QUINIX Sport News: Teammates since college, Kumar Rocker and Jack Leiter eager to replicate star run with Rangers

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The duo charted similarly bumpy roads from the ultimate highs of collegiate stardom at Vanderbilt to early struggles in pro ball. Both could factor in heavily to Texas’ starting rotation this season.

SURPRISE, Ariz. — The Texas Rangers attacked the free agent and trade markets aggressively this past winter in hopes of re-stocking a roster that proved to be World Series-worthy not all that long ago. Joc Pederson and Jake Burger were added to strengthen the lineup. The bullpen was completely remodeled, with Texas bringing a whopping six new relievers into the fold. Nathan Eovaldi, the most reliable member of Texas’ starting staff over the past two years, was retained on a lucrative three-year contract.

Of course, no offseason transaction carries as much significance for Texas as the possibility of getting a full season from ace Jacob deGrom. This is a pitcher who won consecutive Cy Young Awards in 2018 and 2019 and then somehow seemed to get even better in the seasons that followed, albeit with frequent injury-related interruptions along the way. Those ailments unfortunately reached a breaking point when deGrom needed Tommy John surgery just six starts into the five-year, $185 million deal he inked before the 2023 season. That put him on the shelf for the entirety of Texas’ championship run and the majority of 2024 as well.

DeGrom’s return to the mound late last season came with relatively minimal fanfare considering Texas’ place in the standings. But he looked like himself, with his heater humming at 98 mph and his hard slider coaxing whiffs like it always has. It was too late for deGrom to alter the 2024 Rangers’ fate, but his form in those three September starts was an encouraging preview of his potential impact on the 2025 team.

“To get a full year, the first full year with him, will be a lot of fun,” shortstop Corey Seager said. “I know that’s got to feel good for him, just a sigh of relief. It’s been a long couple years for him, so he’s got to be pretty excited and we’re excited to have him.”

Rangers manager Bruce Bochy recently revealed that deGrom will slot into the latter portion of the Rangers rotation in an effort to ease the prized pitcher into season. With how Texas’ April schedule lines up, this arrangement will afford deGrom some additional days of rest in the early going as he builds toward a more traditional workload. Eovaldi, then, should get the nod on Opening Day, with right-handers Jon Gray and Tyler Mahle, plus lefty Cody Bradford, following behind him.

A fully operational deGrom unquestionably alters the complexion of this veteran-laden rotation, easing the expectations on the others to perform beyond their capabilities. But it also takes a whole lot more than five starting pitchers to make it through a 162-game regular season, let alone the grueling postseason tournament that follows in October. And lurking beyond the projected starting staff are two talented yet unrefined right-handers who are eager to finally prove themselves at the highest level for a team that will surely need them at some point: Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker.

Among Texas pitchers not named deGrom, it is perhaps these two young hurlers whose seasons ahead could most influence the Rangers’ success. The duo charted vastly different yet similarly bumpy roads from the ultimate highs of collegiate stardom as teammates at Vanderbilt University to their highly anticipated major league debuts last summer. Now entering their age-25 seasons, both Rocker and Leiter have embraced the struggles they’ve endured along the way and continue to relish the unexpected reality of pursuing their big league dreams in the same clubhouse.

“I think if you told us that last year at Vandy, while we were in Omaha, that we were going to be debuting the same year for the same team in the big leagues, I don’t think we would have believed it,” said Leiter. “It just didn’t seem possible.”

Earlier this spring, Rocker and Leiter were two of several former Commodores in attendance to see their university compete at Salt River Fields, just across town from the Rangers’ spring training facility, in the Desert Invitational. It was an apt opportunity to reflect on their respective journeys to this point, and a full-circle moment for Rocker in particular: almost exactly six years earlier, he had made his first collegiate start on that same field — and failed to make it out of the second inning. That inaugural outing was a humbling start to what went on to be a historic freshman campaign for Rocker, punctuated most notably by a 19-strikeout no-hitter in the super regional against Duke en route to the program’s second national championship.

 

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