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Post-Season Pinch-Hit Home Runs

Posted by Raphy on October 11, 2010

In the comment section of another thread there has been a bit of a discussion about post-season pinch-hit home runs. You can create the entire list by using the Postseason Batter Event finder, searching All Teams for Home Runs and filtering for Position "PH". (I don't know if the PH for DH definition problem exists here or not.) Here is the complete list of 51:

Cr# Gm# Date Series Gm# Batter Tm Opp Pitcher Score Inn RoB Out Pit(cnt) RBI Play Description
1 1 1947-10-02 WS 3 Yogi Berra NYY @BRO Ralph Branca down 9-7 t7 --- 1 1 Home Run (CF-RF)
2 1 1952-10-03 WS 3 Johnny Mize NYY BRO Preacher Roe down 5-2 b9 --- 1 1 Home Run (Deep RF)
3 1 1953-09-30 WS 1 George Shuba BRO @NYY Allie Reynolds down 5-2 t6 1-- 1 2 Home Run (Deep RF); Cox Scores
4 1 1954-09-29 WS 1 Dusty Rhodes NYG CLE Bob Lemon tied 2-2 b10 12- 1 3 *ENDED GAME*:Home Run (Deep RF); Mays Scores; Thompson Scores
5 1 1954-10-02 WS 4 Hank Majeski CLE NYG Don Liddle down 7-0 b5 12- 2 3 Home Run (Deep LF); Dente Scores/unER; Hegan Scores/unER; Majeski Scores/unER
6 1 1955-10-02 WS 5 Bob Cerv NYY @BRO Roger Craig down 4-1 t7 --- 0 1 Home Run (Deep LF)
7 1 1959-10-02 WS 2 Chuck Essegian LAD @CHW Bob Shaw down 2-1 t7 --- 2 1 Home Run (Deep LF)
8 1 1959-10-08 WS 6 Chuck Essegian LAD @CHW Ray Moore ahead 3-8 t9 --- 0 1 Home Run (Deep LF)
9 1 1960-10-05 WS 1 Elston Howard NYY @PIT Roy Face down 6-2 t9 1-- 1 2 Home Run (Deep RF); Richardson Scores
10 1 1961-10-07 WS 3 Johnny Blanchard NYY @CIN Bob Purkey down 2-1 t8 --- 2 1 Home Run (Deep RF)
11 1 1975-10-14 WS 3 Bernie Carbo BOS @CIN Clay Carroll down 5-2 t7 --- 2 1 (0-0) 1 Home Run (Deep LF)
12 1 1975-10-21 WS 6 Bernie Carbo BOS CIN Rawly Eastwick down 6-3 b8 12- 2 5 (2-2) 3 Home Run (Deep CF); Lynn Scores; Petrocelli Scores
13 1 1978-10-04 NLCS 1 Jerry Martin PHI LAD Bob Welch down 9-4 b9 --- 1 1 (0-0) 1 Home Run
14 1 1978-10-07 NLCS 4 Bake McBride PHI @LAD Rick Rhoden down 3-2 t7 --- 2 2 (0-1) 1 Home Run
15 1 1979-10-03 ALCS 1 John Lowenstein BAL CAL John Montague tied 3-3 b10 12- 2 3 (0-2) 3 *ENDED GAME*:Home Run; DeCinces Scores; Bumbry Scores
16 1 1981-10-10 NLDS 4 George Vukovich PHI MON Jeff Reardon tied 5-5 b10 --- 0 1 *ENDED GAME*:Home Run
17 1 1981-10-24 WS 4 Jay Johnstone LAD NYY Ron Davis down 6-3 b6 1-- 1 4 (1-2) 2 Home Run (Deep CF-RF); Scioscia Scores
18 1 1985-10-09 ALCS 2 Pat Sheridan KCR @TOR Tom Henke down 4-3 t9 --- 0 1 Home Run
19 1 1987-10-09 NLCS 3 Harry Spilman SFG STL Todd Worrell down 6-4 b9 --- 2 6 (3-2) 1 Home Run
20 1 1988-10-15 WS 1 Kirk Gibson LAD OAK Dennis Eckersley down 4-3 b9 -2- 2 7 (3-2) 2 *ENDED GAME*:Home Run (Line Drive to Deep RF); Davis Scores
21 1 1989-10-27 WS 3 Bill Bathe SFG OAK Gene Nelson down 13-3 b9 -23 1 2 (1-0) 3 Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep LF); Oberkfell Scores; Manwaring Scores
22 1 1991-10-11 ALCS 3 Mike Pagliarulo MIN @TOR Mike Timlin tied 2-2 t10 --- 1 2 (1-0) 1 Home Run (Line Drive to Deep RF)
23 1 1991-10-22 WS 3 Chili Davis MIN @ATL Alejandro Pena down 4-2 t8 1-- 0 3 (1-1) 2 Home Run (Line Drive to Deep LF); Harper Scores/unER; Davis Scores
24 1 1992-10-18 WS 2 Ed Sprague TOR @ATL Jeff Reardon down 4-3 t9 1-- 1 1 (0-0) 2 Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep LF); Bell Scores
25 1 1995-10-06 NLDS 3 Mark Lewis CIN LAD Mark Guthrie ahead 1-3 b6 123 0 5 (2-2) 4 Home Run (Fly Ball to LF-CF); Morris Scores; Santiago Scores; Boone Scores
26 1 1998-10-01 NLDS 2 Jim Leyritz SDP @HOU Billy Wagner down 4-2 t9 1-- 2 8 (3-2) 2 Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep RF Line); Caminiti Scores
27 1 1998-10-12 NLCS 5 Greg Myers SDP ATL Kerry Ligtenberg down 7-4 b9 1-- 0 6 (3-2) 2 Home Run (Fly Ball to Deep RF Line); Sweeney Scores
28 1 1999-10-08 NLDS 3 Turner Ward ARI @NYM Rick Reed down 3-0 t5 -2- 0 2 Home Run; Stinnett Scores
29 1 2000-10-05 NLDS 2 J.T. Snow SFG NYM Armando Benitez down 4-1 b9 12- 1 4 (2-1) 3 Home Run (RF Line); Bonds Scores; Kent Scores
30 1 2000-10-05 NLDS 2 Mark McGwire STL ATL Mike Remlinger ahead 4-9 b8 --- 0 4 (1-2) 1 Home Run
31 1 2001-10-12 NLDS 3 Daryle Ward HOU @ATL John Burkett down 4-0 t7 1-- 1 3 (1-1) 2 Home Run; Eusebio Scores
32 1 2001-10-20 ALCS 3 Jay Buhner SEA @NYY Jay Witasick ahead 3-12 t9 --- 1 3 (2-0) 1 Home Run
33 1 2001-10-21 NLCS 5 Erubiel Durazo ARI @ATL Tom Glavine tied 1-1 t5 1-- 2 6 (2-2) 2 Home Run; Gonzalez Scores/unER; Durazo Scores/unER
34 1 2002-10-09 NLCS 1 J.D. Drew STL SFG Tim Worrell down 9-5 b8 --- 2 6 (3-2) 1 Home Run (CF-RF)
35 1 2002-10-10 NLCS 2 Eduardo Perez STL SFG Jason Schmidt down 3-0 b8 --- 2 2 (1-0) 1 Home Run
36 1 2003-10-04 ALDS 3 Trot Nixon BOS OAK Rich Harden tied 1-1 b11 1-- 1 3 (1-1) 2 *ENDED GAME*:Home Run (Fly Ball); Mirabelli Scores
37 1 2003-10-07 NLCS 1 Mike Lowell FLA @CHC Mark Guthrie tied 8-8 t11 --- 0 6 (3-2) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
38 1 2003-10-13 ALCS 4 Ruben Sierra NYY @BOS Scott Williamson down 3-1 t9 --- 1 4 (1-2) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
39 1 2003-10-15 NLCS 7 Troy O'Leary CHC FLA Josh Beckett down 9-5 b7 --- 2 6 (3-2) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
40 1 2003-10-23 WS 5 Jason Giambi NYY @FLA Braden Looper down 6-2 t9 --- 1 5 (2-2) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball to CF-RF)
41 1 2004-10-13 NLCS 1 Mike Lamb HOU @STL Julian Tavarez down 10-6 t9 --- 2 4 (2-1) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball to LF-CF)
42 1 2005-10-04 NLDS 1 Eric Young SDP @STL Randy Flores down 8-1 t8 --- 0 4 (1-2) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
43 1 2005-10-12 NLCS 1 Chris Burke HOU @STL Chris Carpenter down 5-0 t7 1-- 2 3 (2-0) 2 Home Run (Fly Ball); Everett Scores
44 1 2006-10-07 NLDS 3 So Taguchi STL SDP Scott Linebrink down 3-0 b8 --- 0 5 (0-2) 1 Home Run (Line Drive)
45 1 2006-10-17 NLCS 5 Chris Duncan STL NYM Pedro Feliciano ahead 2-3 b6 --- 1 6 (3-2) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
46 1 2007-10-28 WS 4 Bobby Kielty BOS @COL Brian Fuentes ahead 1-3 t8 --- 0 1 (0-0) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
47 1 2008-10-13 NLCS 4 Matt Stairs PHI @LAD Jonathan Broxton tied 5-5 t8 1-- 2 5 (3-1) 2 Home Run (Fly Ball); Ruiz Scores
48 1 2008-10-26 WS 4 Eric Hinske TBR @PHI Joe Blanton down 5-1 t5 --- 2 4 (2-1) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
49 1 2009-10-21 NLCS 5 Orlando Hudson LAD @PHI Cole Hamels down 6-2 t5 --- 1 4 (2-1) 1 Home Run (Line Drive)
50 1 2009-10-31 WS 3 Hideki Matsui NYY @PHI Brett Myers ahead 4-7 t8 --- 2 3 (1-1) 1 Home Run (Fly Ball)
51 1 2010-10-10 NLDS 3 Eric Hinske ATL SFG Sergio Romo down 1-0 b8 1-- 1 6 (2-2) 2 Home Run (Line Drive to Deep RF Line); Gonzalez Scores
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 10/11/2010.

EDIT:I was correct above that there are PH for DH missing in the above list. We can find them with the batting game finder. Here are the missing PH HRs:

Rk Player Date Series Gm# Tm Opp Rslt PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB IBB SO HBP SH SF ROE GDP SB CS WPA RE24 aLI BOP Pos. Summary
1 Eric Bruntlett 2008-10-23 WS 2 PHI TBR L 2-4 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.020 1.000 .130 7 PH DH
2 David Justice 2001-10-15 ALDS 5 NYY OAK W 5-3 2 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.104 0.611 .470 2 PH DH
3 Jim Leyritz 1999-10-27 WS 4 NYY ATL W 4-1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.043 1.000 .270 6 PH DH
4 Ricky Ledee 1999-10-17 ALCS 4 NYY BOS W 9-2 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.024 2.639 .430 6 PH DH
5 Eric Davis 1997-10-13 ALCS 5 BAL CLE W 4-2 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.045 1.000 .350 4 PH DH
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 10/11/2010.

21 Responses to “Post-Season Pinch-Hit Home Runs”

  1. Brett Says:

    Hinske is the 3rd guy to do it twice, 1st to do it with mulitple teams and in separate seasons/series.

  2. Gonzo Says:

    Whenever I am feeling down, I watch Moonshot by Matt Stairs on youtube.

  3. Zack Says:

    Wow, and two PITCHERS "did" it twice. Mark Guthrie 95 and '03, in Jeff Reardon in '81 and '92. Both were with different teams each time, and more than a few years apart. Both journeyman types....

  4. daHOOK Says:

    Since Dan Driessen is not on this list, I don't think any DHs are here (except for PH-for-a-DH, maybe).

  5. Dr. Doom Says:

    Jeff Reardon twice, Bob Guthrie twice, and, most interestingly to me, both of the Worrell brothers. I'm guessing it's not brought up much at family get-togethers.

  6. Gonzo Says:

    Hmmm, I wonder why Erubial Durazo pinch hit for Mark Grace in the 5th inning in 2001? I guess Bob Brenly is a genius, because his homer was the difference.

  7. Jimbo Says:

    Off topic, but on page 404 of a recent Willie Mays biography, it says Mays holds a record that should never get touched.

    Apparently, Mays has home runs in every inning of MLB games from 1-16. Can somebody get the list for this record and who the closest potential players would be to breaking it?

  8. BSK Says:

    Only one GS from what I see. Mark Lewis.

  9. Johnny Twisto Says:

    Um, Jeff Reardon was not a journeyman type.

  10. Thomas Says:

    He played for 5 teams in his last 6 seasons.... it's justifiable that someone would call him a journeyman type. I'm not saying he's the posterchild for journeymen.... but it's not crazy.

  11. Drew Says:

    What about Geoff Blum for the White Sox in game 3 of the 2005 World Series?

  12. Drew Says:

    Oh, Blum was a defensive substitution (2B) the inning before.

  13. Raphy Says:

    I was missing 5 PH HRs that were for DHs. I have posted them below the original post.

  14. Johnny Twisto Says:

    Maybe justifiable to someone who doesn't remember Reardon. He was considered one of the top closers around for many years, and was briefly the career saves leader. Is Steve Carlton a journeyman too, for playing with 5 teams in his last 3 seasons?

  15. Tony Says:

    Thus ends Eric Hinske's quest to play in the World Series in four consecutive years with four different teams.

  16. Zack Says:

    Journeyman, to me = more than a couple teams, and not the top dog on the roster. Reardon had the good saves for a spell, a little black ink, but he was ultimately not an A-lister. Semantics aside, I did enjoy noting both Worrells. I imagine this is a list they have no idea they're on.

    I do love the lists like this: bringing up all sorts of old names and memories. Nice work.

  17. Thomas Says:

    Sure there was a short period of time where Carlton would have been considered a journeyman. Maybe for only 3 years. But if you are suggesting that 5 teams in 6 seasons isn't even anything resembling a journeyman then you clearly don't have the same definition that I do.

    I'm not, nor ever said, Reardon was just a pushover journeyman. Many many good players have turned into journeymen at the end of their careers. Just because a player was great for a certain period of time doesn't mean that that player is always considered great. I mean, Steve Carlton's last 4 years in the league sucked... it doesn't mean he was a crappy pitcher. It just means that for a certain period of time in his career he sucked.

  18. MCT Says:

    Interesting that no one did this before 1947. Did teams just not use pinch hitters in the postseason (at the time, just the World Series) as much back then?

    The, after happening nine times in nine years during the '50s and early '60s, Carbo's two blasts in the 1975 World Series were the only occurences between 1961 and 1978, despite the expansion of the postseason during that era. That this was an era of relatively low offense may have played a role.

  19. Jeff Wise Says:

    I'll never forget the Kirk Gibson home run in 1988. I was watching that game and rooting for the A's since I was an American League fan. Unbelievable!

  20. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    Interesting that no one did this before 1947. Did teams just not use pinch hitters in the postseason (at the time, just the World Series) as much back then?

    In general, early-20th-century teams didn't use pinch hitters as much in the World Series as teams do today. Through 1943, the average number of pinch hitters appearing in a World Series was fewer than nine, with a high of 19 in 1920 (long, sloppy Series) and a low of two in 1905 (short, well-pitched Series). Both the 1944 and 1945 Series established new highs for total numbers of pinch hitters (20 and 25, respectively). The 1947 Series set yet another high, as Brooklyn, with its outfield and third-base platoons and miserable starting-pitcher performances, used 19 of a record 30 pinch hitters.

    World Series pinch-hitter stats, through 1946: 411 PA, 63 H (52 singles, 11 doubles), 37 BB, 94 K, 9 GDP, 12 ROE, 8 SF, 2 HBP, for a slash line of .173/.248/.203/.451. Up through '46, pinch hitters were almost never used by teams leading in the game — only 22 plate appearances (5.4% of all PH PAs), compared with 112 plate appearances since 1947 (11.8%).

    Between 1948 and 1971, the average number of pinch hitters used in World Series leveled off at a higher number, 15.6, then had a succession of peaks and valleys over the next 13 seasons. After the Reds and A's rolled out 26 pinch hitters in the 1972 Series, Dick Williams and Yogi Berra used 33 in the first Series of the DH Era, a tight seven-game affair in which no DH was employed and Williams hit for his second basemen whenever possible. From 1974 until 1985, the last year of alternating DH/no-DH World Series, the numbers of pinch hitters used swung predictably from very low to very high: 15 in 1974, then 21, 7, 16, 9, 33 (1979 — Baltimore 22, Pittsburgh 11), 7, 23, 4 (1982 — Gene Tenace facing Bob McClure each time), 24, 8, 20. Since 1986, when the rules of the home team's league began to determine whether a DH could be used, the number of pinch hitters has remained steady at an average of about 14, with the glaring exception of the 1991 Series, in which the Braves and Twins combined to tie the record of 33 pinch hitters, twelve in Game 3 alone. No World Series since 2003 has topped 13 pinch hitters — not a big surprise, since recent Series have been short and teams' benches have been small.

  21. Thomas Says:

    Nice work Kahuna!