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Posted

After bouncing back and forth between Triple-A and the majors this year, his return to the big leagues might be for good--and so might his transition to a new role.

Image courtesy of © D. Ross Cameron-USA TODAY Sports

Aaron Ashby has had a less-than-ideal past two years. After missing all of 2023 due to serious issues with his left shoulder, he came back this season as a diminished version of his former self. His velocity was down across the board, an understandable side effect of an extended layoff and rehabilitation process, and aside from two shaky starts, he has spent his 2024 with Triple-A Nashville. He was even less consistent in the minors, and across 84 total innings with the Sounds, he posted an 8.04 ERA and 2.00 WHIP. Those are eye-popping numbers, but not in the good way.

To be fair, his time with the Sounds became more of a long-term rehabilitation assignment than anything. In late May, he had already pitched nearly 40 innings to an 8.10 ERA, but Nashville manager Rick Sweet noted that he was steadily improving, gradually refining his previously nonexistent command and working back up to his pre-injury velocity. Sweet also noted that shoulder injuries are notoriously tricky and hard to come back from, so this rough patch wasn’t totally unexpected.

In August, Ashby finally started to resemble the top prospect he was before injury struck. In his final six games with the Sounds, he pitched eight innings in relief and gave up just two earned runs. His strikeout rate spiked to 48.3% and his K/BB was sitting at 5.0. The biggest reason for this improvement seems to be big steps forward on his sinker. Before his August renaissance, the pitch was sitting right in that lovely “meatball” part of the zone where opposing hitters have the most success and make the best contact.

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Since regaining his feel, it’s now closer to the edges of the strike zone, limiting batted-ball quality.

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Furthermore, his velocity is back up. Prior to Aug. 6, his sinker averaged 93.9 MPH and topped out at 96.7. Since then, it’s averaging 95.5 and topping out at 98.4, numbers more in line with what he was doing pre-injury.

His slider and curveball are also on an upward trend, especially as out pitches. Of the 15 total strikeouts he had in the aforementioned span, eight came against his slider and five came against his curveball.

All of this was on display in his first major-league outing since Jun. 5. In a two-inning relief appearance against the Oakland Athletics, he threw 31 total pitches, 18 of which were strikes. He gave up no hits, no earned runs, and a lone walk, and he struck out two batters. His sinker remained his primary pitch, comfortably sitting around 96 MPH and topping out at 98.2. More importantly, the command had clearly improved, peppering the outside of the zone and earning him five called strikes.

He only threw three sliders, but was deploying the curveball to great effect, earning three called strikes and a whiff.

Ashby’s enticing upside as a pitcher is why the Brewers extended him into 2027, with two more team options. He’s a lefty with significant potential, and while it may be difficult to discern that fact from quick glances at his numbers on Baseball Reference, the deeper details point to him being a potential powerhouse arm.

The larger question about his exact role on the pitching staff still remains unclear, however. Is he at his best in short bursts coming out of the bullpen? Will he ever be able to replicate the success he’s having when having to stretch out to five or six innings of work? It’s hard to make that call right now, but at just over 26 years old, Ashby is having enough success to keep himself in the big-league mix into October.


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Posted

hello. I'm new here today as a subscriber, but been peeking the articles and comments longtime!! I just wana mention imo just seeing Ashby's stuff in them 2 innings and keeping tabs on with some of yalls recent comment history here and other places.. I for one, am so pumped up and another total pump me up move that needs to happen is getting Yoho to Milwaukee ASAP! idc about political 40man shannigans! I want to win the whole dang thing this year! the more we go along in the season, the conviction to this evolves. LETS GO BREW CREW! SWEEP the Gaints! 👋  good talk!

  • Like 4
Posted
1 minute ago, mkingcheckmate said:

hello. I'm new here today as a subscriber, but been peeking the articles and comments longtime!! I just wana mention imo just seeing Ashby's stuff in them 2 innings and keeping tabs on with some of yalls recent comment history here and other places.. I for one, am so pumped up and another total pump me up move that needs to happen is getting Yoho to Milwaukee ASAP! idc about political 40man shannigans! I want to win the whole dang thing this year! the more we go along in the season, the conviction to this evolves. LETS GO BREW CREW! SWEEP the Gaints! 👋  good talk!

Welcome to Brewer Fanatic!

In the case of Yoho (and perhaps Misiorowski), I think the Brewers are waiting until September 1st when rosters expand and they can add one more pitcher.

Posted

Having watched a lot of Ashby's performances (or in many cases watched a few batters before realizing I had to turn it off), he has gone from bad reruns to must see TV.

His starts were making his career look like it was in jeopardy. Then he went to relief, and most of the summer it was like gimme a break, he just became the fall guy when the game was out of hand.

I think late July is when he blossomed, but I didn't notice it at all. He had a couple of bad outings that were probably some growing pains. Then in the heat of the night in August, it was like what's happening, and the he rolled off some fantastic outings and it was like good times. With his recovery he has taken a quantum leap forward.

Cheers.

  • Like 1
Posted

It is all smoke and mirrors with Ashby, even before the injury the problem was his control and that one bad inning as a starter, Ashby is better out of the pen where 3 innings probably would be is threshold. I am glad to see the velocity but don't proclaim him back after just one outing.

Posted
3 hours ago, rolafaive said:

It is all smoke and mirrors with Ashby, even before the injury the problem was his control and that one bad inning as a starter, Ashby is better out of the pen where 3 innings probably would be is threshold. I am glad to see the velocity but don't proclaim him back after just one outing.

I didn't see anywhere that he was proclaimed "back" except in the physical sense of being back on the team.

And he's looked vastly better for a few weeks not just this one appearance. But, we'll see what happens when he faces a major league lineup...

Posted

I guess the next question to be answered down the road is this: Does the post-op Ashby do better working 80-100 pitches w/4-5 days between, or 15-35 w/a day or 2 between? Right now it looks like the latter, which is great because with their heavy BP reliance the pen felt kinda naked w/o the 3rd LHP.

His recent work at AAA combined with the way he located Sunday is a Godsend. Combined with Misiorowski, Yoho & Paredes doing good things at Nashville, it's nice to have fresh options this late in the season.

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