West Point grad Rowley takes long route to major leagues
TORONTO — Trying to maintain his throwing arm in the midst of a 30-month stint with the U.S. Army often proved challenging for Toronto Blue Jays right-hander Chris Rowley. Fortunately, his company medic was willing to co-operate.
The first West Point graduate to reach the major leagues, Rowley pitched one-run ball over 5 1/3 innings to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates in his debut Saturday, leaving the field to a standing ovation.
“It still feels pretty surreal,” Rowley said Sunday. “I’m slowly processing it. I’m still in that initial surge. My phone is getting blown up, I have all these interviews. Twenty-four hours ago, relatively nobody knew my name. Now all of a sudden this has blown up. I’m trying to handle the surreal aspect of it.”
Working off a major league mound wasn’t an option for Rowley in the summer of 2015, when he was stationed in Bulgaria and Romania as part of Operation Atlantic Resolve, aimed at reassuring NATO’s European allies in light of Russia’s invasion in Ukraine. A first lieutenant, his job as a fire support officer in the field artillery branch was the priority, but Rowley and his medic still found time for the occasional game of catch.


