Brewers Video
Statcast ballparks bring a lot of entertainment for baseball nerds, especially in spring training. It gives an idea of who's feeling hot, who's not—and even more intriguingly, it lets us see metrics on minor-league pitchers that we may not get for the rest of the season. This could bring all kinds of fun, from Jesus Made's quality of contact, to Bishop Letson's fastball, Eric Bitonti's bat speed, Braylon Payne's sprint speed and more—if they can get playing time in publicly-distributed Statcast environments. While none of the above played in yesterday's game, it's worth keeping an eye on them, as well as the intriguing standouts below;
Logan Henderson's four-seam fastball was lurking in the 91-92 mph range throughout most of his 2024 season. It took a leap yesterday, surpassing 95 mph on several occasions, and with his electric combination of low release slot and high induced vertical break, it looked very effective. If he leaves it over the heart of the plate, it can see some hard contact, with hitters traditionally seeing it quite well. We don't have arm-angle data during spring, but the best comps for Henderson's fastball as he threw it yesterday would seem to be Christian Scott of the Mets and Bryan Woo of the Mariners. Those heaters find the dead zone a bit, movement-wise, so Henderson's command will be paramount.
More interesting are the cutter and slider. Henderson has predominantly been a two-pitch pitcher in the minors, with his fastball/changeup pairing doing some heavy damage, but to succeed as a starter, he will need a third offering. The slider is a solid gyro option, while the cutter might be a variation to keep hitters off his main fastball—but I'm hoping to see him throw a lot more of these in his next spring training outings.
Craig Yoho
Yoho is a darling of the Brewers' 2023 draft class who looks poised to break into the bullpen during 2025 (health permitting).
Yoho didn't use his slider, but showcased how deceptive and Wiffle Ball-like his changeup really is, coming away with two strikeouts. Yoho's arm angle is predisposed to horizontal movement profiles, and boy, does he make the most of that. That cutter could be an intriguing link pitch to boost the deception when his sinker, changeup and slider all boomerang away from each other; it bears monitoring.
Chandler Welch
Chandler Welch is another interesting profile, this time from the 2024 draft. Leaning on an 88-mph cutter/slider from a low arm slot, Welch got two whiffs (both on the slider) and prevented hard contact in his brief inning of work.
The slider/cutter should work well, but he may need more out of his fastballs and sweeper to be more than a bullpen arm. The low arm slot gives both a chance to succeed, if he can find an extra tick or two of velocity as the season goes on. I'd expect to see him breeze through Low A and spend most of the year at High A and Double A this season.
Tyson Hardin
Tyson Hardin is another pick out of the 2024 draft, claimed in the 12th round out of Mississippi State. Showcasing a strong four-seamer/cutter mix that graded out exceptionally well in Jeremy Maschino's model, again due to a low arm slot and a real feel for generating spin on both offerings, Hardin worked out of a mess of his own making.
We'll need to see more from his breaking balls, though his sole curveball did grade out nicely, and there was extreme horizontal break on his changeup. The stuff grades out better than you could have expected for a 12th-round pick, and is certainly exciting within the Brewers' pitching development system.
Honorable mentions include:
- Ernesto Martinez Jr.: Showed off 83-mph bat speed (league average is around 74 mph) in launching a 104.4-mph flyout that he didn't even barrel (although he also had five whiffs in his eight swings).
- Oliver Dunn with three swings, no whiffs and two 100-mph+ lineouts (and with the same bat speed, which suggests his back issue is no longer a problem)
- Luis Lara with two hard-hit balls (95+ mph), against a sinker and a four-seam fastball
Did you notice anything else in the Brewers' first statcast-tracked game of 2025? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!
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