
A Yankees first-round draft pick has landed on the injured list with a still-unclear issue described only as arm fatigue.
New York placed right-hander Ben Hess on the seven-day IL on April 28, a week and a half after he disappeared from the Somerset Patriots rotation without explanation. The lack of clarity and the absence of any timetable raise fresh questions about the severity of the issue and what it means for his development.
Ben Hess Arm Issue Still Vague
The organization confirmed the arm fatigue diagnosis to The Trentonian‘s Greg Johnson, with the club indicating it is managing Hess’s workload. But no return target date has been set. The vague diagnosis with no projected timetable is precisely what makes the situation difficult to assess.
Hess, 23, ranks fifth in the New York Yankees system according to MLB.com‘s pipeline rankings, with a major league ETA of 2027. The 6-foot-5, 255-pound right-hander out of the University of Alabama was selected 26th overall in the 2024 MLB Draft and entered this season as one of the more eagerly anticipated arms in the Yankees organization.
His final outing before the IL placement didn’t look good. In just 2 2/3 innings, Hess walked five batters, hit two more and threw a wild pitch, per CBS Sports. His collapse in command raised eyebrows, given that Hess walked only 46 batters across 103 1/3 innings between High-A Hudson Valley and Double-A Somerset in 2025, posting a 3.22 ERA, 2.50 FIP and 1.07 WHIP.
Yankees Pitching Depth Faces Questions
Arm fatigue could mean almost anything. The term could signal nothing but an overworked arm that needs rest. More ominously, the term has sometimes served as a euphemism for structural damage, torn UCLs and similar injuries revealed by a more complete diagnosis that follows.
What makes the shutdown harder to figure out is how strong Hess looked before it. Yankees pitching coach Matt Blake drew a direct comparison to Cam Schlittler at the same developmental stage, and Hess backed that billing in spring training, posting a 1.80 ERA with six strikeouts against two walks in five innings. His fastball sat 93 to 94 mph with sharp breaking balls that generated consistent swing-and-miss, according to Yanks Go Yard‘s Stephen Parello.
Hess made two regular-season starts at Somerset before the shutdown — 7 2/3 innings, eight walks. The control numbers alone troubled the Yankees. Paired with organizational silence on a return date, they warrant genuine concern.
Reaching Double-A in a first full professional season is a clear developmental milestone, and the Yankees system is deep enough to absorb one absence. But Hess was one of the arms New York was counting on to advance toward Triple-A this year, with a September cameo not out of the question had things gone well. A prolonged IL stay, or a more serious injury lurking behind this diagnosis, would set that trajectory back in a meaningful way.



Yankees First-Round Draft Pick Lands on IL With Mystery Injury