Royals left-hander Asa Lacy announced on Instagram that he’ll miss the 2024 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. He’ll likely be sidelined into the early portion of the 2025 campaign.
Lacy, the No. 4 overall pick in the 2020 draft after a standout college career at Texas A&M, ranked as one of the sport’s top pitching prospects in the year following that selection but has seen injuries and shaky performance tank his stock. Shoulder and back injuries have hobbled the lefty to this point in his pro career. He didn’t throw a pitch for a Royals affiliate in 2023 and will now also miss the ’24 campaign. Overall, Lacy has just 80 innings pitched since being drafted, and he’s posted a 7.09 ERA with a 21.3% walk rate in that time.
Lacy won’t turn 25 until June. There’s still time for him to eventually get back to full strength and resume the once-promising trajectory that made him a slam-dunk first-round pick and had him in the conversation for the No. 1 overall selection at times heading into that 2020 draft. As it stands, Lacy is one of several high-profile college arms around whom the Royals structured their most recent rebuilding efforts — an endeavor that simply hasn’t panned out.
Lacy, Brady Singer, Daniel Lynch IV, Kris Bubic, Jackson Kowar and Alec Marsh are among the names the club envisioned filling out a pipeline of young pitching. Singer has at times looked like a high-end starter but has lacked consistency. The others have yet to establish themselves in the majors. Stalled development among that group of college arms has been one of the key reasons for the Royals’ struggles in recent years and was surely a driving factor behind the team’s decision to spend a combined $77MM to sign Seth Lugo and Michael Wacha in free agency this winter.
Kansas City will also be without lefty Jake Brentz for a decent chunk of time. The 29-year-old reliever has been diagnosed with a Grade 2 hamstring strain and will miss at least six weeks of action, manager Matt Quatraro announced to the team’s beat this week (X link via Anne Rogers of MLB.com).
Brentz was a solid member of the K.C. bullpen back in 2021, tossing 64 innings with a 3.66 ERA, 15 holds and a pair of saves. His 13.3% walk rate was an obvious reason for concern, but Brentz helped to mitigate his sub-par command with a hearty 27.3% strikeout rate and strong 49% ground-ball rate. Injuries have taken their toll on the southpaw over the past several years, however. He dealt with a shoulder impingement late in that 2021 season and saw his 2022 campaign almost entirely wiped out by a flexor strain and a subsequent UCL tear that required Tommy John surgery.
Brentz inked a two-year, $1.9MM deal with the Royals covering the 2023-24 seasons, with the clear hope that he’d be at full strength again this year and serve as a key member of the bullpen. But a lat strain (coupled with that Tommy John rehab) limited him to just 2 2/3 minor league frames last year. He’s struggled mightily this spring, walking 11 of his 32 opponents and yielding a whopping 14 runs in just 5 1/3 innings of Cactus League action. When healthy, Brentz averaged 97 mph with his heater, missed bats in droves and kept the ball on the ground nicely. It’s been three years since we’ve seen that version of the lefty, but he’ll have the rest of this season and potentially another two years of arbitration eligibility with the Royals to get back on track.
The injury to Brentz thins out the competition for the final couple bullpen spots in Kansas City. One name that’s impressed the club thus far in camp, writes Jaylon Thompson of the Kansas City Star, is left-hander Sam Long. In camp as a non-roster invitee, the former A’s and Giants hurler has tossed 7 1/3 frames and held opponents to one run on five hits and a walk with 13 punchouts.
Long, 28, signed a minor league deal back in December. He’s pitched in the majors in each of the past three seasons, logging 128 innings between MLB’s two Bay Area clubs. In that time, Long has pitched to a 4.92 ERA with an 18.5% strikeout rate and 9% walk rate. He’s at 1.160 years of big league service time, so if he wins a spot in Kansas City’s bullpen and can cement himself as a consistent option, they’d be able to control him for as many as five seasons.
User 2161944466
“Another one”- DJ Khaled
DarkSide830
Historic bust.
This one belongs to the Reds
Best wishes to Lacy for a successful recovery.
amk1920
Dayton Moore went off the rails after the Royals window closed
cr4
He should be charged for war crimes for how he left that farm system lol
JRamHOF
There goes the division
mlb1225
Always wonder how differently the 2020 draft would have played out if there were more than five rounds and full college/high school seasons were played.
hiflew
Just goes to prove that there is no such thing as a can’t miss draft prospect. Lacy was as talented as they come and it looks like he is going to miss.
Manfred’s playing with the balls
I feel bad for any pitcher that gets drafted by KC. They burn through top pitching prospects like the Rockies. I get why Colorado struggles developing ML pitching but KC has no excuse.
Why would agents let top talent sign there? The chances they develop your client into an AS are slim to none.
Kc smoke
What kind of agent would be dumb enough to not have a college pitcher drafted top 5 not sign? He wasn’t a budding high-school prospect with free college available he was older and wasn’t going to get drafted higher.
cuffs2
Kc is a hard place to pitch. They have the games largest outfield. That means a lot of hits that are caught in smaller stadiums. There are less Homer’s at the K but a lot more extra base hits. And far more bloop hits in front of the outfielders there. For KC pitcher’s it is often death by a thousand paper cuts. Pitcher’s seem to get better after leaving KC.
Kc smoke
Worst draft pick in Royals history.
Portland Micro-Brewers
Really? This is the franchise they gave over $7 million to sign Bubba Starling back in 2011.
The royals are the bust
Kc smoke
He went higher than Bubba did in the draft so yes he is a bigger bust. 1985 and 2015 beg to differ.
mlb1225
Starling only went 1 pick higher than Lacy, and signed for nearly $100K more than Lacy did. I guess you could at least say that Starling made the Majors, while Lacy hasn’t yet, but is it really better to make the Majors and be a well below replacement level player than to never make the Majors at all?
Kc smoke
When they got paid millions either way, at least making the majors is a tad bit less disappointing.
Dock_Elvis
Now watch some of these flame outs come back in a couple years to be nice pen arms like Luke Hochevar or a Wade Davis. It’d be a nice story for the Royals if they’re contending.