Stewart nearly Hammers down no-hitter
Twice at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium on Saturday night, Will Stewart got mad. The second time came after his 108th and final pitch, the only one that landed for a hit. He had recorded 26 outs by that point, three of which were Bryce Denton's doing -- a strikeout and
Twice at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium on Saturday night,
After previously starting Denton off-speed, Stewart wanted to bring the heat. Except this fastball was the only one all night that cut back over the plate. Denton sent it to the left-field wall for a double.
"The snap feeling is you're [ticked] that you threw the wrong pitch," Stewart said. "You're very upset because you know how to throw the guy; you've thrown to him all night. You make one mishap and you've ruined something great. But at the same time, after that, I wasn't worried about anything. I was just extremely ecstatic that I had a good outing."
With the no-no no more, the Marlins' No. 21 prospect settled for a rousing ovation after 8 2/3 dominant innings for Class A Advanced Jupiter. He struck out eight, walked one and after exiting was charged with the only run scored by Palm Beach in the Hammerheads' 3-1 win.
The outing was Stewart's best since he chased the same milestone in April. He matched his season high for strikeouts, which he first reached his last time out -- also against Palm Beach -- and pitched into the ninth inning for the first time all year. He felt his changeup and slider played as "power pitches." He often worked inside, only to finish off hitters with a sinker away. The repeatability he's struggled to find in his mechanics was there, with the front side of his delivery staying solid instead of flailing wildly.
"Everything was on point. Everything was doing exactly what I wanted to," the left-hander said. "I had a great catcher [
Well, not everything. Stewart (4-8) retired the first 16 batters he faced, then issued a one-out walk in the sixth to
Avoiding free passes has been his main focus this season because it's what helped him break out last year. Stewart, then with the Phillies, ranked second in the South Atlantic League with a 2.06 ERA, 0.98 WHIP and 4.7 percent walk rate. Those numbers took him from a 20th-round pick in 2015 to the final piece of the trade that sent All-Star catcher
Gameday box score
So Stewart wants to finish every start without walking a batter. On Saturday, he was well aware of the no-hitter. But that, he said, wasn't his concern. He just didn't want to throw four balls to any batter. When he did, it was more upsetting than the double that ended what would have been a historic achievement.
"You can't control what happens to the ball after you let go of it," Stewart said. "But you can control where you put the ball."
With Diaz aboard, the 22-year-old ended the frame by getting Denton to ground into a double play. A 1-2-3 seventh ended with an eight-pitch strikeout of top Cardinals prospect
"I could feel all the energy in the crowd," Stewart said. "It kind of felt like they were down there with me."
The highlights on the mound overshadowed J.J. Bleday's professional debut. The Marlins' first-round pick in last month's Draft went 1-for-4 with a single.
Marlins No. 3 prospect
Joe Bloss is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow him on Twitter @jtbloss.