Red Sox pitching prospect Jojo Ingrassia has been placed on Low-A Salem’s 7-day injured list due to left elbow inflammation, according to the affiliate’s MiLB.com transactions log.
Ingrassia was removed in the fourth inning of his last start against the Down East Wood Ducks on the road at Grainger Stadium this past Sunday. The 21-year-old left-hander was charged with one unearned run on three hits, zero walks, and seven strikeouts across 3 2/3 innings of work.
In 18 appearances (nine starts) for Salem to begin his first full professional season, Ingrassia has posted a 2.03 ERA and 1.94 FIP with a staff-leading 86 strikeouts to 17 walks over 53 1/3 innings. Opponents have batted just .187 against him.
Ingrassia opened the 2024 campaign in Salem’s bullpen and forged a 2.00 ERA (1.27 FIP) with 35 strikeouts to five walks over nine relief appearances (18 innings). Since moving to the Red Sox’ rotation in mid-May, the lefty has pitched to a 2.24 ERA (2.28 FIP) with 51 strikeouts to 12 walks across 35 1/3 innings as a starter.
Among the 56 Carolina League pitchers who entered Friday having accrued at least 50 innings to this point in the year, Ingrassia led the group in strikeouts per nine innings (14.51), strikeout rate (40.4 percent), swinging-strike rate (21.8 percent), FIP, and xFIP (1.91). He also ranked third in ERA, fifth in batting average against, seventh in WHIP (0.99), eighth in groundball rate (50 percent), 17th in walks per nine innings (2.87), and 20th in walk rate (8 percent), per FanGraphs.
Ingrassia, who turns 22 next week, was selected by the Red Sox in the 14th round of last summer’s draft out of Cal State Fullerton. The California native spent the first two seasons of his collegiate career at San Diego State before transferring and earning Second Team All-Big West honors with the Titans as a junior. He signed for $150,000 shortly after being drafted but did not make his professional debut until April.
Standing at 6-foot-1 and 170 pounds, Ingrassia was recently tabbed by FanGraphs’ Eric Longenhagen as the No. 37 prospect in Boston’s farm system, which ranks 15th among pitchers in the organization. Longenhagen described Ingrassia as a “crafty, diminutive” southpaw who “has a whippy arm stroke that helps him sell his fading mid-80s changeup.”
The Red Sox, Longenhagen notes, have altered Ingrassia’s delivery so that it is now more cross-bodied, which “has aided the effectiveness of [his] sweeping low-80s breaking ball, and he’s also had a [velocity] uptick into the low-90s. Because of the upshot angle of his fastball from his low-ish, cross-bodied slot, his heater plays up even though he doesn’t throw all that hard.”
Ingrassia, Longenhagen adds, “is still getting feel for what it’s like to attack hitters with his fastball at the letters (which he really didn’t do in college). Because of his lack of size, it’s more likely that he ends up being a long reliever in the Ryan Yarbrough mold, but Ingrassia has a starter’s repertoire and command and probably needs to be promoted to be tested.”
Prior to landing on Salem’s injured list, Ingrassia could have been viewed as a possible candidate to receive a promotion to High-A Greenville before the end of the season. Now, he will presumably be shut down from throwing in an effort to reduce the inflammation in his elbow before any next steps are taken.
(Picture of Jojo Ingrassia: Gary Streiffer/Flickr)