

Left-handed starting pitcher Kyle Harrison will get the ball as the Milwaukee Brewers square off against the Athletics in a Cactus League matchup on Friday.
Harrison is 0-0 with a 3.00 ERA in Spring Training games. Gage Jump gets the start for the Athletics at American Family Fields of Phoenix.
In Harrison's last three outings for Milwaukee, he has allowed two hits and walked two while striking out eight. That's a sweet statistics line for Harrison. Entering Friday's game, the Brewers appear to have a full bullpen to pick from against the Athletics.
After the Athletics, the Brewers will have games against the Colorado Rockies and San Francisco Giants over the weekend.
Other teams that the Brewers will play in upcoming Spring Training games include the Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Angels, and Seattle Mariners. The Angels and Mariners games will have Milwaukee split squads taking the field.
While Harrison and other Brewers pitchers tune things up for the 2026 MLB season, Quinn Priester will be out of action.
Brewers manager Pat Murphy has announced that Priester will start this season on the Injured List. Prester is dealing with a wrist injury right now. Murphy indicated that Priester's injury is “in that T.O.S. [thoracic outlet syndrome] family.”
This doesn't sound too good for Priester.
And the Brewers were hoping to have a full complement of pitchers going into the season.
Now, with Priester out for some time, Milwaukee will have to adjust.
Murphy will do his best to make sure the rest of the pitching staff is healthy and ready to rock and roll when Opening Day rolls around.
Who, though, will get the ball on Opening Day? There are indications that Jacob Misiorowski might be that guy as Milwaukee starts the season with a series against the Chicago White Sox.
Murphy also has pointed out that Chad Patrick probably will be in the starting rotation, too, according to MLB.com's Brewers beat reporter Adam McCalvy.
Brewers fans will have to keep a close eye on how the starting rotation looks like as of Opening Day.
Priester's injury isn't good news. It might even lead him to have to get surgery, too, if his rehabilitation work goes off the rails.
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