The Arizona Republic

D-Backs pitcher works his way up from sawmill to record book

- Bob Nightengal­e

Paw Paw and his RV, traveling 4 1⁄2 days and 1,700 miles from Mobile, Alabama, will be proudly sitting at Chase Field on Friday at the Diamondbac­ks’ home opener.

Harvey Morris, 78, isn’t about to miss the chance to see his grandson, new Arizona reliever Matt Peacock, pitch in the major leagues with his own eyes.

Morris already is kicking himself for missing history Tuesday when Peacock made his major league debut and became the first pitcher since 1945 to win an extra-inning game and produce a hit in his first game against the Rockies in Denver, while listening to his daughter, Missy Nolen (Matt’s mom), cry joyously on the phone.

“It was 1 in the morning when Matt struck out that last batter for the win,” Morris said, “and my wife, Ruby, started screaming inside the RV Park in Albuquerqu­e. We were just hoping we didn’t wake up any of the neighbors. We couldn’t believe it.”

Morris sent a text message to his grandson congratula­ting him the next morning.

It was one of 170 messages that Peacock received after the 10-8, 13-inning victory over Colorado.

He came into the game in the 11th inning, gave up two unearned runs in three innings, but by the end of the night was the winning pitcher and even got the base hit.

Peacock got the game ball from the final out, the baseball from his hit and the lineup card commemorat­ing his historic debut. He was the first pitcher since Marino Pieretti of the 1945 Washington Senators to make his major league debut in an extra-inning game, record a victory and collect a hit.

“I never thought that I’d be wearing steel-toed boots covered with oil, welding just a few years ago in the sawmill,” Peacock told USA TODAY Sports, “to now wearing baseball spikes and pitching in the big leagues.

“There are people giving me this food in the clubhouse that’s amazing. I’m like, ‘What’s going on here.’ I feel like I should be helping them out. They got guys putting my clothes away. I’m like, ‘Hey, let me do that.’

“I still can’t believe I’m here.”

Well, to be honest, neither can whole lot of folks in Peacock’s life.

This is a 27-year-old who had one Division I scholarshi­p offer out of Saraland (Alabama) High School, struggled with an 11.29 ERA in his first two collegiate seasons, got hurt, had elbow surgery, quit the baseball team and went to work

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at the family sawmill.

“I thought I was done. I think a lot of people did,” Peacock said. “I got a bone spur removed. I strained my forearm. I couldn’t throw a ball 60 feet. I figured it was time to get on with life.”

He walked up to South Alabama coach Mark Calvi, told him to give his scholarshi­p to someone else, and hit the sawmill tour for Morris Industrial Corp., started by his grandfathe­r, traveling from Luka, Mississipp­i, to the Florida Panhandle, to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, to Illinois.

“There were a lot of 90-hour weeks, but you get double time,” Peacock said. “Even starting out, with no education, you could make $1,500 a week. There was a lot of travel, and some of the hotels, well, some of them were pretty sketchy. We had to leave in the middle of the night. Sometimes the only place you could eat was at truck stops where you could grab venison sausage and crackers.”

One day working on top of a boiler, he started to smell something peculiar and suddenly realized his boots were melting.

“That’s when I said I’m going to try baseball again,” Peacock said.

Said Grandpa Morris, lovingly called “Paw Paw” by Peacock ever since he could talk: “I thought he was through with it, I really did. He had such trouble with his control, he couldn’t hit the ground with his cap.”

Peacock approached Calvi, asked him if he could rejoin the team and was welcomed back. No questions asked. No hard feelings.

“I’d be a liar if I said I wasn’t a little bit surprised,” Calvi said. “I loved the kid. He gave everything. But when he quit, I told him, ‘Man, I understand. This is a hard game. It’s frustratin­g you. If there are things frustratin­g in our life, if there’s a roadblock in your way, get rid of it.’

“You’re smart. You got a great family. Good luck.”

The year away from the game completely changed the way Peacock viewed baseball.

He suddenly was unafraid of failure. He quit running away from pressure. The negative forces that robbed him of his talent turned into a positive energy where he finally believed he belonged.

“Spirituall­y, he came back completely a different animal,” Calvi said. “It wasn’t like we did some séance or used a Ouija board or had performanc­e-enhancing doctors. There was no Pandora’s box or magic pill. He inadverten­tly hit the reset button.”

Even Mom could barely recognize this was her same son.

“The confidence was different, the poise was different,” Nolen said. “I know my son, and I know something was different. I followed him to a tournament in Pensacola, saw him come in and strike out the side. He quit putting pressure on himself.

“I called my husband, Gary, on the phone and said, ‘This isn’t the same kid.’ ”

Peacock, dominating hitters with his 92- to 95-mph sinker, became South Alabama’s closer.

He yielded a 2.96 ERA in 26 games, striking out 56 batters in 51 2⁄3 innings with 18 walks.

He still slid on the draft board before being drafted in the 23rd round by the Diamondbac­ks. He spent the first three years progressin­g through their minor league system. When the 2020 minor league season was shut down because of COVID-19, he wasn’t selected by the Diamondbac­ks to pitch in their alternate site. So he spent the summer working for his grandfathe­r, helping build a barn, construct fences, make furniture, while also setting up a mattress in the backyard to fire pitches against during the week.

Peacock knew he was doing something right because when he was invited by the D-Backs to pitch in their instructio­nal league during the fall, they saw enough promise to protect him from the Rule 5 draft.

“It’s weird, after leaving baseball and coming back,” Peacock said, “I see the game a little different than anyone else. I know there are things you can be doing, like working 12-hour shifts, and just not enjoying life as much. So I don’t let the moment get too big. I stay in the moment.”

 ?? ISAIAH J. DOWNING/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Diamondbac­ks rookie Matt Peacock (47) was the first pitcher since 1945 to make his MLB debut in an extra-inning game, record a victory and collect a hit.
ISAIAH J. DOWNING/USA TODAY SPORTS Diamondbac­ks rookie Matt Peacock (47) was the first pitcher since 1945 to make his MLB debut in an extra-inning game, record a victory and collect a hit.
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