Blue Jays fireballer finds new life as a reliever
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This story was excerpted from Keegan Matheson¡¯s Blue Jays Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
DUNEDIN, Fla. -- There¡¯s something different about Nate Pearson this spring.
He¡¯s always been huge. He¡¯s always lit up the radar gun. He¡¯s always thrown with his right arm. For once, though, we¡¯re not talking about his body.
In 2020, Pearson was the Blue Jays¡¯ No. 1 prospect and the second-best pitching prospect in baseball, ranked No. 10 overall by MLB Pipeline. A spiral of injuries has haunted Pearson, though, and even when it looked like he¡¯d have a chance to rebound in 2022, he dealt with a long bout of mononucleosis. He¡¯s led the league in bad luck at times.
There¡¯s a mental freedom to Pearson now, though. His prospect status is gone and his starting days are over, instead focusing on a shorter relief role. This winter, he pitched with Tigres del Licey in the Dominican Winter League, living in Santo Domingo. He buzzed through 12 scoreless innings, taking home a 0.00 ERA with 16 strikeouts. He felt like ¡°Big Nate¡± again.
¡°I have to get back to what made baseball fun for me,¡± Pearson said recently.
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At times, he admits, baseball stopped being fun.
¡°It was kind of hard going through all of the injuries and battling through that. But I realized why you play the game,¡± Pearson said. ¡°When you¡¯re healthy, it makes all of the rehab and everything worth it. When you get back healthy and do what I was able to do today, facing these guys, it was just awesome. It was a blast.¡±
What Pearson did that day was face live hitters on Field 2 at the Blue Jays¡¯ complex. In the final at-bat, he got Matt Chapman to swing through a breaking ball for strike three. Asked if that¡¯s the feeling he¡¯s been chasing, Pearson lit up.
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There¡¯s still so much that needs to happen between this point and Pearson being a legitimate piece of the Blue Jays¡¯ bullpen in the big leagues, but this is a refreshing starting point after years of frustration. Pearson¡¯s physical tools didn¡¯t go anywhere, though, and he¡¯s still just 26. That¡¯s why pitching coach Pete Walker jumped straight to the mental game when asked about Pearson recently.
¡°There¡¯s not as much pressure on him right now, which is nice,¡± Walker said. ¡°He¡¯s just going about his business and I think he looks really comfortable in his own skin right now. His stuff is outstanding. He knows who he is as a pitcher right now. I¡¯m really excited to see him this spring.¡±
Pearson¡¯s time in the Dominican was important, too. He loved the opportunity to experience where so many of his Latin teammates grew up, playing in front of big, rowdy and drum-banging crowds. He learned where to eat -- and where not to eat -- and embraced the adventure as much as the baseball.
Most important, though, was that Pearson¡¯s innings in the Dominican mattered. These weren¡¯t rehab outings with pitch counts, they were meaningful moments with wins and losses teetering in the balance.
¡°I can do it. I knew I could do it, to be able to go down there and handle business like that, it was a good time,¡± Pearson said. ¡°To be able to pitch in leverage was one of the main things I was excited for. I was a leverage reliever. I only came in when the game was close, and if the game wasn¡¯t close, I didn¡¯t come in. Just feeling that pressure and the crowd was fun.¡±
This is all just a start, but a fresh one. Pearson is off the old starter¡¯s track and onto this new bullpen track, which isn¡¯t what we all envisioned years ago, but this mental refresh could give Pearson¡¯s career new life.