Luinder Avila didn’t look like a pitcher trying to find his way on Sunday. He looked like a starter who knew exactly where he was headed.
The 24-year-old handled a dangerous Phillies lineup over five innings in the Royals’ 5-2 win at Kauffman Stadium, keeping Philadelphia’s All-Star core of Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper and Brandon Marsh in check. Avila gave up one run on three hits and struck out four, another sharp step in a stretch that has the Royals feeling good about what he can become.
“You see his heartbeat on the mound,” Royals pitching coach Brian Sweeney said. “He doesn’t quiver out there no matter what the situation.”
Avila has now allowed seven earned runs in 19 ⅔ innings over his last four starts, and the Royals have won all four games. That works out to a 3.20 ERA during that run. He called the challenge of facing Philadelphia straight-up.
“Respect to them, but we are in the big leagues,” Avila said via a translator. “Everybody is a star here. So I had the ball in my hand and I had to pitch, execute pitches and go get people out.”
The Royals have been high on Avila for a while. Matt Quatraro saw starter potential from him in spring training, and Salvador Perez was already talking him up during the World Baseball Classic.
“He is one of the best in here,” Perez said. “The stuff he has is one of the best. He just needs to throw more strikes like he did on (Sunday).”
That’s been the theme for Avila: the stuff has always played, but the strike-throwing has to come with it. That’s where Michael Wacha has become a key voice.
“Ever since I got here, he took me under his wing,” Avila said. “I’m always there.
I watch his bullpens and he can locate with the best of them. So I feel like if at one point I learn how to locate like he does, I’m going to do good.”
Wacha, a 2026 All-Star with 14 MLB seasons behind him, knows the value of that kind of guidance. He pointed back to Adam Wainwright helping him early in his own career, and now he’s trying to pass that along.
“This is a job, but you want to see this game grow,” Wacha said. “You want to see young guys get better in this game and reach their full potential.”
Before Avila starts, the two go over pitching notes and build a plan. Wacha said the process is about learning from each outing and carrying the useful parts forward.
“I feel like he does a great job of accessing his outings and kind of what went wrong, what went good and what can we build off,” Wacha said. “That’s important to continue to grow in this game.”
The message from Wacha has been simple: attack the zone and trust the arsenal. Avila works with five pitches, and both his fastball and sinker can reach 96 mph.
His slider has produced a 34.9% whiff rate, according to Baseball Savant. He has thrown first-pitch strikes 55.4% of the time this season, but staying ahead in counts remains the biggest test.
“If you are throwing that at high-90s, that’s hard to cover which direction it’s going to go,” Sweeney said. “And then beyond that, you have the secondary stuff. Luinder has natural cut on his fastball, he’s got some seam-shift on his sinker that puts him in a really good spot.”
When Avila falls behind, the walks can pile up. When he’s on the attack, the whole package looks different.
“It’s about keeping their eyes looking at different spots,” Avila said. “My fastball cuts and the other one moves in on righties.”
Wacha sees a familiar kind of arm in him, comparing Avila’s profile to Carlos Martinez. Martinez, a two-time All-Star, had a 3.74 ERA across nine MLB seasons and also posted five years with a sub 3.00 ERA.
“Luinder is a little taller and gets a little bit more downhill than he did,” Wacha said. “But same type of electric stuff. ... When those guys are in the zone and attacking hitters, they have a lot of success.”
The Royals are planning to keep giving Avila chances. He can help them as a starter or out of the bullpen, and the need is real with Cole Ragans out for the rest of the 2026 season because of a UCL injury and Kris Bubic dealing with a shoulder issue while heading toward free agency.
Avila is 5.05 ERA in 17 games, including eight starts, over 51 ⅓ innings, but the club sees a pitcher with room to keep climbing.
“I mean, the cool part is he’s so versatile,” Sweeney said. “He can be a starter and we’d like to continue on that path.
But, you’ve seen him really good as a reliever, too. He’s got that mindset going into a game: Give them your best stuff for one inning.
He understands what it takes to get through, in the future, 6-7-8-9 innings.”
His next turn comes Friday in Baltimore, his final start before the All-Star Break and another chance to keep the momentum rolling into the second half.
“It’s been a lot of fun watching him go out there and see how he approaches his outings,” Wacha said. “He’s an unbelievable talent and has some really electric stuff. And (he’s got) the will to learn, too.”
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