Cole Carrigg Just Gave Rockies Fans A Reason To Believe

The Colorado Rockies are discovering that their No. 6 prospect, Cole Carrigg, brings an electrifying energy to the team, proving he has the drive and skills to excel in high-stakes moments.

LOS ANGELES - Cole Carrigg keeps showing the Rockies the same thing: the moment doesn’t rattle him.

In Monday night’s 8-7 loss at Dodger Stadium, the switch-hitting rookie came up huge in a game that nearly tilted Colorado’s way. Carrigg went 3-for-5 with two doubles, and his second two-bagger, against left-hander Tanner Scott, brought home two runs to tie the game in the top of the ninth. He then scored the go-ahead run in the 10th on a play at the plate that emptied both benches and the Rockies’ bullpen before it was settled as more misunderstanding than fight.

After the game, Carrigg was surrounded by family and friends from Turlock, Calif., and from San Diego State, where he played before Colorado took him in the second round of the 2023 Draft. But the night still ended the way it has too often for the Rockies lately - with Carrigg having done plenty, and the team still coming up short.

“I know all the guys wanted this one,” Carrigg said. “I wanted it.

I’ve always said that we can play with anybody, we’ve got a great team, everybody picks each other up. It sucks not to get this one.

We’ll get them tomorrow.”

The late rally also pushed Colorado’s run total in the eighth inning or later to a Majors-leading 126, with Carrigg driving in two of those runs and scoring another.

That kind of finish is exactly why the Rockies believe he can become one of the players who helps them win nights like this one. Manager Warren Schaeffer didn’t hide how impressed he was by the way Carrigg handled the pressure.

“He’s proven over and over again that the moment is not too big for him,” Schaeffer said. “That’s about as big a stage as you can get in a regular-season game, in Dodger Stadium, and he wants it. Two outs in the ninth, game on the line and he delivers.”

Carrigg’s game has plenty of juice. He flashed his speed with a triple for his first big league hit, and he showed off his arm Monday with a 100.9 mph throw to the plate that wasn’t quite enough to stop Dalton Rushing from scoring on Shohei Ohtani’s fourth-inning single. In 25 games, he has reached base 21 times and is hitting .309 with a .978 OPS.

The numbers back up the rise. Over 331 Minor League games before his promotion, Carrigg hit .283/.359/.474. He also spent much of that time facing limited left-handed pitching, though he hit .338 in 57 games at Triple-A Albuquerque with even left-right splits.

And then there’s the part of Carrigg that doesn’t come with a filter.

He has long been the kind of player who can swing a game with his bat, his legs or his arm, but also one who can flirt with an ejection. That wasn’t the case in Triple-A, where he said the challenge system and replay have helped him keep things in check.

“I can’t yell at anybody … that’s helping me, too,” Carrigg said.

The emotion is still there. Bat flips after homers, celebrations after extra-base hits, slammed bats, helmets that aren’t always safe in the dugout - that all comes with him. But Carrigg says the fire is part of what makes him effective.

“The edge to win and to play for me, I will never lose - it will never leave,” Carrigg said. “Being able to manage some of that on tough days is something I’ve worked on even through the Minors.

But that’s just how I’m wired. I’ve gotten better at it and will continue to, but that won’t cause me to lose any type of edge.”

Schaeffer said the Rockies are fine with that, and that the veterans around Carrigg have made it easier for him to stay himself.

“A huge part is how the veterans basically allow him to do that,” Schaeffer said. “I’ve heard stories where guys come in and veterans say, ‘No, you can’t act like that,’ and they’re not themselves. We’re blessed not to have that.

“These guys all promote guys to be who they are, which is huge for our team and this organization going forward.”

Carrigg’s ninth-inning double was the kind of at-bat that shows why. He was looking for a fastball, Scott tried to sneak in a slider, and Carrigg punished it. The Rockies were right back in it.

“I wasn’t really looking slider, but I felt in the back of my mind he might go back to it, just because he got me to swing at it, and he left one over the plate,” Carrigg said. “Today showed that we are always in it.”

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