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Pitching into extra innings in a major-league debut

Posted by Andy on June 9, 2010

Can you name any of the pitchers to go more than 9 innings in their major-league debut? It's happened more often than I expected. The list is after the jump.

Rk Gcar Player Date Tm Opp Rslt App,Dec IP H R ER BB SO HR GSc BF AB 2B 3B
1 1 Allan Anderson 1986-06-11 MIN TEX L 2-6 GS-10 10.0 8 2 2 4 3 0 67 37 33 1 1
2 1 Danny Cox 1983-08-06 STL PHI L 0-1 GS-10 10.0 7 0 0 2 8 0 84 38 35 2 0
3 1 Al Olmsted 1980-09-12 (2) STL PHI W 5-0 GS-10 9.1 6 0 0 4 4 0 76 37 31 0 0
4 1 Jesse Jefferson 1973-06-23 (2) BAL BOS W 2-1 CG 10 ,W 10.0 7 1 1 3 1 1 72 38 35 1 1
5 1 Ron Taylor 1962-04-11 CLE BOS L 0-4 CG 12 ,L 11.0 10 4 4 3 5 1 63 43 40 2 1
6 1 Slick Coffman 1937-05-21 DET BOS W 4-2 11.0 8 2 2 5 2 1 70 44 39 1 1
7 1 Fred Archer 1936-09-05 PHA WSH W 4-3 10.0 8 3 3 4 1 0 61 41 35 2 0
8 1 Tony Freitas 1932-05-31 PHA WSH L 4-5 10.0 7 3 3 1 1 2 66 37 36
9 1 Augie Walsh 1927-10-02 PHI NYG L 4-5 9.1 12 5 5 5 0 3 39 42 36 2 0
10 1 Wayland Dean 1924-04-17 NYG BRO W 3-2 10.0 6 2 2 3 2 2 71 37 33 0 0
11 1 Skipper Friday 1923-06-17 WSH CHW L 3-5 11.0 4 5 5 14 4 0 59 47 28 0 0
12 1 Fred Johnson 1922-09-27 (1) NYG PHI L 3-5 10.0 11 5 5 1 2 51 41 39
13 1 Monty Swartz 1920-10-03 CIN STL L 3-6 12.0 17 6 6 2 2 0 44 53 51 3 0
14 1 Shovel Hodge 1920-09-06 (2) CHW DET W 5-4 10.0 2 4 0 7 2 0 75 38 31 0 0
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/9/2010.

Of course this excludes any possible instances from 1940 to 1951 or pre-1920.

I can't imagine this ever happening again except under very unusual circumstances or unless pitching methodology gradually changes back to the way it used to be (in, you know, 100 years...)

Lots of Philly teams on this list and also 4 out of 14 games were part of doubleheaders, which makes sense.

13 Responses to “Pitching into extra innings in a major-league debut”

  1. Scott Says:

    I think what else is interesting is none of those pitchers pitched more than 1500 innings and one 3 posted and above average ERA+ Al Olmstead who only pitched 5 games with a 132 ERA+, Danny Cox who probably was the best pitcher on the list with a 104, and Allan Alderson with a 102.

    Who'd think that not abusing young pitchers would be a good idea?

  2. Frank Clingenpeel Says:

    Has anyone noticed that a grand total of NONE of these pitchers followed their 9+ inning debuts with a Hall-Of-Fame career?

  3. Zack Says:

    It's not surprising that none of them made the HOF. The % of players who do is miniscule.

  4. Ian W. Says:

    How do you not love a guy with a name like Shovel Hodge?

  5. Djibouti Says:

    Shovel Hodge may not be in the baseball HoF, but he's in my personal 'awesome baseball nicknames' HoF. A list headed, of course by High Pockets Kelly.

  6. Larry R. Says:

    What about Pickles Dillhoefer (or Pickles Gerken...take your pick) and, my personal favorite, Bow Wow Arft.

  7. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    Has anyone noticed that a grand total of NONE of these pitchers followed their 9+ inning debuts with a Hall-Of-Fame career?

    Not true. Tony Freitas was elected to the Pacific Coast League HoF in 2003.

  8. Frank Clingenpeel Says:

    How about Pud {Short for "Pudding"} Galvin?

  9. Kelly Says:

    Wow. Not only are they not Hall of Famers, I think you'd be hard pressed, statistically speaking, to randomly select another group of starting pitchers this mediocre. Did any of them even win 40 career games?

  10. Andy Says:

    Cox won 74 and was a pretty good pitcher before his injury. And he didn't always pitch fantastically in the playoffs but he was nevertheless part of 4 different playoff teams including two World Series winners.

  11. psychUMP Says:

    Wow, 14 EXTRA INNING CG's and your record is 6-8

  12. DoubleDiamond Says:

    Ron Taylor has an interesting life story, though. First, I wondered if he was the same Ron Taylor who was from Canada, played for the Mets and later became a doctor. After checking both his Baseball-Reference.com Player page and his Bullpen page, I verified that he was. That April 11, 1962, game is noted in his Bullpen entry as being, "the only time in MLB history that a scoreless tie was broken with a walkoff grand slam in the 12th inning. (This has never happened in a later inning either)."

    Taylor has also served as the team doctor for the Blue Jays. I remember Howard Johnson, then with the Mets, being interviewed before the 1991 All-Star Game, which was in Toronto. He had brought his 8-months-pregnant wife with him, and he said that Ron Taylor had arranged for possible care for her if she ended up delivering on the trip.

  13. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    I'd like to add to Andy's list three games that probably aren't PI-searchable yet:

    The debut of Cardinals pitcher Al Jurisich on April 26, 1944. Twelve and two-thirds innings pitched, one earned run, four walks, seven strikeouts, a game score of 87 — and a 1-0 loss.

    Second, the debut of Senators pitcher Marino Pieretti on April 19, 1945: Twelve IP, 14 H, 3 runs (two earned), a game score of 62. He won the game 4-3.

    Third, the debut of Yankees pitcher Don Johnson on April 20, 1947: Ten IP, 11 H, two earned runs, a game score of 64. He won the game 3-2.