It is easy to forget with all that is going on, but the Nats have a potentially impactful arm who is rehabbing right now. The Nats signed Max Kranick in May, and have helped him out in the final steps of his recovery from flexor tendon surgery. Now, the righty is rehabbing in Harrisburg and showing strong stuff.
After his first rehab outing, the media actually got to talk with Kranick. It was very clear that he was excited to be back on a competitive mound. He told us that his live BP sessions in West
Palm Beach were beginning to get “stale”. With the competitive juices flowing, he said his stuff looked better than he thought it would. In that outing, Kranick got up to 97, and was sitting about 95.
Kranick said that the velocity and shapes were not at that level when he was throwing his live BP’s. However, with the adrenaline flowing, he thought his stuff was nearly identical to where it was last season.
Back in 2025, Kranick was impressive for the Mets, combining stuff and command. His fastball averaged 95.6 MPH. He combined that with a 90 MPH slider, a 79 MPH downer curve and an 82 MPH sweeper he would mix in occasionally. In 37 innings, Kranick had a 3.65 ERA for the Mets in a multi-inning relief role. If the Nats can get that version of Kranick, it would be a big boost for them.
With the quality of his stuff, I think there could be some room for improvement from a strikeout standpoint. Last year, he only struck out 16.7% of hitters, which is low for a guy with quality stuff. He was clearly focusing on pounding the zone in 2025, with a 4.7% walk rate.
During his rehab assignment, Kranick has shown that he has not lost his strike-throwing ways. Kranick has not walked anybody in 5.2 innings across 4 outings. Having that kind of command after missing a year due to elbow surgery is very impressive. It shows a level of sharpness that proves that Kranick can be big league ready soon.
Kranick has also shown some swing and miss, with 6 strikeouts in those outings. However, most of the K’s came against A ball hitters. Once he got up to AA, Kranick has only K’d one hitter in 3 innings. Overall, the effectiveness has been there, with the righty posting a 3.18 ERA across his four outings.
After his first rehab appearance with the Fred Nats, Kranick had an interview, where he went into how he felt and what was next. He mapped out a process that has since been followed. The next step for him should be to start throwing on back to back days.
Once he does that, and makes some outings in AAA, he should be ready to roll in the big leagues. Kranick has not been talked about much, but he could be a really nice addition to this bullpen. He has the ability to be a multi-inning guy or a higher leverage arm, which is nice.
With the Nats having a shot to make a playoff push, they need all hands on deck. The bullpen has been an obvious weakness for this team. Max Kranick is obviously not going to fix this all by himself, but he can be part of the solution. Hopefully the Nats are in position to make some additions to this bullpen at the trade deadline as well.
This is going to be the most exciting second half of Nats baseball we have had in a long time. However, to truly make a push, this bullpen has to be better. Max Kranick can be a part of that fix.










