Jacob Misiorowski is the talk of the All-Star Game. Why Dodgers are partially to thank.
Published in Baseball
ATLANTA — Seven days ago, Jacob Misiorowski was really only known by the most die-hard of baseball fans.
And even then, he was far from any sort of household commodity.
"I don't even know who I'm pitching against," future Hall of Fame Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw said last week, a day before squaring off against the Milwaukee Brewers' rookie phenom who had made only four career starts prior.
"Is that the guy who twisted his ankle on the mound, the 'Twisted-His-Ankle' guy?'" Kershaw added, able only to recall a widely shared clip of Misiorowski having to exit his MLB debut a month earlier amid five hitless innings after turning his ankle on the downslope of the hill.
"I know he throws hard. I saw a couple highlights," Kershaw continued.
But, as far as the 23-year-old's reputation was concerned, that was it — both to Kershaw, and most casual observers of the sport.
Then, however, came the game that changed everything — for Misiorowski, Major League Baseball and the conversation around this year's All-Star festivities in Atlanta.
Last Tuesday, Misiorowski had his official coming-out party with a dominant six-inning, one-run, 12-strikeout gem against the mighty Dodgers — easily the most electrifying outing of the young flamethrower's nascent career.
Days later, in a move that stunned the sport, Misiorowski was unexpectedly added to the National League All-Star team — an immediately controversial move given his one total month of big-league service time.
On Monday, at an All-Star media day event near Truist Park in Atlanta, Misiorowski's presence was still dominating story lines at the Midsummer Classic, especially after several members of the Philadelphia Phillies (who felt two of their pitchers, Cristopher Sánchez and Ranger Suarez, were more deserving of All-Star nods even though they wouldn't have pitched in the game) derided Misiorowski's selection over the weekend as a "joke" and public relations stunt by the league.
It was the first question Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who will helm the National League team after winning last year's World Series, fielded at a Monday afternoon news conference at the Coca-Cola Roxy Theater.
And when Misiorowski took his seat at media day, he was immediately peppered with questions about the backlash to his inclusion, and how he felt about people who argued he wasn't deserving of being in the game — especially his NL teammates from the Phillies.
"I mean, they're not happy," Misiorowski said with an awkward smile. "But they're not upset with me. It's nothing I did. So they were all nice to me. The clubhouse has been good."
For all the visceral takes and viral reactions the Misiorowski story has generated in recent days, chances are it will blow over by the time Tuesday's game rolls around.
Roberts confirmed Misiorowski will pitch in the contest, probably somewhere in the middle innings.
And while he said Misiorowski's selection, coupled with the withdrawals from numerous other NL All-Star pitchers, required a "deeper conversation" about how the game could be improved, he added that he was all for having Misiorowski take part in this year's event.
"For this young kid to be named an All-Star, I couldn't be more excited for him," Roberts said. "It's gonna be electric. The fans, the media, you're gonna love it. So for me, it's an easy answer, because if it brings excitement, attention to our game, then I'm all about it."
If it wasn't for Roberts' team, the Misiorowski drama might have never happened.
Entering his start against the Dodgers last week, Misiorowski had a 3.20 ERA, was coming off a five-run, 3 2/3 inning clunker against the New York Mets, and (despite his 100-plus mph fastball and wicked repertoire of breaking pitches) was nowhere near the All-Star picture.
Even internally, he acknowledged, he was still getting comfortable in the majors.
But in that game against the Dodgers, Misiorowski bounced back from a leadoff home run from Shohei Ohtani by giving up just three other hits. He mowed through the Dodgers' league-leading offense with triple-digit fastballs and upper-90s mph sliders, which Dodgers catcher Will Smith called the nastiest current pitch in the sport. And he emerged with a newfound sense of belonging at the big-league level.
"That's one of those games you look back on and you're like, 'OK, now we go,'" Misiorowski said Monday. "Now it starts.'"
Afterward, no one praised the young right-hander more than Kershaw, who started his postgame remarks about Misiorowski by quipping, "I know him now, huh?"
And now, a week later, so too does the rest of the baseball world; with Misiorowski's dismantling of the Dodgers helping to thrust him into a spotlight he could have never imagined seven days earlier.
"I think it was just one of those things that, when it happened, it's not really anything I've done," he said. "I'm not gonna say no to MLB about coming to the game, so it is what it is."
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