ST. LOUIS β Of the many stellar qualities that Michael McGreevy has displayed over the final stages of the 2024 and β25 seasons β composure in big spots, a heavy sinker that induces ground balls at a high rate and a crafty six-pitch mix β the ones the Cardinals have grown to love the most is the 25-year-old right-handerβs willingness to adapt and be coachable.
Making changes to how he attacks hitters certainly helped McGreevy keep the Reds off balance on Tuesday in arguably the best start of his young MLB career.
βWhat Iβm liking that I am seeing is his ability to have a postgame review and then having the courage to take what he is told and apply it immediately and not being scared that it may not work,β manager Oliver Marmol said before McGreevy limited the Reds to three hits over seven scoreless innings in a 3-0 Cardinals win Tuesday night. βThatβs a really cool trait to have as a young player.
β[Previously], in Triple-A, he was 86 percent slider/sweeper mix to righties and 78 percent in the big leagues. Then, he goes into his last outing [Sept. 10 at Seattle] and he mixes curveballs, cutters, and four-seamers to righties, which is something that he previously didnβt do. He took that [suggestion] and applied it. Some people have the personality of, βWhat if that doesnβt work?β He has the personality of, βWhat if it does?ββ
McGreevy (7-3) outdueled Reds left-hander Andrew Abbott for the second time in 18 days by mixing his six pitches beautifully. After arguing to stay in the game, he struck out the side in the seventh inning and six for the game. Tuesdayβs performance was the first seven-inning shutout in his 18 career MLB starts, bettering his six innings of scoreless work against the Cubs on Aug. 8.
After not striking out a Reds batter when he faced them in Cincinnati on Aug. 30, McGreevy credited his willingness to be adaptable to his success on Tuesday against a Cincinnati squad hoping to stay in the playoff race. He noted that assistant GM for player development and performance, Rob Cerfolio and pitching director Matt Pierpont β newcomers to the Cards’ organization in 2025, impressed upon him early in the season the need to be adaptable at the big league level.
βI couldnβt even put a face to Cerfolio or Pierpont yet, but they were like, βTry thisβ and, βUse your time [at Triple-A Memphis] to get better,β and I was like, βYeah sure, Iβm down for that,ββ said McGreevy, who didnβt meet many of the staff newcomers until April because he spent Spring Training in Cards camp. βThey were like, βYou havenβt even met us yet!β But Iβm always open to ideas and being coachable. They have my best interests in mind to help me become a better pitcher, so anything that comes my way, Iβm looking to add to what I already do.β
Abbott came into Tuesday having limited the Cardinals to three earned runs in 16 innings over three starts this season. However, the Cardinals scored three runs on Tuesday before the crafty lefty made it through three innings of work. Nolan Arenado, who returned on Monday after missing 40 games with a strained right shoulder, drove in a run in a second straight game with a sacrifice fly. Then, shortstop Thomas Saggese β the replacement for the injured Masyn Winn (torn meniscus in his right knee) — went low in the zone and crushed a 3-2 pitch for his second homer of the season and his first long ball since April 6 in Boston.
Saggese, a fellow Southern California native like McGreevy, has played defense behind the 6-foot-4 right-hander for the past two years and heβs always been impressed with how McGreevy remains in command of any situation heβs in. When McGreevy made his MLB debut on July 31, 2024, and limited a powerful Rangers lineup to one earned run over seven innings, Saggese was one of the first players in Triple-A to ask him every detail about playing in the big leagues.
βI asked him about it, and he was like, βYeah, I wasnβt even nervous,ββ Saggese recalled incredulously. βI was like, βDude, I donβt know how you werenβt nervous,β and that was always crazy to me. But he just handles everything really well and really competes. Iβve always been impressed by that.β
McGreevy said he learned from an early age that to survive as a pitcher, you have to be willing to make changes to stay ahead of hitters.
βIt definitely came from my dad [Steve] in Little League, telling me, βYouβve got to be coachable,ββ he said. βIβm blessed enough to say that every coach Iβve had since then said the same thing about being coachable.β