Pomeranz thriving as fireballing reliever
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MILWAUKEE -- Gio González was extolling the virtues of Drew Pomeranz, lights-out reliever, when someone suggested that Pomeranz was turning into Josh Hader Jr.
Gonzalez did some quick math in his head.
¡°He might be a little older,¡± Gonzalez said, ¡°so I might give him the Sr.¡±
While technically true -- Pomeranz is 30, Hader 25 -- it¡¯s Pomeranz who is just learning the ropes of relief. He¡¯s finding success similar to two-time All-Star Hader.
Pomeranz made the switch in July when he was still with the Giants, and he has continued performing in the role in remarkable fashion since a July 31 trade to the Brewers.
He had a six-up, six-down save Tuesday night at Miller Park in the Brewers¡¯ 3-1 win over the Padres, which lifted the Crew back into a tie for the National League¡¯s second Wild Card berth. Pomeranz has struck out 43.4 percent of the batters he has faced since the trade. Hader¡¯s rate this season is a best-in-baseball 48.5 percent.
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There¡¯s no secret to how Pomeranz has morphed from a starter with a 5.97 ERA this season in San Francisco to a lights-out reliever for a team in the middle of a pennant race. He¡¯s doing it with power fastballs that have jumped in velocity from a 91.3 mph average on June 16, his final start with the Giants, to 94.3 mph on July 22 in his first appearance out of the bullpen, to the 95-96 mph range for the Brewers. His four-seamer averaged 95.2 mph on Monday, when he threw 19 fastballs in 24 pitches.
¡°Just sitting in here watching him, it¡¯s like he could literally throw all fastballs,¡± said Brandon Woodruff, who touched 99 mph with his own fastball on Monday in his first start off an oblique injury. ¡°It¡¯s like Hader in a way, just coming in there and firing fastballs. Until they hit it, keep throwing it. He¡¯s done a phenomenal job for us. He¡¯s pitching in some big games and some big innings. He¡¯s doing a terrific job.¡±
Pomeranz has thrown fastballs 75 percent of the time and curves 25 percent in a Brewers uniform. That¡¯s still shy of Hader¡¯s 85 percent fastballs, but in the neighborhood.
¡°I didn¡¯t think I was going to go back out there a second inning,¡± said Pomeranz, eligible for free agency at season¡¯s end. ¡°I gave it all I had the first inning and came back in and they said, ¡®Keep going.¡¯ My focus is getting outs. So, it was three more outs.¡±
Said Brewers manager Craig Counsell: ¡°It¡¯s always a challenge to figure out which guys are going to benefit from the bullpen. Some guys, it¡¯s the same. And then you see a guy like Drew, and it¡¯s night and day. I think from Drew¡¯s perspective, it¡¯s, ¡®I can just let it fly.¡¯ That¡¯s what he¡¯s doing.¡±
With four more strikeouts against San Diego, Pomeranz has 36 whiffs in 21 1/3 innings as a Brewer and has limited opponents to a .189 average. He has been a crucial addition to a team missing former closer Corey Knebel (Tommy John surgery) and Jeremy Jeffress (released earlier this month) from the National League Championship Series roster of a year ago.
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Counsell relied heavily on whom he dubbed ¡°the electric dudes¡± in the bullpen last fall. Now Pomeranz and Hader are an electric duo, with Counsell increasingly counting on such others as right-handers Jay Jackson and Junior Guerra in big spots. Left-hander Alex Claudio also has been effective after a rocky start to the season.
¡°I think we¡¯ve gotten ourselves in a place where I feel like we¡¯ve got a bunch of weapons in the bullpen again,¡± said Counsell, whose club has won 11 of its past 12 games. ¡°It¡¯s not one guy; it¡¯s multiple guys we can go to. To go through a stretch like this, that¡¯s what you need. We¡¯re not going to the same guy every night; we¡¯re going to different guys and the guys are getting the job done.¡±