Blake Ashton Snell (born December 4, 1992) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball (MLB). He has previously played in MLB for the Tampa Bay Rays, San Diego Padres, and San Francisco Giants.
Snell was selected by the Rays in the first round of the 2011 MLB draft and made his MLB debut with them in 2016. He won the American League (AL) Cy Young Award in 2018, when he was an All-Star and led the league in both wins and earned run average (ERA). The Rays traded Snell to the Padres before the 2021 season and he won his second Cy Young Award in 2023.
Snell signed with the Giants in 2024. He threw a no-hitter on August 2 against the Cincinnati Reds.
Snell started 2014 with Bowling Green and was promoted to the Charlotte Stone Crabs in May. On August 2, he pitched a rain-shortened no-hitter against the Daytona Cubs, it was the first no-hitter in Stone Crabs history. In 24 total games started between the two clubs, he was 8β8 with a 3.19 ERA. After the season, he was named the Rays Minor League Pitcher of the Year. Snell started 2015 with the Stone Crabs and was promoted to the Montgomery Biscuits after allowing no runs in 21 innings to start the season. He was later promoted to the Durham Bulls. In 25 games (23 starts) between the three clubs, he was 15β4 with a 1.41 ERA and a 1.02 WHIP and he was named the USA Today Minor League Pitcher of the Year. The Rays added him to their 40-man roster after the season. Snell began the 2016 season with Durham, where he made 12 starts and was 3β5 with a 3.29 ERA.
At the beginning of the 2017 season, Snell failed to work into the sixth inning in almost all of his first eight games and was routinely touching 100 pitches in the fourth inning. After posting an ERA of 4.71 through eight starts in 2017, he was demoted to Durham on May 13. On June 28, Snell was recalled and went 5β1 with a 3.31 ERA to finish the season with 24 starts, recording 119 strikeouts over innings with a 4.04 ERA.
At the time of the All-Star team announcement, Snell was 12β4 with a 2.09 ERA, the lowest of all qualified pitchers in the American League. Despite his success, he was not named to the original AL roster. This led to wide criticism of the selection process by players, coaches, fans, and analysts. After Corey Kluber opted out of the All-Star game due to injury, Snell was named his replacement, ending the controversy and awarding him his first career All-Star appearance.
On July 23, Snell was put on the 10-day disabled list with shoulder fatigue. He was reactivated on August 4 against the Chicago White Sox. On August 21, Snell set a new MLB record with his 13th straight start allowing one earned run or fewer at home After he allowed two runs at home against the Baltimore Orioles, his streak ended at 14. and he was the American League Pitcher of the Month for August, during which he went 4β0 with a 1.08 ERA over five starts.
On September 18, Snell recorded his 20th victory on the season, becoming the first Ray to accomplish this since David Price in 2012. On September 23, he won his 21st game, setting a franchise record after pitching 6 scoreless innings with 11 strikeouts against the Toronto Blue Jays. He was again named the American League Pitcher of the Month for September, in which he went 5β0 with a 1.26 ERA and 53 strikeouts over 35 innings. Snell became the youngest pitcher to win the award in consecutive months since Johan Santana in 2004.
Snell finished his breakout season leading the majors in wins (21), adjusted ERA+ (219), and batting average against (.178), as well as leading the American League in earned run average (1.89) and wins above replacement among pitchers (7.5). His 1.89 ERA was the lowest in the American League since Pedro Martinez posted a 1.74 in 2000, and the third-lowest in the AL since the designated hitter was introduced in 1973. He allowed two or fewer runs in 27 of his 31 starts and one or zero runs in 21 starts. Against the American League's five playoff teams, he went 9β2 with a 2.00 ERA. He led all major league pitchers in left on base percentage, stranding 88.0% of base runners. For the season, he also had the lowest percentage of balls pull hitter against him (33.8%) among major league pitchers, and led major league pitchers in lowest contact percentage (66.6%).
On November 14, Snell won the American League Cy Young Award, topping runner-up Justin Verlander by 15 points (169β154) and receiving 17 of 30 first-place votes. He became the second Rays pitcher to win the award, after Price in 2012.
Snell made his first career postseason appearance when he started Game 2 of the American League Division Series against the Houston Astros and he also pitched in relief in the fourth and fifth games of the series, earning the save in Game 4. In innings in the series, he allowed one run on four hits with seven strikeouts.
Snell started the first game of the postseason against the Toronto Blue Jays in the Wild Card Series, taking a no-hitter into the 6th inning as the Rays won. He then started Game 1 of the Division Series against the New York Yankees, allowing four runs through five innings. Snell started both Games 1 and 6 of the American League Championship Series against the Astros. He allowed one run through five innings in Game 1 and two runs through four innings in Game 6. In Game 2 of the 2020 World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Snell allowed two runs and struck out nine batters in innings. He became the first player in World Series history to strike out nine or more batters in fewer than five innings pitched. His nine strikeouts set a franchise postseason record and the Rays won the game 6β4 In Game 6 with the Rays leading 1β0 with one out, Snell was pulled by Kevin Cash for Nick Anderson in the 6th inning after pitching a shutout with two hits and nine strikeouts. The Dodgers then scored two runs that inning and would go on to win the game 3β1 and the World Series, resulting in criticism by fans and baseball media.
Snell made two more starts in April before spending two stints on the injured list (plus paternity leave), making only three starts between April 20 and July 8. On July 27 at Oracle Park, against the Colorado Rockies, Snell struck out a career-high 15 batters over six scoreless innings. It was the most strikeouts in six or fewer innings in MLB history.
In his next start on August 2 against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park, Snell pitched a no-hitter in a 3β0 win, his first win as a Giant. Snell struck out eleven batters and allowed only three base runners. It was also the first time he had completed pitching eight innings and ever pitched into the ninth inning in his major league career. He threw 114 pitches in the game, which was just short of his career high of 117. On the season, he was 5β3 with a 3.12 ERA in 20 starts.
On November 1, 2024, Snell opted out of his contract with the Giants and became a free agent.
Snell started the Dodgers playoff opener against the Cincinnati Reds in the Wild Card Series, allowing two runs in seven innings, while striking out nine. He then pitched six shutout innings, on only one hit, while striking out nine again, in the second game of the 2025 NLDS against the Philadelphia Phillies.
Snell owned a home in St. Petersburg, Florida, but sold it in 2021. He resides in Lynnwood, Washington. Snell and Haeley Mar, his partner of two years, had a son in June 2024, and another son in August 2025.
Tampa Bay Rays (2016β2020)
2016β2017
2018
2019
2020
San Diego Padres (2021β2023)
2021
2022
2023
San Francisco Giants (2024)
Los Angeles Dodgers
Personal life
See also
External links
|
|