Platooning DHs
Posted by Andy on April 9, 2010
I'm hearing a lot of clamoring from the Red Sox fans to sit David Ortiz in favor of Mike Lowell or to at least put both players in a platoon at the DH spot. I'll say this much--Mike Lowell is still a good hitter and its a shame to keep him on the bench full-time. However, if they platoon these guys, then they'll have two veterans accustomed to playing every day who are now part-time players. I would think it's a better option to trade Mike Lowell and hope that Ortiz comes around. It's easy to forget that he was awesome for the last 3.5 months of last season.
Anyway, this got me to wondering how many true DH platoons there have been. Since its inception in 1973, here are the teams that have had more than 1 player with at least 50 games at DH:
Rk | Year | Tm | Lg | #Matching | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2009 | Seattle Mariners | AL | 2 | Ken Griffey / Mike Sweeney |
2 | 2009 | Texas Rangers | AL | 2 | Hank Blalock / Andruw Jones |
3 | 2008 | Oakland Athletics | AL | 2 | Jack Cust / Frank Thomas |
4 | 2007 | Kansas City Royals | AL | 2 | Billy Butler / Mike Sweeney |
5 | 2007 | Oakland Athletics | AL | 2 | Jack Cust / Mike Piazza |
6 | 2004 | New York Yankees | AL | 2 | Ruben Sierra / Bernie Williams |
7 | 2000 | Tampa Bay Devil Rays | AL | 2 | Jose Canseco / Greg Vaughn |
8 | 1998 | Toronto Blue Jays | AL | 2 | Jose Canseco / Mike Stanley |
9 | 1996 | Milwaukee Brewers | AL | 2 | John Jaha / Kevin Seitzer |
10 | 1995 | Detroit Tigers | AL | 2 | Cecil Fielder / Kirk Gibson |
11 | 1995 | Texas Rangers | AL | 2 | Juan Gonzalez / Mickey Tettleton |
12 | 1993 | Milwaukee Brewers | AL | 2 | Kevin Reimer / Greg Vaughn |
13 | 1992 | New York Yankees | AL | 2 | Kevin Maas / Danny Tartabull |
14 | 1990 | California Angels | AL | 2 | Chili Davis / Brian Downing |
15 | 1990 | Chicago White Sox | AL | 2 | Ron Kittle / Dan Pasqua |
16 | 1989 | Boston Red Sox | AL | 2 | Dwight Evans / Jim Rice |
17 | 1988 | Oakland Athletics | AL | 2 | Don Baylor / Dave Parker |
18 | 1988 | Seattle Mariners | AL | 2 | Steve Balboni / Ken Phelps |
19 | 1987 | Milwaukee Brewers | AL | 2 | Cecil Cooper / Paul Molitor |
20 | 1986 | Kansas City Royals | AL | 2 | Hal McRae / Jorge Orta |
21 | 1985 | Kansas City Royals | AL | 2 | Hal McRae / Jorge Orta |
22 | 1984 | Kansas City Royals | AL | 2 | Hal McRae / Jorge Orta |
23 | 1984 | Toronto Blue Jays | AL | 2 | Willie Aikens / Cliff Johnson |
24 | 1983 | Texas Rangers | AL | 2 | Dave Hostetler / Mickey Rivers |
25 | 1983 | Toronto Blue Jays | AL | 2 | Cliff Johnson / Jorge Orta |
26 | 1980 | Minnesota Twins | AL | 2 | Glenn Adams / Jose Morales |
27 | 1980 | Texas Rangers | AL | 2 | Rusty Staub / Richie Zisk |
28 | 1977 | Minnesota Twins | AL | 2 | Rich Chiles / Craig Kusick |
29 | 1976 | Boston Red Sox | AL | 2 | Cecil Cooper / Jim Rice |
30 | 1976 | Minnesota Twins | AL | 2 | Steve Braun / Craig Kusick |
31 | 1975 | Boston Red Sox | AL | 2 | Cecil Cooper / Jim Rice |
32 | 1974 | Minnesota Twins | AL | 2 | Harmon Killebrew / Tony Oliva |
33 | 1973 | Detroit Tigers | AL | 2 | Gates Brown / Frank Howard |
There have been 33 such cases. Many of these clearly are not platoons in the traditional sense. The 2004 Yankees, for example, played Bernie Williams mostly in the outfield but gave him occasional spells at DH. The rest of the time, Ruben Sierra DHed, with a few dozen games also going to Jason Giambi and Gary Sheffield. But this was a case of a team with a lot of aging players and Joe Torre trying to get them all a little bit of rest. This was not a case of a manager choosing to play one guy against some pitchers and another guy against a different set of pitchers.
The Royals of 1984-1986 famously platooned Hal McRae and Jorge Orta at DH and those seasons show up here. In 1985 and 1986, neither McRae nor Orta played a single game in the field. Think about how weird that would be today--to carry 2 guys on the team who both appeared in at least 50 games but never played an inning in the field. In 1987 the Royals actually had 3 guys plays exclusively at DH--McRae, Orta, and Jim Eisenreich (but none of them had 50 games at the spot so that team doesn't make the list above.)
Please add your thoughts in the comments about which of these cases were true DH platoons.
April 9th, 2010 at 1:06 pm
Andy, I think your search either used some additional criteria that you didn't describe or didn't pick up all the teams that it should have. Example: The 1982 Brewers, with lefty Roy Howell (84 games at DH, six in the field) and righty Don Money (66 and 28). Why aren't they on your list?
April 9th, 2010 at 1:10 pm
Hmm. I checked the search and it seems correct, but your example of the 1982 Brewers also looks correct. Not sure where the discrepancy is coming in.
April 9th, 2010 at 3:11 pm
My guess is that the discrepancy comes about because of the vagueness in defining a pinch hitter for a DH. I remember a couple of years ago Sean was working on this. Regardless, Don Money and the Brewers should count by any legitimate definition. Money played 66 games at DH. Of those, 19 were credited when he pinch hit. However, in 5 of the 19 he came to bat a second time after he pinch hit. This should leave him with at least 52 games where actually played DH.
April 9th, 2010 at 3:30 pm
Of course this flaw may also be helpful to us. Here is the list of teams with the most player games in which the player played both DH and PH. (In other words, the most PH at bats for a DH in a season). I don't know enough about these teams, but maybe it could help find "platooning DHs".
http://bbref.com/pi/shareit/9J35J