South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Skid ends with shutout

Chisholm takes deGrom deep, Rogers dominates

- By Jake Seiner

Jazz Chisholm Jr. watched Jacob deGrom’s first 100 mph fastball whiz by and wasn’t impressed.

“People were saying, ‘It’s an angry

100, it gets on you,’ ” the Marlins’ brazen, blue-haired Bahamian said. “It didn’t really get on me like I was expecting.”

“Some people’s 100 is a little lighter,” he added. “To me, it felt like he was on the lighter side.”

Safe to say, Miami’s youngsters don’t scare easily.

Chisholm hit a stunning homer off an otherwise dominant deGrom, Trevor Rogers beat the two-time Cy Young Award winner for the second time and the Marlins blanked the New York Mets 3-0 Saturday.

DeGrom (0-1) matched a career best with 14 strikeouts over eight innings, the 23-year-old Rogers

(1-1) fanned 10 in six and the teams combined for 28 overall.

For a while, the difference was Chisholm’s rip in the second inning.

DeGrom looked unhittable early — until the 23-year-old Chisholm barreled a 100.4 mph, 0-2 fastball thrown above the strike zone. The left-handed hitter’s drive reached the second deck in right field for a 1-0 lead and was estimated at 402 feet.

Chisholm took a 100 mph strike to start the at-bat, then found himself swinging too quick for a 99 mph pitch. He claims he was looking for something offspeed when deGrom reached back for a third straight heater — 100 above the letters.

“He threw me a fastball up and I just reacted to it,” said Chisholm, who called deGrom the best pitcher in baseball. “Got my hands above the ball, and yeah, it was a homer.”

It was the first 0-2 home run deGrom has allowed in the majors.

“He sold out for it,” deGrom said. “Probably should have done a better job recognizin­g he was going to try to get to that fastball.”

The next time Chisholm came up, deGrom struck him out with one fastball and then five straight changeups.

Coming off their first postseason berth since 2003, the Marlins are 2-6 but with encouragin­g signs from a rotation featuring a 2.01 ERA in 2021.

Rogers outpitched deGrom for the second time in nine major league starts. The left-hander got his first big league win against him in a 5-3 victory last Aug. 31. This was his second.

“Best in baseball, Jacob deGrom is,” Rogers said. “You really have to bring your best and then some. To see me and our whole team go out and compete with the best, it just shows you how good we are.”

A 2017 first-round draft pick, Rogers cruised in his third career outing against New York. He scattered three hits and two walks, retiring 11 straight in one stretch.

Rogers mixed a fastball averaging 95 mph with a slider and changeup, inducing 19 swing-andmisses among his 82 pitches. He ended his outing with strikeouts of Michael Conforto and Pete Alonso, stranding two runners to preserve a 1-0 lead.

“This kid’s growing up right in front of our eyes,” Mattingly said.

Dylan Floro followed with a perfect seventh, Richard Bleier was helped by shortstop Miguel Rojas’ diving catch to rob pinch-hitter Kevin Pillar during a 1-2-3 eighth, and Yimi García completed the three-hitter for his first save, spelling struggling closer Anthony Bass.

Chisholm’s homer was all Miami could muster against deGrom. The right-hander reached 14 strikeouts for the fourth time — including three times against the Marlins. He allowed a run, five hits, walked none and threw 76 of his 95 pitches for strikes.

Plagued throughout his career by insufficie­nt run support, deGrom was tagged with another disappoint­ing loss. He even accounted for one of New York’s three hits.

“Unfortunat­ely, we’ve been through this before,” center fielder Brandon Nimmo said. “It’s never easy.”

New York closer Edwin Díaz relieved deGrom and struggled. Starling Marte hit a leadoff double and scored the next at-bat on a single by Jesús Aguilar. Rojas added an RBI single before Díaz was pulled and booed off the mound.

Mets fans also jeered Conforto — even after he leaned into one for a walk-off hit by pitch in their home opener Thursday, a call plate umpire Ron Kulpa later admitted he missed. Conforto struck out three times to extend a slump to start what could be his final season in New York.

Kulpa was cheered by fans when the umpires were announced before the game.

Trainer’s room

Marlins: C Jorge Alfaro was scratched from the lineup shortly before first pitch with tightness in his left hamstring. The issue also kept him out of Thursday’s game. Chad Wallach started instead.

Up next

The teams conclude the threegame series Sunday. New York will start RHP Marcus Stroman (1-0, 1.50), who looked sharp in his season debut against Philadelph­ia. Miami was waiting to see how Saturday’s game played out before determinin­g a starter for Sunday.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Marlins starting pitcher Trevor Rogers delivers in the first inning of Miami’s 3-0 victory over the Mets on Saturday in New York. It was the left-hander’s second big league win against the Mets’ Jacob deGrom.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Marlins starting pitcher Trevor Rogers delivers in the first inning of Miami’s 3-0 victory over the Mets on Saturday in New York. It was the left-hander’s second big league win against the Mets’ Jacob deGrom.

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