In camp with the Brewers after they acquired him as part of a six-player trade with the Boston Red Sox, Shane Drohan brings a familiar objective to his new surroundings.

“I want to pitch in the big leagues,” he said. “It’s always been the goal.”

That goal, Drohan admitted, was pushed to the back burner for a couple of seasons by injuries, including shoulder issues that sidelined him for most of 2024. But after a breakout 2025 that saw him pitch to a 2.27 ERA and 65 DRA- with a 35.3% strikeout rate in Triple-A, the 27-year-old is on the cusp of his major-league debut.

After the injury, Drohan slowed things down, both off the field and on the mound. When he returned a year after shoulder surgery, he was a vastly improved pitcher. From a health standpoint, Drohan was stronger from rehabbing and working in the weight room, which helped the ball come out of his hand crisper and more accurately than before. He added a tick of velocity to every pitch in his arsenal, and the induced vertical break of his fastball increased from 14 to 16 inches, meaning it had more carry at the top of the strike zone. His cutter gained even more.

“I had the muscles contracting again in the rotator cuff,” he said. “That wasn’t happening before. So I feel like that was kind of like the uptick in velo and uptick in carry on the fastball, just quality of stuff. Everything went up, just because the shoulder was properly functioning. And on the strength and conditioning side, it’s kind of been a year-to-year process of just putting on size to put more force on the ball.”

The time away also gave Drohan a chance to refine his slider. After he made its shape more compact and consistent, it emerged as his best offering last year. Opponents chased 49.5% of sliders outside the zone and whiffed on 42.2% of swings.

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“When I came back from the injury, it was just better and tighter because I had more reps with it, just working on it when I was rehabbing,” he said.

Drohan also slowed his delivery to better leverage his added strength down the mound. Earlier in his career, he focused on delivering the ball as quickly as possible. It’s possible for a pitcher to move too quickly, though, which was what happened to Drohan.

“I felt like in years past, I was pretty wound up in my delivery and just not as free as I’d like to be,” he said.

To establish a more natural tempo, he switched to a fuller wind-up. Drohan’s delivery took slightly longer, but his improved rhythm and added strength allowed him to move more explosively toward the plate as he started moving forward.

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“It’s just that the timing of it seems a lot better,” he said. “I think it was also just the strength and conditioning. I’m just a lot stronger. I don’t have to worry about moving as ridiculously fast as I used to down the mound. I just have more weight now. I can put more force into the ground.”

For all the positives last season brought, Drohan still missed three months with a forearm strain, which is often a precursor to more serious elbow injuries. He downplayed the severity of the injury and confirmed he is fully healthy.

“I think the little forearm strain that popped up last year was almost like a reaction thing from the shoulder being strong again,” he said. “The rest of my arm just wasn’t used to the force that the arm was producing, because in years past, it just wasn’t producing that force. So I think the forearm kind of just freaked out a little bit.”

Drohan said he spent most of those three months building back up as a starter, after a three-week shutdown. When he returned, he maintained his velocity gains through the rest of the year.

“When I came back, I threw well,” he said. “The stuff felt really good, so it was a good sign.”

A pair of trying seasons may have stalled Drohan’s journey to the big leagues, but they made him a more polished product than he was during his first, unsuccessful stint in the upper minors. Now he’s joining a Brewers pitching staff that can further develop him.

“It’s pretty hard to ignore the success they’ve had here on the mound,” he said. “Starters, relievers, everybody. I wasn’t too dialed in on their exact mindset and teaching certain things, but it was very easy to just watch the Brewers play. They get guys to pitch really well.”

It’s taken longer than it has for many prospects, but Drohan is finally positioned to reach his goal.

“I feel like I learned a lot in those two years. I feel ready to pitch in the big leagues.”