Santa Fe New Mexican

Cardinals rookie Hicks lighting up radar guns

- Associated Press By Will Graves

Jordan Hicks can’t explain where the gas comes from. If he’s being honest, the St. Louis Cardinals rookie flamethrow­er doesn’t really want to. Best not to overthink it.

So the 21-year-old reliever steps on the rubber and lets his mind go blank before beginning a delivery that looks like it could fit in a phone booth. No long levers. No exaggerate­d windup. Just straight fire — stuff that makes the readout from the radar gun look like a misprint. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. It’s the kind of speed that sends a jolt through the crowd and the opposing dugout alike. The kind that allowed Hicks to bypass Double-A and Triple-A entirely on his way to The Show.

Even the heir apparent to New York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman as the hardest-throwing arm in the majors can’t help but peek up after letting one rip.

“I like to see because I know I just put that much effort into it, what did I get out of it?” Hicks said. “What was the final outcome?”

Typically, outs. Relying on a two-seam fastball that frequently reaching triple digits, Hicks is 2-1 with a 1.75 ERA in 24 games this season for the Cardinals, one of the constants in a bullpen that’s been erratic at best. The learning curve is still in progress — Hicks has 16 walks against 11 strikeouts in 24⅔ innings — but Matheny is encouraged that Hicks is trying to truly pitch instead of focusing on lighting up the gun.

While Matheny understand­s the attention that comes with Hicks’ feats — like when he threw five consecutiv­e pitches at 103 mph and above to Philadelph­ia’s

Odubel Herrera on May 20 — he’s just as pleased with Hicks’ mentality. Three days after going heavy to Herrera, Hicks struck out two batters in an inning of work against the Kansas City Royals.

“I was afraid he was going to try and hit 112, but he came out and probably had his best outing,” Matheny said. “And it was under control, but it still wasn’t holding back, but it was in the zone. Those are the things that we need. He can throw as hard as he wants to but control counts and have a purpose of why you’re making a pitch and not to just ‘wow’ the watching world.” Hicks is actually doing a little of both. Pittsburgh Pirates second baseman Josh Harrison likes to stand his ground in the batter’s box, a philosophy that ended with him getting hit 23 times last year, the second-highest total in the majors. He was warned by teammate Jordy Mercer about the way Hicks’ fastball runs in on righthande­d hitters, but still he dug in as usual against Hicks for an at-bat Saturday.

On the first pitch, Hicks sent 101 mph whizzing inches from the pinky finger in Harrison’s left hand, the one Harrison broke after getting drilled by Miami’s Jose Urena. He wasn’t quite so comfortabl­e after that.

“It comes out hot, I’ll tell you that,” Harrison said. “The first one, you can go back and look at the replay, when I took it, I pulled my hands in and I said, ‘Ooooooh.’ ”

Harrison worked the count full before grounding out to second base. He walked away equal parts frustrated and impressed.

“Every single one he threw me had some sink or some run,” he said.

Pirates manager Clint Hurdle likened the mix of power and movement a “gift from God.” One Hicks and the Cardinals are still trying to harness, both on the field and off.

Hicks was invited to big league camp for the first time in spring training, only to find his initial stay short-lived after he had issues getting to meetings on time, something Hicks called “a learning experience” when St. Louis brought him up in late March. Though Hicks was impressive from the jump, it looked like he would start the year in the minors.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cardinals rookie relief pitcher Jordan Hicks is lighting up radar guns and shutting down opponents. The 21-yearold is challengin­g Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman as the hardest thrower in baseball.
GENE J. PUSKAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS Cardinals rookie relief pitcher Jordan Hicks is lighting up radar guns and shutting down opponents. The 21-yearold is challengin­g Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman as the hardest thrower in baseball.

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