Quinn Priester has battled lingering wrist soreness throughout the spring. The Brewers will place him on the 15-day injured list to begin the season. The timeline beyond that isn’t entirely clear, but Adam McCalvy of MLB.com reports that Priester will visit a specialist on Wednesday to try to identify the source of the problem.
Priester described the injury last week as intermittent soreness rather than any acute injury. It traces back to the second half of last season. Priester has been able to continue playing catch but hasn’t pitched in a game this spring. They’ll hope that tomorrow’s evaluation can give them a clearer path forward. There’s no indication yet it’s a serious injury. According to the MLB.com injury tracker, the team is still hoping he’ll make his season debut at some point in April.
Manager Pat Murphy said last week that Jacob Misiorowski and Chad Patrick were the only locks for the Opening Day rotation. Brandon Woodruff will obviously be in there as well if he’s sufficiently built up from last year’s lat issue. He threw two innings and 32 pitches in his Spring Training debut over the weekend. Priester would have been a lock if healthy after turning in a 3.32 ERA across 157 1/3 innings last year.
His injury leaves at least two spots up for grabs to begin the season. Logan Henderson has a good chance to win one of them after pitching to a 1.78 ERA while striking out a third of opponents over his first five career starts.
Henderson, who finished last season on the injured list with elbow inflammation, reported minor elbow discomfort over the weekend. Fortunately, the Brewers don’t seem concerned. McCalvy relays that the 24-year-old is feeling better and scheduled to return to mound work tomorrow. He could be back in Cactus League action as soon as this weekend. Henderson has pitched four innings of two-run ball with one strikeout across two spring appearances. It’s a situation to monitor but one that isn’t currently trending towards an IL stay.
Offseason trade acquisitions Brandon Sproat and Kyle Harrison are probably competing with Henderson and lefty Robert Gasser for the rotation jobs. Murphy has also left open the idea of using Aaron Ashby or DL Hall as starters, though they profile better in relief roles.
Hall and Harrison — each of whom has only logged three Spring Training innings so far — are the respective scheduled starters for the next two games. Sproat has surrendered three runs despite striking out seven of 21 opponents. Gasser has been hit around for seven runs on a trio of homers across 6 1/3 frames.
The Brewers also made a few camp cuts this week, most notably optioning catching prospect Jeferson Quero. He’ll begin the season back in Triple-A, where he hit .255/.336/.412 across 250 plate appearances last season. That was the expectation after the Brewers signed Gary Sánchez to a cheap one-year deal to work behind William Contreras.
Non-roster invitee Reese McGuire is also in camp but has an uphill path to a roster spot barring injury. He has gone 2-14 with a homer and six strikeouts. Sánchez has also struggled, hitting .208 without an extra-base knock in 27 trips to the plate. Contreras, Sánchez and Quero are the three catchers on the 40-man roster. McGuire, who cannot be sent to the minors without his consent if he secures a 40-man spot, could attract interest from another team with more flexibility in the backup role later in camp.