With 'unique schedule' ahead, Padres shuffle pitching staff

April 26th, 2025

SAN DIEGO -- With a spate of upcoming off-days, the Padres reshuffled their pitching staff ahead of their 1-0 loss on Friday night in the series opener against the Rays at Petco Park.

, the team’s No. 5 starter, was optioned to Triple-A El Paso. , the organization’s No. 21 overall prospect, received his first callup to the big leagues. He’s expected to pitch out of the bullpen.

Here’s what it means:

What’s next for the rotation?
The Padres had an off-day Thursday and off-days next week on Monday and Thursday (surrounding their two-game series against the Giants). Additionally, they’ll have an off-day on May 8 during their upcoming three-city road trip.

From now until May 13, San Diego will need a No. 5 starter only once -- and not until May 6 against the Yankees in New York.

“Yeah, we wanted to make sure we were taking advantage of our off-days to rest our starters,” said Padres manager Mike Shildt. “But they’re [already] getting rest. Nobody’s going to get compromised.”

Indeed, because of the high volume of off-days, the Padres were looking at the possibility of some starters receiving six or seven days between starts. At this stage of the season, they decided that large of a gap was counterproductive.

As such, they’ve set up what amounts to a four-man rotation over the next 3 1/2 weeks (albeit with a vacancy on or around May 6).

One added benefit: With the Giants coming to town for a highly anticipated two-game series between two of baseball’s hottest teams, the Padres can line up their two best starters this season -- Nick Pivetta on Tuesday and Michael King on Wednesday.

What to expect from Bergert?
The team’s sixth-round pick in the 2021 Draft, Bergert impressed during big league camp this spring. In five starts with Triple-A El Paso, he posted a 5.16 ERA, albeit in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League.

“It was kind of surreal,” Bergert said of his big league callup. “Very excited and happy to be here. … I’m coming out of the ‘pen, not quite sure what my role is. But I’m happy to help and ready to go.”

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Shildt later revealed that Bergert would mostly be relied upon for long relief -- which gives the Padres some flexibility in their bullpen. Logan Gillaspie had previously been the only other reliever capable of covering length. As a result, Shildt admitted he wasn’t able to use Gillaspie as often as he otherwise might have.

With Bergert on board, the Padres have a deeper group of options in a ‘pen which has posted a 1.76 ERA, the lowest in the Majors this year entering play on Friday.

What’s next for Hart?
Shildt wanted to make it abundantly clear that Hart’s demotion wasn’t performance-related.

“You’re not sitting down having this conversation like, ‘Listen, it’s not going well,’” Shildt said. “It was more of a conversation: ‘We’re excited about where you’re going. We see improvement. … The reality is we have a unique schedule where it just makes sense to do what we’re doing.’”

The start to Hart’s Padres tenure has been up and down. He’s posted a 6.00 ERA across five starts, though most of that damage came during one rough outing at Wrigley Field.

Hart pitched Wednesday’s series finale in Detroit, allowing two runs over 4 1/3 innings. He’ll continue making regular starts with El Paso. But he’s not eligible to be recalled by the big league club until May 9, ruling him out for that lone early-May vacancy.

What about Darvish?
Left unsaid in the Padres’ rotation chatter is that the club is hopeful to have a key piece rejoin the staff at some point in May.

Yu Darvish, who has been out since mid-March because of right elbow inflammation, threw another bullpen session on Friday, mixing in a heavier dose of breaking pitches. His ramp-up has been a slow, steady progression, as he hadn’t fully built up in Spring Training when he was sidelined.

As a result, Darvish is potentially several weeks off, but he could progress to facing hitters at some point in the near future.

Darvish won’t be an option for the early-May vacancies. But there’s a cost to the current volume of off-days. The Padres’ schedule picks up in intensity in late May and early June. Considering the challenges that schedule will present, Darvish’s return around that time would be a major boost.