Kevin McGonigle lives up to hype in historic Tigers debut
When the Detroit Tigers confirmed that young infielder Kevin McGonigle had made their Opening Day roster, the expectations could not have been higher.
Yet somehow, one of Major League Baseball’s top prospects managed to exceed them in his first game.
McGonigle roped the first pitch he saw on Thursday for a bases-loaded, two-run double, and added three more hits on the afternoon to finish the day 4-for-5 with two runs batted in, and two runs scored. In the process, he became just the third-youngest player with four or more hits on Opening Day in the last century of MLB action.
“What a debut,” manager A.J. Hinch said after Detroit’s 8-2 win. “He can hit.”
Hinch penciled McGonigle into the sixth spot in Detroit’s lineup, starting him at third base. He came to the plate with the bases loaded in the top of the first inning, and jumped on the first pitch he saw, a 91-mph cutter on the inside part of the plate. He laced that down the right-field line, bringing two teammates home on the very first pitch he saw:
“I was nervous, but it’s weird — I feel like right when I started my load to hit, it just went away,” McGonigle said after the game. “I felt great out there. Very confident. Looking to keep that same mindset going.”
McGonigle certainly had that same mindset in his second at-bat, which came in the top of the third inning. After falling down 0-2 in the count after missing on a fastball and taking a curve for the second strike, he battled back to even the count at 2-2. That’s when McGonigle jumped on another fastball on the inner half of the plate, roping a line drive off the top of the wall in right field:
While he just missed his first MLB home run, his head-first slide into second ahead of the throw from Fernando. Tatis Jr. gave him his second double in two at-bats.
He reached on an infield single in the fifth, and then popped out to third in the seventh, recording his first MLB out. But McGonigle had one more at-bat in the game, as he came to the dish in the top of the ninth.
That’s when he laced a single to right center for his fourth hit of the day:
“He won’t be as nervous as that at-bat, and if that’s the nervous version of him, we’re in for a fun year,” Hinch said. “I like the fact he was aggressive on his pitch. Obviously a big hit to open up the game a little bit and give us some breathing room. That set the tone for a really good day for him and for us.”
McGonigle was the youngest Tigers player named to an Opening Day roster since Omar Infante in 2003. And as noted above he became the third-youngest player in the last 100 years of MLB action to record four or more hits on Opening Day.
The only two players younger? Ken Griffey Jr. and Delino DeShields Jr., both of whom accomplished that feat on Opening Day in 1990.
“[I told myself] it’s just another game,” McGonigle said. “I kept that mindset, and I’m looking forward to keeping that going.”
It might have felt like just another game to McGonigle. But it certainly did not to Tigers fans.
To them, it felt like the future. And a very bright one at that.
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