Tylor Megill has had ups and downs as he enters his fifth big league season with the Mets. But the talent of his right arm has never been in doubt.
“It starts with having really good stuff, he's got good stuff,” manager Carlos Mendoza said before Megill started Friday’s game in Houston.
“If he’s aggressive and he’s trusting his pitches in the zone? He’s a guy, he’s a dude,” the skipper added. “He’s got that potential… he’s been through a lot in this league, and he’s ready to take that next step.”
Against the Astros, Megill retired the first nine batters he faced en route to a fine five-inning outing that saw him allow one run on three hits and a walk with six strikeouts in the Mets’ 3-1 win.
“I thought he was really good,” Mendoza said. “I thought he threw strikes. Early on, he was attacking; they hit some balls hard, but that’s what we are asking him to do: to throw strikes, stay on the attack.”
And that was the prescription for the 29-year-old: Simplifying his game and being efficient with his pitches.
“When we can keep it simple, just use two-three pitches against righties, two- three pitches against lefties. Get strike one, continue to stay in the attack, trust the defense, trust your pitches in the strike zone,” the manager said pregame. “I think that’s gonna be the key for him.”
Megill, who threw a strike on the first pitch to 11 of 19 batters he faced, had 49 strikes on 77 pitches. He went heavy on the fastball, sinker, and slider – accounting for 72 of his offerings – against a right-handed heavy Astros lineup.
“We executed really well,” he said, after getting 10 whiffs on 35 swings with 14 called strikes for a 31 called-strike whiff percentage. The slider was working very well for him, contributing five whiffs on eight swings.
“Putting pressure on hitters, getting ahead early, and getting to two strikes as fast as possible,” Megill said. “That allows me to go after them with the secondary stuff and get some strikeouts and then some weak contact.”
The sinker, a pitch the manager said before the game his starter would have to show good “awareness” in deploying against the right-handed Astros – came up big getting an inning-ending double play in the fifth.
“Huge,” Megill said. “That’s kinda what the pitch is for: get the ball in play and let the defense work. And it helps me out, especially there. Obviously, used to be predominantly four-seam, get fly outs or whatnot, but sinker really allows ball on the infield hit to a position player.”