Jake Irvin Just Gave Nationals Fans A Reason For Relief

Jake Irvin takes a crucial step forward in his recovery, while fellow Nationals pitchers continue their comeback journeys.

Jake Irvin took a meaningful step in his comeback Wednesday, facing live hitters for the first time in six weeks as he works back from a right shoulder strain.

The Nationals right-hander had been sidelined since May 24, when he was placed on the injured list after an MRI showed the injury. His return to the mound came ahead of Washington’s series finale against the Astros, and manager Blake Butera could tell Irvin approached the session with extra purpose.

“I understand. He's been out for a while, he wants to get back,” Butera said. “It felt like a real outing for him, at least the way he prepared for it.”

Irvin called the workout “a stepping stone in this rehab process,” and said getting back in front of hitters felt like progress after a long wait.

“It’s a stepping stone in this rehab process,” Irvin said. “I think getting to face hitters in any capacity is like checking the boxes, but it's also a product of a lot of hard work. It feels like a long time coming.”

Under hot conditions at Nationals Park, with temperatures in the 90s, Irvin got through two ups on 30 pitches. He said the session was less about game sequencing and more about simply getting his full arsenal back into action.

“I think the biggest thing was just being able to throw everything,” said Irvin. “We weren't sequencing like a normal game or anything like that. … I think the biggest balance is attacking guys with everything, throwing it over the plate and just feeling good.”

Butera said the main thing he was watching for was simple: health.

“The biggest thing with any of these build-ups from rehab is making sure they get out of the outing healthy, and make sure they throw the amount of pitches they're supposed to throw,” Butera said. “That's what I look at first.

“I thought the stuff from the eye looked about the same as it did before, which is a positive, but that's like secondary to me. It's more about how he's doing now and the fact that he got through the whole outing fine. He can be throwing 98 [mph], but if he has to shut it down in the middle of it, the 98 isn't really as important.”

Irvin’s injury came at an awkward time, right in the middle of one of his strongest outings. On May 23 in Atlanta, he was working on five no-hit innings and had seven strikeouts before the shoulder issue surfaced. He was placed on the 15-day IL the next day.

With Irvin out, left-hander Andrew Alvarez moved into the rotation. Butera said Irvin’s next step will most likely be a rehab assignment, and because the Nationals expect him back in the starting rotation, he’ll need to build up toward five innings.

“[There has been] a bunch of support from everybody, so it was great,” said Irvin. “I’m just happy to be back on the bump, as simple as that is.”

Wednesday also brought encouraging rehab work for two more Nationals pitchers at Triple-A Rochester. Trevor Williams, coming back from right UCL reconstruction, started for the Red Wings and threw 2 2/3 scoreless innings, allowing two hits and striking out two. Max Kranick, recovering from right elbow surgery, followed with 2 1/3 innings, giving up one run on two hits and one walk while striking out three.

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