The 2026 MLB season is barely underway, but one name is already forcing his way into the biggest conversations in baseball: Mason Miller.
And not just for highlights or radar gun readings.
For something much bigger.
Through the first couple weeks of the season, Miller has been nothing short of untouchable. A 0.00 ERA. A microscopic WHIP. Strikeouts piling up at a jaw-dropping rate. Hitters overmatched, late-game situations locked down with ease.
It’s the kind of dominance that makes you stop and ask a question that almost never gets asked in today’s game:
Can a closer actually win the Cy Young Award?
A Start That Demands Attention

Pitching out of the bullpen for the San Diego Padres, Miller has quickly established himself as one of the most electric arms in baseball.
Early 2026 snapshot:
- ERA: 0.00
- Saves: Among league leaders
- Strikeouts: Double-digit dominance in limited innings
- WHIP: Nearly unhittable territory
This isn’t just effective—it’s overwhelming.
Armed with a triple-digit fastball and a wipeout slider, Miller isn’t pitching to contact. He’s eliminating it entirely. At times, it looks like opposing hitters are guessing—and guessing wrong.
In an era filled with elite velocity, Miller still stands out.
The Eric Gagne Standard

To understand Miller’s uphill climb, you have to go back more than two decades.
The last—and only modern-era—closer to win a Cy Young Award was Eric Gagne in 2003 with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Gagne’s season was legendary:
- 55 saves
- 1.20 ERA
- 137 strikeouts in 82.1 innings
- Perfect in save opportunities
He didn’t just dominate—he defined dominance for a reliever.
And even then, it took a historic, once-in-a-generation performance to sway voters away from starting pitchers.
Why the Cy Young Is So Difficult for Closers
Despite Miller’s jaw-dropping start, history—and voting patterns—are working against him.
The reality is simple:
- Starters throw 180–200 innings
- Closers typically pitch 60–70 innings
- Voters value durability alongside dominance
Even if a reliever is the most unhittable pitcher in baseball, the question always becomes:
Did he impact the season enough compared to a frontline starter?
That’s the barrier Miller must break through.
What a Cy Young Season Would Look Like
If Mason Miller is going to seriously contend for the Cy Young, he won’t just need to be great—he’ll need to be historic.
We’re talking about a season that looks something like:
- ERA under 1.00
- 40–50 saves
- 100+ strikeouts in limited innings
- Complete dominance in every high-leverage situation
In other words, he would need to replicate—or even exceed—the level set by Eric Gagne.
Anything less, and the advantage likely shifts back to starting pitchers logging far more innings.
The Realistic Outlook
So, can he do it?
The honest answer: It’s unlikely—but absolutely not impossible.
More realistic outcomes for Miller in 2026 include:
- All-Star selection
- National League Reliever of the Year
- Top 5–10 Cy Young finish
But if he continues at this pace—and more importantly, sustains it deep into the summer—he could force voters into a serious debate.
Because dominance like this is hard to ignore.
Why This Matters Right Now

Baseball is always evolving. Roles are changing. Bullpens are more valuable than ever. And elite closers are being used in increasingly impactful moments.
If there were ever a time for a reliever to break through and win a Cy Young Award again, it would be now.
And right now, Mason Miller is pitching like the guy who could make it happen.
The season is young. The sample size is small.
But the statement has already been made.
And if he keeps this up, we won’t just be talking about a great season—we’ll be talking about history.