July 5, 2024

Oct 1, 2021; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Huascar Ynoa (19) throws against the New York Mets in the first inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

The group of Max Fried, Kyle Wright, Ian Anderson, and Huascar Ynoa from 2022 saw their 453.2 innings cut down to just 108.2, with Fried accounting for the majority of that reduction. This was a particularly harsh blow to their rotation.

However, things ought to be improving in 2024 as Atlanta gets ready to welcome back Ian Anderson and Huascar Ynoa following Tommy John surgery.

Ynoa, who had surgery in September 2022, is the first pitcher scheduled to return to activity. He is now in camp and in good health. Pitchers often take 12 to 18 months to return to action.

He seems to be the underdog when it comes to starting pitching, as the only players mentioned while discussing the #5 place in the rotation are Hurston Waldrep, AJ Smith-Shawver, and free agency signing Reynaldo López.

However, Ynoa is in good health and is motivated to improve both as a player and a person from when Atlanta supporters last saw him.

The final memory most fans have of Ynoa is probably one he’d prefer to forget: on a May Sunday in Milwaukee, following a bad outing in which he gave up five runs on nine hits in just 4.1 innings, he punched a bullpen bench out of rage.

Pitching to an ERA above five and going 0–4 in ten starts, Ynoa, who was dominating a 4–1 record and 2.23 ERA at the time, lost three full months due to the injury and didn’t appear quite the same towards the end of the 2021 season. Atlanta went on to win the World Series, and Ynoa was left off the playoff roster.

After just two starts in 2022, Ynoa was optioned to AAA Gwinnett, where he struggled the entire season (5.68 ERA) before ultimately undergoing Tommy John surgery following the season.

He informed Justin Toscano of the AJC that he had subsequently spent time improving both physically and emotionally, saying, “I think there’s some things, even off the pitch, that I was taking too personally,

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *