TORONTO — Clay Holmes never shied away from dreaming about this. The big right-hander had always thought about dominating in the big leagues, establishing himself as one of the best and maybe even being mentioned for an All Star game.
“Obviously, that’s what you worked for. It always just seems like this thing of the future, but to be, I guess, a little closer, to so many things. It does kind of feel a little surreal. I don’t know. I mean any ballplayer in the big leagues this is something you work towards and hopefully something you accomplish one day, but it’s a lot harder to do than just dreaming about it.
“So it’s cool just to see some of the work and just the process of what I’m trying to do and kind of start to see some results.”
After tweaking his two-seamer to where it’s one of the nastiest pitches in the big leagues, the Yankees have in Holmes a top-notch closer who has converted in all 11 of his chances this season. He has a 30-inning scoreless streak spanning 28 appearances that is 0.2 of an inning away from tying Hall of Famer Mariano Rivera.
Holmes has not had a team score on him since April 8. Holmes has allowed one earned run all year for a 0.29 ERA, the second best ERA through a pitchers first 29 games of a season behind only Dellin Betances.
It seems like a dream ending to the work that Holmes did to get here. Except, well, the Yankees also have an All-Star closer on the injured list in Aroldis Chapman who is rehabbing his way back from an Achilles injury.
How will they work together when Chapman is back off the IL? Well, we’ll see.
“I think a little of everything,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said earlier this week of Holmes’ role when Chapman returns. “So he’ll be closing some games too. Basically, he’s gonna find himself in a lot of the toughest parts of the lineup. So whether that’s the eighth inning, the ninth inning we’ll just try and match him up as best we can.”
Boone had used Holmes as his best reliever even before Chapman went down. He’d pick spots where the toughest part of the lineup was coming up in the seventh or eighth inning and use Holmes.
“Some of the highest leverage points in the game are earlier in the game,” Holmes said. “I think one thing that we’ve done a really good job of here is just putting players in a good position, in their best matchups, and that could be in different parts of the game. I think that’s what they’re gonna continue to do.”
That’s the right answer, obviously.
It shows Holmes is a good teammate — willing to do whatever helps the team — and it’s accurate. There are bigger moments, higher leverage spots in the eight or even sooner in games.
But, there is something about being the last guy on the mound to slam the door. Certainly, Holmes’ visibility has gone up in baseball not just with the impressive scoreless streak, but also by doing it to end games. It just seems more important, more electric in the ninth.
Holmes smirked at that idea. That electricity? He feels the same whatever innings he pitches.
“Honestly, yeah, I mean, it’s important situation where you go into the game and you have to put up a zeros and you have to be your best and get some important outs so, that feeling is kind of same whether it’s in the seventh or eighth thing with the runners on or in the ninth,” Holmes said. “You still know, it’s important. To say that something feels more than the others. I don’t know. Just not really true. It kind of all feels the same.”
And, obviously, the results have been the same.
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