The Ukiah Daily Journal

Snell gets out of tricky situations

- By Evan Webeck

Stashed away somewhere in his parents' house, Kyle Harrison has a keepsake it might be time to unearth.

One day in 2018, when he was still a rising star at De La Salle, Harrison made the pilgrimage to Oracle Park. One of his favorite pitchers was in town. It was Blake Snell, another overpoweri­ng lefty then in the middle of his first Cy Young campaign who gave a teenaged Harrison a blueprint for his eventual path to the major leagues.

“I met him and he signed something to me, `From one lefty to another,'” Harrison recalled after learning the Giants had inked Snell to a two- year, $ 62 million free-agent deal. “He probably wouldn't remember me. We'll see. I'll bring it up. I still have the autograph.”

It's not hard to see the similariti­es between Snell, 31, and Harrison, 23. Just as easily as they pitch themselves into trouble, they have proven — Snell in the majors and Harrison on his pathway there — to be able to pitch themselves out of it. The heaters coming out of their left arms are so electric, their breaking balls so bendy, that it seems sometimes like even they don't know where it is going.

In a pitching department that has prioritize­d two things — strikes and sinkers — Snell is a novel subject. On his way to winning his second Cy Young award last season, he led the National League in walks. He issued 99 free passes, eight more than the next-closest pitcher, who finished the year with a 5.43 ERA. Snell's baserunner­s, however, didn't come around to score.

“He stranded runners at a rate that was borderline spectacula­r,” said Bob Melvin, who had a frontrow seat from the dugout. “Guys on third, less than two outs, it felt like it was a punchout every time.”

Snell's 2.25 ERA led the NL, the first pitcher to ever lead a league in both categories. He stranded 86.7% of the runners he put on base, six percentage points better than the next-closest pitcher, Gerrit Cole, the Cy Young winner in the American League.

Logan Webb was the runnerup to Snell in the NL, but the results might have been different if he swapped his 73.7% strand rate with Snell's. Whereas Webb generated ground balls at a higher rate than any other pitcher, Snell trailed only Spencer Strider with a 31.5% strikeout rate.

“It seems like even if he's in a jam, I feel like I've seen him have bases loaded and he'll strike out the next three guys,” Webb said, before his voice trailed off into a chuckle. “It looks almost easy, but …”

Rotation partner Alex Cobb, another sinkerball­er pitch-to-contact type, picked up the thought.

“You can watch him throw one time and realize that is different than anybody else that throws a baseball,” said Cobb, who saw Snell at a young age as teammates in Tampa in 2016 and '17. “You knew he was going to have challenges because his arm is so electric and his stuff is so big and so good and with that comes the challenge to keep the ball over the plate.

“The first year he came up we always talked about working deep into games. He knows that's something he wants to do. The stuff that he has creates a lot of pitches.”

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