Tampa Bay Rays pitchers and catchers officially began their season Wednesday at Charlotte Sports Park, with a number of bullpen sessions taking place along with fielding practice for the pitchers and batting practice for catchers.
For manager Kevin Cash, it was a chance to get all the pitchers out on the fields together for the first time to run through drills, and start to get to know some of the new faces in camp.
“Good to see the pitchers get off the mound,” Cash said after practice concluded. “Just saw some guys take ground balls and the [catchers take] BP.”
One pitchers everyone has been interested in seeing is right-hander Naoyuki Uwasawa, who the team signed to a minor-league deal during the off-season. Uwasawa was one of the pitchers who threw a bullpen session Wednesday, and Cash said it’s been good getting to know him.
“[He’s] just a very personable guy,” Cash said. “He’s done a lot of really good things over in [Japan], and we’re fortunate that we have him over here. He seemed very eager to get with Kyle [Snyder], see what was going to help him be the best version of himself over here in this league. But just impressed with how excited he was to be here and kind of ingrain himself within the clubhouse.”
Uwasawa said his meetings with Snyder were a big reason he decided to forego taking a major league deal with another club and instead come to Tampa Bay.
“Obviously, I thought this was the right spot to continue playing in the states,” Uwasawa said through translator Taishi Terashima. “I’m looking forward to working with all the guys.”
The right-hander said after signing that he wanted to pitch as many innings as possible, which is certainly a welcome offering to Cash, especially after seeing Tyler Glasnow get traded and not having Shane McClanahan pitch this year, Jeffrey Springs and Drew Rasmussen not returning until the second half of the season at the earliest, and Shane Baz being on a limited workload.
“I don’t know how many that’s going to be, but we’ll take any pitcher that says that they like to pitch a lot of innings.” Cash said.
Another aspect that struck Cash about Uwasawa was his youthful demeanor.
“I can’t believe I asked him how long he’s played for,” Cash laughed. “He said ‘twelve years.’ He looks like he’s 18 years old.”
Listen to Cash’s conversation below, where he also discusses Zach Eflin‘s leadership role, Zack Littell‘s move into the rotation, and what he expects from Baz as well as Taj Bradley.