Bellozo mastering mental game early in MLB career
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This story was excerpted from Christina De Nicola¡¯s Marlins Beat newsletter, written this week by Paige Leckie. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
MIAMI -- It¡¯s been a whirlwind of a year for Valente Bellozo. From being traded to the Marlins at the beginning of April to making his Major League debut in June after five years in the Minors, there¡¯s been a lot of change. But through it all, Bellozo has stayed true to himself and delivered quality stuff.
The secret to his success? Bellozo has been seeing a sports psychologist for just over a year.
¡°It's changed all my career, all my life, too,¡± Bellozo said. ¡°[It¡¯s] helped me a lot, being on the field, living more present and [not] thinking of the future or past. And overall, talking about baseball, being on the mound [and] having that confidence, that aggressiveness, and enjoying and embracing every moment.¡±
Growing up, Bellozo knew he was an underdog. Even after signing with the Astros in 2017 as an international free agent, he knew he wasn¡¯t going to be the hardest-throwing or the biggest pitcher out there. But that hasn¡¯t stopped him. Through his work with his psychologist, former big leaguer Freddy Sandoval, Bellozo has grown his confidence and learned how to approach each game as just that, a game.
Part of the key for Bellozo in his success is recognizing that he doesn¡¯t need to be someone, or something, that he¡¯s not. He¡¯s not going out on the mound trying to be the next coming of Cy Young or early Jacob deGrom. He¡¯s taking the ball every fifth day and, so far, delivering pretty electric results.
¡°I'm an average size, I don't pitch hard, and I need to demonstrate that,¡± Bellozo said. ¡°I need to think that I'm the best pitcher over here, because there's a lot of big league hitters here. ¡ And when they see that you're afraid or [have] no confidence, they're gonna be on top of you every time. So I think that's really good, right now, for me, the approach of more playing mentally than talent, because everybody has the talent. It's more mental.¡±
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The mental game is working like a charm. While he¡¯s started just six games thus far, Bellozo¡¯s 2.45 ERA is leagues lower than the rest of the Marlins¡¯ starters -- the closest is Ryan Weathers, who posted a 3.55 ERA in 13 starts before hitting the injured list on June 8 with a left index finger strain. He hasn¡¯t pitched since.
Bellozo¡¯s numbers exhibit his unique qualities. The average launch angle against him (26 degrees) is over twice the league average (12.3). His ground ball rate is half the league average (22.9% vs. 44.5%) while he induces popups twice as much as other pitchers across the league (15.6% vs. 7.1%).
¡°It's a very unique profile -- one that I have not seen, honestly, at this level, where he has got a lot of outs in the air and not a ton of punchouts,¡± manager Skip Schumaker said. ¡°Now, he has punched out guys -- I think the Boston game [on July 2], he struck out [eight] guys -- but for the most part, he's getting outs and getting deep in the games.
¡°Ride the highs, that's what I'm all about. Ride it as long as you can, because if you're getting outs in the big leagues, obviously you're missing barrels, and that's a big deal.¡±
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Bellozo is certainly missing the barrels; he¡¯s allowed just three homers over his six starts so far and, though his fly ball rate is almost nine percentage points above the league average, it doesn¡¯t matter.
In August alone, Bellozo has gone 2-0 with a 1.57 ERA in four starts, the eighth-lowest ERA among qualifying NL pitchers. Not too shabby for a guy who hadn¡¯t pitched above Double-A entering this season. And so much of it is thanks to his confidence.
¡°The one thing about him is he brings energy,¡± Schumaker said. ¡°He is walking around -- I've said it before, he acts like he's Max Scherzer, which is awesome to see. I'm not comparing those two, don't get me [wrong], I'm not saying that. But the demeanor should be something that a lot of these other pitchers should look at and be like, 'I should be more like that instead being scared on the mound.'¡±