McGarry has unusual route to LV
Seth McGarry took somewhat of a circuitous route to Triple-A.
He pitched in 45 games at Double-A Reading last season, so it stood to reason that he would either start the year back with Reading, or get a promotion to Lehigh Valley. Neither of those scenarios unfolded.
Instead, he was sent down a level to High-A Clearwater despite his 3.99 ERA with Reading in 2018, as well as his impressive performance as part of the Phillies contingent playing in the Arizona Fall League following last season.
The demotion caught McGarry offguard, but he realized there wasn’t anything he could do to change the minds of the Phillies player development staff other than to pitch for Clearwater and put up numbers that would force them to bump him back up to Reading.
That didn’t happen either.
McGarry had made four relief appearances with the Threshers this season, three of which resulted in four innings of work, with just one hit and one walk with no runs allowed. The other was a disastrous inning of work where he allowed five hits and three earned runs. The result was a 5.40 ERA.
“I definitely had different expectations,” said McGarry about opening the season with Clearwater. “But they talked to me about it, and I saw where they were coming from.
“I guess I didn’t leave enough of an impression for them to put me some place else, and I didn’t want to feel sorry for myself. I just wanted to try to get better so I could get back to where I was.”
One of the reasons he was sent down to Clearwater was because the Phillies wanted him to develop a slider, which he had never thrown before. They felt it was a better compliment to the sinker he was throwing than his curveball was. He took input from anyone who was willing to give him tips on throwing the curve, and was began to feel a little more comfortable with it.
On May 1, the Threshers were rained out in Ft. Myers. As McGarry and his roommate hung out in their hotel room, there was a late-night knock on the door that started a whirlwind 12-hour span for McGarry.
“It was pretty unexpected,” said McGarry. “The manager came and knocked on the door around 11:30 and said ‘hey, I don’t know the exact details yet, but you’re going to be going to Lehigh tomorrow.’ He came back around midnight and said the airport shuttle is at 4:30 in the morning, they’re playing a 10:30 game and you’re definitely pitching.
“My flight was around 6:50, and I got here in the fourth or fifth inning and then pitched the seventh and eighth. I only had about three hours of sleep before I got ready to catch the shuttle. I had about five alarms set because I didn’t want to miss the shuttle.”
As it turned out, McGarry did pitch in that Education Day game, making his Triple-A debut. He wound up throwing two shutout innings against Syracuse, picking up two strikeouts and not allowing a baserunner. Needless to say, he’s stuck around and has added five more shutout innings for the IronPigs, giving up just three hits and one walk with five strikeouts since his debut. Odds are that he may stick around a little longer.
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