June belonged to Ketel Marte.
The Diamondbacks had a few worthy candidates for their monthly honor, with catcher Gabriel Moreno forcing his way into the conversation after a blistering .308/.427/.474 line. But Marte made the choice hard to ignore.
He played in 26 of Arizona’s 27 games in June, came through with late-inning hits that helped win a couple of games, and launched eight homers. He even closed the month by going deep in four straight games.
Marte’s biggest moment of the month came in a game that doubled as Arizona’s best win. On June 4 against the Dodgers, the Diamondbacks were staring at a loss in a four-game series after falling behind 2-0 through seven innings. They tied it in the eighth, then finished it off in the ninth when Marte sent a Tanner Scott pitch over the fence with one out for a walk-off homer.
"Ketel Marte is an amazing baseball player, and the best players do the best things at the most critical times, and he basically stepped up there and won us a baseball game, and it was a great moment for him, a great moment for this team," Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said.
Marte’s walk-off power has become a little more familiar lately. He had never hit one before May 19, and now he has two.
There were other strong performances across the roster in June. Eduardo Rodriguez kept stacking up another excellent month, posting a 2.02 ERA and a 1.12 WHIP across six starts. That run was rewarded over the weekend, when he was named to his first All-Star Game in his 11th big league season.
"I didn't realize it was his first one, honestly," fellow starter Merrill Kelly said. "You know, he's been doing it for a while, he's obviously won a World Series. I figured in my mind, I just thought he had already gotten one, but it's pretty cool to see after how the last couple years have gone for him, for him to do what he's doing this year and then get his first All-Star nod."
Ryan Clarke also kept turning in quality work out of the bullpen after his offseason signing drew little attention. In June, he pitched in 11 games and finished with a 2.92 ERA and a 1.05 WHIP.
The month also included one game the Diamondbacks would rather forget. After beating the Twins in the opener of the series, Arizona was blown out 16-8 in a game that was far uglier than the final score suggests. Minnesota piled on for 16 unanswered runs, including a 10-run fifth inning, and Yilber Díaz took the brunt of it, allowing seven runs in two-thirds of an inning before being designated for assignment after the game.
"That was a rough day," Lovullo said after the game. "There isn't much positive to say other than we need to be better.
We need to pitch better, we need to prep better, we need to coach better, I need to manage better. We just got to do it all the way around.
You cannot give up 16 runs, you cannot put yourself in that position."
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Now the conversation has shifted from what Soroka can do on the mound to what the Diamondbacks should do with him beyond this season. He has already given the organization enough to keep the debate alive, but injuries have also shaped too much of his recent track record to make the answer simple. Arizona will have to weigh the appeal of keeping a pitcher with real swing-and-miss ability against the uncertainty that has followed him for years. [Read more 🡒]
Ketel Marte Has Diamondbacks Fans Eyeing Another Big Night
Ketel Marte is the kind of hitter Arizona can lean on when the matchup lines up, and this one does. German Marquez is back in the picture after a forearm injury, and the right-hander has had trouble keeping the ball in the park this season, which is exactly the sort of opening that can turn a routine night into a loud one for a lineup with Marte in the middle of it.
Marte has also handled Marquez well enough in past meetings to make Diamondbacks fans pay attention, with extra-base damage already on the ledger and a track record that suggests comfort against this particular arm. For a team trying to squeeze every bit of offense out of its best bats, that history is enough to make another big night feel less like a guess and more like a possibility. [Read more 🡒]
