The pressure was suffocating. Game 2 of the American League Wild Card Series. Win or go home. And there was Chase DeLauter, just 23 years old, stepping into the batter’s box for his first major league plate appearance.
Most rookies get their feet wet during meaningless September games. DeLauter got thrown into the postseason fire against the Detroit Tigers on October 1, 2025, becoming just the sixth player in MLB history to make his debut in the playoffs. The moment couldn’t have been more electric at Progressive Field. Cleveland Guardians manager Stephen Vogt made the gutsy call to start the organization’s No. 2 prospect in center field, batting seventh in a must-win situation. It was either brilliance or madness.
“He’s ready,” Vogt said before the game. “You can see it on his face. We know how good of a player he is, and we’re going to roll with it.”
The path to this moment had been anything but smooth for the Frederick, Maryland native. Just three months earlier, DeLauter was recovering from surgery to repair a fractured hamate bone in his right wrist – the latest in a string of injuries that had plagued his young career.
Before his playoff call-up, DeLauter had been grinding it out with Triple-A Columbus, where he posted impressive numbers despite limited playing time. In just 34 games, he slashed .278/.383/.476 with five home runs, showcasing the hitting ability that made him the 16th overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft out of James Madison.The injuries had been relentless. A fractured bone in his left foot. A sprained right toe. A right hamstring strain. Core muscle surgery for a sports hernia in March. Each setback pushed his MLB debut further into question.
“Had some live at-bats on Friday, had a call to stay hot, stay ready, and then last night got a call to come up here and just be ready to help any way I can,” DeLauter explained before the series began.
When DeLauter took the field in Game 2, the nerves were understandable. His first defensive chance resulted in a dropped fly ball – an error that had Cleveland fans holding their breath. But champions are defined by how they respond to adversity.
In the fourth inning, DeLauter delivered the kind of moment that legends are built on. With runners on base, he unleashed a 92.3 mph throw from center field to nail Zach McKinstry at third base, recording an inning-ending assist that wiped a run off the scoreboard. It was the fifth-fastest outfield assist by a Cleveland player all season.His first plate appearance? A professional two-out walk in the second inning, showing the plate discipline that made scouts fall in love with his potential.
“Everywhere he’s ever been, he’s hit,” Vogt said, summing up why the Guardians were willing to gamble on a rookie in their biggest game of the year. “We’re looking for offense, and this gives us a really good opportunity to add an impact bat.”
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