
Brewers Phenom Jacob Misiorowski Gets Tagged for 1st Time in Loss to Mets
The hard-throwing rookie finally got knocked around Wednesday, serving up back-to-back homers as the Milwaukee Brewers lost 7–3 to the New York Mets in the second game of a day-night doubleheader at Citi Field. Barely touched by opposing batters since getting called up from the minors last month, Misiorowski (3-1) gave up five runs, five hits, and three walks over 3 2/3 innings in his fourth career outing. Brandon Nimmo connected for a grand slam in the second, and a slumping Francisco Lindor followed with another long ball off Misiorowski to give the Mets a 5–0 lead.
'He wasn't in sync tonight, for sure. You could see it early. He'd have it for one pitch and then you could just see the ball wasn't coming out of his fingers the same. You could see the frustration building,' Brewers manager Pat Murphy said. 'That's too good of a team and too good of a lineup. (These are) the days you realize how good these guys are – all major league players. It's so tough to perform at the highest level and be consistent. But when you're off a little bit, it can be the difference, and Miz just wasn't in sync.'
A touted prospect, the 6-foot-7 Misiorowski had more than lived up to the hype since his arrival. He began his career with 11 hitless innings and then a scoreless start in a win over Pirates ace Paul Skenes before a crowd of 42,774 in Milwaukee last week. The 23-year-old right-hander carried a perfect game into the seventh June 20 at Minnesota and racked up 19 strikeouts in his first 16 big league innings.
'He has amazing stuff,' Nimmo said.
Misiorowski threw 62 pitches at least one hundred mph in his first three games, and opposing batters were 3 for 49 (six percent) against him – making him the first pitcher in the modern era (since 1900) to have as many wins as hits allowed through three career starts.
'He's really good. Crazy future ahead of him,' Lindor said. 'It's going to be fun to watch him and fun to play against him.'
But on this night, Misiorowski walked consecutive batters with two outs in the second and was unable to corral a high comebacker off the bat of No. 9 hitter Hayden Senger. The ball glanced off Misiorowski's glove and spun away from second baseman Brice Turang for an infield single that loaded the bases.
'There was a fastball at the bottom of the zone for a walk that I thought was there. But I thought, 'good spot,' and maybe get it up a little bit more,' Misiorowski said. 'Just frustrated at myself for not making a play.'
Nimmo pulled the next pitch – a 96 mph slider – to right field for his third career slam and second this season. Lindor then drove a 1–2 fastball to right-center for his 17th home run.
'I threw good pitches and they hit 'em. Plain and simple as that,' Misiorowski said. 'I mean, you're facing the best of the best. They're getting paid what they're getting paid for a reason.'
Misiorowski said his problem was mechanical. 'My fingers were just a little too far on the right side of the ball, and it kind of spun a little different than I'm used to,' he said. 'I think I came back pretty well after that. … I fixed it that next inning.'
Murphy said Misiorowski didn't feel good while warming up in the bullpen, and that carried over to the game. 'His whole body was not in sync,' the manager explained. 'All the arms and legs, it's hard to sync it all up.'
Misiorowski came out firing one hundred mph fastballs – touching 102 mph against Lindor in the first inning – but it didn't last.
'He learned his lesson. He's ticked about it. Even some of the sequencing, he's ticked about,' Murphy said. 'He can see it, that there's just a really fine line between being dominant and being just OK.'
Misiorowski, however, won't dwell on this disappointment. 'It's done. Use the old Tiger Woods approach and move on to the next hit. Move on to the next pitch. It is what it is. I got a loss, but oh well,' he said. 'It's frustrating. But at the same time, like, young career, it's good figuring it out now. Not when we're in the playoffs and it matters most.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
42 minutes ago
- Arab News
Doug Ghim clings to one-shot lead at John Deere Classic
SILVIS, Illinois: Doug Ghim shot a 3-under par 68 and held onto a one-stroke lead over Max Homa and a group of contenders at the John Deere Classic on Friday in Silvis, Illinois Homa is part of a five-way tie for second after also posting a 68 late Friday afternoon at TPC Deere Run. He matched Ghim at 12 under with a birdie at the par-5 17th hole, but after finding a bunker off the 18th tee he failed to save par and dropped back a shot. Ghim, a 29-year-old Illinois native, is hoping to land his maiden PGA Tour victory in his home state. 'They couldn't make it today but I'm anticipating family coming (Saturday), and I'm excited about that,' Ghim said. Ghim made an eagle for the second straight round, holing out from 179 yards away at the par-4 15th. 'I guess holing out two days in a row is always nice,' he said. 'It's been couple years since I think I holed out from the fairway. To get two back-to- back days is a great.' He reached 13 under for the tournament with back-to-back birdies at Nos. 4-5, but Ghim bogeyed his closing hole, No. 9. Homa entered the week an abysmal No. 122 in the FedEx Cup standings amid a disappointing season, but now he's in the mix for his first win since 2023. 'I don't think really much changes' on the weekend, Homa said. 'I mean, just play the golf course. You're going to have to shoot really low. If you went out there and tried to do something specific, I'm not so sure that is going to work. Somebody can go out there and shoot 11-under out there and jump everybody. 'So just go do what we did today and play another round of golf. Just keep waiting until the back nine on Sunday basically.' The round of the day belonged to defending champion Davis Thompson, whose bogey-free 63 catapulted him to 11 under. Tied with Homa and Thompson are Brian Campbell (66), David Lipsky (67) and Argentina's Emiliano Grillo (66). '(On Thursday) I hit a lot of great putts early but they were just burning the edges,' said Thompson, who made four birdies on each nine Friday. 'Then I was able to make a few on the back nine (Thursday) and just ride that momentum into today.' Colombia's Camilo Villegas (66) and Si Woo Kim of South Korea (67) are part of a group at 10 under as the second round finished up late Friday. Rickie Fowler dropped four shots in a four-hole span on his back nine, with two bogeys and a double bogey, but he birdied No. 17 to finish up a 1-over 72 and get to 5 under, which wound up being the cut line at the end of the day. Notable names who missed the cut included Tom Kim of South Korea (4 under), Australian Jason Day (2 under), J.T. Poston (1 under) and Canadian Adam Hadwin (2 over).


Al Arabiya
42 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Astros' Altuve Homers Twice, Drives In Five And Gets Booed In 18-1 Historic Rout Of Dodgers
Jose Altuve homered twice, reaching base five times and driving in five runs, as the Houston Astros routed the Los Angeles Dodgers 18–1 on Friday night in the series opener of a matchup between division leaders. The defending World Series champion Dodgers were held to five hits and Will Smith's solo homer in the team's worst loss in Dodger Stadium history. The AL West-leading Astros scored 10 runs in the sixth, highlighted by Victor Caratini's grand slam and Altuve's three-run shot. It was the most runs given up in an inning by the Dodgers since April 23, 1999, when they allowed 11 to St. Louis. Houston's Lance McCullers Jr. (2–3) allowed one run and four hits in six innings of his second start since returning from a sprained right foot. He struck out four. Isaac Paredes hit his first career leadoff homer on the first pitch of the game from rookie Ben Casparius. Altuve doubled and scored on Walker's RBI single for a 2–0 lead. Jake Meyers doubled leading off the third and scored on Altuve's 14th homer. Rookie Cam Smith doubled and scored on Walker's 417-foot shot halfway up the left-field pavilion to cap four straight hits given up by Casparius and extend Houston's lead to 6–1. The Astros broke it open in the sixth. Smith had a bases-loaded RBI single, reliever Noah Davis hit Walker with two strikes to force in a run, and Caratini hit his grand slam with no outs. Meyers added an RBI single, and Altuve hit his second homer of the night. Casparius allowed six runs and nine hits in three innings and struck out three. Dodgers fans relentlessly booed Altuve throughout his at-bats, chanting 'Cheater! Cheater!' He's one of two players, along with McCullers, remaining from Houston's 2017 team that beat the Dodgers in the World Series. It later came out that the Astros were stealing signs with the help of video and relaying pitches to batters by banging on a trash can. Key moment: Shohei Ohtani hit a 96-mph line drive off the left heel of McCullers in the third. The ball flew up and was caught by shortstop Mauricio Dubón, with the umpire signaling Ohtani out on the rare 1–6 putout. Key stat: Cooper Hummel's pinch-hit single in the fifth snapped a streak of 12 1/3 hitless innings by the Dodgers bullpen. Up next: Astros LHP Framber Valdez (9–4, 2.72 ERA) starts Saturday. Dodgers RHP Shohei Ohtani (0–0, 2.25) will throw two innings as the opener on his 31st birthday.


Al Arabiya
an hour ago
- Al Arabiya
Quero Hits 1st Homer to Back Houser's Gem as White Sox Edge Rockies in Matchup of MLB's Worst
Adrian Houser allowed two hits in eight innings, and rookie catcher Edgar Quero hit his first major league home run–a tiebreaking solo shot in the sixth that sent the Chicago White Sox past the Colorado Rockies 3–2 on Friday night. Rookie reliever Grant Taylor gave up a two-out single to Mickey Moniak in the ninth before striking out Ryan McMahon for his third save. In a matchup between the two worst teams in the majors, Houser (4–2) permitted two unearned runs on four hits and two walks. He hasn't yielded more than three runs in any of his eight starts this season. The veteran right-hander was coming off seven sharp innings in a 1–0 win over the Giants that Taylor also saved. Andrew Benintendi and Miguel Vargas opened the fourth with singles against Antonio Senzatela (3–12), and Quero walked to load the bases. Michael A. Taylor's two-out single gave Chicago a 2–0 lead. Michael Toglia doubled in the fifth and scored on a throwing error by third baseman Josh Rojas. Tyler Freeman doubled to tie it at 2. Quero gave Chicago the lead with a 401-foot drive to right field–before getting the silent treatment from his teammates when he returned to the dugout. Senzatela leads the majors in losses after allowing three runs and seven hits in 5 2/3 innings. White Sox shortstop Colson Montgomery had a memorable big league debut after being called up from Triple-A Charlotte. He became the second player since 1920 to reach on catcher's interference in his first plate appearance, then made a diving over-the-shoulder catch to end the second inning. He finished 0 for 2 with a walk. Chicago (29–59) kept the Rockies (20–68) from winning back-to-back home games for the first time this season. White Sox RHP Jonathan Cannon (2–7, 4.59 ERA) starts Saturday opposite Rockies RHP Germán Márquez (3–9, 5.62).