For a pitching prospect, one question always looms: Sure, minor league hitters are going down swinging, but can the guy on the mound get big leaguers out?
It鈥檚 a question Ryan Long 鈥21 answered emphatically in the World Baseball Classic in March when he struck out three-time American League MVP Mike Trout while playing for Great Britain on the international stage.
Long, a 6-foot-6, 240-pound former pitcher, has moved two rungs up the minor league ladder since then. Promoted to the Baltimore Orioles鈥 High-A team in Aberdeen, Maryland, to start the season, Long鈥檚 strong first half earned him another move up on July 14, when the Orioles assigned him to the Double-A , also in Maryland.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited to throw at this new level,鈥 Long says. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 going to be a good step up, a good challenge. From what I鈥檝e heard, there鈥檚 definitely a jump from High-A to Double-A. It鈥檚 where it starts to get a little more鈥擨 don鈥檛 know the right word to say, but real, maybe. You鈥檙e that much closer to the major leagues so it adds a level of importance and expectations. So yeah, I鈥檓 really excited.鈥
Facing MLB All-Stars
Life in the minors can be grueling, although less so now than in the past (more on that later). But back in March, Long was on the mound for Great Britain against Team USA in front of nearly 40,000 fans in the World Baseball Classic in Phoenix when Trout came to the plate.
Long, drafted 497th overall by the Baltimore Orioles in 2021 after missing his entire senior season to the pandemic shutdown, was facing Trout, the 11-time All-Star.
And down went Trout after Long with a 94-mph fastball.
鈥淚t was just a really surreal experience. Something that I鈥檒l definitely hold onto forever,鈥 Long says of playing in the World Baseball Classic.
Eligible to play for Great Britain鈥檚 national team because his mother, Liz, was born in England, Long contacted the British Baseball Federation in the run-up to the WBC after asking , the Pomona-Pitzer head coach and a professor of physical education, if he had any connections. Pericolosi put Long in touch with alumni who did, and only months later, Long was pitching in Chase Field in Great Britain鈥檚 opening game against Team USA.
He gave up a home run, 鈥渙ne that I鈥檓 not too upset about because it鈥檚 a major league All-Star,鈥 he says of the blast by Kyle Schwarber, who led the National League in homers last season. The next inning, Trout came to the plate. 鈥淔irst of all, he鈥檚 obviously an amazing hitter but their whole lineup was filled with All-Stars and future Hall of Famers,鈥 says Long.
He got Trout to a 3-2 count and decided to stay with his best pitch, his fastball.
鈥淗e fouled the first two off,鈥 Long says. 鈥淗e didn鈥檛 seem like he was seeing it as well as he might normally be and I decided to throw it again and it got past him. That was a very, very exhilarating feeling.鈥
The big crowds disappeared after the WBC, but the experience stayed with Long.
鈥淚t definitely helped my confidence levels and my ability to trust myself and my pitches,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think just seeing that I could pitch against pretty experienced major league hitters, and in some cases get them out, set me in the right frame of mind to be able to know that, OK, I don鈥檛 have to try and do more than what I already do to be able to have some level of success.鈥
Moving Up in the Minors
Making the step from Low-A ball to High-A this season, Long took his growing confidence with him and put together a 2.52 earned-run average while striking out 71 and walking just 18 in 60 2/3 innings for Aberdeen before the four-day All-Star break.
鈥淚 was driving down to North Carolina to see my girlfriend for the break, and the coach called me about two hours into that and told me I鈥檇 be . That was a cool moment,鈥 says Long, who was going to visit Hannah Black 鈥20, a student at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine who is on clinical rotations in Wilmington, N.C.
Back in Maryland on a new team, Long took care of business in his Double-A debut on July 15, pitching 2 1/3 scoreless innings to earn the win in relief while allowing one hit and striking out three.
A philosophy, politics and economics major at Pomona, Long was headed to graduate school at Georgetown University before he was drafted. But with time on his hands during his rookie ball season with the Orioles鈥 organization, he prepared for the LSAT, took the test and eventually plans to go to law school.
Bargaining for Player Rights
Long鈥檚 interest in law was only fueled last offseason when he was among the players who took on an informal role representing minor league players鈥 interests in collective bargaining after minor leaguers voted to unionize last September.
鈥淚t was a really big offseason for that because it was the first time the minor leaguers had ever unionized, and we negotiated with the very pivotal help of the MLBPA鈥攖he Major League Baseball Players Association鈥攁 new collective bargaining agreement that really helped change the lives and the pay for all minor leaguers,鈥 Long says.
鈥淚t increased the pay by about double for most people. Money got better, you got more security on transportation, on housing, on food. The lifestyle has gotten a lot better and I think this offseason was a huge part of that.鈥
Long and other players were 鈥渕iddlemen between the players and the lawyers doing the bargaining,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e were trying to give them a feel for what the players wanted and what the priorities were.鈥
As part of his role, Long traveled to Arizona to meet with MLBPA lawyers and leaders, and to New York, where he sat in on a bargaining session with lawyers representing Major League Baseball.
鈥淚 have had and I still do have the aspiration to make it up and play major league baseball,鈥 Long says. 鈥淚 have some other aspirations in life. I want to eventually go to law school and do well in that.鈥
That LSAT score is valid for five years, but Long鈥檚 in no hurry to use it.
鈥淚 figure I鈥檒l either use it within the five years鈥攐r if I have to take it again it means it鈥檚 going pretty well in baseball, so I won鈥檛 be too upset about that.鈥