NEW YORK — Some players take unusual paths to the big leagues. And then there is the journey of Jonathan Pintaro.
Undrafted from a Division II college in Georgia, he spent two seasons in the MLB Draft League for overlooked long shots. Then two years pitching for the Glacier Range Riders of the independent Pioneer League — where he compiled a 6.60 ERA.
So when Pintaro walked into the New York Mets' clubhouse Wednesday, about 2,400 miles from 2,291-seat Glacier Bank Park in Kalispell, Montana, needless to say it was an improbable arrival.
''Pretty cool story, right? I think this is an organizational win, when you're talking about a kid that was pitching independent ball last year,'' Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. ''Credit to him. Obviously, it's not easy what he did.''
Pintaro received a surprise promotion when the struggling Mets shuffled bullpen arms again before Wednesday night's 7-3 victory against Atlanta.
Left-handers José Castillo and Richard Lovelady were designated for assignment. Pintaro was selected to the major league roster, and lefty Brandon Waddell was recalled from Triple-A Syracuse.
The 27-year-old Pintaro made his major league debut when he entered to start the ninth inning. He walked his first batter and gave up a single before getting a groundout and a strikeout.
A two-run single by 2023 NL MVP Ronald Acuña Jr. and a walk to Matt Olson chased Pintaro, who was pulled for closer Edwin Díaz.