LHP Ixan Henderson (AAA) will begin a rehab assignment with the FCL Cardinals," the Cardinals announced. "RHP Jefferson Moran (FCL) has been activated from the 60-day IL."
For Henderson, the news matters because he still hasn’t pitched in a game this season. His 2025 work had already put him firmly on the radar.
Last year, he made 25 starts for Double-A Springfield and posted a 2.59 ERA with 134 strikeouts and 51 walks across 132 innings. In 2024, he logged 22 total appearances, including 17 starts, between Class-A and High-A and finished with a 2.34 ERA.
That momentum stalled in February, when Henderson was shut down in Spring Training because of a left flexor strain. Chaim Bloom described it at the time as a "mild" flexor strain, and the Cardinals said there were no underlying structural issues.
Now, after the long wait, he’s finally headed back toward game action. It’s still too early to know exactly how he’ll respond, but if he can pick up where he left off and translate that production to Triple-A after the rehab assignment, he could put himself back in the conversation for a look later in the season or in 2027.
The Cardinals have made a clear push to strengthen their pitching pipeline, and the prospect rankings show it. Ten of their top 14 prospects are pitchers, though injuries have hit several of them, including Brandon Clarke, Tekoah Roby and Henderson.
Even if it doesn’t affect the big-league club right away, Henderson’s return is the kind of development the organization has been waiting for.
In Other News...
Brendan Donovan Trade Return Suddenly Looks More Interesting For Cardinals
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Andrew Williamson brings left-handed power potential to the outfield mix, while Dawson Montesa adds a hard-throwing arm with a starters toolkit that still has room to develop. Add in the earlier haul from the trade, and the Cardinals suddenly have a deeper group to evaluate than a one-for-one swap would suggest, even if the full value of the move will take time to sort out. [Read more 🡒]
Cardinals Fans Are Hearing Big Things About Their New Pitching Hope
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For a club that has spent real energy building out its pitching pipeline, the reaction around Kuhns matters because it suggests the organization may have found one of the more intriguing names in the class. He arrives in a deep group of Cardinals arms, and the early buzz has been strong enough to put him in a conversation with some of the better young pitchers in the game, which is exactly the kind of attention St. Louis was hoping to generate with this selection. [Read more 🡒]
Cardinals Fans Keep Seeing The Same Trevor Condon Draft Mix-Up
The draft brought a pair of Georgia first-rounders into the spotlight, and it also brought a familiar bit of confusion with it. Charlie Condon, now in the Colorado Rockies system, has been hearing the same assumption since the names started circulating together, even though he and Trevor Condon are separate players who just happen to share a last name, a state and a trip into the first round.
For Cardinals fans, the mix-up has been easy to understand because Trevor Condon is the one wearing the St. Louis draft tag, while Charlie arrived with his own high-profile profile as one of the top players in the class. Charlie has said the brother question comes up often, and the overlap only gets more noticeable when both players are being discussed as major league prospects from Georgia, with their paths now headed in very different directions. [Read more 🡒]
