Toolshed: Feltman prepping to provide relief
The first time Durbin Feltman was promoted, he was about to board a team bus for a five-hour road trip from Lowell, Massachusetts, to Auburn, New York. Scheduled to pitch every three days out of the Class A Short Season bullpen, he was next slated to take the mound July
The first time Durbin Feltman was promoted, he was about to board a team bus for a five-hour road trip from Lowell, Massachusetts, to Auburn, New York. Scheduled to pitch every three days out of the Class A Short Season bullpen, he was next slated to take the mound July 11 against the Doubledays -- the first of a three-game series at Auburn -- so he was trying to mentally prepare for his fifth career Minor League appearance as well as for the long ride ahead on I-90. That is, until he was told to hang back for a second.
"I figured that could mean only one thing," he said.
The second time Feltman was promoted -- just three weeks later -- he was taking an ice bath in the Class A Greenville clubhouse, thinking less about the future than the freezing water he was immersed in when a coach demanded he get out for a meeting in the manager's office. He threw a Gatorade towel around his waist, some slides on his feet and went where he was told. The news came fast. Congrats, he was on his way to Class A Advanced Salem.
"'Can I put on a shirt or something?' was my thought," Feltman said. "I really didn't see it coming. They wanted me to focus on where I was only, so all those moves weren't things I was really considering at the time."
He played for three Minor League teams from the time the Red Sox took him in the third round of the 2018 Draft to the end of the year. And he could be gearing up for another quick climb in 2019, with the season drawing near and Boston's bullpen remaining the Major League club's weakest link.
Feltman's potential rapid ascent to the Majors makes sense, considering his successful history as a reliever. Undrafted out of Oak Ridge High School in Conroe, Texas, the 6-foot right-hander became a force in the Texas Christian University bullpen shortly after arriving on campus. He posted a 1.56 ERA and a 0.75 WHIP with 49 strikeouts in 34 2/3 innings as a freshman, picking up nine saves. He ranked second in the nation with 17 saves the following year, even as his other stats backed up a bit (3.64 ERA, 1.28 WHIP in 29 2/3 innings). Last spring, he tied current Marlins Rule 5 pick Riley Ferrell for the program saves record with his 32nd on April 27. However, a shoulder strain set him back a month. He returned for two final appearances in the Big 12 tournament, going without a save in either to finish his collegiate career deadlocked with Ferrell.
Still, all Feltman's traits were on display heading into the Draft. When he returned to action, his numbers were again brilliant. He had a 0.74 ERA, a 0.74 WHIP, 43 strikeouts and six walks in 24 innings. His strikeout rate jumped from 11.2 K/9 as a sophomore to 15.9 as a junior, and his BB/9 fell from 4.6 to 2.2 in the same period. Despite the missed month, he was named a Baseball America Third-Team All-American.
In terms of stuff, his fastball hit the mid- to high-90s with plenty of life, and his slider also received plus grades. He was dinged in part for his delivery, which features plenty of motion, and there was some worry it could have contributed to the shoulder woes. However, the righty called the strain "an isolated incident" and blamed an increased workload for the timing of the injury. In fact, he credited improvement in his motion with his better results in 2018.
"Sophomore year, my control was very spotty. Our assistant coach, Kirk Saarloos, showed me this video of my delivery as a sophomore vs. [as] a freshman, and I could see I was moving really fast and way too out of control," he said. "That's why my command was all off. So I adjusted before junior year, slowing things down, making it smoother, and I had a little more control. But, yeah, it used to be a lot worse."
The Red Sox liked enough of what they saw to take Feltman 100th overall last June and sign him for $559,600, equal to the slot bonus for the pick.
Feltman made his professional debut on June 29 and was nearly perfect in his four appearances for Lowell, striking out seven without allowing a hit or a walk in four scoreless innings. The only New York-Penn League batter to reach against him came in his pro debut on a fielder's choice. He first surrendered a hit in his Greenville debut on July 11 (and struck out the next three batters), but didn't allow an earned run until his seventh pro appearance five days later. On July 19, his perfect ninth inning closed out the third no-hitter in Drive history, and two weeks after that, he was wearing a Salem uniform. After 11 outings with Boston's Carolina League affiliate, he finished his first Minor League season with a 1.93 ERA, a 0.99 WHIP, 36 strikeouts and five walks in 23 1/3 innings. He'd also notched four saves in four opportunities, showing he can handle the fire of professional ninth innings just as well as he did the flames of the college game.
The chance to close came from a level of trust from his organization not typically shown to players in their inaugural seasons.
"They basically said, 'Hey, you're here for a reason. Do what you do,' so they let me go a little bit," he said.
That isn't to say Feltman didn't learn a few lessons and put them into action as the season went on.
"One thing I did in college was pitched down in the zone," he said. "That was consistent for me. But when I got the pros, I could see I was still striking guys out with belt-high fastballs. The spin rate was still hard to pick up up there, and I could use the slider off that. Rather than relying on the coach calling the pitches, I knew I could pitch the top of the zone like the other pitchers, and that really kicked in at [Class A Advanced]. Other than that change, I always thought that my strengths are better than your strengths. A good pitch is always going to beat a good batter, so I just need to keep throwing good pitches."
Durbin Feltman finished with 129 strikeouts over 87 2/3 innings at TCU. (Sue Ogrocki/AP)
Heading into his first Spring Training, Feltman finds himself in an interesting situation, given the state of the Boston system. The World Series champs have lost postseason hero Joe Kelly to free agency. Closer Craig Kimbrel remains on the market, but president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski has said he doesn't expect the club to make a big splash for a free-agent reliever. The absence of those two amounts to 128 innings of high-quality relief Boston will need to fill, let alone the fact that their late-inning roles are vacant. Matt Barnes and Ryan Brasier seem best positioned to bear the weight of closing, but the former has never posted an ERA lower than 3.65 in the Majors and the latter was pitching in Japan in 2017.
There's a real opportunity for a dominant reliever -- especially one with special stuff and late-inning experience already on his resume -- to rise through the ranks and claim a spot in the bullpen at Fenway Park.
"I've seen a little bit on Twitter like everyone else," Feltman said of the Major League roster situation. "But at the end of the day, I'm not too worried. If I do as well as I can, it'll work out. Of course, I know that the door is a little more open now than it might have been, but I feel like it's going to come down to me showing them what I can do and taking care of business wherever I go."
It's possible the organization keeps moving Feltman up the chain with an opening assignment to Double-A Portland, thus making him Boston's first top-10-round Draft pick to open his first full season at Double-A or above since Craig Hansen started with the Sea Dogs in 2006. Of course, the 2005 26th-overall pick also pitched in the Majors in his Draft year, a leg up Feltman did not enjoy down the stretch in 2018.
Even if Feltman opens back with Salem, the Red Sox have shown they're willing to get aggressive with the closer if he continues to dominate. That would make him the relief pitcher version of Andrew Benintendi, who opened 2016 in the Carolina League and ended it in the American League Division Series.
In other words, Feltman might want to keep an extra shirt handy the next time he gets in an ice bath in a Minor League clubhouse.
"[Closers are] definitely a special breed. When I got hurt, our eighth-inning guy had to pitch there, and he told me afterwards that closing is just a little different than setting up. You're riding that border between cockiness and confidence. You have to," he said. "With my game and my stuff, I'm going to dare you to hit it. I've just got to get through that inning, so I'm putting all the cards on the table. I like the chaos around it. It takes a special person, I think, to feel that way. You have to be a little psycho."
Sam Dykstra is a reporter for MiLB.com. Follow and interact with him on Twitter, @SamDykstraMiLB.
Minor League Baseball partners with TruGreen
FRANKLIN, Tenn. -- TruGreen, the nation's leading lawn care treatment provider, is proud to announce a groundbreaking partnership with Minor League Baseball that includes activations across all 120 clubs, a makeover of the home dugout in each market, sponsorship of select MiLB team grounds crews, and a new initiative called
Podcast explains why the Syracuse Mets are looking for Jim Morrison
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Dash im-prom-tu promo and Mets' Suero joins the podcast
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Minor League Baseball partners with Circle K
Minor League Baseball announced a new national partnership with Circle K, which will see the convenience store giant become the “Official Convenience Store of Minor League Baseball.” During the 2025 season, the Circle K brand will be integrated into the MiLB in-stadium experience through in-game video board assets at most
These 15 moments led to season No. 15 of Minor League road trips
Benjamin Hill travels the nation collecting stories about what makes Minor League Baseball unique. This excerpt from his newsletter is a mere taste of the smorgasbord of delights he offers every week. Read the full newsletter here, and subscribe to his newsletter here.
MiLB podcast crew makes Opening Day predictions
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Everything you need to know for Triple-A Opening Day
First, there was big league Opening Day. Now it's Triple-A's turn to take the spotlight. The Minor League season opens Friday when the Triple-A International League and Pacific Coast League seasons get underway for the first of MiLB’s two Opening Days. And right out of the gates, several of baseball's
Top prospects to watch at Triple-A -- one for each organization
It’s Triple-A’s turn up to bat on Friday. The regular season begins for the Minor Leagues’ highest level one day after the action starts on the Major League side. Fun fact: it’ll be the earliest start to a Minor League season since 1951 (March 27). Double-A, High-A and Single-A will
Here's where every Top 100 prospect is expected to start the season
The 2025 Opening Day prospect roster announcements began last week when the Cubs informed Matt Shaw (MLB No. 19) he was making the trip overseas to compete in the Tokyo Series. Roki Sasaki (No. 1) also received the good news, but his assignment was much less of a surprise. Now
Nationals prospect King joins MiLB podcast
Check out the latest episodes of The Show Before the Show, MiLB.com's official podcast. A segment rundown is listed below, in case you want to skip to a particular section. Like the podcast? Subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts. The podcast is also available via Spotify, Megaphone and other
Here are the 2025 All-Spring Breakout Teams
Fifteen games, several jersey swaps and countless highlights later, the second edition of Spring Breakout has officially concluded – and it lived up to its billing. Of the 16 contests sprinkled across four days, only one game (Dodgers vs. Cubs) was rained out. Coincidentally, the Cubs were one of two
Rox young sluggers aim to bring pop back to Coors Field
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Coors Field may provide the best run-scoring environment in Major League Baseball, but the Rockies haven’t taken advantage of it in recent years. Even without adjusting for Coors, they have fielded offenses worse than the league average the past three seasons, and they scored the fewest runs
Astros brass sees potential in consistently 'underranked' farm system
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- The last time the Astros landed in the top 10 of MLB Pipeline’s farm system rankings was before the 2019 season. Since those rankings expanded to all 30 teams ahead of the 2020 season -- 11 lists in total -- they’ve never ranked higher than
Complete results and highlights from Spring Breakout
The second edition of MLB Spring Breakout is complete, and there was no shortage of highlights from the future stars of Major League Baseball over the four-day showcase. Here's a complete breakdown of the 16-game exhibition:
Southpaw Spring Breakout: White Sox future on display with Schultz, Smith
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- If all goes as planned for the White Sox, left-handers Hagen Smith and Noah Schultz won’t spend much time following each other to the mound in a single game. Schultz, the No. 1 White Sox prospect and No. 16 overall, per MLB Pipeline, and Smith, who is
In first pro game, Rainer offers pop, promise to Tigers fans
NORTH PORT, Fla. -- Bryce Rainer’s pro career consisted of workouts and batting practice until Sunday.
'Me and Brady on the dirt again': House, King reunite at Spring Breakout
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- The 2025 Spring Breakout was a flashback for Brady House and Seaver King. Over 10 years ago, the infielders were travel ball teammates in Georgia who shared the dream of making it to the Major Leagues. Now, they are top prospects in the same organization,
Lambert -- 'an adrenaline guy' -- hoping to be next Mets bullpen gem
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Ryan Lambert loves throwing hard. He relishes the idea of getting to two strikes and blowing hitters away. “Get me in a game,” Lambert said, “cool things will happen.”
Stewart embraces Spring Breakout: 'What's not to love?'
PHOENIX -- Sal Stewart was one fired-up Reds prospect. On Sunday in the first inning during the organization's 9-7 Spring Breakout win over Brewers prospects, Stewart lifted a 2-2 pitch that sailed over the center fielder's head to the wall. Already not known as a speedster, he stumbled running between
Prospect Peña quietly drawing raves in Brewers' farm system
PHOENIX – Jesús Made was at the top of the Brewers’ lineup for Sunday’s 9-7 loss to the Reds in the finale of MLB’s four-day Spring Breakout, a fitting perch when you consider that the 17-year-old infielder is under a bright spotlight as MLB Pipeline’s No. 55 prospect. Made could
Brecht -- in 1st outing since '24 Draft -- wows at Spring Breakout
GLENDALE, Ariz. -- Sunday's Spring Breakout showcase was the perfect unveiling for Rockies No. 5 prospect Brody Brecht. A right-handed pitcher from the University of Iowa whom the Rockies selected 38th overall last summer, Brecht had a nice collegiate resume, an interesting backstory as a former wide receiver for the
Braves prospects show promise in Spring Breakout
NORTH PORT, Fla. -- As Terry Pendleton prepared to serve as the manager of the Braves prospect team that played the Tigers prospect team in a Spring Breakout game on Sunday afternoon, he said fans should be patient with John Gil and Luis Guanipa, a pair of teenagers who have
Yanks' Lagrange flashes triple-digit heat in Spring Breakout
SARASOTA, Fla. -- There was an audible “Ooh” from the crowd at Ed Smith Stadium, and Carlos Lagrange quickly glanced beyond the right-field wall, checking the velocity of the pitch he’d just thrown in Saturday’s 5-4 Spring Breakout loss to the Orioles. It had registered in the triple digits, and
Bradfield dedicates Spring Breakout performance to late friend
SARASOTA, Fla. -- It was about more than playing in the national spotlight. More than the dinner bet placed with an old college teammate earlier in the month. More than a game. As Enrique Bradfield Jr. slid home to score a run during the first inning of Saturday night’s Spring