Pittsburgh Gazette Times, May 24, 1913:
Excessive use of the spitball has injured Ed Walsh’s digestion and has thus affected his condition, so that he has not yet reached his best form of this year, according to Dr. James H. Blair, club physician of the Chicago Americans, in a report made today on the pitcher’s condition.
...
According to the doctor saliva needed for Walsh’s digestion has been used on the ball, but with care the pitcher may be in his old time form in a month.
Obviously the ...
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1. Neutral Milk Dotel (Dan Lee) posted on March 05, 2013 at 07:11 AM # hit 0 | hit 0If you're feeling really adventurous, you could move Konerko to third base and play OBP machine Lu Blue at first. But that'd probably be really crazy.
C/Manager: Del Crandall
1B: Paul Konerko
2B: Rabbit Robinson
3B: Don Savage
SS: John Richmond
LF: Elmer Valo
CF: Jeffrey Hammonds
RF: Sam Thompson
SP: Jeff Tesreau
SP: Erik Bedard
SP: Steve Ontiveros
SP: Ryan Franklin
SP: Virgil Barnes
RP: Kent Tekulve
http://espn.go.com/boston/mlb/story/_/id/9018223/2013-spring-training-drake-britton-boston-red-sox-prospect-arrested-dui-charge
I'm kind of surprised they didn't release him on the spot.
They did at least immediately demote him.
Probably, but that's not the one that I noticed.
That's not what I was looking at. But his pitching mostly in relief definitely affected his ability to set this record.
He did, however, hold out for the entire 1909 season.
Most MLB seasons with the same W-L record?
EDIT: He's 15th all-time. #1 pitched 786 games primarily for Detroit, Oakland, and Baltimore.
Wedsel Groom?
This is getting warmer, but it's not what I had in mind.
I wouldn't be surprised if he does hold this record, though, because he had the same won-loss record five times in his career, which seems pretty tough to beat. But I have no idea how to look up something like that.
He does tie a bunch of others, however, for most seasons (again, 5) in which his record was exactly .500, but that's not exactly what I was looking for, either.
Is it most 1-loss seasons? Or 1-win?
Posted yesterday, but Marlins prospect LHP Charlie Lowell was arrested for alledgedly choking his girlfriend in a domestic dispute.
From what I've read, he throws a fastball in the low 90s and doesn't have a MLB-ready breaking ball. It's sort of weird to me that a low draft pick who's about to turn 24 and doesn't appear to be close to the majors would have any value other than organizational filler.
That is what I was looking for; not too exciting, but Mike MacDougal is the only pitcher to ever have exactly one loss in seven different seasons.
Only two pitchers (Jay Witasik, Shawn Hill) have more exactly-1-win seasons than does MacDougal, who has five.
I wouldn't be surprised if this is the case as well.
I don't dispute your overall point, but I think he throws in the high 90's, not low 90's.
Interesting post. Interesting that he gave out revenue numbers--$650 million for MLBAM as a whole, $250 million from "content subscriptions."
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