Brock Stewart checked off many of the boxes he wanted when he threw a 20-pitch live batting practice session to Kyle Farmer and Manuel Margot on Friday at Target Field.
Stewart’s fastball velocity was close to his normal range, sitting at 95-96 mph. He liked the command and shapes of his pitches, drawing several swings and misses.
Well, all his pitches except one. He beaned Farmer on the shoulder with an inside fastball. Farmer returned for his next at-bat shirtless, showing the bruise he received.
“I apologized big time,” said Stewart, the 32-year-old Twins reliever recovering from right shoulder tendinitis. “That definitely shouldn’t happen. [Farmer] said it’s all good, but it’s not all good. I don’t need to be hitting my teammates. Thankfully, he’s such a good guy and he said it was all good.”
Stewart didn’t know the next step in his progression — he prefers not to ask too much about possible timelines — but he’s likely nearing a rehab assignment.
“He’s going on a rehab assignment at some point,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “He’s going to have to face some hitters in a live-game situation, and then we’ll hopefully be able to bring him back. I think we’re getting towards that point, but I can’t tell you when.”
When Stewart is healthy, he’s been one of the top-performing setup men in the majors. He allowed one run in 13⅓ innings this season (0.68 ERA) with 17 strikeouts. He permitted only two runs in 27⅔ innings last year (0.65 ERA).
“Brock looked great,” Farmer said. “He threw me some really good sliders. I mean, as long as he’s healthy and he feels good, I think he’s in good shape.”