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Dateline: Goodyear, Arizona
Tejay Antone's uncooperative elbow is slightly ahead.
He is recovering from his third surgery to repair the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow. His first was in 2017. He lost the entire 2017 season. Antone pitched his way to the Reds in 2020 and pitched in Louisville and Cincinnati in 2021 before his elbow balked again. He missed all of 2022. The third was in 2024. He was able to return late 2025, pitching in 15 games with Dayton, Chattanooga and Louisville. He combined to post a 10.20 ERA in 15 innings.
The 32-year old right hander, who the Reds tabbed in the fifth round in 2014 is on the road to a game winning rally in spite of a setback this morning.
The Reds reassigned the big right hander with the easy smile but a lion's heart to the minor league camp.
This game is not over. Antone continues his quest with "house money".
"The want me to look back a realize what I've done and how far I've come. They want to see me continue to do what I've done a little bit longer," the still upbeat, Antone said. "In 2024 I made the team out of camp and got injured pretty quickly. No one wants a repeat of that so, they want me to get out in April, go to Louisville and kind of continue to do what I'm doing now to show strength and that I'm not fragile anymore."
"It is never fun to be told, you're not making the team, that's the hope and the dream," Antone said. "I'm looking forward to an opportunity this year and every pitch I throw now is just playing with house money. It's a blessing just to be able to throw. I'm going to go to Louisville and just be a good teammate, maybe I can provide mentorship to some of the young guys, while I hone my craft and work on myself and be a weapon for the team."
There is no woh-is-me. Antone is looking ahead and not just to pitch.
"I proved myself in spring training this year my philosophy is there. I have weapons to strike out the best hitters in the game," Antone said. "I think there's no doubt that I have the ability to pitch in the big leagues and not just pitch in the big leagues but be a weapon. The biggest concern for the team is health. They want to commit to something that could break. I know I can pitch in the big leagues and when I'm there be one of the best pitchers in the big leagues. It is up to me to be the best pitcher in Triple A so that when the churn does happen, that my names at the top of the list."
A lot of pitchers in there 30's are on the downhill side of their career. Antone isn't buying into that fate.
"I want to pitch for another five years," Antone stated with confidence. "How I feel and how the ball is coming out, I think it is very realistic goal. I don't want to say this was expected but this is the contract that I signed. I signed a minor league contract. I hoped and dreamed for the big leagues but I'm go to pitch to the best of my abilities and work my way back up."
Antone made six appearances this spring in Cactus League play. He pitched three innings in his first three tries allowing a total of one hit and a walk, while he struck out three batters. His next two were not as good, totally an inning and two thirds with five runs on five hits and three walks. He struck out four.
Yet, he finished strong. Antone breezed through the Texas Rangers on eight pitches to four batters, allowing one hit.
"I was happy for being super efficient. That's great for the arm health too. I would trade no strikeouts for the rest of my career if I could get eight pitch innings," Antone said. "I got a lot of mis hits. I threw a lot of cutters and it's working well."
Francona talked earlier in camp about Antone's progress.
"He has plenty of fastball and he can really spin it," Francona said.
These conversations a week from starting the Major League schedule are rarely pleasant and rife with disappointment whether the player battles injury or not. The closer to the end of camp the bigger the disappointment.
"He was so respectful," Francona said of the tough conversation. "He's a terrific young man. It was so intriguing watching him pitch. I don't think it's unfair for us to want him to go to Triple A and get into the groove and the grind, and how he bounces back. I think he understood. There is always going to be some disappointment. I tried to remind him, you know, everything you've been through enjoy competing. He has done a terrific job. I think his better days are ahead of him. I tried to remind him of that."