Miami Herald

Luzardo has gone from ‘lowest point’ to Opening Day starter

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

As Jesus Luzardo Sr. and Monica Luzardo sat amid the frenzy that was Citizens Bank Park on Oct. 3, all they could feel was a bursting sense of pride.

There they were, watching their son pitch in

Game 1 of the Miami Marlins’ wild card series against the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

Two decades earlier, the Luzardos were in the stands for one of the Marlins’ 2003 World Series games against the New York Yankees. Their son, Jesus Luzardo, was 6 years old at the time.

Now, in the first playoff game the Marlins have played in a full season since that World Series, Luzardo was on the mound. The result wasn’t what they had hoped for — Luzardo gave up three runs over four innings in an eventual 4-1 Marlins loss.

“But at that point,” Jesus Sr. said, “it didn’t matter the score or the result . ... We’re very proud of him. We grew up Marlins fans. We enjoy him being a major leaguer, but the opportunit­y for him to be one of the key players for his hometown team and be able to help them get into a postseason run was awesome.”

The feel-good moments will continue for the Luzardo family Thursday.

When Luzardo steps onto the loanDepot park mound as the Marlins begin the 2024 season against the Pittsburgh Pirates, he will accomplish another of his lifelong dreams.

Luzardo, who grew up in Parkland and graduated from Stoneman Douglas, will officially be the Opening Day starter for his hometown team.

“It’s definitely sunk in,” said Luzardo, 26 and entering his sixth MLB season. “I’m excited. Definitely trying to keep all the emotions out of it, but for sure I’m excited.”

It’s the latest full-circle moment for Luzardo — and his latest moment of validation.

Luzardo was at a potential crossroads when he joined the Marlins midway through the 2021 season. His career hadn’t taken off with the Oakland Athletics

Marlins trade Berti to Yankees,

and he was starting to have doubts if it ever would. Now came the added pressure of trying to salvage that dream while playing for the team he rooted for his entire life.

“When I got traded over,” Luzardo said, “I was at the lowest point in my career. At times, I felt like maybe this isn’t for me; maybe I’m not a big-league pitcher.”

Luzardo has not only resurrecte­d his career over the past two-and-a-half years, but he is thriving in the process. He has gone from being an uncertaint­y to a reliable cog in Miami’s rotation.

The Marlins will lean heavily on Luzardo, especially to start the season considerin­g the current state of the club’s starting rotation. Sandy Alcantara, Miami’s ace and Opening Day starter the past four years, won’t pitch in 2024 while rehabbing from Tommy John surgery. Braxton Garrett (left shoulder soreness), Eury Perez (right elbow inflammati­on) and Edward Cabrera (right shoulder impingemen­t) are starting the season on the injured list as well.

“I know he’s going to embrace the pressure that goes with that No. 1 spot,” pitching coach Mel Stottlemyr­e Jr. said.

Luzardo, however, said he doesn’t feel pressure. With what he’s gone through to get to this point, his focus is on what he has to do to be ready every fifth game.

“Just go out there and be myself,” Luzardo said. “I feel like I’m prepared for what’s to come and I’m ready to carry on whatever load that needs to get carried.”

‘THE TRAJECTORY IS JUST CRAZY’

It wasn’t guaranteed Luzardo would reach this point, though.

When then-Marlins general manager Kim Ng swung the trade that brought Luzardo to Miami, sending outfielder Starling Marte to Oakland in return, there was an understand­ing that Luzardo was going to be a work in progress.

To that point in his career, Luzardo had flashed the traits to be a potential star — a hard-throwing lefty with swing-and-miss secondary pitches — but the results didn’t match the talent. He had a 4.79 ERA in 109 innings with Oakland. In 2023 alone, his ERA skyrockete­d to 6.87 in 13 games (six starts) before being traded to Miami.

He didn’t fare much better immediatel­y after the trade (a 6.44 ERA over 12 Miami starts to close the 2021 season), but the Marlins weren’t overly concerned with the struggles. They wanted him to pitch through them and get up-close guidance from Stottlemyr­e so he had a better understand­ing of what he needed to fix in the offseason.

While the Marlins had Luzardo penciled into their long-term plans, the uncertaint­y lingered.

“I didn’t know if I was gonna be in the rotation,” Luzardo said.

He did make the roster in 2022 as the No. 5 pitcher in the rotation and showed glimpses of what could come. In 18 starts, he posted a 3.32 ERA with 120 strikeouts against 35 walks, a .191 batting average against and a 1.04 walks and hits per inning pitched rate over 100 1/3 innings.

The only blemish on Luzardo’s season that year was a left forearm strain sustained six starts into the season. He missed twoand-a-half months. When he returned, he posted a 3.03 ERA and a .198 batting average against over his final 12 starts.

That pushed him to being the No. 2 starter behind Alcantara in 2023 and went on to have a career season. Luzardo assumed the No. 1 pitcher role over the final month of the season and for the playoffs after Alcantara sustained a season-ending elbow injury in early September that ultimately resulted in needing Tommy John surgery. Luzardo made all 32 of his scheduled starts and pitched to a 3.58 ERA while setting career-highs in innings pitched (178 2/3) and strikeouts (208).

“The trajectory is just crazy to think about,” Luzardo said, “and I do think everything happens for a reason. It wasn’t planned. It just kind of worked out this way.”

Luzardo did his part to put himself in a position to succeed. He made regular drives from Parkland to Cressey Sports Performanc­e in Palm Beach Gardens — about a 45-minute drive each way on a good day — during the offseason. He dove into video work. He tweaked his mechanics. He improved his game-planning and pitch sequencing.

“There was a sacrifice,” Stottlemyr­e said. “He took his lumps, and he’s earned it. Really proud of him sticking with that commitment and that process because when you’re young and you don’t get the results that you get all the time, it’s really easy to waver from that process.

“He stuck with it.”

‘I’M NEVER ALONE OUT THERE’

Luzardo didn’t get to this point alone.

A large support system — from the unwavering encouragem­ent of his family to the gained trust of his new coaching staff once he got to Miami — gave Luzardo the confidence to unlock his talent and show he can be a front-line starting pitcher.

“It definitely takes a village,” Luzardo said. “At the end of the day, a lot of the work was just between my ears and mental, but it took a lot to get there.”

Family support has been paramount for Luzardo throughout his career. His parents are at almost every game and have helped him through every step of his baseball career.

And then there’s the man who isn’t here to see Luzardo’s career unfold in person.

Nicolas Alvarez, Luzardo’s grandfathe­r on his mom’s side, died in 2022, just before Luzardo’s career with the Marlins really began to take off. The two bonded over baseball and McDonald’s. Alvarez loved the Marlins because of the Venezuelan flare to the roster, including the likes of Anibal Sanchez and Miguel Cabrera.

“He was part of the reason why I fell in love with the game,” Luzardo said. “He also was part of the reason why I fell in love with the Marlins.”

How does Luzardo think Alvarez would have reacted to where Luzardo is now in his career?

“He’d be in tears for sure,” Luzardo said. “I know that he’d be extremely excited. He’ll be with me on Opening Day. I’m never alone out there.”

As the years have gone by, Monica has noticed her son’s confidence and maturity grow. That brings a smile to her face.

“He’s happier in general,” Monica Luzardo said. “He’s with a team that he dreamed of playing for. This is his place.”

‘HE WANTS TO INSPIRE’

While Luzardo is still making a name for himself in the big leagues, he hasn’t forgotten his roots.

Every offseason since 2021, Luzardo holds an annual baseball clinic at Stoneman Douglas with former high school teammate Colton Welker. The day-long camp has grown from about 75 kids in its first season to about 150 this year.

“He wants to make an impact in the community because he knows how important his voice and presence is,” Monica Luzardo said. “He wants to inspire kids.”

Luzardo also takes time to mentor current players on the Stoneman Douglas baseball team, which has won three consecutiv­e state titles.

When Luzardo was rising through the high school ranks, he remembered Anthony Rizzo stopping by Stoneman Douglas to speak with the current team. Luzardo knew if he ever got to the big leagues, he wanted to do the same thing.

The last two years, it was pitchers Jake Clemente and Christian Rodriguez, both of whom are now playing at the University of Florida. This year, he’s keeping an eye on sophomore lefty Gio Rojas, a University of Miami commit.

“It’s just nice to go back,” Luzardo said. “I see a lot of myself in some of those guys.”

It provides Luzardo a reminder of how his baseball career began.

His journey started when he was just a few months old and his dad bought him a foam bat and ball. When Luzardo was 3, not long after the family moved to Parkland, his room regularly became a makeshift baseball diamond.

His favorite pitchers growing up: Fellow Venezuelan­s Johan Santana and Felix Hernandez plus Marlins standout Dontrelle Willis.

While the Luzardo family always had a love for baseball, it wasn’t until Luzardo was 9 that he started focusing on the sport full time and wasn’t until his sophomore year at Stoneman Douglas that he truly felt he had a chance to turn the sport into a career.

Despite having to undergo Tommy John surgery his senior year, the Washington Nationals drafted him in the third round of the 2016 MLB Draft. He was traded to Oakland a year later and made his MLB debut late in the

2019 season.

Two years later, he found his way back home to Miami.

AN ACE? ‘I HOPE TO EARN THAT TITLE’

For Marlins manager Skip Schumaker, the pivotal moment in Luzardo’s developmen­t last season came July 23. The Marlins had lost a season-high eight consecutiv­e games coming out of the All-Star Break when Luzardo took the ball in their series finale against the Colorado Rockies.

Luzardo had given up just one run through six innings before putting runners on the corners with two outs in the seventh. Schumaker went for a mound meeting.

“With some guys, sometimes you see the look or they’re kind of handing you the ball already and they kind of make the decision for you,” Schumaker said that day. “With Zeus, you could tell he was staying on the mound.”

Luzardo wound up striking out Brenton Doyle to strand the two runners and cap arguably the best start of his MLB career — seven innings (tying a career high), 13 strikeouts (a career high), one run on four hits and two walks, 115 pitches (a career high). Miami won the game 3-2 in 10 innings.

“That set the tone for the rest of the season,” Schumaker said. “There’s a different feeling when your ace is on the mound that day coming to the ballpark. People started feeling that with Zeus last year.”

Luzardo has the qualities of an ace, the definition of which can vary from person to person.

For Luzardo, an ace is “a tone setter, a leader, someone that when they take the mound, the whole team has confidence behind them.”

“It’s not forced,” Luzardo said. “I think an ace is just something that just comes. It’s confidence, a feeling that everyone has around you. It’s not selfprocla­imed. It’s something that gets given to you. You’ve got to earn that, and that’s what I plan to do. I hope to earn that title.”

To Stottlemyr­e, Luzardo is well on his way. Thursday, Opening Day, is the next chapter on that path.

“He knows himself,” Stottlemyr­e Jr. said, “and he’s our guy right now.”

Jordan McPherson: 305-376-2129, @J_McPherson1­126

(Home team in ALL CAPS)

Updates: https://www.scoresands­tats.com

Team Boston Milwaukee

Team Arizona UConn N. Carolina Iowa State

12½ (226) 2 (225½)

7½ 10½ 4½ 1½

Team ATLANTA N. ORLEANS

Team Clemson San Diego St. Alabama Illinois

Los Angeles San Diego Arizona Colorado S.F.

1 1 0 0 0 SCHEDULE THURSDAY (Opening Day) AMERICAN LEAGUE LA Angels (Sandoval) at Baltimore (Burnes), 3:05 Toronto (Berrios) at Tampa Bay (Eflin), 4:10

Minnesota (Lopez) at Kansas City (Ragans), 4:10

Detroit (Skubal) at Chi. White Sox (Crochet), 4:10

NY Yankees (Cortes Jr.) at Houston (Valdez), 4:10

Cleveland (Bieber) at Oakland (Wood), 10:07

Boston (Bello) at Seattle (Castillo), 10:10

1 1 0 0 0

.500 .500 .000 .000 .000

— — — — —

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pittsburgh (Keller) at Miami (Luzardo), 4:10

Milwaukee (Peralta) at NY Mets (Quintana), 1:10

Atlanta (Strider) at Philadelph­ia (Wheeler), 3:05

Washington (Gray) at Cincinnati (Montas), 4:10

San Francisco (Webb) at San Diego (Darvish), 4:10

St. Louis (Mikolas) at LA Dodgers (Glasnow), 4:10

Colorado (Freeland) at Arizona (Gallen), 10:10

INTERLEAGU­E

Chi. Cubs (Steele) at Texas (Eovaldi), 7:35

FRIDAY AMERICAN LEAGUE

Toronto at Tampa Bay, 6:50 NY Yankees at Houston, 8:10 Cleveland at Oakland, 9:40 Boston at Seattle, 9:40

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pittsburgh at Miami, 7:10

San Francisco at San Diego, 9:40 Colorado at Arizona, 9:40

St. Louis at LA Dodgers, 10:10

March 20: March 21:

RESULTS

LA Dodgers 5, San Diego 2 San Diego 15, LA Dodgers 11

Team FLORIDA Philadelph­ia OTTAWA PITTSBURGH TORONTO CAROLINA MINNESOTA ST. LOUIS WINNIPEG COLORADO EDMONTON Nashville SEATTLE Dallas

Line Team

-196 NY Islanders -150 MONTREAL -200 Chicago

-230 Columbus -184 Washington -240 Detroit

-345 San Jose -137 Calgary

-137 Vegas

-154 NY Rangers -150 Los Angeles -162 ARIZONA -235 Anaheim -114 VANCOUVER

Line +162 +125 +164 +188 +152 +195 +270 +114 +114 +128 +125 +134 +190 -105

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? A lifelong fan of the Marlins, Jesus Luzardo, who grew up in Parkland and graduated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, will accomplish another of his career goals: Opening Day starting pitcher.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com A lifelong fan of the Marlins, Jesus Luzardo, who grew up in Parkland and graduated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, will accomplish another of his career goals: Opening Day starting pitcher.
 ?? D.A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? In 2023, Jesus Luzardo led the Marlins with 10 wins, 208 strikeouts, and had a team-best 3.63 ERA.
D.A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com In 2023, Jesus Luzardo led the Marlins with 10 wins, 208 strikeouts, and had a team-best 3.63 ERA.
 ?? ??

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