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Pitchers with 100 ERA+ and 100 OPS+

Posted by Andy on June 20, 2011

Here are the 17 pitchers who, since 1901, amassed an ERA+ of 100 or better as well as an OPS+ (as hitters) of 100 or better (minimum 10 plate appearances):

Rk Player ERA+ From To Age G GS CG SHO GF W L W-L% SV IP Tm
1 Earl Jones 142 1945 1945 26-26 10 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 28.1 SLB
2 Pedro Dibut 142 1924 1925 31-32 8 2 2 0 5 3 0 1.000 0 36.2 CIN
3 Ken Tatum 123 1969 1974 25-30 176 2 0 0 105 16 12 .571 52 282.2 CAL-BOS-CHW
4 Reb Russell 121 1913 1919 24-30 242 148 81 24 60 80 59 .576 13 1291.2 CHW
5 Wes Ferrell 117 1927 1941 19-33 374 323 227 17 43 193 128 .601 13 2623.0 CLE-BOS-TOT-NYY-BRO-BSN
6 Terry Forster 116 1971 1986 19-34 614 39 5 0 318 54 65 .454 127 1105.2 CHW-PIT-LAD-ATL-CAL
7 Ron Blackburn 111 1958 1959 23-24 64 2 0 0 24 3 2 .600 4 108.0 PIT
8 Forrest Thompson 111 1948 1949 30-31 55 8 1 0 26 7 13 .350 4 147.2 WSH
9 Wally Holborow 109 1944 1948 30-34 21 2 2 1 12 2 3 .400 0 51.2 WSH-PHA
10 Dixie Howell 106 1940 1958 20-38 115 2 0 0 68 19 15 .559 19 226.1 CLE-CIN-CHW
11 Mike O'Neill 105 1901 1904 23-26 85 77 68 4 8 32 44 .421 2 694.1 STL
12 Doc Crandall 104 1908 1918 20-30 267 132 89 9 119 98 58 .628 19 1449.0 NYG-SLM-SLB-BSN
13 Terry Mathews 102 1991 1999 26-34 324 5 0 0 90 22 21 .512 10 421.2 TEX-FLA-TOT-BAL-KCR
14 Danny Boone 102 1981 1990 27-36 61 1 0 0 16 2 1 .667 4 101.2 SDP-TOT-BAL
15 George Mullin 102 1902 1915 21-34 487 428 353 35 51 228 196 .538 8 3686.2 DET-TOT-IND-NEW
16 Ernie Herbert 101 1913 1915 26-28 35 2 1 0 30 2 0 1.000 1 115.2 CIN-SLM
17 John Skopec 101 1901 1903 21-23 15 14 9 0 0 8 5 .615 0 107.2 CHW-DET
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/20/2011.

And here are their stats as hitters:

Rk Player OPS+ G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO HBP SH BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
1 Wally Holborow 155 21 10 6 1 2 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 3 .333 .429 .500 .929 /*1 WSH-PHA
2 Terry Forster 145 620 86 78 7 31 4 1 0 7 2 9 0 6 .397 .413 .474 .887 *1/9 CHW-PIT-LAD-ATL-CAL
3 Ernie Herbert 137 44 37 35 6 13 2 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 .371 .405 .429 .834 /*1 CIN-SLM
4 Ron Blackburn 135 64 13 12 1 3 2 0 1 1 0 4 0 1 .250 .250 .667 .917 /*1 PIT
5 Ken Tatum 134 176 51 45 7 11 1 0 4 6 3 17 1 2 .244 .306 .533 .839 *1 CAL-BOS-CHW
6 Terry Mathews 127 324 24 24 3 9 3 0 0 3 0 9 0 0 .375 .375 .500 .875 *1 TEX-FLA-BAL-KCR
7 Pedro Dibut 125 8 14 11 2 3 0 1 0 3 2 0 0 1 .273 .385 .455 .839 /*1 CIN
8 Forrest Thompson 124 56 44 40 6 13 3 1 0 4 4 4 0 0 .325 .386 .450 .836 /*1 WSH
9 Earl Jones 123 10 10 10 2 2 1 0 1 3 0 4 0 0 .200 .200 .600 .800 /*1 SLB
10 Doc Crandall 119 500 1033 887 109 253 35 19 9 126 118 111 4 24 .285 .372 .398 .770 *1/46983 NYG-TOT-SLM-SLB-BSN
11 Dixie Howell 106 124 79 74 8 18 2 1 5 9 4 21 0 1 .243 .282 .500 .782 *1 CLE-CIN-CHW
12 Reb Russell 104 422 1062 976 141 262 48 25 22 172 42 130 15 29 .268 .309 .436 .745 *19/7 CHW-PIT
13 John Skopec 102 15 47 43 4 12 0 1 1 5 2 12 0 2 .279 .311 .395 .706 /*1 CHW-DET
14 Danny Boone 101 61 11 10 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .300 .300 .400 .700 /*1 SDP-TOT-BAL
15 Mike O'Neill 101 137 415 380 50 97 14 9 2 41 20 62 8 7 .255 .306 .355 .662 /*17 STL-CIN
16 Wes Ferrell 100 548 1345 1176 175 329 57 12 38 208 129 185 0 40 .280 .351 .446 .797 *1/7 CLE-BOS-TOT-NYY-BRO-BSN
17 George Mullin 100 615 1685 1531 163 401 70 23 3 137 122 172 7 25 .262 .319 .344 .663 *1/98743 DET-TOT-IND-NEW
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/20/2011.

19 Responses to “Pitchers with 100 ERA+ and 100 OPS+”

  1. Library Dave Says:

    Babe Ruth's years as a pitcher (1915-1919) give him an OPS+ of 192 and an ERA+ of 127. OPS+ is by far the best, and ERA+ is over 1200+ innings, putting him ahead of Earl Jones and Pedro Dibut in my book, since they pitched a combined 65 innings.

  2. Andy Says:

    Good point, Dave. To qualify for this list, the player had to have at least half of his plate appearances coming as a pitcher.

  3. Doug Says:

    Discounting Boone and Matthews (35 PA combined), the most recent pitchers on this list are Ken Tatum and Terry Forster, who both started their careers just before the DH came in.

    No surprise there, since pitchers no longer have any minor-league hitting experience before they get to the bigs.

  4. Doug Says:

    Another take on good hitting pitchers are those who have received an intentional base-on-balls. Eleven pitchers (50% appearance rule) have had an IBB (10 of them between 1956 and 1970), led by Gary Peters with 3 and Mickey McDermott with 2. The details for those two guys (both of whom had 100+ ERA+) are kind of interesting.

    Peters got all his IBBs as a pinch-hitter. For his career, Peters was used 75 times as a pinch-hitter, going .235 / .293 / .471 with 4 HR and 13 RBI in that role.

    McDermott was also used a lot as a pinch-hitter, but without much success (.576 OPS in 143 times as a PH). He got both his IBBs for the '57 As, one as a PH and one as a pitcher. In the latter game, he batted 8th, ahead of shortstop Joe DeMaestri (career 62 OPS+ in 11 seasons, mostly as a regular or semi-regular guy). For the record, after McDermott was walked (to load the bases), the As pinch-hit for DeMaestri. In the 4th inning! Talk about a Rodney Dangerfield moment.

    http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/CLE/CLE195705121.shtml

    The last pitcher to get an IBB was Don Robinson in 1984, also in a pinch-hitting role.

  5. Lawrence Azrin Says:

    @1/ Is there any doubt that Wes Ferrell is the best-hitting pitcher of the live-ball era who had a real career? All the other pitchers ahead of him by OPS% didn't have anywhere as long a career; of those that did, Reb Russell pitched in the dead-ball era (before being converted to an OFer), and Terry Forster didn't have that many AB.

    I am not making a statement, just curious and throwing the question out. There are other pitchers frequently cited as good hitters, such as Don Newcombe, Earl Wilson, Don Drysdale, and Warren Spahn, who did not make this list.

  6. Troy Says:

    . . . as an aside, Terry Forster has the highest career batting average (.397) of ANY player with 75 or more at-bats.

  7. Doug Says:

    @5. No doubt at all, Lawrence.

    @6. Cool little factoid, Troy.

  8. Doug Says:

    @6.

    Forster is still number 1 in BA even at a 50 AB threshold, and in the top 10 (number 8) at a 25 AB threshold.

    The man could hit!

  9. Bip Says:

    @4

    The Dodgers have put Aaron Miles in the leadoff spot in 8 games this year. If there was a runner on 2nd and Chad Billingsley was coming to the plate (159 OPS+ in 33 PA) I would intentionally walk him to get to Aaron Miles.

  10. Doug Says:

    Whoops. Don't know where the "cool face" came from. For the record, Forster is number 8 in career BA for all players with 25 or more AB.

  11. nwicubfan Says:

    Wow. Shows who extremely rare it is to have a pitcher who can hit. Carlos Zambrano has a career .240 avg, 22 HRs, 68 RBIs in almost 700 PA's, but that translates into just a 62 OPS+.

  12. Whiz Says:

    Doug, this has happened to me on bbref before, an "8" immediately followed by a ")" is interpreted as a smiley face 8)

    I wonder if you can use square brackets... 8]

  13. Dvd Avins Says:

    @5 The only reason Red Ruffing's ERA+ is too low is because he played well past his hitting prime (until he was 42). He has an incredible 13.7 batting WAR to Ferrell's 12.0.

  14. Artie Z Says:

    @13 - Looking at Ruffing's cumulative batting stats he never ended any season with an OPS+ greater than 100. It was 99 at the end of 1932, the highest it would be at the end of any season, and he was 27 at the time. Ruffing had 700 more plate appearances in which he accumulated the extra 1.7 batting WAR. Through age 33 (which is when Ferrell retired), Ruffing's OPS+ was "only" 88. Which is certainly fine, as is his career OPS+ of 81.

    Ferrell's OPS+ was as high as 107 (at the end of his age 27 season).

  15. Johnny Twisto Says:

    pitchers no longer have any minor-league hitting experience before they get to the bigs.

    I believe they hit when NL affiliates play each other.

  16. Jeff Says:

    Terry Forster had a .397 lifetime BA? That's incredible! I had no idea. And I don't think he was just lucky, since he had only 9 SO in 86 plate apperances.

    If I were him I'd pay someone to follow me around and break into my conversations with fans. "Sure, you pitched for a long time, but I'll bet you weren't a very good hitter, like most pitchers. What was your batting average?" Then I'd say sort of offhandedly, "Aw, shucks, it was .397" and watch people's mouths drop open.

  17. Gerry Says:

    Doc Crandall was used as a pinch-hitter. His pitching line for 1913 is very odd: it shows him pitching for two teams, both of which were the New York Giants. Back in the days before this website, when pitcher batting data was hard to come by, this was very puzzling, but now you can look at his batting stats, and transactions, and dispel some of the mystery. The Giants sent him to the Cardinals, where he didn't pitch but got two at-bats (as a pinch-hitter, I believe), then the Cards sent him back to NY less than two weeks later. Of course, it's still a bit of a mystery why the Cardinals didn't pitch him, and why he went back to the Giants in under two weeks.

    Oh, I almost forgot the other interesting thing about him; more than half of his 300+ pitching appearances were in relief, highly unusual (unique?) for the period.

  18. Richard Chester Says:

    On 8/6/13 the Giants traded Crandall to the Cards for C Larry McLean. The Cards discovered afterwards that Crandall had a sore arm and claimed that they received damaged goods. The Giants compensated by buying back from the Cards a couple of weeks later. Players being returned after a trade has happened quite a few times.

  19. Gerry Says:

    Richard, thanks. Players being returned after a trade may have happened quite a few times, but I think players like Crandall with adjacent lines in their records for one team in one year are rather rarer.