Luis Heibardo García (born December 13, 1996) is a Venezuelan professional baseball pitcher for the Houston Astros of Major League Baseball (MLB). García signed with the Astros as an international free agent in 2017, and he made his MLB debut in 2020.
Career
Minor leagues
Luis García signed with the Houston Astros as an international free agent on July 2, 2017. He spent the 2017–2019 seasons in Minor League Baseball with the DSL Astros, Quad Cities River Bandits, Tri-City ValleyCats, and Fayetteville Woodpeckers.
Houston Astros
Major league debut (2020)
García was called up to the majors for the first time on August 29, 2020. He made his major league debut on September 4, 2020, against the Los Angeles Angels.
In 2020, García had a win–loss record (W–L) of 0–1 with a 2.92 earned run average (ERA) in 12+1⁄3 innings pitched (IP) over the course of five games (one start). García made his postseason debut in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series (ALCS) against the Tampa Bay Rays. He pitched two scoreless innings in a bullpen game that the Astros went on to win.
Rookie season (2021)
García played his first full major league season for the Astros in 2021. He appeared in 30 games, starting 28, and registered 155+1⁄3 innings pitched. He posted an 11–8 win–loss record with a 3.48 ERA, and 167 strikeouts, ranking third on the club in innings pitched and second in strikeouts. García led AL rookie pitchers in Wins Above Replacement (WAR, 3.1), wins, strikeouts, and innings pitched. His strikeout total trailed only Tom Griffin in 1969 with 200 for most among rookies in franchise history. García was the eighth Astros rookie pitcher with at least eleven wins. Following the regular season, the Houston chapter of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) named García as the Astros' Rookie of the Year. He finished second to Randy Arozarena of Tampa Bay in the American League Rookie of the Year balloting, receiving two first-place votes.
In the postseason, García struggled initially, losing both of his first two starts (Game 3 of the ALDS and Game 2 of the ALCS) while failing to get past the third inning in each. However, he adjusted his mechanics and started Game 6 on October 22 which resulted in a gem; in 5+2⁄3 innings, he struck out seven with one walk and one hit while helping to shut out the Boston Red Sox. The lone hit was yielded to the final batter, Kike Hernandez. Thus, García tied the club record for the longest number of innings pitched without allowing a hit in postseason history, equaling Brandon Backe's performance in the 2004 NLDS. Garcia's start was also the second-longest no-hit bid by a rookie (after Michael Wacha in 2013) and the most by an AL rookie pitcher. That night, the Astros prevailed 5–0 to defeat the Red Sox and win the American League pennant.
Garcia started Game 3 of the World Series. He went 3+2⁄3 innings while allowing one run on three hits, four walks, and six strikeouts in a 2–0 loss to the Atlanta Braves; he is the fifth pitcher to have that many strikeouts with one earned run allowed in four innings or less and first since Rich Hill.
2022
On May 6, 2022, García matched a career-high with nine strikeouts versus the Detroit Tigers, going seven innings, allowing two hits, one earned run, and earning the win in a 3–2 final score. He retired the final 15 batters faced and, at one point, five consecutive via strikeout. On May 29, García retired the first 13 Seattle Mariners batters until a walk to Eugenio Suárez and did not allow the first hit until Luis Torrens singled leading off the sixth inning as the Astros eventually won, 2–1.
On June 15, García authored an immaculate inning in the second inning versus the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field, striking out Nathaniel Lowe, Ezequiel Durán, and Brad Miller. Five innings later, teammate Phil Maton struck out the same trio of batters en route to his own immaculate inning, making this the first occasion in the major leagues of two immaculate innings pitched both in the same game and on the same date. García's immaculate inning was the eighth in team history. On June 30, he led a 2–1 win over the New York Yankees with one run allowed over 5+1⁄2 innings, three hits and six strikeouts.
On July 12, García allowed one hit in six scoreless innings to the Los Angeles Angels, retiring the final 13 batters while striking out seven. The one hit allowed was a career low through his first 45 major league starts. His sixth quality start of the season, it was the 17th consecutive produced on the road by Houston pitching. Per an AT&T SportsNet broadcast, that extended the longest streak in franchise history, exceeding the 1972 club (14). In a September 3 start versus Los Angeles, García tossed seven innings and allowed one run as Houston fell 2–1 in extra innings. On September 19, García started the first five innings and won a 4–0 shutout of the Tampa Bay Rays to clinch a fifth American League West division title for the Astros over the previous six seasons. In his final start of the regular season on October 2, García was the winning pitcher with one run allowed over six innings versus Tampa Bay, culminating a 7–0 record and 3.20 ERA over his last eight starts. His seven wins from August 12 onward led the AL.
In the third game of the 2022 ALDS, García earned the win after working the final five innings of a series-clinching sweep of the Mariners. The game had remained scoreless for an unprecedented 17 innings—the longest scoreless period in postseason history—until rookie Jeremy Peña homered in the top of the 18th to eventually win it for the Astros, 1–0.
MLB World Series 2022 Houston Astros |