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Miami Marlins prospect Eury Pérez debuts Friday as club's youngest pitcher ever

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MIAMI - At 6-foot-8, Miami Marlins prospect Eury Pérez towers above most pitchers.

The right-hander's combination of size, control and maturity has made him one of the most intriguing prospects in baseball - a prodigy so young he was an infant when the Marlins last won the World Series in 2003, and so good he's leapt from Double-A to the majors in three years.

Pérez will make his major league debut Friday when the Miami hosts Cincinnati. At 20 years, 27 days, he'll become the youngest pitcher in the club's history and the only MLB player born after 2002.

"When you're looking at him, he's throwing all his pitches for strikes. He's commanding his pitches," Marlins general manager Kim Ng said, "and so those are the things that you really make sure he can do before he gets here, and he's shown that."

Injuries to left-hander Trevor Rogers and right-hander Johnny Cueto made room for Pérez, who is rated by MLB pipeline as the No. 10 overall prospect and third-best right-hander. He was called up from Double-A Pensacola on Wednesday.

"He gave us great confidence in his ability to come up here and do well," Ng said. "In terms of the rotation, we're at a spot where Trevor and Johnny are going to be out for a bit and thought it made sense."

Pérez was 4 inches shorter - 6-4 and 175 pounds - when the Marlins signed him for $200,000 out of the Dominican Republic four years ago. By the time Pérez made his pandemic-delayed pro debut in 2021, he'd grown to his current height and put on 45 pounds.

Pérez is 3-1 with a 2.32 ERA and 42 strikeouts over 31 innings for Pensacola. His fastball sits between 94-97 mph and has topped out at 100. It reached 99 mph in last summer's Futures game.

Pérez - born on April 15, 2003 - will be Miami's youngest pitcher since the late José Fernández, who made his 2013 debut at 20 years, 250 days.

"I think we have to temper the expectations a little bit," manager Skip Schumaker said after Miami's 5-4 win over Arizona. "He's 20 years old. He's supposed to be a junior in college, and he's going to be facing the Reds. So I think we have to just slow down in expectations a little bit. But he's earned it. It's not just because we needed somebody. He's earned this position."

Schumacher said Pérez, who has worked at most six innings in a game, will have his pitches and innings limited.

"We'll monitor it," Schumaker said. "We're going to protect him. There's no doubt about it, but we're going try to win games too."

Miami is second in the NL East at 19-19, including a 12-0 record in one-run games, the best start to a season in major league history in that category.

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