Alexander Alberto’s path to the majors has taken a while, but the Rays right-hander may finally be lining up for his shot.
A late addition to Tampa Bay’s 2019 international class, Alberto is now in the final year of his MiLB contract, and this season has started to look like the one where everything could come together. The White Sox nearly got him this past winter in the Rule 5 draft, but he was sent back to the Rays near the end of Spring Training after he couldn’t carve out a bullpen role in Chicago.
What’s changed is the command. The 6-foot-8 righty began the year in Double-A, where better strike-throwing started to catch up to his premium stuff.
Since moving to Triple-A Durham, that progress has held, even if he can still get a little scattered while adjusting to Triple-A baseball. With more reps, that should settle down.
The raw material is obvious. Alberto works from a low 3/4 slot with plus extension, and that release makes his 97-98 mph cut-ride fastball play up even more.
He can also reach back for 100. The pitch has a naturally platoon-neutral shape, which gives him a fastball he can use to both sides of the plate.
He also has a two-seam version that’s mainly been used against right-handers, though he appears to have shelved it in Triple-A so far. His third pitch is a mid-80s sweepy breaking ball that he can throw to either side of the plate.
There may still be room for a tighter gyro breaker or a true cutter down the line to help against lefties, especially given his feel for spin.
The results back up the stuff. Alberto has long been a ground-ball machine, with a career ground-ball rate near 60%, and he pairs that with above-average whiff numbers.
Among more than 1,400 pitchers who have thrown at least 1,000 innings since 2021, he owns the lowest HR/FB rate at 1.7%. He has allowed only two homers in 206.2 professional innings.
His delivery is part of what makes the package so intriguing. From behind the mound, his release point stands out next to the rest of the Rays’ staff, sitting way out to the right alongside Craig Kimbrel. Alberto may even have more funk and deception than Kimbrel, considering he’s throwing from that low slot while also being eight inches taller.
That kind of uniqueness matters. Hitters have a harder time picking up the ball from outlier release points, and that fits neatly with the Rays’ recent approach. It adds another layer to stuff that already grades as plus and gives Alberto the kind of profile Tampa Bay has been willing to bet on.
The timing could hardly be better. With front offices already starting to look for trade-market help, Alberto’s contract situation, unusual delivery, improved command and high-end stuff make him a real candidate to reach the majors this season.
He’ll need to be added to the 40-man roster before the end of the year, or the Rays could lose him to minor league free agency. If injuries don’t open the door first, that roster call may end up deciding whether Alberto finally gets the opportunity he’s been chasing for years.
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