Cardinals Fans Need To See How Fast This Unique Arm Is Rising

Jurrangelo Cijntje's promotion to Triple-A brings the St. Louis Cardinals closer to making MLB history with their one-of-a-kind switch-pitching talent.

Jurrangelo Cijntje keeps standing out in a Cardinals system that has plenty of pitching names worth watching, but none quite like his. The switch-pitcher, whose name is still enough to make people slow down and check the spelling, has been moved up to Triple-A Memphis this week and is now much closer to an MLB debut.

That alone makes him unusual. In the modern era, only one other switch-pitcher has reached the majors: Pat Venditte.

Venditte appeared in 61 games across six clubs over five big league seasons, though he never really locked down a permanent role in a bullpen. Cijntje, by contrast, is being developed with a starting future in mind, and that gives him a very different kind of ceiling.

Most of the time, Cijntje works from the right side. But he has also chosen to throw left-handed in games, usually only for a couple of batters at a time.

Before the Cardinals got him from the Seattle Mariners in the Brendan Donovan trade this offseason, Seattle had been leaning toward having him pitch only right-handed going forward. St.

Louis has mostly continued that direction, while still leaving the door open for him to switch sides.

A big-league debut does not appear imminent, but the move to Memphis matters because it adds another high-upside arm to a rotation that is starting to take shape. Cijntje now joins Quinn Mathews, MiLB’s Pitcher of the Year in 2024, along with recently promoted Mason Molina and Cardinals 2025 Minor League Pitcher of the Year Brycen Mautz in the Redbirds’ starting mix.

Those three lefties, along with Cijntje, are part of a broader wave of young pitching moving through the system. Hunter Dobbins is in that conversation too, even though he is no longer considered a prospect after coming over in the Willson Contreras trade.

Cijntje’s season ERA sits at 5.04, but that number does not tell the whole story. He has been much sharper lately, especially in July, when he has made two starts and covered 12 innings. In that span, he has allowed two runs on four walks and seven hits while striking out 17.

Mathews has been rolling too. After dealing with command issues earlier, he has settled in and turned into a force for Memphis.

Over his last eight starts, he has posted a 1.87 ERA, struck out 53 batters and averaged more than five innings per outing. His latest start, on July 9, was his best of the stretch: seven scoreless innings, with only two hits and two walks allowed.

Taken together, Dobbins, Mathews, Mautz, Molina and now Cijntje give the Cardinals something they have lacked in recent years: real trust in their minor league pitching depth over the grind of a 162-game season. And this group is only part of the picture. Liam Doyle and Tanner Franklin have been in the organization for just one year, and there are more arms on the way in names like Yhoiker Fajardo, Jacob Odle, Brandon Clarke, Cooper Hjerpe, Tekoah Roby, Cade Crossland, Ixan Hendersno, Braden Davis, Chen-Wei Lin and several pitchers added in this weekend’s draft.

The Cardinals have already seen the payoff from their young hitters at the major league level this year, with more help coming there too. Now the pitching side is starting to catch up, and Cijntje’s arrival in Triple-A is another sign that the next wave is getting close.

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