Jeanmar Gómez

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Jeanmar Gómez
Philadelphia Phillies – No. 46
Pitcher
Born: (1988-02-10) February 10, 1988 (age 36)
Caracas, Venezuela
Bats: Right Throws: Right
MLB debut
July 18, 2010, for the Cleveland Indians
MLB statistics
(through May 25, 2016)
Win–loss record 23–22
Earned run average 4.06
Strikeouts 271
WHIP 1.39
Saves 18
Teams

Jeanmar Alejandro Gómez (born February 10, 1988) is a Venezuelan professional baseball relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies of Major League Baseball (MLB). He has also played for the Cleveland Indians and Pittsburgh Pirates.

Career

Cleveland Indians

A native of Caracas, Venezuela, Gómez was signed by the Cleveland Indians as an undrafted free agent.

Since 2006, Gómez has played in the minors with the Gulf Coast League Indians, Lake County Captains, Kinston Indians, Akron Aeros, and the Columbus Clippers.

On May 21, 2009 Gómez pitched a nine-inning perfect game for Akron against the host Trenton Thunder at Waterfront Park. It was the first perfect game in Aeros team history and just the second nine-inning perfect game in Eastern League history, dating back to 1923.[1][2]

On July 18, 2010 Gómez was called up to the Cleveland Indians from the Columbus Clippers to make his Major League Baseball debut in a spot start against the Detroit Tigers.[3] He entered the game knowing it was his only start before returning to the minor leagues, even though he notched a "lights out" performance, throwing seven innings while surrendering only two unearned runs.[4]

On April 14, 2012 Gómez was ejected after hitting the Kansas City Royals' third baseman Mike Moustakas. The benches had already been warned after Indian's outfielder Shin-Soo Choo was hit by a pitch.[5]

Gómez got his first major league hit on June 12, 2012, off Cincinnati Reds pitcher Johnny Cueto.

On January 2, 2013, Gómez was designated for assignment by the Indians to make room on the roster for Russ Canzler who was claimed from the Blue Jays.[6]

Pittsburgh Pirates

On January 9, 2013, Gomez was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates in exchange for outfielder Quincy Latimore.[7] Quite inconsistent in Cleveland, Gomez found stability in the back end of Pittsburgh's rotation after improving during spring training. The recipient of direction from pitching coach Ray Searage to avoid moving his head so much, Gomez's simplified approach helped him post a 2.76 ERA during his first eight starts.[8] During the second half of the season, he worked out of the bullpen, and ultimately compiled a 3–0 record with a 3.35 ERA, an improvement of more than 2.5 earned runs per nine innings from the prior season.[9]

Entering 2014, Gomez was a candidate to work in long relief, particularly because he was out of options.[10] He pitched in 44 games – all out of the bullpen – totaling 62 innings and posting a 3.19 ERA, but overall was "underwhelming".[11][12] He was designated for assignment on October 25, and subsequently became a free agent.[13]

Philadelphia Phillies

On January 12, 2015, he signed a minor league contract with the Philadelphia Phillies.[14] Although he had experience both as a starter and a reliever, he projected to work mainly in middle relief for the Phillies, assuming he made the club out of spring training, which he did, one of seven Venezuelans on the Phillies' roster, the most in the major leagues.[15][16] Working exclusively out of the bullpen, Gomez pitched in 65 games, and posted a 3.01 ERA with a 3:1 strikeout to walk ratio.[9] That walk rate was the best of his career, and he increased the velocity of his fastball as well.[17] He successfully reinvented himself to be a serviceable middle reliever on a subpar team, and to that end, was retained for the 2016 season.[18]

Pitching style

Gomez relies primarily on a sinker that he grips like a two-seam fastball, that ranges from about 90–92 miles per hour (145–148 km/h), as well as a slider and a changeup, the latter of which he uses primarily against left-handed hitters.[19] Very occasionally, he mixes in a cutter.[20] Over time, both his two seam fastball and slider have improved in terms of movement according to Carlos Santana, who served as the catcher for Gomez both at the minor league and major league levels.[4]

References

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External links