MESA, Ariz. – A crowd formed around Field 5 at the Cubs’ Sloan Park spring training facilities, where Kohl Franklin was facing batters for the first time this year, a big step in his recovery from an oblique injury.
His was the last simulated game of the day, so his teammates filled the bleachers. Behind the backstop, coaches gathered pitch data. Cubs vice president of pitching Craig Breslow and major-league pitching coach Tommy Hottovy looked on.
Franklin’s final pitch cracked in the catcher’s mitt, and the sea of blue dispersed, buzzing.
“Well, Kohl looks pretty good,” one prospect said to another. “Kohl looks pretty good.”
Franklin hasn’t thrown in a game in two years. The COVID-19 pandemic wiped out the 2020 minor-league season, and then a left oblique injury sidelined Franklin in 2021. But he’s on track to return this season. On Saturday, the last day of prospect minicamp before minor league camp officially opened, he faced three batters in a one-inning sim game. His fastball touched 99 mph twice.
“It’s unbelievable,” he said after walking off the field, grinning. “I can’t wait to tell my parents.”
Cubs coordinator of pitching development Casey Jacobson said he couldn’t find words to describe how impressive Franklin’s performance had been.
“He’s lost two years, and you look back, and the frustration – I can’t ever imagine it, never never going through that myself,” Jacobson said the next day. “But he’s responded incredibly well. He’s been very mature. He’s gone about the process and done the tedious day-to-day stuff at a really high level that got him to the position where he was yesterday.”
Franklin was playing long toss a few months before 2021 spring training when he felt a pain like he’d been hit in the back with a golf club. The stiffness wouldn’t subside, and his left side began to swell.
An MRI later revealed a torn oblique. The injury also took off a piece of a rib, Franklin said.
“I think I cried to my mom, honestly,” he said. “I’d worked so hard to get back to where I was, and then feeling like it’s reset. It was super tough.”
Months passed before Franklin could start easing back into activity. He received two platelet-rich plasma injections as part of his treatment. Over the summer, he dealt with another flair up.
“It was a grueling process,” he said.
Franklin didn’t go through it alone. Veteran right-hander Jonathan Holder was on the injured list all last season with what the Cubs described as a right shoulder strain.
When Kohl started rehab exercises, Holder encouraged Kohl to take his time. Rushing through steps wouldn’t help speed up recovery for that kind of injury. After rehab sessions together, Holder would take Franklin to dinner to catch up.
“It was awesome having somebody with experience like that to be able to talk to,” Franklin said.
Franklin estimates he threw six or seven bullpens in August and September and then shut down for a regular offseason so he would be fresh entering this spring.
He was relieved when he reported to Mesa and his physical exam pointed to a successful recovery. As Franklin built back up for the spring, Jacobson noticed a difference in how the pitcher carried himself.
“He knew all the work has really paid off,” Jacobson said.
Franklin had trouble sleeping Friday night, with a 15-pitch live session scheduled the next day. Afterward, Franklin, as Jacobson put it, “floated” off the mound.
“I’m so ecstatic,” Franklin said. “I’m so happy to be here right now.”
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