The Miz has somehow unlocked an even higher level of dominance.
Jacob Misiorowski, the Milwaukee Brewers' nearly untouchable fireballing right-hander, tossed the first complete game and shutout of his career, needing just 95 pitches to toss a one-hitter and strike out 15 against the Philadelphia Phillies Friday, June 12 at American Family Field.
Only a Kyle Schwarber single in the fourth inning separated Misiorowski from perfection. And Schwarber was erased one batter later on a Bryce Harper double play ball.
Yep, he faced the minimum 27 batters in the Brewers' 6-0 victory and along the way, Misiorowski tossed a 104.5 mph pitch to strike out Schwarber in the first, the hardest pitch by a starting pitcher since pitch tracking began in 2008. It was his first time pitching beyond the seventh inning in 28 career starts.
And pitching on the one-year anniversary of his major league debut, he made it look easy: Not only did Misiorowski not walk a batter, he did not face a three-ball count all game.
And his 15 strikeouts were the most by a pitcher in a shutout of less than 100 pitches, breaking Detroit Tiger lefty Tarik Skubal's record of 13. Seventy-four of his 95 pitches were strikes.
Misiorowski said it felt like he was "floating" in a postgame interview with the Brewers TV broadcast. He certainly maintained his stuff, given he hit 104.5 mph on the first batter of the game and 103 mph on his last pitch − a fastball he blew by Justin Crawford to finish his gem.
The final out of Miz's masterpiece 🥹 pic.twitter.com/FjPyQalcd4
— Milwaukee Brewers (@Brewers) June 13, 2026
"There was no chance," says Misiorowski, "I was going to throw something other than a heater there."
It capped a night the crowd of 40,205, with the roof open on a gorgeous night in Milwaukee, urged him along, giving him a standing ovation when he emerged from the dugout for the ninth inning. The Phillies stood little chance.
"That was as good as it gets," says Brewers manager Pat Murphy. "With all those All-Stars and great players they have over there, incredible, incredible performance. Efficient.
“Amazing young man. Really is. He just goes out and lets it eat."
It was the Brewers' first complete game since Brandon Woodruff went the distance in September 2023. And it figures to be the first of many for Misiorowski.
The 6-foot-7, 24-year-old continues to defy convention − that his body can't sustain such prolonged hard throwing, that he can't be pitch-efficient while striking out so many guys.
But all that's a little easier when you simply don't let anyone on base.
He sat hatless atop the Brewers bench in the bottom of the eighth inning, just 86 pitches to his name. Murphy dared to joke with him: "You good?"
Catcher William Contreras shot Murphy a "You gotta be kidding?" look and of course, he was: There was little doubt he'd go out to try and finish it − and needed just nine pitches to do so.
Unsurprisingly, he recorded 12 of his 15 strikeouts on his fastball, and threw 58 pitches of at least 100 mph, 31 of those 102 mph or harder.
Little wonder his ERA now sits at 1.34, best in the major leagues.
He'll continue stacking up the velocity benchmarks: The hardest pitch, the most pitches above a certain speed, things of that nature. But now it's Miz, The Pitcher, who is commanding the headlines, with seemingly no ceiling.
"It’s really cool," Misiorowski said of his velo accomplishments, "but there’s always another step to go with it.
"So keep pushing it."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jacob Misiorowski blows away Phillies in 15-strikeout shutout