Rockies' young arms have chance to impress

Two spots in Opening Day rotation are potentially up for grabs in spring

March 11th, 2017
Jeff Hoffman, left, and Kyle Freeland are the Rockies' top-two pitching prospects, according to MLBPipeline.com. (Getty)

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- The Rockies don't need to look externally for pitchers to fill their rotation.
With right-hander set to undergo chemotherapy for testicular cancer and left-hander Chris Rusin about a week away from throwing because of a right oblique injury, two rotation spots have opened. And while there is plenty of time before the regular season opens for conditions to change, the Rockies' immediate reaction is to stick with pitchers who are big on talent and low on experience.
Right-handers and and lefty are expected to start the regular season in the rotation.
and were first-round Draft picks and are the club's No. 2 and No. 7 prospects, according to MLBPipeline.com, respectively. , No. 9, has impressed this spring, registering scoreless outings in two of his last three spring appearances. is the club's No. 4 prospect, and the Rockies thought enough of him to give up Corey Dickerson for him, acquiring Jake McGee, as well, in a trade with the Rays. , the club's No. 28 prospect, doesn't have the eye-popping velocity some of the others do, but he ascended to Triple-A Albuquerque in 2016.
Chatwood has 90 career games and 89 starts, which are 23 games and 19 starts more than the combined possible starters.
According to scouts from multiple teams and other sources with knowledge of the club, immediate word is the Rockies lean toward staying with pitchers within their system.
Pitching coach Steve Foster understands the Rockies will always scout other clubs. But he's not looking over his shoulder for reinforcements. He's not giving big pep talks, either.
"When they know that you believe in them and you're giving them opportunity, that weighs on the mind of that young player," Foster said.
But the challenge is to earn a spot. Now pitchers are starting to throw four innings or 60-70 pitches, whichever comes first, meaning it's time to earn Major League spots. All the pitchers have had their ups and downs during the spring, but now is the time to show what they can bring to the table in the regular season.
"These next three weeks will be performance-based and critically evaluated," Rockies manager Bud Black said.
Black noted that the some of the better National League rotations have experience. The Dodgers and Giants, who have dominated the National League West recently, fit the profile. But he mentioned the Mets, who made the 2015 World Series, among teams that have won with young rotations.
"It doesn't mean you can't do it with lesser service-time guys, but they have to pitch well," Black said. "Experience tells us there will be ups and downs. You hope the ups hang around longer and the downs are minimal."