It was a rough start to the season for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders relief pitcher Zach Messinger. In five appearances in April covering 12.1 innings, the 26-year-old right-hander allowed 13 runs (11 earned) on 15 hits with nine walks and 11 strikeouts. His earned-run average was 7.07.
Since then, Messinger has turned things around. In his last six appearances dating back to April 28th, he has not allowed a run and just one hit in 13 innings with five walks and 11 strikeouts. He has lowered his ERA to 3.67.
“As the year goes on, there’s ups and there’s downs. I just hit a lower point early on,” Messinger said. “I’ve put in a lot of work with our analysts and our pitching coaches on things we can tighten up. I think we’ve done a really good job of that. It’s also me staying within myself, understanding it’s only April, it’s only May. Nothing really too crazy to push the issue on. Just the ebbs and flows of the season. But it’s been good to put a few good ones together.”
During the rough stretch, there wasn’t anything physically wrong with Messinger. Nothing wrong mechanically, his velocity was good. Some of it was bad luck. Most of it, Messinger feels, was a difference in game-planning and focus points.
“Typically in my career, that’s something I’ve leaned pretty heavy on,” he said. “I feel like I’m a pretty cerebral guy and I enjoy the game-planning aspect of going through a lineup and how you’re going to attack them. I got a little bit away from myself from doing that. So getting back to who I was and trusting my stuff. I’ve worked really hard to get where I’m at, worked really hard to get my stuff where it’s at. It was a little bit of seeing is believing. Now it’s starting to come together.”
The turning point came April 23rd in a home game at PNC Field against Rochester. Messinger came on in the top of the ninth inning with the RailRiders leading, 4-2, and allowed three runs on five hits and two walks, enabling the Red Wings to take a 5-4 lead. The RailRiders tied it in the bottom of the ninth to force extra innings. Messinger pitched three-up, three-down innings in the 10th and 11th with two strikeouts and the RailRiders won it in the bottom of the 11th on a RBI single by Jasson Domínguez.
“Putting together two really good innings and ending up winning that game,” said Messinger, who is 3-0 with one save this season. “That’s just good mentally, confidence-wise, too, to be able to have that one in the back pocket. So leaning on that and kind of doing a deep dive into some usage stuff – fastballs less, sliders more – looking back on what’s given me success over the course of my career as a starter or a reliever.”
Selected by the Yankees out of the University of Virginia in the 13th round of the 2021 MLB Draft (393rd overall), Messinger has worked his way up through the organization, primarily as a starter.
He began last season in Triple-A with the RailRiders and his first seven appearances were starts. Then, in mid-May, he transitioned to a reliever and worked out of the bullpen. On August 28th, he was sent down to Double-A Somerset and finished the season there. In 33 combined games (28 RailRiders, 5 Somerset), he was 4-4 with three saves, one hold, a 5.55 ERA and 71 strikeouts in 73 innings.
Messinger doesn’t have a preference as a starter or a reliever. He believes he is capable in whatever role he is needed.
“Last year I did some starting at the beginning of the year, then had some ninth-inning appearances,” he said. “So far I’ve done a decent amount of long relief, but I’ve also had some later, high-leverage innings in the eighth and ninth this year.
“I think the best thing I can give the Yankees is me showing I’m adaptable. If you need 45 pitches out of me, I’m going to be there. If you need me to come in late innings and kind of put out a fire with guys on base, I’m adaptable. I’ll be ready in any situation.”
One of Messinger’s best friends in the organization is RailRiders teammate Brendan Beck. The two were drafted together in the same year. They are roommates on the road, so he had a front-row view for when Beck was called up to the Yankees on May 7th to make his Major League debut.
“I was right there watching everything that was going on in the Yankees game and there with him when he had to jump in the car and rush to the Bronx,” Messinger said. “Knowing that guy’s journey, there’s nothing you can take away from that guy that he hasn’t earned. Going through surgeries and setbacks, he’s an absolute grinder. It was so cool to see, he’s really earned it. They don’t hand out big-league debuts just for guys because it’s a cool story, coming back from injuries. You’ve got to go out there and put up the success on the field and he’s been able to do that at every level he’s been at. He’s been able to do it since college. He just needed the opportunity and let his body hold up a little bit. It’s been really awesome to see him do that these last couple weeks.”
If and when Messinger gets that phone call, he said he will be ready.
“I’ve put in a lot of work, especially the past few offseasons, to build my repertoire and my mentality for the game, especially as a reliever,” he said. “I think I’ve put myself in a good position to where if the team upstairs needs me, I’ll be ready. That’s kind of the whole goal, right? I stuck my toe in the water last year and got the taste of Triple-A as a starter and a reliever. I know how to get through a lineup and I’ve seen guys go up to the big leagues and succeed. I’ve talked to them and I feel like I’m good mentally and physically to where if the opportunity comes and the Yankees need me, I’ll be there.”