The nickname behind a fast-rising Astros pitching prospect
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Spencer Arrighetti is on a roll at Double-A Corpus Christi. In May, the Astros¡¯ No. 9 prospect dominated with an 0.67 ERA and 37 strikeouts in 27 innings.
Coincidentally, whenever Arrighetti has made a start recently, his teammates have rocked a shirt pregame that reads ¡°Spaghetti of Meat Balls.¡±
¡°I do love spaghetti,¡± Arrighetti said. ¡°I am Italian by heritage, so the nickname kind of just comes from Spencer and Arrighetti getting mashed up. I think people my entire life have called me that.¡±
But the fun, silly shirt -- which was inspired after playing a Pictionary-esque game with his teammates on their phones, Arrighetti said -- could also be the sign of a turnaround for the right-hander. He started the year struggling to find the same success that had led to a callup from High-A Asheville near the end of the 2022 season, with a 11.05 ERA in four appearances (two starts) in April.
Then came a conversation with teammate Cesar Gomez.
¡°I had a talk one day, and he told me, ¡®Hey man, just keep the blinders. Stop worrying about all the other crap. You were good last year. You're still good now. You just need to go be Spencer,¡¯¡± Arrighetti said. ¡°And that conversation kind of brought me back to reality a little bit.¡±
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For Arrighetti, who stresses the importance of the mental side of the game, having a short memory is key. He bounced back to rattle off five straight wins, including striking out seven straight batters in his last start of May. It doesn¡¯t hurt that the 23-year-old has the arsenal to back up his mentality.
A sixth-round Draft pick in 2021 out of Louisiana-Lafayette, Arrighetti added 2-3 mph to his fastball, which now sits 92-95 mph, after joining the Astros¡¯ organization. He primarily throws two breaking balls: a big sweeping slider to right-handed hitters and a ¡°slurve-y curveball that has two planes of break¡± to lefty batters.
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One of the fastest-risers in Houston¡¯s farm system, Arrighetti led all Astros farmhands with 152 strikeouts in 106 2/3 innings in 2022. The next step is continuing to find that consistency and develop a fourth pitch, his changeup, to throw to batters on both sides of the plate.
¡°I'm really proud of the way that I've drawn the ball, and I feel like I feel dominant again some days when I throw,¡± Arrighetti said.
Triple-A Sugar Land
Quincy Hamilton went deep in four straight games, including a two-homer night on Wednesday that sealed a 5-4 win. The Astros¡¯ No. 22 prospect, who was promoted to Triple-A from Double-A on Tuesday, has carried over his powerful left-handed swing to his first three games at the next level.
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Double-A Corpus Christi
Colton Gordon, the Astros¡¯ No. 8 prospect, hasn¡¯t allowed more than three runs in any of his past eight starts, rolling to a 2.31 ERA in May and June. The left-hander tossed back-to-back scoreless five-inning outings before a three-run start his last time out.
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High-A Asheville
Ryan Clifford is slashing .320/.485/.800 in June, including a two-homer game on June 2. The Astros¡¯ No. 4 prospect, Clifford was promoted from Single-A, where he slashed .337/.488/.457, to High-A on May 9.