Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images
For the city of San Diego, elite closers are nothing new. Trevor Hoffman, Goose Gossage, Mark Davis, Heath Bell, Rollie Fingers, Josh Hader, Robert Suarez… it goes on for a while.
For the sport itself, what Mason Miller is doing on the baseball field is new.
Only one pitcher has ever recorded a full season with a strikeout rate over 50%. A month into 2026, Mason Miller is up over the 70% mark. At that rate, Miller will own several more records come October. However, still only in April, the Padres’ closer claimed his first major record.
On Wednesday, April 22, against the Colorado Rockies, Mason Miller tied Cla Meredith for the longest scoreless streak in Padres history. Miller’s active streak of 33.2 innings is now atop the list and showing no signs of slowing down soon.
For Miller, owning such a prestigious record has to feel special this early in his career. For the other 29 teams, it’s only the beginning of a story that will continue to grow.
There’s an endless array of conventional stats to illustrate just how well Mason Miller is pitching. However, let’s just start with the stats that he’s actually breaking:
1. His -1.09 FIP (Fielding Independent Pitching) FIP is a stat that takes fielding out of the equation, evaluating a pitcher on strikeouts, walks, hit batsmen, and home runs. The average FIP is about 4.00, and it typically lands between 3.50 and 4.50.
By no means is a FIP supposed to be negative. In 2025, the lowest FIP from a qualified reliever was an outstanding 1.76 from Aroldis Chapman.
2. His -53 OPS+ OPS+ is a stat that distributes OPS around a league average of 100. The stat typically has a standard deviation of about 35 across full-season data sets.
Once again, OPS+ has zero business being in the negatives. However, that’s just what Mason Miller has done through a month of play. He’s over four and a half standard deviations from the league average.
3. His spot on the graph of MLB strikeout rates
It’s one thing to hear that Mason Miller leads MLB in strikeout rate by a margin of 30%. It’s another thing to actually see what that looks like on a scatterplot.
Yes, the red dot on the far, far right of the screen is Mason Miller at 71.1%. His dominance single-handedly extends the image by nearly twice the size.
Miller’s 33.2-inning scoreless streak is impressive, but it doesn’t even fully capture the success he’s had in the brown and gold. Without a singular home run from Lourdes Gurriel Jr.—which came against a 104 mph fastball—Miller would theoretically be scoreless in all 35.2 of his innings with San Diego.
Since coming over, Miller has allowed just 10 hits in 34 games. Gurriel Jr.’s home run is the only hit that went for extra bases. Over that span, he’s struck out 72 hitters and walked only 12.
When the Padres traded for Mason Miller last summer, they were expecting to get a high-end closer to load their bullpen. They probably didn’t foresee Miller becoming the best closer in the league with the chance to put together a season for the ages.
Or they did, and we’re all just seeing their vision come to life.
Today we have 4 picks for the evening Friday slate. A few pitchers we love,…
Ever since he joined the Braves, Michael Harris II has been a puzzling player to…
True three-outcome players are one of the rarest breeds in Major League Baseball. If you’re…
Today we have 3 picks for this loaded Wednesday slate. To see our full card,…
In Houston, all eyes are fixated on the grand return of slugger Yordan Alvarez at…
For years, the noise surrounding the Los Angeles Dodgers has always been about money. Many…