While most St. Louis Cardinals fans are still debating whether the team’s rebuilding is on the right track, Jurrangelo Cijntje has just delivered the strongest reminder yet that the future of this franchise may lie in his own arms — or rather, his two arms.
Following his recent devastating performance at Double-A Springfield with 10 strikeouts, the unique MLB super prospect has sent the Cardinals community into a frenzy again. And while his ERA statistics this season are still ugly, the general feeling is becoming clearer: Cijntje is no ordinary prospect. He is a true baseball phenomenon.
If pitching talent could be valued in money, as Redbird Rants put it, Cijntje would be “as rich as Jeff Bezos.” And after what just happened, it’s hard to argue against that.
Cijntje has long been considered a “unicorn” of modern baseball. Born in Curaçao, raised in Mississippi State, and selected as the No. 15 in the 2024 MLB Draft, he possesses an almost unbelievable ability: pitching at over 90 mph with both his right and left hands.
That’s not a showmanship.
That’s genuine talent.
When the Seattle Mariners owned him, experts considered Cijntje one of the most unusual yet captivating prospects in Minor League Baseball. And when the Cardinals decided to trade Brendan Donovan to Seattle for a prospect package centered around Cijntje, the entire St. Louis farming system almost completely shifted direction.
Now, the Cardinals are beginning to see why they took such a big gamble.
Although his ERA across eight games remains above 6.00, his most recent performance revealed what captivated scouts: top-tier raw stuff, a unique slider, and elite-level swing-and-miss ability. In the recent game, Cijntje nearly turned the opposing lineup into helpless spectators with a dominant 10 strikeouts.
What makes this story even more compelling is how the Cardinals are developing him.
Baseball Executive Chairman Chaim Bloom has confirmed the organization believes Cijntje’s greatest future lies in his right hand. However, St. Louis isn’t ready to completely abandon his exceptional switch-pitching ability. The team continues to allow him to develop his left-handed pitching to a limited extent — a strategy that is both practical and ambitious.
And that has fans going wild.
On Reddit, Cardinals fans even joked that the team had “completely solved its pitching problem” thanks to a player who could handle “two rotation spots at once.” Another called him a “technically a switch-pitcher, but mentally a monster.”
Sounds exaggerated?
Perhaps.
But Cijntje’s talent is exceptional enough to generate that kind of reaction.
Because the Cardinals haven’t had a pitching prospect in a long time that has shaken the entire system with pure excitement. In recent years, a host of their pitching talents have either stalled or been ravaged by injuries. Quinn Mathews has had fitness issues. Tink Hence has also failed to maintain consistent development. The pitching system that was once the pride of St. Louis now desperately needs a fresh face to believe in.
And Cijntje is stepping onto that stage.
More importantly, he’s still incredibly young for the current Double-A level. According to Redbird Rants, Cijntje is more than 1.5 years younger than the league average — meaning the Cardinals still have plenty of time to hone this raw talent.
The scary thing is that if he truly focuses entirely on his right hand, many evaluators believe his stock could grow even more dramatically. MLB.com also emphasizes that Cijntje’s right-handed stuff is already at a “very advanced” level, and becoming a full-time right-handed pitcher could propel him closer to the MLB faster than expected.
But perhaps what Cardinals fans love most isn’t the statistics.
It’s the feeling.

The feeling that this franchise finally has a prospect with a special aura. A name that makes everyone stop to watch the highlights. A player who not only “has potential,” but also brings curiosity, excitement, and hope every time he steps onto the mound.
Baseball always loves strange stories. And nothing is stranger—or more intriguing—than a switch-pitcher potentially becoming a future ace.
Jurrangelo Cijntje is still a long way from being a finished product. He still walks too much batter. The ERA isn’t great yet. Consistency remains a big question.
But after his recent performance, one thing has become clear:
The Cardinals may not know exactly who Jurrangelo Cijntje will become.
But they certainly know how special he is.