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Hoyt Wilhelm
#49 | Pitcher | San Francisco Giants/New York Giants


James Hoyt Wilhelm: "Snacks," "Old Tilt"

Hoyt Wilhelm

     Wilhelm's unusual career began in 1952, when he was already 28 years old, but didn't end until 1972, when he was an astonishing 48 years of age.  He homered in his first plate appearance on April 23, 1952: twenty years and 1,000 games later, he had yet to hit another round-tripper.

 

     But it was on the mound that he distinguished himself as the game's premier reliever.  The knuckleballer appeared in more games (1,070) than any pitcher in major league history, established records for relief wins (123), games pitched in relief (1,018), games finished by a pitcher (651), and innings pitched in relief (1,870).  His 227 saves place him among the all-time leaders.

     Fittingly, he was the first relief pitcher elected to the Hall of Fame, and the first pitcher inducted with fewer than 150 career wins.

 

     In a rare start for the Orioles on September 20, 1958, he no-hit the Yankees.  His 1,070 games pitched is the third-highest total in history (Jesse Orosco and Dennis Eckersley lead the list).

 

     Wilhelm was a high school pitcher in North Carolina when he read an article about knuckeballer Emil "Dutch" Leonard and began experimenting with the pitch.  After a year in the minors, his progress was interrupted by WWII, in which he won the Purple Heart for heroic duty during the Battle of the Bulge. He then spent two seasons in the North Carolina State League, winning 21 and 20.  Drafted by the Giants in 1948, he remained in their farm system for four years.  He was 28 when New York decided to try him in their bullpen in 1952.

 

     Wilhelm hit the only home run of his lengthy career in his first ML at-bat on April 23, 1952 (and his only triple in his second at-bat).  That season, he set a then-record with a NL-high 71 appearances, all in relief, and recorded league bests with a 2.43 ERA (he recorded 159.1 innings, enough for an ERA title by modern rules), an .833 winning percentage (15-3), and 15 relief wins.  He led the league in appearances again in 1953 (68), and in 1954 won a league-high 12 in relief, with only 4 losses.

 

     In 1955, the wheels came off and the 32-year-old struggled.  Wilhelm did not record a save in 1955, and he was traded to St. Louis and sold to Cleveland in 1957.  In 1958, after 363 consecutive relief appearances, he was given six starts by Indians manager Bobby Bragan before being waived to Baltimore in August.  In his ninth ML start, on September 20, 1958, pitching through a drizzle on a day with little wind, he no-hit the Yankees on national television.  Don Larsen allowed just one hit through six innings, but Wilhelm's batterymate Gus Triandos homered off reliever Bobby Shantz to give Baltimore the 1-0 victory.  It was Wilhelm's only win for the Orioles that year.

 

     Wilhelm remained in the starting rotation in 1959, won his first nine games, and finished at 15-11, and won the AL ERA title (2.19) at the age of 36.  He did not record a relief win or save.  His knuckler was largely responsible as Orioles catchers set a modern record with 49 passed balls (28 by Triandos, 21 by Joe Ginsberg).  The following year, manager Paul Richards introduced the oversized catcher's mitt that became standard equipment for catching the knuckler.  With the emergence of the Orioles' good young pitchers in 1960 (the "Baby Birds" - 21-year-olds Milt Pappas, Jack Fisher and Steve Barber went 37-29 between them, while 22-year-old Chuck Estrada was 18-11) in 1960, Wilhelm, age 37, was returned to the bullpen.

     But Wilhelm was not done yet.  Over the next three years, he was excellent, going 27-25 and saving 40 games.  Wilhelm was sent to the White Sox in the January 14, 1963 deal that brought Luis Aparicio to the Orioles.  From 1964 to 1968, he rattled off five consecutive seasons with ERA below 2.00, including 1.31 in 1967 - his stretch from 1962 to 1968 rates as one of the greatest of all time.

 

     He got his career-high 27 saves in 1964.  Always one of baseball's most frequently used pitchers, he worked in 361 games in six seasons with Chicago.  He set a ML record for pitchers in 1968 when he worked in his 319th straight game without an error.  With the knuckleball putting little strain on his arm, he appeared in a career-high 72 games in 1968 at the age of 45.

     The White Sox lost Wilhelm to the Royals in the 1968 expansion draft, but he was traded to California that same winter.  He was reunited with Paul Richards, by then a vice-president of the Braves, when Atlanta purchased the reliever on September 8, 1969.  In eight games, Wilhelm went 2-0 with two saves to help Atlanta capture the NL West title.  In 1970 he led the Braves in games pitched and saves before his late-season trade to the Cubs.  He pitched briefly for the Braves and Dodgers before retiring in 1972.

 

 

Picture from National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, Inc.


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