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May 22, 2026

From The Hill to The Show: Former Barton pitcher Zach Thornton makes MLB debut with Mets

Posted May 22, 2026 12:50 PM
Zach Thornton with his family and friends following his MLB Debut (Photo credit: Washington Nationals)
Zach Thornton with his family and friends following his MLB Debut (Photo credit: Washington Nationals)

Former Barton Community College pitcher Zach Thornton officially reached baseball's biggest stage Wednesday evening, becoming the fifth former Cougar to appear in the Major Leagues after drawing the starting assignment for the New York Mets in an 8-4 loss to the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C.

The first former Barton baseball player to reach the Major Leagues since Steve Edlefsen in 2012, Thornton settled in after allowing four runs through the opening two innings, retiring eight straight batters and nine of his final 10 hitters faced before departing after 4.1 innings.

Thornton (0-1) allowed four runs on four hits with two walks and three strikeouts across 80 pitches, 53 going for strikes. The left-hander recorded his first Major League strikeout in the opening inning, punching out former top prospect Dylan Crews swinging.

Mets skipper Carlos Mendoza praised Thornton's response following the early adversity. "I thought he competed," Mendoza said. "The one thing I liked, even after he got punched there in that first inning, he didn't back down."

Asked about making his Major League debut, Thornton said the moment was everything he envisioned. "It's everything you kind of dream about as a kid," Thornton said.

Among those in attendance for Thornton's Major League debut were his parents and sister, along with former Barton teammates Micah Grover, Colter Maldonado and lifelong teammate David Stuart.

Thornton's promotion came as little surprise to Barton's coaching staff, as pitching coach Brent McBride said the left-hander personally FaceTimed both him and head coach Brent Biggs Monday after learning of his promotion.

I've always told everyone he was born to throw baseballs with his brilliant command and ability to attack the strike zone," McBride said.

Following Thornton's debut Wednesday evening, McBride said what impressed him most was how naturally the former Cougar carried himself on baseball's biggest stage.

"I was impressed with how he handled himself both on the mound and with the media afterward," McBride said. "For something that should feel surreal because of how hard it is to reach the Major Leagues, it almost felt natural watching Zach out there. He carries himself like he belongs there. Honestly, it felt like the rest of us were more nervous than he was."