Mickolio graduated from Belgrade High School in 2002, but did not play baseball because Montana did not sanction the sport.[2] Instead, he played with a local American Legion Baseball team named the Belgrade Bandits,[3][4] which finished in third place with a 32–20 record in state competition. He went 9–2 with 115 strikeouts in 88 innings pitched. He registered five shutouts and complete games each in his eleven starts. He also batted .386 with six home runs.[2]
Mickolio was traded by the Mariners along with George Sherrill, Adam Jones, Chris Tillman and Tony Butler to the Baltimore Orioles in exchange for Érik Bédard on February 8, 2008.[9] After spending the first four months of the 2008 campaign with the Bowie Baysox and Norfolk Tides,[8] Mickolio was promoted to the Orioles for the first time to replace an injured Sherrill on August 20.[10] He made his major league debut later that night at Camden Yards, becoming the first player from Utah Valley to play in an MLB game.[2] He pitched the top half of the eighth inning in relief of Dennis Sarfate and surrendered a run in the 11–6 win over the Boston Red Sox.[11] When Brian Burres was recalled to fill a starting rotation vacancy on August 25, Mickolio was optioned to Norfolk,[12] but returned to the Orioles eight days later on September 2.[13] His only decision in nine relief appearances that season was an 8–7 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on September 17, when he allowed a one-outTravis Snidersacrifice fly to left field to score Scott Rolen in the bottom of the eighth to break a 7–7 deadlock.[14]
Pitching for the Tides in the first half of 2009, Mickolio was recalled by the Orioles on July 6 after bicepstendinitis forced Chris Ray onto the disabled list.[15] He bounced back and forth between Norfolk and Baltimore twice within the next six weeks, getting his final promotion of the year on August 17 to replace Matt Albers who was sent to the Tides.[16] Mickolio was credited with a pair of losses before inflammation in his throwing shoulder ended his season on September 17.[17]
On May 28, 2011, Mickolio was optioned to the Triple-A Reno Aces after Zach Duke was activated from the disabled list.[19] He was released by the Diamondbacks organization on November 9.
Hiroshima Toyo Carp
Mickolio's contract was sold to the Hiroshima Toyo Carp in Japan on November 14, 2011,[20] and he was the team's closer for three seasons. In 61 appearances (40 games finished) in 2012, Mickolio was 3–5 with a 2.79 ERA and 21 saves, striking out 54 in 58 innings.[8] On December 6, 2012, he re-signed with Hiroshima for 75.6 million yen (US$740,000).[21] In 57 appearances (45 games finished) in 2013, he was 2–4 with a 2.04 ERA and 27 saves, striking out 39 in 57.1 innings.[8] In his third season with the Carp in 2014, Mickolio appeared in 51 games, posting a 1–1 record with 25 saves and a 2.45 ERA.[8]
Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles
Mickolio left the Carp after the 2014 season and signed a two-year deal with the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles worth an estimated 481 million yen and was assigned the number 43. He was unable to pitch in 2015 due to injury. Finally healthy in 2016, Mickolio made 45 relief appearances for the Eagles. He compiled a 5–1 record and a 2.38 ERA.[8]
Minnesota Twins
After his stint with the Golden Eagles, Mickolio was signed by the Minnesota Twins to a minor league deal on May 16, 2017.[22] In seven appearances for the Triple–A Rochester Red Wings, he logged a 4.00 ERA with three strikeouts across 9 innings pitched. Mickolio elected free agency following the season on November 6.[23]
On May 19, 2019, Mickolio announced his retirement from professional baseball.
Personal life
On November 12, 2011, Mickolio married the former Tiffany Leone. The couple has three children, a son, Braden Landon Mickolio, born in August 2012; a daughter, Abriella Emilia Mickolio, born in May 2014; and a daughter, Lincoln Perry Mickolio, born in May 2015.
Tiffany and their three children are planning on joining Kameron in Japan in July 2016.