PHOENIX β Google can be so cruel sometimes.
Kevin Ginkel, current Arizona Diamondback and former Arizona Wildcat, had one substandard outing recently, and youβd think he was the worst pitcher in baseball.
βGinkel falters as Diamondbacks blow 3 leads,β one search-engine headline started.
βDiamondbacksβ Kevin Ginkel: Doesnβt have it in loss,β another read.
Never mind that Ginkel had been lights-out for nearly a month. In his previous eight appearances, from Sept. 4-24, he did not surrender a run. In several of those outings, he didnβt allow a baserunner.
Of course, criticism and adversity are nothing new for the tall, hard-throwing right-hander. Heβs experienced it all during his five-year MLB career β including the literal ups and downs of being assigned to the minors at some point in each of those five seasons.
The way Ginkel sees it, he wouldnβt be the pitcher he is today β a key reliever for the playoff-bound Diamondbacks, who open their NL Wild Card series Tuesday at Milwaukee β if he hadnβt gone through all that.
βYou just have to understand thatβs the job I do and thatβs what I signed up for,β Ginkel said this past Friday from the D-backsβ dugout at Chase Field, a few hours before their series opener against Houston.
βWe all want to be great. But thereβs also another side of it: Youβre gonna have some tough times. (Whether itβs) an injury or performance-based, you go through that.
βI feel like Iβve grown up a lot. Iβve built more character (to) where Iβm like, βOK, Iβve handled adversity. Iβm going to continue to handle adversity. Itβs going to be thrown my way.β
βFor me, itβs like Iβm not afraid of anything anymore. Itβs like, βOK, this happens. All right, Iβve been through it. Iβve been through worse.β Itβs just accepting and letting go of whatever possibilities might happen.β
Ginkel just put together the best season, by far, of his major-league career. He notched career highs in wins (nine), saves (four), appearances (60), innings (65β ) and strikeouts (70). His ERA of 2.48 was his best mark since his rookie season.
I asked what the biggest difference has been this year, and the first thing he mentioned said it all: βMindset.β
Yes, Ginkel has tweaked his delivery over the past two years under veteran pitching coach Brent Strom. Ginkel also has worked to improve his personal habits, from hydrating to eating to sleeping.
But itβs the mental side of the game where he has made the most strides, and thatβs what separates the great from the good, the major-leaguers from the minor-leaguers. So many pitchers can throw 95-mph-plus fastballs with nasty sliders and sweepers these days. Only a select few are able to earn the confidence of their manager to protect a one-run lead in the eighth inning.
Asked whatβs enabled Ginkel to have so much success this year, Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said: βProbably the persistence, belief in himself, and then going out there and executing at a high level with really good stuff, finishing those pitches. And just a certain attitude that you want every back-end guy to have.β
Strom first watched Ginkel up close during a spring-training bullpen session at Salt River Fields last year. Ginkelβs slider intrigued him. The two worked to smooth out Ginkelβs delivery. But itβs whatβs happened since then thatβs made the biggest difference.
βHeβs met with some success, and heβs ridden that success,β Strom said. βHis confidence is high, and I think thatβs the biggest thing.β
Strom, 74, has been a coach for over 30 years. He spent six seasons as a big-league pitcher, making exactly 100 appearances. He believes successful athletes must have two traits above all others: They have to be able to make adjustments, and they have to be competitive.
Ginkel possesses both, Strom said. If he didnβt, Ginkel wouldnβt have made it back to the majors after being sent down multiple times.
βItβs a lot easier to get here than it is to stay here.β Strom said. βKevinβs established himself a little bit right now, so Iβm really happy for him. Weβre counting on him.β
Ginkel joined the Diamondbacks as a 22nd-round draft pick in 2016. It was the third year in a row heβd been selected; Strom wasnβt the only one intrigued by his arm.
Ginkel was part of Jay Johnsonβs late recruiting wave in 2015 and ended up playing an integral role for the β16 team that came within a hit of winning the College World Series.
Ginkel nearly pitched a perfect game vs. ASU. He closed and started on the same day when Arizona swept Louisiana-Lafayette to survive a draining regional in the Bayou. He started what could have been the clinching game in the CWS vs. Coastal Carolina, leaving with the scored tied, 2-2, after striking out 10 batters in seven innings.
I canβt say for certain that Ginkel had thought much about any of that before we chatted last week; fighting for your career doesnβt leave much time for reminiscing.
But if he needs to dig deeper into the well of character-building experiences, Ginkel can look back at the 2016 Wildcats. They were picked to finish ninth in the Pac-12 that year and almost won the whole thing. Thatβs basically the equivalent of being a 22nd-round pick in a draft that no longer has that many rounds.
βWe had so much adversity that we had to go through as a team that year,β Ginkel said. βWe werenβt handed anything. No one really gave us a chance. We just went out and played our brand of baseball.β
Thatβs essentially the approach Ginkel has taken during his breakout season. He defined that all-important mindset change as βjust going out there with the mentality that Iβm going to be aggressive, and Iβm going to live and die by that.β
Has there been any self-doubt along the way?
βYeah, no question,β Ginkel said. βBut I think that has allowed me to be in the position that Iβm in now.β
It has allowed him to move past outings like Sept. 25 vs. the Yankees, his lone loss of the season, the performance that led to search-engine ostracization.
βI know Iβve pitched really well this year,β Ginkel told me. βIβm not gonna let one outing affect my season. Iβve had those blunders before. Itβs not anything new to me.β
Ginkel pitched a hitless inning that night.