Schmidt stellar in long relief in Thunder win
Clarke Schmidt made only three starts for the Thunder since his promotion on Aug. 15, but that didn't hinder the 23-year-old from wanting the ball when the playoffs began.On Wednesday, he got it -- albeit a little later than he initially believed -- and made the most of his Double-A
On Wednesday, he got it -- albeit a little later than he initially believed -- and made the most of his Double-A postseason debut.
The fifth-ranked Yankees prospect provided six strong innings of relief, allowing an unearned run on a pair of hits and a walk while fanning four, as Trenton rallied to a 4-3 victory over Reading in Game 1 of the best-of-5 Eastern League semifinals at FirstEnergy Stadium.
"It was a lot of fun," Schmidt said. "I knew the stakes were high, but I like the big environments, pressure situations. I've always thrived on that. So for me to be able to throw in this game and put up zeros was a blessing.
"I live for these big games -- the brighter the lights, the better. It was a lot of fun, the adrenaline was flowing and to settle down there and post those zeros and give my team a chance, I completed my goal, for sure."
Schmidt (1-0) entered in the fourth after rehabbing left-hander
"I was supposed to be the starter and then yesterday afternoon they told me [Montgomery] was coming down, so I was going to piggyback him and to get ready to come out of the 'pen," he said. "So it was definitely a new thing for me. I had to change my warmup a little, figure out when the best time to get hot was ... but I think I handled it pretty well. My job was to just go out there and get outs and that's what I did so I was thankful for that."
Gameday box score
The 23-year-old right-hander issued a leadoff walk to Phillies No. 28 prospect
"Early on, I really didn't have anything going," he said. "I was just spraying the ball everywhere and couldn't really find the strike zone. But then I made some adjustments and stayed within myself. I threw a lot of breaking balls early on, but then found my fastball and worked that in to keep guys off-balance, and that seemed to work well for me. My fastball had a ton of life tonight -- it was just jumping out of my hand. So I was able to bounce back and get some quick outs."
The 2017 first-rounder faced the minimum the rest of the way, aided by a double play to end the sixth, and threw 45 of 74 pitches for strikes. He needed 12 pitches or fewer to navigate four of his final five frames.
"I knew we would put up some runs, so I was just trying to keep my mind in it," Schmidt said. "You can't lose focus, especially after we start to score, so I just did my best to stay locked in and put up two more zeros after that."
Game 2 is Thursday in Reading.
Complete postseason coverage
Fourth-ranked Phillies prospect
In other Eastern League playoff action:
Baysox 5, Senators 3
Orioles No. 5 prospect
Rob Terranova is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow him on Twitter, @RobTnova24.