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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Friday, October 24, 2008
New Marchman/New Republic.
Jesse Orosco, the beloved New York Met (and Dodger, and Indian, and Yankee, and ...) whose toss of his glove up into the air at the end of the 1986 World Series is one of the game’s great iconic moments, pitched, absurdly, until he was 46, mostly well. By the end of his career he looked, fittingly, a bit like Yoda. Sidewinder Mike Myers , believed to hold the major league record for one-off appearances with an amazing 310, was one of the more entertaining pitchers of this decade, throwing from a freakishly low angle that saw his knuckles barely miss scraping the mound while the ball twirled and jumped in on batters’ hands. Paul Assenmacher, like Billy Bob Thornton, looked like he was about 38 when he was 25 and when he was 38, and got all manner of big outs for the excellent Cleveland teams of the late 1990s, seeming all the while as liable to shoot the batter as throw some sloppy breaking ball his way.
How much drearier would the game have been without these men and dozens other like them? How tedious would the World Series be were Howard given every chance to launch his 450 foot bombs with no effort at resistance from someone who might occasionally be mistaken for a trainer, or an adult fantasy camp refugee? By all means let the people pay their $600 to see Carl Crawford and Chase Utley come up in the biggest spots, under the brightest lights. Thanks to the likes of Miller and Eyre, they’ll most likely botch things miserably. It well fits a game of failure.
Repoz
Posted: October 24, 2008 at 10:04 PM | 6 comment(s)
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I assume he means "one-out appearances"
BRF PI shows that Myers has the fewest IP for any pitcher who appeared in >600 games
883 games, 541 1/3 IP or 0.61 IP/ game
Myers 314
Orosco 235
Plesac 175
If I'm not mistaken, the top righty is Bradford with 71...in 49th place
Most one-out appearances, career:
Myers 308
Orosco 292
Plesac 243
Again, Bradford looks to be the top RHP, in 29th place with 116
(only since 1956, but it seems safe to assume that covers everyone we're looking for)
1960s: 3,360
1970s: 3,980
1980s: 4,607
1990s: 8,194
2000s: 9,423
Considering expansion, the increase is not as much as I expected.
It does.
The transition from the bullpen of yesteryear to the bullpen of today occurred primarily over a seven-year stretch from 1988 to 1995. During that stretch, several trends accelerated:
1. The use of one-out lefty specialists.
2. The virtual termination of closer usage when the team was trailing or tied. Although several closers were used infrequently when the team was trailing or tied before that (Lee Smith and Reardon, primarily), LaRussa and Eckersley accelerated that trend.
3. The one-inning closer. Henke and Olson (after Oates took over the Orioles) were the first, in 1991, and Phil Garner picked up on it when he took over the Brewers a year later. (Eckersley didn't become one until 1994).
4. The use of a true setup man. Some teams had used a "second closer"/setup pitcher as far back as the 1970s (Oakland, Cincy, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh), but those guys pitched almost as often when the team was trailing as they did to set up the closer. The use of one guy primarily when the team had a lead in advance of the closer occurred almost in tandem with the move toward a one-inning closer. Henke had Ward, for example, and Olson had Todd Frohwirth in that role in 1992.
-- MWE
When you drop the standard down to 500 or more games, though, Ray King tops him. For their careers, King has 411 IP in 593 games (.693 IP/G) and Myers has 541.2 in 883 (.613 IP/G).
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