A-Rod Grand Slam – Historic & Momentous

A-Rod continues his "trot" to the Hall of Fame.

On June 12, 2012, Alex Rodriguez continued his march to the Hall of Fame by stroking his 23rd “Grand Slam” home run.  It was an historic and momentous blast.  Historic because it tied A-Rod with Lou Gehrig for the all-time lead in career grand Slams.  Momentous because it tied a game the Yankees were trailing (4-0 to the Braves in the eighth) and led to a 6-4 win that kept the Yankees in sole possession of first place (one game ahead of the Orioles).

A-Rod acknowledged history and momentum.  “Lou Gehrig is not only one of the all-time greats, but he’s one of ours,” A-Rod said after the game.  “He was a Yankee.”  Noting the Yankees’ building momentum, he said, “I really felt it was a swing for the team.  I feel like everybody needed that hit and we’ve all been waiting for it.”

BBRT says congrats to A-Rod, and would like to share some Grand Slam trivia with it blog followers.

While A-Rod and Lou Gehrig top the career Grand Slam list with 23, they are joined in the top five positions (six actually, a tie for fifth) by Manny Ramirez (21), Eddie Murray (19), Willie McCovey (18 and the NL record holder), and Robin Ventura (18).

Another Yankee, Don Mattingly, set the current single season record in 1987 with six Grand Slams (tied by Travis Hafner of the Indians in 2006).  Notably, Mattingly’s six Grand Slams were the only base-loaded homers of his 14-year career.

Sticking with the Yankees, they are the only ML team to hit 3 grand slams in one game – coming on August 25, 2011 against the Oakland As at Yankee Stadium (Robinson Cano, 5th inning; Russell Martin-6th; Curtis Granderson-8th).  The Yankees, who trailed 7-1 after three innings, won the game 22-9.

The NL record for Grand Slams in a season is 5, held by Mr. Cub, Ernie Banks and former Cardinal Albert Pujols.

Four players have hit a Grand Slam in their very first major league at bat:  Bill Duggleby (Philadelphia, NL, 1898); Jeremy Hermida (Florida, 2005); Kevin Kouzmanoff (Cleveland, 2006); and Daniel Nava (Boston, 2010). Duggleby, Kouzmanoff and Nava all hit their Slams on the first pitch they ever saw in the majors.

In 1961, when the Orioles’ Jim Gentile hit a then record-tying 5 Grand Slams in a season,  Baltimore’s Chuck Estrada was the Orioles’ starting pitcher each time Gentile struck a four-run blow – winning all four games (On May 9, Gentile hit two Grand Slams in a game against the Twins at Minnesota).

Only 13 players have hit two grand slams in a game – and only once did the player accomplish this feat in his home park.  Nomar Garciaparra hit two Slams for the Red Sox at Fenway in a May 10, 1999, win over the Mariners.

Bill Mueller of the Red Sox is the only switch hitter to hit Grand Slams from both sides of the plate in the same game –  in the 7th and 8th innings of a 14-7 Red Sox win at Texas on July 29, 2003.

–  Atlanta Braves pitcher  Tony Cloninger  was the first National Leaguer to hit two Grand Slams in one game – a July 3, 1966,  17-3 complete game victory over the Giants at Candlestick.  He remains the only pitcher with a two-GS game.

Cardinals third baseman Fernando Tatis is the only player to hit two Grand Slams in the same inning – an 11-run third inning as the Cards beat the Dodgers 12-5 on April 23, 1999.   Dodgers’ starting pitcher Chan Ho Park gave up both grand slams (Why was he still in there?) becoming the answer to the question, Who is the only pitcher to give up two grand slams to the same batter in one inning?

Park’s inning went like this:

Single; Hit By Pitch; Single; Tatis Grand Slam; Ground Out; Home Run;  Walk; Walk; Safe on Fielder’s Choice (attempted sacrifice); Safe on Error; Single; Fly Out; Tatis’ Second Grand Slam; Call to Bull Pen; Pop Out.

Grand Slams – a grand part of the grand old game.

Combined No-Hitters – Historic Tidbits

As BBRT considers the concept of a six-pitcher no-hitter, it seems to be more of a statement of the hitters’ collective futility than of pitching quality.

Ernie Shore - while with the Red Sox - finished what the "Babe" started - MLB's first combined no-hitter.

Friday (June 8, 2012), the Seattle Mariners, tied a major league record by using six pitchers to complete a 1-0 no-hit winover the Dodgers in Seattle.  It was the tenth combined no-hitter in major league history, only the second inter-league combined no-hitter, and made Millwood (who left the game after six innings due to a groin injury) one of only three hurlers to start both an individual complete game no-hitter and a multi-pitcher no-hitter.  The others are Kent Mercker and Vida Blue.  As

When BBRT considers the concept of a six-pitcher no-hitter, it seems to be more of a statement of the hitters’ collective futility than of pitching quality.   More than a sustained no-hitter, the six-hurler no-hitter is a collection of good innings.  Still, combined no-hitters do make for interesting score cards and bits of baseball history.  Let’s take a look at past combined no-hitters and what made them unique.

The first-ever combined no-hitter may have been the strangest. It came on June 23, 1917, when Red Sox ace lefty Babe Ruth (Ruth had won 23 games in 1916 and was on his way to a 24-win season in 1917) started on the mound at Fenway, facing the Washington Senators.  Ruth walked the first batter of the game – Senators’ second baseman Ray Morgan – on four pitches.  The hot-headed Ruth quickly earned an ejection for arguing with the home plate umpire, and the Red Sox brought in ErnieShore(on just two-days rest).  Morgan was quickly thrown out stealing and Shore went on to retire the next 26 batters in order (two strikeouts) for a combined no-hitter that was close to a perfect game.

The next combined no-hitter didn’t occur until 50 years later – on April 30, 1967 – when Baltimore Orioles Steve Barber and Stu Miller combined to no-hit the Tigers in Baltimore.  This “gem” is most noted for the fact that it is the only combined no-hitter in which the team that was no-hit managed to get the win.  Barber went 8.2 innings, but walked ten (striking out three) in the 2-1 loss. Despite the walks, it looked pretty good for Barber going into the top of the ninth.  The Orioles had scored in the eighth to take a 1-0 lead.  The ninth went like this.  Barber walked Tiger first basemen Norm Cash to start the inning (Dick Tracewski ran for Cash); Barber then walked light-hitting shortstop Ray Oyler; Tiger pitcher Earl Wilson bunted the runners to second and third; Willie Horton fouled out pinch hitting for second baseman Dick McCauliffe; Jake Wood was brought in to run for Oyler; a Barber wild pitch with center fielder Mickey Stanley at the plate enabled Tracewski to score, tying the game; then Stanley walked and that was all for Barber.  Stu Miller came on and saw third baseman Don Wert safe on an error, with Wood scoring.  Then, finally, right fielder Al Kaline made the third out of the inning.  The Orioles went 1-2-3 in the bottom of the night and the no-hitter was completed – and lost.  The only other losing no hitter came on April 23, 1964, when Houston Colt .45s hurler Ken Johnson was beaten 1-0 by the Reds with an unearned ninth-inning run.  There have also been two eight-inning no-hitter losses (the home team did not bat in the bottom of the ninth), but MLB does not recognize these as official no- hitters.

September 28, 1975, saw the Oakland As’ Vida Blue, Glenn Abbott, Paul Lindblad and Rollie Fingers no-hit the Angels in a 5-0 win in Oakland.  The only tidbit here is that this no-hitter took place on the final day of the regular season – one of only two final day no-hitters (the other being Mike Witt’s 1984 perfect game against the Rangers at Arlington Stadium.)

On July 28, 1976, John “Blue Moon” Odom (pitching for the White Sox) combined with Francisco Barrios to no-hit Odom’s former team, the As. In a 2-1 victory in Oakland, Odom started and went just five innings, walking nine and striking out three. His ninth walk was the lead-off hitter in the sixth inning of a 1-1 tie, which earned Odom an early exit despite the fact that he had not given up a hit.  Barrios tossed the final four innings, giving up 2 walks and striking out two.  (The 11 walks in this game is the most given up in a no-hitter).

On April 11, 1990, Mark Langston started a combined no-hitter for the Angels, playing at home against the Mariners.  The Angels scored in the bottom of the seventh to take a 1-0 lead and Langston, who had thrown 99 pitches in this early-season start, was relieved by Mike Witt, who closed it out with 2 perfect innings (two strikeouts).  Of interest here is that it makes Witt the only hurler to throw a no-hitter as a starter and participate in a no-hitter as a reliever.  (As noted earlier, Witt threw a perfect game for the Angels against the Texas Rangers on September 30, 1984.)

July 13, 1991, the Orioles’ Bob Milacki, Mike Flanagan, Mark Williamson, and Greg Olson no-hit the As 2-0 … notable as one of two combined no-hitters that season.

September 11, 1991, Braves Kent Mercker, Mark Wohlers and Alejandro Pena no-hit the Padres 1-0 in the first National League combined no hitter.

The only extra inning, combined no-hitter came on June 12, 1997 – with the Pittsburgh Pirates downing the Houston Astros 3-0 in ten innings on a walk-off three-run homer by pinch-hitter Mark Smith.  The game was started by Francisco Cordova, who went nine innings with 2 walks and ten strikeouts (121 pitches).  Ricardo Rincon relieved in the tenth, walking one and striking out one.  As you would expect, Cordova’s nine innings are the most pitched by any one hurler in a combined no-no.

On June 11, 2003, Houston Astros’ starter Roy Oswalt aggravated a groin injury in the second inning of what went on to become a combined no-hit, 8-0 victory over the Yankees (at Yankee Stadium). Houston used six pitchers in that game, setting the record tied by the Mariners yesterday.  In addition, it was the first inter-league combined no-hitter.   For more on the Astros’ 2003 feat, see the BBRT May 3, 2012, post on Jered Weaver’ s no-hitter.

And that brings us up to the June 8 Mariners / Dodgers game.

Hamilton’s Streak – Memories of “Hondo”

Josh Hamilton trotting home - a familiar site in Texas ... and parks north.

Josh Hamilton’s recent one-week home run binge – 9 homers in seven days, brought back memories of Frank “Hondo” Howard, who holds the record for homers in a week with 10.  Not to take anything away from Hamilton’s dramatic performance, but Hondo’s run may have been even more spectacular.  It came in 1968 – known as the “Year of the Pitcher” for the lack of offensive achievement.   It also was achieved in one less game, primarily on the road (only one home game) and with considerable more travel (Howard’s week included games Washington D.C., Boston, Cleveland and Detroit).

Let’s look at these two momentous long-ball achievements.

Hamilton’s week stretched from May 7-13 (7 games, one doubleheader) and included 14 hits in 30 at bats (.467), 9 HRs, 10 Runs, 18 RBIs, 4 walks and 11 strikeouts.  Hamilton’s total included six two-run homers, and three solo shots.  He homered in 5 of the 7 games, including May 8’s record-tying four-homer performance.  His victims included:  Jason Berken; Jake Arrieta (2); Zach Philips; Darren O’Day; Tommy Hunter; Jerome Williams (2); and C.J. Wilson.

The Ranger slugger’s run included four road games (at Baltimore) and three at home (vs. the Angels) – with the Rangers winning four of six.  In the streak, the Rangers scored a total of 61 runs, with Hamilton driving in 29.5% of that total.

Frank Howard’s 1968 streak also came in May, from the 12th through the 18th.  His week included only six games and he collected 13 hits in 20 at bats (.650); 10 HRs (the one-week record); 10 runs; 17 RBIs; just one walk; and four strikeouts.  He homered in all six games, with 4 solo homers, three 2-run dingers and one 3-run shot.  His victims included:  Fred Lasher;  Mickey Lolich (3); Lee Stange; Ray Culp; Jose Santiago; Sam McDowell (2); and Joe Sparma.

The streak included just one home game (Tigers) and five on the road at Boston (2), Cleveland (1) and Detroit (2).  The Senators went 3-3 and scored 29 runs in the six games (Howard drove in 58.5% of the Senators runs in the streak).

 

Hamilton’s 2012 streak

Date                      Hits-At Bats        HR             R             RBI         BB           K

May 7                       3-4                    1              1              2              2            2

May 8                       5-5                    4              4              8              0            0

May 10 (1)              1-4                       0              0              0              0            2

May 10 (2)              1-4                       1              1              2              1            2

May 11                    3-4                       2              3              2              1            0

May 12                    1-4                       1              1              1              0            3

May 13                    2-5                       0              0              3              0            2

 

Howard’s 1968 streak

Date                      Hits-At Bats        HR              R             RBI         BB             K

May 12                   2-4                       2              2              2              0              0

May 13 (off)

May 14                    3-4                       2              2              3              0              0

May 15                    2-4                       1              1              2              0              1

May 16                    2-3                       2              2              4              1              1

May 17                    1-4                       1              1              2              0              1

May 18                    3-5                       2              2              4              0              1

Three-Homer Jump Start – Another 2012 Rarity

J.J. Hardy - Twice the middle man in a three-homer start.

As we move through the 2012 season, rarities abound. A perfect game (one of only 21 in baseball history); a four-homer game (one of just 16 – also making 2012 the only season in which we saw a perfect game AND a four-homer game), and yesterday, for just the fourth time ever, a team started off a game with back-to-back-to-back home runs.

The team was the surprising Orioles, with Ryan Flaherty, J.J. Hardy and Nick Markakis leading off a 6-5 home victory over the Rangers with long balls (number one of the season for Flaherty, number eight for Hardy and number five for Markakis).

Here’s some tidbits about the contests in which a team has started off with three straight dingers.

The first three-homer jump start came on April 13, 1987, as the Padres’ Marvelle Wynn, Tony Gwynn and John Kruk pulled off the feat in a 13-6 home loss to the Giants. The Padres remain the only team to start with three long balls and still lose. They also had the least likely trio to pull of the accomplishment, as Wynn, Gwynn and Kruk (sounds like a law firm to me) totaled only 29 homers for the year. Wynn, in fact, finished the 1987 season with only 2 roundtrippers. It was also the first homer of the 1987 season for all three players.

The second three-homer start came on May 28, 2003, courtesy of the Braves’ Rafael Furcal, Mark DeRosa and Gary Sheffield – in a 15-3 home victory over the Reds. Furcal, DeRosa and Sheffield totaled 60 homers for the year.

The third group of long-ball initiators was made up of the Brewers Rickie Weeks, J.J. Hardy and Ryan Braun. They joined the list on September 9, 2007,  in a 10-5 road win over the Reds – making the Brewers the only team to achieve the feat on the road; the Reds the only team to be victimized by a three-homer start at home, as well as the only team to have the feat accomplished against them twice. (Weeks, Hardy and Braun totaled 76 homers for the year).

Notably, by being part of yesterday’s three-homer Orioles’ start, J.J. Hardy became the only player to twice be part of an event that has occurred only four times in MLB history. (Boy, don’t we keep track of everything in baseball.)

Weaver Tosses 2012’s Second No-Hitter … and a bit of history

 Jered Weaver yesterday tossed a no-hitter against the Minnesota Twins, which raises the question – Which is more surprising?

 1) That the Angels’ ace no-hit the 6-18 Twins (who were shut out on 3-hits by Jerome Williams the day before and now haven’t had a hit in 15 innings);

2) That the Angels remain in last place despite the three-game sweep of the Twins;

3) That Albert Pujols (of the 11 consecutive 30+ homer seasons) is hitting .208 with no home runs and only 5 RBIs after 25 games in the American League?  

We’ll go with “3” and send our congratulations out to Weaver, who walked one and struck out nine in his 9-0 win.   

BBRT likes to provide a little history in each post, so here some factoids for today – which, as you will see later, are only one degree of separation from Jered Weaver. 

While Weaver’s no-no was the classic complete game, there have been 9 “combined” no-hitters in MLB history, including 2 in 1991 (when there were a total of 7 no-hitters).  1991’s seven no-hitters is the record for a single season, tied with 1990, when there were also 7 no-hitters, including one combined effort.   For historic reference, 1990-91 saw as many no-hitters as 1927-44. 

The most pitchers used in a combined no hitter was six, on June 11, 2003, when a parade of Houston Astros’ hurlers shutdown the Yankees 8-0 at Yankee Stadium.  It all started out normally enough as the Astros’ Roy Oswalt sent the Yankees down 1-2-3 in the first (Alfonso Soriano-fly out, Jeter- strikeout swinging, Jason Giambi-strikeout swinging). Things took a turn toward baseball history two pitches into the Yankee second, as Oswalt aggravated a groin injury and the Astros were forced to go to the bullpen.  In succession, Pete Munro tossed 2.2 innings; Kirk Saarloos 1.1; Brad Lidge 2.0 (for the win); Octavio Dotel (1.0); and Billy Wagner 1.0.   When it was over 13 Yankees had gone down on strikes, there Bombers had no hits and had put only 5 runners on base (3 walks, an error and on a wild pitch strikeout.)

And, the game was both unusual and meaningful.  The Yankees came into the game with a 36-27 record, just ½ game ahead of the Red Sox, while the Astros were 36-28 and tied for first place with the Cubs.  Oh, and that one degree of separation?  The Yankees’ starting (and losing) pitcher was Jered Weaver’s brother Jeff, whose major league pitching career spanned 1999-2010.  Jeff went 6.1 innings, giving up 5 runs on ten hits in the loss.  

How did the Yankees take the unusual no-hitter?

“We should be embarrassed,” Jeter said after the contest. “If you’re not embarrassed something’s wrong with you.”

The Yankees did take the loss with class. When they got to the clubhouse after the game, each of the six participating pitchers found a bottle of champagne, courtesy of the Yankees, at his locker.

Best and Worst One Game ML Careers

We wouldn’t we all like that one chance to put our names into the Encyclopedia of Baseball.  Here are two players whose one-game careers were polar opposites in terms of outcome – but were no doubt equal in terms of thrills. 

 

 

RON WRIGHT.  Three at bats – six outs – and done.

Attitude is everything – and we could all learn a lot from Ron Wright, a one-time MLB prospect who calls his one-game major league career “the best day of my professional life,” despite the fact that he accounted for an amazing 6 outs in only three at bats. Starting his first – and only – game after being called up in April 2002 by the Mariners, Wright began his ML career by striking out with two on in the second inning – and it was all downhill from there. But, I’m getting ahead of myself.

First, the 6’ 1”, 230-pound first baseman was a legitimate prospect, and a three-time minor league all-star.  Selected by the Braves (right out of high school) in the seventh round of the 1994 draft, Wright hit 32 home runs for the Macon Braves as a 19-year-old. He added another 36 minor league dingers for the Durham Bulls and Greenville Braves the next year. Wright was traded to the Pirates in 1996, and would later play in the Cincinnati, Tampa Bay and Seattle systems.  Injuries, however, took him off track in short order.  Wright missed most of the 1998 and 1999 seasons with a back injury, but worked hard to regain his prospect status.  In 2001, playing for the Durham Bills, he hit .262 with 20 homeruns and was considered the International League’s top fielding first-sacker.  The following season, an injury to Seattle DH Edgar Martinez led to an April call-up to the Seattle Mariners. On April 14 he started (and ended) his ML experience in a game won (at Texas) by Seattle 9-7, with Seattle getting 18 hits.  Wright’s day  went like this.

  • Second Inning: With Ruben Sierra on second and John Olerud on first, Wright took a called third strike from Rangers’ starter Kenny Rogers
  • Fourth Inning: With Sierra on third and Olerud on first, Wright hit a grounder to Rogers, who threw to SS Alex Rodriguez at second for the force. Sierra, who had broken for home, was caught in a SS-C-3B-P rundown for a second out, and Wright who tried to take second during the run down was thrown out P-2B.  An unusual triple play.
  • Sixth inning: Again up with both Sierra and Olerud on base (second and first, respectively), Wright hit into a more traditional short-to-second-to first double play.
  • Seventh Inning: Up again with Sierra and Olerud on base (first and third) with one out, Mike McLemore pinch hit for Wright (ending Wright’s ML stat line).  McLemore, by the way, struck out.

Wright went back down to the minors before getting another ML at bat and never made it back. (He did hit .273 with 15 HRs for Tacoma in 2002).  So, his major league career consisted of three at bats and six outs – strikeout, triple play, double play.  And, as for that fielding expertise, Wright’s spent his short ML career as a DH.  Still, in all his interviews since then, Wright had indicated he cherishes the game and the fact that he is one of the rare few who did make it to the major leagues.

JOHN PACIOREK.  Career On Base Percentage 1.000 – and done.

On the other side of the coin, we have John Paciorek, who enjoyed a banner day in his only major league appearance.  A 6’ 1”, 200-pound outfielder, Paciorek was called up by the Houston Colt .45s (yes, that was their original name) in September of 1963.  The 18-year-old got into his only major league game on September 29, starting the last game of the season (at home against the Mets) in right field and hitting seventh.  It was a 13-4 Houston victory and Paciorek ended up with three hits and two walks in five plate appearances, with 2 runs scored and three runs batted in.  It was a rather surprising ML debut for Paciorek, who was hitting just .219 for Modesto when he was called up (and who went on to hit over .250 in only one of his 6 minor league seasons.)  Like Wright, back surgery played a role in Paciorek’s brief career.  The surgery came in 1964; Paciorek missed all of 1965 and ended his playing career in 1969 without ever getting back to the “bigs.”  His one game went like this:

Second Inning:  With Houston 3B Bobby Aspromonte on first with two out, Paciorek walked and later scored on a triple by C John Batemen.

Fourth Inning: With the based loaded (1B Rusty Staub on third, Aspromonte on second, CF Ivan Murrell on first), Paciorek singled, driving in two.  Later he scored on a sacrifice fly by pinch hitter Pete Runnels.

Fifth Inning:  With Aspromonte and third with one out, Paciorek singled for another RBI.  Later, he scored on a single by SS Bob Lillis.

Sixth Inning:  Paciorek walked with one out, later scored on another Lillis’ single.

Eighth Inning:  Paciorek led off with a single.

Short, but spectacular ML career.  Oh, and another factoid, Paciorek is the brother of Tom Paciorek, who enjoyed a solid 18-year major league career.

Happy 40th Chipper – A 4-Bagger Celebration

Happy 40th Chipper!

Yesterday, when Chipper Jones celebrated his 40th birthday with a home run during the Braves 4-3 win over the Dodgers, he joined an elite club – only four other players have hit a home run on their 40th birthday:

Bob Thurman, Reds, on May 14, 1957 … an unusual case, since Thurman didn’t make the major leagues until he was 37 and then played until he was 42 (1955-59).

Joe Morgan, Phillies, on September 19, 1983 … Morgan played from 1963-84.

Wade Boggs, Devil Rays, on June 15, 1998 … Boggs played from 1982-99.

Tony Phillips, As, on April 25, 1999 … Phillips played from 1982-99.

Jones, retiring after this season, will not have the chance to move to the next level … a homer on his 41st birthday. That birthday club has two members:

Darrell Evans, Tigers, May 26, 1988 … Evans played from 1969-89.

Jim Thome, Indians, August 27, 2011 … Thome, still playing for the Phillies, began his ML career in 1991. He rejoined the Indians (from the Twins) the day before his birthday blast.

And, of course, there is also the Mets’ Julio Franco. Maybe not a birthday bash but, on May 4, 2007, at 48-years-old (and 254 days), Franco established the current mark for the oldest major leaguer to hit a round-tripper. Note: Franco is also the oldest player to have a multi-homer game, hit a grand slam and hit a pinch-hit home run. Franco’s career stretched from 1982-2007.

Apps You’ll Find on the BBRT IPhone

Here’s a look at the baseball apps you’ll find on BBRT’s IPhone – for baseballs news, statistical analysis, history or just plain fun.   Most of these run from free to $1.99, except for MLB At Bat 12 at $14.99, but worth it for a true baseball geek.

 Baseball News

MLB At Bat 12 … BBRT’s number one source of in-season info.  Lots of baseball news, schedules, box scores, Game Day pitch-by-pitch coverage, standings, stats leaders and good, timely video.   Free live video stream of one game a day, and you can listen to any game through your phone – just like the days of the good-old transistor radio, only with infinite range.  Pricey at $14.99, but well worth it.

EvriThing Baseball … Pulls baseball news from literally thousands of sources and organizes them for easy access (in what the app terms “channels”).  There’s Scoreboard and Standings channels, as well as channels for General BB news, Trade Talk, Roster Moves, Injury Reports and one for each ML team.  And, to top it all off, it’s free.  If you’re looking for a no-cost baseball news app, this is for you.

Sporting News Pro Baseball … Baseball info organized by News (general news), Scores, Stats and Fantasy News.  Identify your favorite team and have quick access to the latest developments.   Another  free source of baseball news.

 Analysis

Bill James Baseball IQ … For true BB stats geeks, in depth analysis of player strengths, weaknesses and trends – based on every pitch thrown over the past four seasons.  Goes way beyond traditional stats like batting average, RBIs, ERA, etc.  and into such areas as where, when and how a player gets his hits or makes his outs – or what pitch a hurler is likely to toss, in what location and on what count.    “Some” of the categories:  Hit Locators (where the batter is likely to hit the ball in a specific situation); Hit Zone (where the batter gets his hits); Pitch Location (where the pitcher is likely to spot the ball); Match-Ups (batter/pitcher lifetime results) – and MUCH more.  How detailed can you get?  I just looked up what pitch location Jered Weaver had used to strikeout Danny Valencia on two and two counts over the past four seasons.  Basically, as you learn to use this app, it will take you to statistical levels (depths and heights) you never reached before.    Again, free.  Ain’t life sweet?

History

Baseball Memories … This app makes more than 200,000 games played between 1871-2009 available to you (depending on records kept at the time).  You can access the final line score (with line-up), the box score, a text play-by-play or a play-by-play on-screen simulation.  You can pull up games by year, date and / or team.   A bit addicting for a baseball geek like me, but a treasure trove of history for $1.99.

Fun

Baseball Legends … More than 1,000 baseball trivia questions offered up in regular mode (ten seconds per question) or time trials (answer as many as you can in 90 seconds).   Degree of difficulty ranges from “gimmees” to “You’ve got to be kidding!”   No one gets shut out, but there are few four-for-fours either.  The points you earn for correct answers enable you to unlock video, photos and audio from baseball history –  such “fan treats” as Abbott and Costello’s famous “Who’s  on first?” routine, Babe Ruth’s speech announcing he is leaving the Yankees, Roger Clemens talking about his fifth Cy Young.  A fun pick-up for 99 cents.

Flick Home Run … Hitting homers with a flick of the finger (you can also swing and miss, foul one off or pop up).  Fun diversion when things are going slow, as you work to get the appropriate “flick” on an array of fast balls and floaters the move across your screen.  Points for distance – and you can “leave the park and hit buildings, automobiles, etc.   A free and 99-cent version – and you can purchase advanced skills.

Hit the Deck Baseball … Electronic version of the old classic mechanical baseball pinball game, with flippers, lights bells and all the excitement of being in an old-style arcade.   Had a little trouble with tracking all-time high score, but still loads of  retro fun for “geezers” like BBRT.    (99 cents)

ESPN Fantasy Baseball … Let’s me run my ESPN Fantasy Baseball team from the IPhone.  (Free)

Congrats Phil Humber – Light Up A “Perfecto”

On April 21, Phil Humber tossed a perfect game in a 4-0 victory over the Seattle Mariners in Seattle.  Humber finished off the Mariners in 95 pitches, 67 for strikes, going to a three-ball count on only three batters.  In his gem, Humber struck out nine (including the final batter) and there were only six outfield putouts.

While BBRT raves about Humber’s masterpiece, we register a bit of a rant at the Mariners’ shortstop Munenori Kawasaki’s sixth-inning bunt attempt.  The first hit, after 17 batters have been retired in a no-hitter, should be legitimate.

The 4-0 score is the second most popular perfect game final count.  Six of MLB’s 21 perfect games have resulted in the narrowest of victories, ending by the score of 1-0.  Five perfect games have ended at 4-0 and four at 2-0.  The highest score in a perfect game?  6-0, twice: In Yankee David Cone’s July 18, 1999, perfect game against the Expos – and in Phillie Jim Bunning’s June 21, 1964, masterpiece against the Mets.

Another perfecto fact.  The largest attendance for a perfect game was 65,519 for Don Larsen’s 1956 World Series perfect game (the only ever in a World Series).  The smallest – 6,298, when Catfish Hunter shut down the Twins in Oakland on May 8, 1968, although tens of thousands claim to have been there.  The announced attendance for Humber’s perfecto was 22,472.  Final piece of trivia:  Of the 21 perfect games, 15 were at home.

Looking back to Larsen’s game, probably the most famous perfecto:  It came on October 8, 1956, at Yankee Stadium as the Bronx Bombers bested the rival Brooklyn Dodgers 2-0.  Larsen struck out 7 (including, like Humber, the last out), went to a three-ball count only once and saw 9 outfield putouts.

Perhaps the most dominant perfect game performance (if such a distinction can be brought to perfection) belongs to Dodger lefty Sandy Koufax, who tossed his perfect game against the Cubs in LA – winning 1-0 on September 9, 1965.  Koufax struck out 14 Cubbies in that outing, including the last six batters.

Addie Joss of the Cleveland Naps used the fewest pitches to log a perfect nine-innings – 74 pitches – just three strikeouts – as he beat the White Sox (in Cleveland) on October 2, 1908.  The most pitches in a perfecto?  120 by Yankee David Wells, as he shut down the Minnesota Twins 4-0 at Yankee Stadium on May 17, 1998.

Perfect game record least likely to be broken?  When Jim “Catfish” Hunter tossed his perfect game against the Twins (May 8, 1968, at Oakland), he not only notched 11 strikeouts (including the last batter) – he added insult to injury by collecting three hits in four at bats (a double and two singles) and driving in three of Oakland’s four runs.  The best offensive performance ever by a perfect hurler.

 

BBRT Declares Unofficial Record – 38 straight strikes.

Talk about being in the groove.  On April 18, while beating the Angels 4-0, Oakland A’s  pitcher Bartolo Colon threw 76 percent of his pitches for strikes, including one streak of 38 strikes in a row (second pitch of the fifth inning to the seventh pitch of the eighth inning).  BBRT is going to declare the 38 straight strikes an “unofficial” record until someone proves it wrong.  Colon pitched 8 scoreless innings in the game, with 4 hits, no runs and 5 strikeouts.  The win brought the 2005 Cy Young winner’s 2012 record to 3-1, 2.63 ERA, with 2 walks in 27.1 innings pitched.

Pretty much everything Bartolo Colon threw was over the plate Wednesday.

In an understatement, A’s catcher Kurt Suzuki said after the game, “Bartolo knows where the ball is going and he knows what he wants to do.”

BBRT likes to reminisce, so here’s the look backward.  In 1962, Kansas City Athletics hurler Bill Fischer put together a record streak of 84.1 innings pitched without a base on balls (August  4- September 30).  Fischer, who ended the year 4-12 with a 3.95 ERA, tossed 127 innings with only 8 walks that season.   Ironically, Fischer – in his later coaching career – became known as “Walking Wisdom.”