



DETROIT >> Driving to Sarasota back on March 21, it dawned on Tarik Skubal that he hadn’t faced the Orioles in a while.
“Yeah, I was trying to think, like, ‘When was the last time I pitched against those guys?’” he said.
The last time he faced the Orioles in a regular-season game was May 15, 2022, before he had flexor tendon surgery, before he morphed into Cy Skub. He punched out 11 in six scoreless innings that day at Comerica Park.
He will face them again Sunday in the series finale. But that trip to Sarasota in March triggered one of his favorite memories.
“The last time I went to Sarasota before that, I started against Felix Hernandez,” he said.
True story. King Felix was trying to make a comeback with the Orioles in the spring of 2021. His spring start against Skubal was one of the final starts of his career. The long-time Mariners ace never got back to the big leagues after 2019.
“I went to college in Seattle, right, so I was very familiar with him,” Skubal said. “That was one of the coolest things ever, that I was starting against Felix Hernandez.”
Skubal is coming off a grind of a start a week ago. The Royals took an effective approach against him, essentially selling out to an opposite-field approach. They ended up with seven singles, all up the middle or to the opposite side and paper-cut Skubal out of the game after five innings.
Skubal talked at length Saturday about how he deals with situations like that and the balance he has between relying on scouting reports and trusting that he can win most battles with his elite pitch mix.
Just so you know, he relishes the chess match.
“That’s what makes the game fun,” he said. “That back and forth. I think the game would get monotonous, if not boring, if you just went out and did the same thing. There is always the chess match, the back and forth, the counts, the previous at-bat, the game flow — all of that stuff is what makes the game fun.
“And it’s what pushes you to continue to get better.”
Skubal, despite the Cy Young Award last year, despite being one of the games’ dominant lefties the last year and a half, still sees himself as an unfinished product.
“When my career is done, that’s when I will be a finished product,” he said. “I’m always trying to learn, trying to get better, trying to be a better version of myself. Right now the best version of myself is who I am.
“But like two years from now, what am I going to be?”
For sure he will have a counter move should the Orioles try to replicate the Royals’ attack plan. But he’s still coming with his upper-90s four-seam and sinker, elite changeup, slider and knuckle-curve.
He seeks to find that balance between game plan and attacking strength on strength.
“As a pitcher, you always have to pitch to your strengths,” Skubal said. “You also need to know the hitters’ weaknesses if your strengths aren’t your strength that day. But I’m always going to pitch to my strengths.
“If a guy hammers changeups, I’m still going to throw a changeup. Can you hit mine? Then, oh, you can? Then we’ll flip the script.”
Skubal takes the game-planning part seriously. Not necessarily to map out specific pitch sequences for each hitter, but to reinforce his own pitch decisions.
“They help me mentally buy in a little more with every pitch,” he said. “That helps me execute. When I’ve done my homework and I know they can’t handle certain pitches, it helps me execute at a higher clip than just blindly going up there and, here’s a 2-1 slider.
“Why am I throwing that pitch?”
The scouting report helps bolster conviction. The worst feeling for a pitcher, Skubal will tell you, is to get beat on an non-convicted pitch.
“If you get burned on anything, you want a reason why threw that pitch,” he said. “It helps you kind of move on. Was I throwing that curveball just to throw it or was there a reason to throw it?
“If you have a reason for everything you do, it helps you sleep better at night — good or bad — because you bought in to what you were doing.”
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There is a reason, too, that game plans aren’t etched in stone, figuratively speaking. Things happen in the game that can quickly alter the course.
“The scouting report might say this guy hammers fastballs,” Skubal said. “And I throw him a fastball in his first at-bat and he’s way behind. Hey, guess what? You are going to get a ton of them.”
It can go the other way, too.
“It’s day to day,” he said. “Some scouting reports are based on year-long data. But what if a guy is in a slump. (Boston slugger) Raffy Devers got thrown 17 fastballs in a game earlier. If I looked at a scouting report, I guarantee it says he hits fastballs.
“But at that moment, he wasn’t hitting fastballs. So you throw them.”
There are nuances to this stuff within at-bats. Skubal was asked about being fearless and throwing challenge fastballs in hitter-friendly counts.
“Just because you are in a hitter’s count doesn’t mean they’re thinking a heater is coming,” he said. “I’ve probably earned the right to throw some 2-0 fastballs because the at-bat prior I might’ve thrown a 2-0 changeup.
“That’s just stuff that goes on in the game. If I just went out there and did the same thing every game, I’d start to feel like a robot. That stuff is the human element in the game and that’s what makes it fun.”
There is a zone pitchers all strive to get to. Skubal has been there many times. Reese Olson got into one Wednesday. It’s the point where the game planning, conviction and execution all come together and you just start imposing your will on hitters.
“I can throw a fastball at 96 mph with 18 inches of carry and two inches of horizontal break and it gets fouled off because I wasn’t bought in,” Skubal said. “I can throw that same heater at 96 and I’m bought in on it and for whatever reason, there is a little more life on it, even though the numbers say it’s the same pitch.
“You can see it. It just comes out and you are going right after guys. It’s overwhelming. When I’m sitting in the dugout watching other guys do it, it’s like, ‘Holy crap.’ It’s so hard to get in that mode.”
Skubal watched Yankees’ lefty Max Fried get in one of those zones against the Tigers when he punched out 11 in seven innings back on April 9.
“That was probably the best I’ve ever watched from a starting pitcher,” Skubal said. “It was unbelievable and it was overwhelming. I was like, we don’t have a chance. At the end of the outing he started ripping 96 and 97 and we’re way late because he’d slowed us down the whole game.
“I’m getting goosebumps right now. That’s pitching.”
Skubal is due for a goosebump outing of his own.