Just as the baseball world was beginning to get back to normal in February, Tylor Megill had a wrench thrown into his plans.
The Mets pitching prospect had gotten pretty used to waiting to play. He only pitched in a short-season league after getting drafted in 2018, suffered a shoulder injury that kept him from starting games until July 2019, and was one of the many victims of the canceled 2020 minor league season.
Megill was ready to let it fly in 2021. To convey their confidence in his future, the Mets invited him to major league camp, offering unparalleled access to veteran pitchers and the coaching staff. Shortly after he arrived though, Megill tested positive for COVID-19 and was ultimately limited to one brief outing.
Megill and his lack of experience remained somewhat of a mystery heading into the minor league season. One-and-a-half months in, he has already answered many of the questions.
“Staying in routine with what I’m doing, and every time I’m out there on the mound just attacking hitters and having a ton of confidence in all my stuff,” Megill said on this week’s Mets Prospective presented by Verizon. “Once the ball leaves my hand, that’s about everything I can do.”
The 6-foot-7 right-hander has been one of the organization’s top performers thus far, needing just five starts at Double-A Binghamton to force a promotion to Triple-A Syracuse. Through seven total starts, Megill has a 3.06 ERA with an organization-best 53 strikeouts in 35.1 innings.