Casey Mize put together the kind of night that turns heads, and he did it in the Bronx.
The Tigers right-hander carved through the Yankees on Monday at Yankee Stadium, finishing with a career-high 10 strikeouts in a 7-3 Detroit win to open the series. Mize was in command from start to finish, working seven shutout innings, allowing just one hit and issuing no walks.
His last pitch told the story. After getting New York’s Oswaldo Cabrera on a seventh-inning strike-call challenge, Mize walked off the mound with the same calm stride he’d shown all night. The call wasn’t close, and it put the finishing touch on a dominant outing.
Mize is now 3-5, but the numbers behind the record keep getting stronger. The former No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 draft lowered his ERA to 2.63, and Monday’s start was the longest of his career. He also threw first-pitch strikes to 16 of 22 batters, and after reaching 10 strikeouts for the third time in five seasons, he finished by fanning five of the final six hitters he faced.
The lone hit he allowed came on a Spencer Jones bloop double. It carried an exit velocity of 82 mph and a .205 xBA, which only added to how little hard contact New York managed all night.
Mize also made a little MLB history in the process. He became just the third starting pitcher ever to hold the Yankees to one run or fewer while recording at least 10 strikeouts and zero walks.
The only others to do it were Chris Sale for the White Sox on May 22, 2014, and Pedro Martínez for the Red Sox on Sept. 10, 1999.
For Mize, the performance only adds to a season that’s starting to look more and more real. He built on the momentum from his All-Star appearance last season and continues to emerge as one of Detroit’s most dependable arms.
That raises the obvious question: if two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal is moved before the deadline, does Mize step into the Tigers’ ace role? Or is he simply raising his value around the league?
The Yankees had little answer for him Monday. Playing without Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton, they dropped their fifth straight and have now been held to three hits or fewer in four consecutive games for the first time in franchise history. New York is batting .098 during that stretch.
Maybe Mize caught them at the right time. Maybe not. Either way, he kept building a case for himself.
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Chisholm did not meet with reporters afterward, leaving the reaction to come from elsewhere. Michael Kay called the scene a really bad look on his radio show, and former Yankees teammate Anthony Rizzo described the ejection as a sign of immaturity while noting the spot it left Anthony Volpe in. For a club trying to keep its focus on the bigger picture, the issue is less the ejection itself than the growing number of moments around Chisholm that are forcing the conversation in the wrong direction. [Read more 🡒]
