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In the big show: Former Jackets pitcher Miller living the big league dream

By George Von Benko 6 min read
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Mason Miller was 8-2 with a 1.86 ERA and 97 strikeouts in 67 ⅔ innings while pitching for Waynesburg University during the 2019 season.
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Former Waynesburg University pitcher Mason Miller, who now is a closer for the Oakland Athletics, was chosen as the American League Reliever of the Month for April.
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Former Waynesburg University pitcher Mason Miller is shown during his playing days for NCAA Division-I Gardner-Webb.

The journey of pitcher Mason Miller from NCAA Division III to one being one of the most dominant closers in Major League Baseball is worthy of a Hollywood movie script.

Miller played high school baseball at Bethel Park and began to come on in his junior campaign. He developed into an ace for the Black Hawks in the latter half of 2015, but pitching beyond high school was never something Miller and Bethel Park coach Tony Fisher talked about very much.

Waynesburg University coach Michael Humiston and assistant coach Bill Stough traveled down to West Virginia to catch a youth baseball game one day in the summer. The duo stumbled upon Miller, who pitched and played both third base and outfield during the game. They were both impressed by Miller.

A time was set up for Miller to visit Waynesburg, soon after seeing him play. By the fall of 2016, he was a Yellow Jacket.

Miller did not fare well as a freshman and sophomore. He threw mid-80s and didn’t have a lot of control, so he wasn’t one of WaynesburgĢƵ top guys.

“Baseball was always something I loved, something I enjoyed,” Miller told the Pittsburgh media recently. “Coming out of high school, that wasn’t something that I really saw myself playing past college. I went to Waynesburg knowing I would play there my freshman year, and that was what was important: Just being on the field, doing what I love. School was first, for sure. I was planning on a job after college — I wasn’t planning on a job like this.”

Things changed drastically for Miller following the 2018 season. Miller is a big leaguer because of a failed drug test.

He landed a finance internship at a local hospital following his sophomore year. A required drug screen was flagged as diluted. The lab coordinator ran another test and told Miller there were two possibilities in play. Miller had diluted the sample in an attempt to manipulate the outcome of the test or he had dangerously high blood sugar.

Miller was admitted that day to UPMC ChildrenĢƵ Hospital of Pittsburgh. He was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. After that everything changed. Able to put on weight after years of struggling, MillerĢƵ velocity quickly ticked up and he started to perform at a higher level.

From his first pitch his junior year, Miller said, “I dominated.” He had a 1.86 ERA, striking out 97 in 67 2/3 innings in a breakout season in 2019. He made two starts in his senior year and scouts started showing up at Waynesburg games.

“I had a lot of scouts come out to those games, which for D-III games was pretty flooring for just about everybody there. It was nothing that any of us had ever seen,” Miller explained to MLB.com. “So at that point, I was taken aback. I thought I might actually have a chance.”

Then Covid hit, canceling the rest of the college baseball season and turning the MLB Draft into a short five-round affair.

Miller took advantage of an extra year of eligibility. Miller transferred to Division-I Gardner-Webb for his fifth season. That was enough to get picked by the Oakland AĢƵ in the third round of the 2021 Draft.

“(Playing at Gardner-Webb) gave me the platform I needed to showcase the skills that I had. ThatĢƵ all I could ask for. But yeah, a fifth year of school was me going all in on baseball. I was good after four years,” Miller joked.

At Gardner-Webb he went 8-1 with a 3.30 ERA and struck out 121 in 92 2/3 innings.

“Different team, different round, different priority,” Miller said. “I think it all happened for a specific reason.”

The AĢƵ third-round pick in 2021, Miller shot up to Triple A in 2022 and pitched in the Arizona Fall League. Miller, who has a screw in his right elbow from a youth baseball injury, missed some of the 2022 season with a scapula strain.

Miller was called up last April after throwing just 45 1/3 innings in pro ball. AĢƵ manager Mark Kotsay wasn’t just familiar with his stuff; he’d been bugging GM David Forst to bring Miller to Oakland.

“I asked for him a year before he came up,” Kotsay said. “Those arms generally play.”

Miller debuted on a Wednesday afternoon at Oakland Coliseum. The AĢƵ were 3-15 before losing by 10 runs to the Chicago Cubs that day. But the kid touching 102 mph in the second inning had everyoneĢƵ attention. In his third career start, Miller threw seven no-hit innings against the Seattle Mariners.

But Miller was derailed by another injury. — a mild UCL sprain. He missed four months.

“That sucked,” Miller told MLB.com. “But I avoided anything major, which is good. I tried to find the silver lining in it.”

When Miller returned in September, the AĢƵ moved him into a multi-inning relief role. Given MillerĢƵ injury history and how diabetes could impact his recovery time, Kotsay said, it made sense to lighten the workload further by bringing Miller out of the bullpen in 2024.

“ItĢƵ an adjustment,” Miller said about moving to the closerĢƵ role, while visiting the MLB studios recently.

The flamethrower has become MLBĢƵ most electric closer.

“I think I made the transition fairly easily,” Miller told the Pittsburgh media. “ThatĢƵ a testament to our group and the coaches who are putting me in positions to succeed and giving me enough time to adjust to this role. I think I’ve taken to it pretty well. I enjoy pitching in those moments late in the game.”

Bringing the heat, Miller can’t help taking a peek at the radar gun.

“Yeah, I sneak a couple looks for sure,” Miller stated. “Usually, it doesn’t end up being my best one. When I come in (to the clubhouse), somebody will let me know. Or somebody will text me and obviously we have video after the game. I think everybody that says they don’t (check the radar gun) is lying a little bit. Everybody likes to take a little look.”

Miller missed facing his hometown team the Pirates last season because of injury, but notched a save and then pitched a scoreless inning in a second stint against the Bucs with a dominant performance in the AĢƵ recent three-game sweep of the Pirates.

“ItĢƵ a surreal moment to play against the Pirates,” Miller said on TV. “The Pirates are the team I grew up rooting for and going to games. Obviously a beautiful ballpark, it was something I looked forward to doing every summer. But being on the same field as the Pirates now itĢƵ like I said, very surreal and I’m extremely grateful to have that opportunity.”

Major League Baseball announced Friday that Miller has been named American League Reliever of the Month for April.

Miller has been dominant coming into the weekend, posting a 1.35 ERA in 13 1⁄3 innings pitched while converting all eight of his save opportunities. Miller has 28 strikeouts over those 13 1⁄3 innings and opponents are hitting just .149 against him.

George Von BenkoĢƵ “Memory Lane” column appears in the Sunday editions of the ĢƵ. He also hosts a sports talk show on WMBS-AM radio from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays.

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