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Rookie Paul Skenes finishes 11-3 with 1.96 ERA, retires 6 straight batters in Yankee Stadium debut

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Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Pittsburgh Pirates' Paul Skenes smiles after the second inning of a baseball game against the New York Yankees, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

NEW YORK – Paul Skenes knew his time on the mound at Yankee Stadium was going to be brief, so he savored all 23 pitches, especially encounters with New York stars Juan Soto and Aaron Judge that resulted in strikeouts.

“It's cool,” Skenes said after ending an impressive rookie season by retiring six hitters in order in Pittsburgh’s 9-4 win over the Yankees on Saturday. “It’s not the first time I faced them. It’s definitely not going to be the last. So looking forward to the next time.”

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A top contender for NL Rookie of the Year, the 22-year-old right-hander started the All-Star Game, where he walked Soto and got Judge hit ground into a forceout. Skenes finished 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA in 23 starts and 133 innings — 29 innings shy of qualifying for the National League ERA title. He struck out 170 and walked 32.

“We didn’t know if it was going to be perfect,” Pirates manager Derek Shelton said. “I don’t think anybody did and I realize people are going to be critical because they wanted to see him. “We wanted to make sure we ramped him up. Even today, we wanted to make sure that he finished the season strong, that he finished the season on the mound.”

Skenes’ ERA is the second-lowest for a rookie with at least 20 starts since ERA became an official statistic in both leagues in 1913, above only Reb Russell’s 1.90 for the Chicago White Sox in 1913.

“I didn’t really have a ton of expectations going into it, just to go out there every five or six days or whatever and execute whatever that looks like,” Skenes said. “So I don’t know what else I could have done, but definitely happy with how the season went.”

In a predetermined two-inning start, Skenes threw four pitches over 100 mph, finishing with exactly 100 pitches of 100 mph or higher this season. Los Angeles Angels right-hander José Soriano is second among starting pitchers with 40.

Skenes is the first rookie pitcher with a sub-2.00 ERA and at least 23 starts in a season since Scott Perry for the 1918 Philadelphia Athletics, according to STATS,

“He’s been one of the best pitchers in baseball with the things he’s done,” Shelton said. “To have a sub-2.00 ERA in his first year and especially in today’s era, that’s pretty special. I think we’re seeing a guy that’s pretty elite, has ability to make pitches and I think has room for growth.”

Skenes said the Pirates arrived in New York on Thursday night, when the Yankees clinched the AL East, and said he had not checked out Monument Park.

“I like New York,” Skenes said. "The stadium’s just — it's one of the destinations in baseball for sure, a place to cross off your bucket list, but cool to be out there and pitch and definitely going to keep checking it out tomorrow because it’s just a cool place to go out there and look up at when you’re in the outfield.”

With girlfriend and LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne in the stands, Skenes threw a 99.8 mph fastball on the high, outside corner that Soto took for a called third strike. Judge struck out swinging at a sweeper that was outside.

“He’s been one of the big stories in Major League Baseball this year, first pick, doesn’t break camp and ends up starting in the All-Star Game,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said before the game. “A player that’s really, really kind of taken the league by storm and emerged as one of the game’s outstanding starters.”

Skenes threw 17 pitches for strikes, including 12 four-seam fastballs that averaged 99.4 mph.

He ended his outing by getting a called third strike with a 99.6 mph fastball on the inside corner to Jazz Chisholm Jr. and was replaced by Mike Burrows, a 24-year-old right-hander who got the win in his major league debut.

San Diego outfielder Jackson Merrill is the other top Rookie of the Year contender, entering Saturday with a .292 average, 24 homers, 90 RBIs and 16 stolen bases.

“That was awesome,” said Burrows, who had Tommy John surgery in April 2023. “He’s had such an unbelievable year. I think nobody’s more deserving of Rookie of the Year. He’s an incredible pitcher and I’m glad I could piggyback him today and get a win.”