Baltimore Sun Sunday

Gonzalez shaping up with Shorebirds

Lefty has halved ERA, worked on delivery in 2nd Delmarva season

- By Jon Meoli jmeoli@baltsun.com twitter.com/JonMeoli

SALISBURY — When lefthander Brian Gonzalez returned home from his first full profession­al season with a 5.71 ERA with the Low-A Delmarva Shorebirds, he did so feeling the mental and physical effects of a full season.

A third-round draft pick in 2014 but still the Orioles’ top selection in that draft class, he knew what his full-season debut meant for everyone involved.

“I understood what happened during the season was a disappoint­ment, obviously, for the organizati­on, but personally for myself,” Gonzalez said. “I put really high expectatio­ns on myself, and to go through that, honestly, it was good and bad. I learned a lot last year. I experience­d a lot, and understood what it takes to make this happen, to pitch well.”

His second time around with Delmarva has shown that what he learned took hold. Gonzalez, 20, has more than halved that ERA this season, posting a 2.59 mark in the South Atlantic League and putting some of the luster back on his stock. He has maintained his strikeout rate (6.9 per nine innings last year, 6.8 this season), but cut his walks per nine innings from 5.03 to 3.63 while lowering his WHIP from 1.49 to 1.32.

Almost immediatel­y, Shorebirds manager Ryan Minor and pitching coach Blaine Beatty saw the benefits of the decision to return him to their charge.

“Once he had a couple good starts early in the year, his confidence kind of grew a little bit and [he thought], ‘I know I belong here. I know what kind of level I was drafted at,’ ” Minor said, “and I think he’s starting to pitch like he’s worthy of that pick.”

Especially recently, Gonzalez has pitched not only as if he’s worthy of the pick, but like someone who is worthy of spending the last month of the season with a promotion to High-A Frederick. He’d posted back-to-back outings of six scoreless innings entering Tuesday’s start against Lakewood, and had another shutout bid going into the seventh inning before he ran into trouble.

He needed 54 pitches to cruise through six innings but allowed his fourth home run of the season on an errant changeup.

But within that start, Gonzalez showed how he has gotten this far, and how he’ll have to succeed without premium velocity on his fastball. The left-hander, 6 feet 3, 230 pounds, has a fastball that sits at 88-92 mph, a changeup that he’ll cut for weak contact or throw with more fade for swinging strikes, and a breaking ball that he says is “a lot more consistent than last year.”

He had to streamline his delivery to keep him on line and shorten his time to home plate, but he has been more consistent this season and has used that to mix the looks he gives batters.

“That’s all just experience and trying to give the hitter a different look and seeing if I need a pitch, I’ve got it there,” he said. “I throw a lot of variations of each pitch because I’m not going to go out there and blow it by every pitch, but I change speeds up on every pitch.”

That knowledge is something Gonzalez is going to have to carry with him when his time in Delmarva ends. His future will rely on his ability to spot his fastball down in the zone and keep hitters off balance. He can do both by eschewing the mentality that got him in trouble in 2015, when he started well but faded down the stretch as he wore down physically and avoided the strike zone.

“Last year, I was trying to paint this perfect picture on the strike zone where I’m trying to throw an 0-0 pitch on the corner, when usually a guy might be trying to see a pitch or see what I got,” Gonzalez said. “I think when I first got drafted, that first halfyear, I was kind of going after guys coming through my high school season. That’s how I was taught, then coming to this league my first year, it’s better competitio­n, it’s older competitio­n, I have to make better pitches.

“But in reality, you go after guys, they’re going to respect it, and it helps with all your other pitches.”

Beatty saw similar conviction grow from year one to year two.

“That would be the biggest thing for me with Brian, to see him solidify himself and his ability,” Beatty said. “The developmen­t of his curveball has gotten better, his ability to read hitters, to know how to pitch to hitters and just having that confidence when he goes out there.”

Leaving Gonzalez in Delmarva for the majority of his second full season fits that bill of building his confidence, and outings like his past few are the way to send him home happy. He’d be one of the 10 youngest players in the Carolina League were he to move up, and at age 21 on Opening Day next year, he will be on a normal schedule as he progresses through the Orioles system, carrying the banner for a draft class that’s highlighte­d so far by pitchers David Hess (fifth round), Tanner Scott (sixth round) and Matthew Grimes (18th round).

And perhaps most importantl­y, he won’t go home with a bad taste in his mouth this year.

“For me personally, I’m just going to be more at ease,” Gonzalez said. “Last year, I was so anxious to get back out there. I had to wait 41⁄2, five months, whatever it is, and I wanted to make sure I was ready. I was kind of like, ‘Let’s go, let’s go, let’s go.’ This year, I know what I’m working with.

“But there’s still a lot of stuff I want to work on. There’s still a lot of stuff I need to work on. So to be honest, I’m looking forward to the offseason to get a chance to work on those things, but just not having that stress of, ‘Oh, I’ve got to perform better.’ ”

 ?? DELMARVA SHOREBIRDS ?? Brian Gonzalez has an ERA of 2.59 this season, down from 5.71 in 2015.
DELMARVA SHOREBIRDS Brian Gonzalez has an ERA of 2.59 this season, down from 5.71 in 2015.

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