Phillies' Nick Castellanos sounds off on MLB after Jacob Misiorowski decision

Aaliyan Mohammed

Phillies' Nick Castellanos sounds off on MLB after Jacob Misiorowski decision image

The Philadelphia Phillies were not too pleased with Major League Baseball's decision to name Milwaukee Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski to the All-Star Game.

Misiorowski has made just five career starts and was named to the game because of his availability to pitch. According to The Athletic's Matt Gelb, that was a requirement to be named a replacement, which was why Cristopher Sánchez was left off the roster. Still, some Phillies thought Sánchez should have been named an All-Star and then replaced if the only reason he was not named a replacement was that he was taking the ball for his team on Sunday.

Nick Castellanos did not hold back on his criticism of the league for their decision to put Misiorowski in the game after making just five starts, even though he has played great.

"It’s turning into the Savannah Bananas," Castellanos said, per Gelb.

"Major League Baseball is really just focusing on the most marketable players," Castellanos continued, per Gelb. "So the fact that they can have somebody in the game that is going to basically blow out one inning and throw 103, 104 (mph), they’re going to get more eyeballs on baseball. They’re going to think it’s getting more popular."

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Misiorowski has a 2.81 ERA in just 25 1/3 innings. He has gone viral and has been the talk around the league since his debut. However, the workload may not justify an All-Star nod. He broke Paul Skenes' record for fewest games pitched before being named an All-Star. Skenes pitched in just 11 games last year before his All-Star nod.

More MLB: Phillies predicted to swing trade with Orioles for $56 million All-Star

Aaliyan Mohammed

Aaliyan Mohammed is a sports journalist who graduated from Mississippi State University. He covered MLB prospects for MLB.com. He has also spent time covering the Green Bay Packers as well as college sports in the SEC. His work features interviews with Gilbert Brown, Andre Rison, Mike Leach and multiple MLB executives.