Gerson Garabito navigated a long and winding path to the big leagues. Signed as an international free agent by the Kansas City Royals in 2012, the right-hander spent nine minor-league seasons with three different organizations before making his big-league debut with the Texas Rangers at age 28.

“It was a long time, just trying to keep everything together,” Garabito, in big-league camp with the Brewers on a minor-league deal, recalled from his locker on Tuesday. “The first couple years, it was kind of tough for me because I had no control of my fastball.”

After two years of pitching exclusively in winter ball, Garabito showed enough with Texas’s Triple-A affiliate in 2024 to finally get the call to the majors. He would spend parts of the next two seasons bouncing between the two levels, with uninspiring results. With the Rangers, he pitched to a 5.77 ERA, 4.97 FIP, and 113 DRA-. After he struggled to an 8.53 ERA and 7.38 FIP in 10 Triple-A starts last year, they released him in June to sign with the Samsung Lions of the Korean Baseball Organization.

Garabito’s performance took off after the change of scenery. In 15 starts in the KBO, he posted a 2.64 ERA (a 59 ERA-, 41% better than the league average) and 3.94 FIP (88 FIP-) with a 25.7% strikeout rate.

“This is baseball,” he said. “Baseball, one day you’re the best pitcher, the best player, and some days you are the worst. But this is something we just learn from that.”

On the strength of that success, Garabito received an offer from another Korean team to remain overseas in 2026, but after his agent informed him of Milwaukee’s interest and its success in developing pitchers, Garabito accepted their offer to return to the United States.

“I said, ‘Okay, let’s go there, then, because I like that,'” he said.

With multiple fastball variations in his five-pitch arsenal, including a heavy sinker, it’s easy to see why the Brewers called. It stands to reason they’ll have him lean into that sinker, but Garabito said he has not yet had conversations about pitch usage or mechanical changes with his new pitching coaches, who are just getting to know him in his first bullpens of the spring.

“The first couple days, they’re just going to see you, how you look and what you need,” he said. “After maybe a week, maybe two weeks, they’re going to say, ‘We need to work on this.’ But right now, everything is going good.”

Garabito is not on the 40-man roster and is unlikely to break camp with the team. Still, he’ll get some feedback on the best way to maximize his abilities and the opportunity this spring to prove his stuff can play against big-league hitters. These next few weeks could lay the groundwork for a big-league role later in the year.

“I’m glad to be here right now,” he said.