Chicago Sun-Times

ALZOLAY BESTED BY BIEBER — BARELY

Cubs get solid start from young righty but fall to long ball

- Rdorsey@suntimes.com RUSSELL DORSEY | @Russ_Dorsey1

CLEVELAND — It looks like right-hander Adbert Alzolay is getting comfortabl­e pitching in the big leagues, and the results are starting to back that up.

There are going to be some ups and downs for Alzolay in his first full season, but so far, he’s been able to improve on each of his outings.

Matched up against some of baseball’s best arms recently, including the Dodgers’ Walker Buehler in his previous start, Alzolay took the mound Tuesday against reigning AL Cy Young winner Shane Bieber.

Getting opportunit­ies to face some of the game’s best isn’t something the Cubs’ young right-hander takes for granted.

“It’s been really fun. I’m looking forward to more matchups like this one,” Alzolay said after the Cubs’ 3-2 loss to the Indians. “I think that’s the good part right now is that I’ve been matching really good pitchers lately, and I do like that.”

Alzolay went pitch-for-pitch with Bieber and looked better than his counterpar­t most of the night.

As he did in his outing against the Dodgers, Alzolay got off to a fast start, striking out four of the first five hitters he faced. He induced 18 swings-and-misses, including 15 off his slider.

“He’s getting more and more comfortabl­e out there,” said Eric Sogard, who hit his first home run with the Cubs. “He has a great sense of all his pitches. When he’s getting ahead and using his defense behind him, it’s fun to watch.”

He was in cruise control and had Cleveland hitters off-balance, but it was the long ball that came back to hurt Alzolay, who surrendere­d a pair of homers in the fourth and fifth innings.

Jose Ramirez’s solo shot tied the game at 1 before Cesar Hernandez’s go-ahead, tworun blast gave Cleveland a 3-2 lead. Both homers came on 3-2 counts.

“I thought Adbert threw the ball pretty well,” manager David Ross said. “I thought he made some big pitches and didn’t give up a whole lot of hits. They had a little bit of damage there with Ramirez, trying to sneak a 3-2 fastball by him. Then to Hernandez, [he threw] a nice slider on 3-1, just didn’t get it there on 3-2. But yeah, I thought he threw the ball extremely well.”

Despite the homers, Alzolay pitched well enough to win, picking up his second quality start of the season. He allowed three runs on five hits over six innings, striking out six. It was the fifth consecutiv­e start he’s allowed three runs or less and his first in which he didn’t issue a walk.

“I definitely feel my body is getting more in rhythm to get deep into the game,” Alzolay said. “Today was a good day in the beginning, just missing two pitches in 3-2 counts. That happens when you’re in the big leagues and you miss your location against good hitters.”

The growth from the Cubs’ young starter has been impressive, and Alzolay slowly is becoming one of the rotation’s most reliable options. If he can continue that upward trajectory, it’s clear he can get to another level.

“He’s been making the adjustment­s he needs to make each start,” catcher Willson Contreras said. “Today, he showed me that he will be capable of going more than six innings. “I talk to him a lot about not rushing with two strikes. Whenever he gets to two strikes, he gets so excited. He probably misses the location the most on two strikes. I think that the next step for him is maintainin­g the same rhythm that he has before two strikes and then try to execute on two strikes.”

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 ?? JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? NOTE: Kris Bryant left the game in the sixth inning with an undisclose­d illness.
Adbert Alzolay allowed three runs on five hits over six innings, striking out six and walking none in the Cubs’ 3-2 loss to the Indians.
JASON MILLER/GETTY IMAGES NOTE: Kris Bryant left the game in the sixth inning with an undisclose­d illness. Adbert Alzolay allowed three runs on five hits over six innings, striking out six and walking none in the Cubs’ 3-2 loss to the Indians.
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