Former first-round pick Triston McKenzie set for Indians debut
By Zack Meisel 2h ago 6
CLEVELAND — At some point Saturday afternoon, before Triston McKenzie scans the empty seats and digs his cleats into the dirt in the center of the mound at Progressive Field, he’ll receive a message from the Indians’ assistant pitching coach.
Ruben Niebla has followed the same ritual for a long list of starters who have debuted for the Indians during his two decades of involvement with the organization’s pitching factory. Niebla drove to Cleveland to watch Adam Plutko and Aaron Civale make their first starts. When Zach Plesac debuted at Fenway Park last season, Niebla texted him that he didn’t need to succumb to his jitters because Niebla felt nervous enough for both of them.
Niebla can recall attending Josh Tomlin’s first start in 2010, a seven-inning gem against the Yankees during Alex Rodriguez’s pursuit of his 600th home run.
“It’s that same, joyous feeling of watching a guy that’s gone through some trials, tribulations,” said Niebla, one of the few members of the Indians’ traveling party who has witnessed a McKenzie outing. “Especially with Triston’s path — it’s going to be very rewarding.”
McKenzie, 23, last appeared in an official game on Aug. 30, 2018, back when a gallon of milk cost $2.92 and a U.S. postage stamp cost 50 cents. For the first time in 723 days, the statistics he registers on Saturday will be glued to his Baseball Reference page.
Injuries wiped out McKenzie’s 2019 season and stranded him in Goodyear, Ariz., where he played Call of Duty, Overwatch, Apex and Madden to break up the daily monotony at the team’s complex. For more than a year, he made near-daily trips to the weight room and the trainer’s room in Goodyear before grabbing a Chipotle burrito and a video-game controller.
An upper back strain marred the first few months of McKenzie’s 2019 campaign. Then, a pectoral strain ended his year before it ever began. It was a disheartening development, but McKenzie said he couldn’t lose sight of “the light at the end of the tunnel.”
On Saturday, he’ll finally step into that spotlight. It might not be a permanent shift; the Indians have a handful of moving parts they’ll need to sort out over the next few weeks, as Mike Clevinger and Zach Plesac toil away in Eastlake.
The Indians have been encouraged with McKenzie’s progress at the club’s alternate site. They could have tabbed Logan Allen or Scott Moss for the start against the Tigers. Instead, they’re handing the ball to the organization’s former No. 1 prospect, a string bean-shaped right-hander who wields a mid-90s fastball and a sharp curveball.
Tigers manager Ron Gardenhire said he doesn’t know much about McKenzie, other than what a clubhouse attendant told him: that he “has a big arm, throws (with) a long arm, really high hand and lets her fly.”
“I know he’s about 6-foot-5 and he’s really skinny,” Gardenhire said.
Carl Willis has never seen McKenzie pitch in an actual game, only in bullpen sessions and live batting practice. McKenzie was scheduled to appear in the Cactus League in March before the pandemic spoiled those plans. He has stretched out to about five innings and 85 pitches in Lake County.
“In his outings at Lake County,” Willis said, “he doesn’t just go out and try to get hitters out. He is using the time to improve himself. He’s had situations there where he gets into counts and maybe he could blow a guy away with his fastball or bounce a curveball, but yet he’s throwing changeups, he’s throwing sliders. And it’s because he understands that when he takes this next step, he’s going to have to be able to do those things. It’s one of the things that makes our staff as successful as they are: that we can be somewhat unpredictable and throw different pitches in counts that most guys are throwing a fastball. A lot of maturity on Triston’s part.”
That’s a pillar of the Indians’ pitching development pipeline. When Shane Bieber was thriving at Double-A Akron a few years ago, he was initially perplexed as to why the team wanted him to test out a changeup. They insisted it would benefit him once he reached the majors, providing him with another out pitch that would dive low and away from left-handed hitters. Bieber spent several years refining it until he felt comfortable throwing the pitch to big leaguers.
McKenzie was considered a top-50 prospect by Baseball America, MLB Pipeline and Baseball Prospectus entering both the 2018 and ’19 seasons. He owns a 2.68 ERA in 60 minor-league outings, with nearly 11 strikeouts per nine innings.
Niebla lauded McKenzie’s fastball, which sits in the 92-96 mph range and rises 20-22 inches. He also praised McKenzie’s curveball, which dips 15-17 inches. McKenzie tunnels the two pitches, so if he exhibits pinpoint command — releasing the two pitches from the same spot and starting toward the same direction — a batter will have to decide to swing before knowing whether the pitch will rise two feet or tumble toward the dirt.
McKenzie also throws a changeup and, within the last year, has implemented a slider. The Indians’ pitching team has supplied him with feedback about optimal velocity, shape, depth and other analytical features.
“We’re obviously very confident in (his) strengths,” Willis said. “We don’t want to overload Triston or any young starter with information and cloud their thought process and have them try to do things that they’re probably going to be able to do in the future, but they’re not quite there yet. Because you do finish development at the major-league level.”
And for a guy who hasn’t appeared in a game in two years, that’s especially true. So how will he overcome that?
“I think that’s a good question,” Niebla said. “I think that’s a question that we all kind of had. I think that’s a question that might be going through his head, as well.”
There’s plenty of intrigue, plenty of mystery. And there’s plenty of uncertainty about how McKenzie fits into the equation beyond Saturday.
But for at least one evening, the Indians will watch their 2015 first-round pick make the leap to the majors.
(Photo: LG Patterson / MLB Photos via Getty Images)
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