Baseball Has a New Position: The Make-Believe Pitcher
Baseball 2018: Is it the year of the home run? The year of the strikeout?
Nope, it’s the year of the position player getting a chance to pitch.
Andy Cross/The Denver Post, via Getty Images
Already this season, entering Friday’s games, there have been 49 instances, by Baseball-Reference’s tally , in which a second baseman, center fielder, catcher or some other position player has gamely headed to the mound to try to finish out a contest that has gotten out of hand. That tops the record of 36 appearances, set just last year. As recently as 2010, the use of a position player to play the role of pitcher occurred only nine times over the course of the regular season.
The trend has been prompted by the heavier and heavier use of bullpens as starters go fewer innings. The increased workload for relievers has, in turn, led managers to look elsewhere when a game is essentially out of hand. Why waste a pitcher, even a mop-up man, in a lost cause? Clearly, more teams are now thinking that way, especially given the limitations of a major league roster.
Here are some highlights, and lowlights, of baseball’s newest trend, with a nod to some historical precedents, too.
The Winning Game
When a position player takes the mound, one thing is almost for sure. His team is far behind and will lose the game. But this season there was one exception — a crazy 16-inning game in Miami in July.
Tampa Bay had used seven real pitchers through 15 innings, and managed to score five runs in the top of the 16th.
Hernan Perez, an infielder and outfielder for the Milwaukee Brewers,
shut out the Los Angeles Dodgers for two innings in a game on July 22.
Dylan Buell/Getty Images
With this seemingly solid lead, and because reliever Vidal Nuno had been injured while running the bases, the Rays decided to send out catcher Jesus Sucre to close out the win, or at least buy some time while a bona fide pitcher warmed up. Sucre had thrown two innings in 2015 and one in 2017, but not very effectively.
Sucre proceeded to give up three straight singles to the Marlins to start the bottom of the 16th. Suddenly, the tying run was in the on-deck circle. Sucre then did get an out, a sacrifice fly. By then, reliever Jose Alvarado was ready to go, and he finished for the save.
Sucre pitched better three weeks later, coming in for the ineffective center fielder Carlos Gomez and getting two outs to finish out a lopsided loss against the Orioles.
Most Appearances
Two Milwaukee Brewers, infielder-outfielder Hernan Perez and catcher Erik Kratz, have become old hands at pitching, coming on three times each this season. Perez has a 13.50 earned run average, but did go two innings against the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 22 without giving up a run.
Kratz has thrown three full innings with only one earned run on his ledger. “If it can get some guys fresh so we can use them tomorrow or the next day, I definitely take pride in that,” he told MLB.com .
The Best
The rookie infielder Alex Blandino of the Cincinnati Reds gave up a single and a wild pitch to the Cleveland Indians in his one inning on the mound in July, but also fanned Brandon Guyer and Roberto Perez, both swinging. He’s the only position player with a two-strikeout outing this year. He also rolled out a serviceable knuckleball .
The Worst
Needless to say, there are a few candidates. Jose Reyes tops the list with a six-run inning in the Mets’ historic 25-4 loss to the Nationals this week. “When you get on the mound and before you throw a pitch, it’s fun,” he said . “But when you start to see people hit a homer and stuff, you get more serious. I want to put a zero up there. But I do the best that I can.”
Rocky Colavito, who had a legendary throwing arm as an outfielder, pitched for the Yankees in an August 1968 game against the Detroit Tigers. He ended up the winning pitcher.
John Lindsay/Associated Press
The Longest
Many position players, when asked to pitch, are popping in for a ninth-inning cameo. But not infielder Daniel Descalso of the Arizona Diamondbacks, who got handed the ball for two and two-thirds innings against Colorado during a blowout loss on July 11. The Rockies bashed two homers off him, and he was relieved by catcher Alex Avila, who went two shutout innings. Still, Arizona lost, 19-2.
Historically Bad
In 2001, outfielder John Mabry of the Marlins came out to pitch the eighth inning with his team trailing the Braves, 15-3. Single, walk, walk, single, walk, single and a groundout (surprise), and he was pulled for a real reliever. He wound up with a 135.00 earned run average for the game. He played for six more seasons but never got another shot at the mound.
Historically Good
Who was the best to try out his pitching chops? Perhaps it was Rocky Colavito, the cannon-armed right fielder of the 1950s and ’60s.
In 1958, he took to the hill for the Indians in relief of Hoyt Wilhelm. He stayed out there for three innings of no-hit, shutout ball, surrendering just three walks.
It took 10 years before he got another chance. Now 35 and playing for the Yankees in his final year in the big leagues, Colavito came in with the Yankees down, 5-0, and immediately got Al Kaline to ground into a double play. He ended up pitching two and two-thirds innings of shutout ball.
Meanwhile, the Yankees rallied. Colavito scored the winning run and got the victory. He also made way for conventional relievers to finish the game.
“That Houk has guts,” Yankees General Manager Lee MacPhail said that day of Manager Ralph Houk . For sending Colavito in? “No. For taking him out.”