From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dennis Lee Eckersley (born October 3, 1954),
nicknamed "Eck," is a former American Major League Baseball player.
Eckersley had success as a starter, but gained his greatest fame
as a closer, becoming the first of only
two pitchers in Major League history to have both a 20-win season
and a 50-save season in a career (the other being John Smoltz).
He was elected to the Baseball Hall of
Fame in 2004, his first year of eligibility. He is also noted
as the pitcher who gave up a dramatic, walk-off home run (a phrase Eckersley
coined after this home run)
to the injured Kirk
Gibson in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series.
Biography
Baseball
career
Early
career
Eckersley was born in Oakland, California. He was drafted by the
Cleveland Indians out of Washington
High School of Fremont, California, in the third
round of the 1972 amateur draft, and made his Major League debut on
April 12, 1975. He was the American League Rookie Pitcher of the
Year in 1975, compiling a 13–7 record and 2.60 ERA. His
unstyled, long hair, moustache, and live fastball made him an
instant and identifiable fan favorite. Eckersley pitched reliably
over three seasons with the Indians; he even threw a no-hitter on May 30, 1977,
against the California Angels.
Boston Red
Sox
Eckersley was traded with Fred Kendall on March 30, 1978 to the Boston Red Sox
for Rick Wise, Mike Paxton, Bo Diaz,
and Ted Cox.
In the book The Curse of Rocky
Colavito, author Terry Pluto noted that the trade was
necessitated by an awkward situation, namely that Eckersley's wife
had left him for teammate Rick Manning. Over the next two seasons,
Eckersley won a career-high 20 games in 1978 and 17 games in 1979,
with a 2.99 ERA in each year. However, during the remainder of his
tenure with Boston, from 1980 to 1984, Eckersley pitched poorly.
His fastball had lost some steam, as demonstrated by his 43–48
record with Boston. He later developed a great slider.
Chicago
Cubs
Eckersley was traded on May 25, 1984 with Mike Brumley to the Chicago Cubs for Bill Buckner, one of
several mid-season deals that helped the Cubs to their first
postseason appearance since 1945. (It also later on proved to be a
fateful transaction in Boston Red Sox history; see 1986 World
Series). Eckersley performed poorly in his sole start for the
Cubs in their NL Championship Series with the San Diego
Padres.
Eckersley remained with the Cubs in 1985, when he posted an 11–7
record with two shutouts (the last two of his career). Eckersley's
performance deteriorated in 1986, when he posted a 6–11 record with
a 4.57 ERA. After the season, he checked himself into a
rehabilitation clinic to treat alcoholism. (Eckersley noted in Pluto's book
that he realized the problem he had after family members videotaped
him while drunk and played the tape back for him the next day.)
Oakland
Athletics
Eckersley was traded again on April 3, 1987 to the
Oakland
Athletics, where manager Tony La Russa intended to use him as a set-up pitcher or long reliever. Indeed, Eckersley started
two games with the A's before an injury to then-closer Jay Howell opened the
door for Eckersley to move into the closer's role. He saved 16
games in 1987 and then established himself as a dominant closer in
1988 by recording a league-leading 45 saves. He recorded saves in
each of the four games the A's won in sweeping the Red Sox in the
1988 AL Championship Series, and in the 1989 World
Series he secured the victory in Game Two, and then earned the
save in the final game of the Series, as the A's swept the San
Francisco Giants in four games.
Eckersley was the most dominant closer in the game from 1988 to
1992,
finishing first in the A.L. in saves twice, second two other times,
and third once. He saved 220 games during the five years and never
posted an ERA higher than 2.96. He gave up five earned runs in the
entire 1990 season, resulting in a
microscopic 0.61 ERA. Eckersley's control, which had always been
above average even when he was not otherwise pitching well, became
his trademark; he walked only three batters in 57.7 innings in 1989, four
batters in 73.3 innings in 1990, and nine batters in 76 innings in
1991. In his 1990 season, Eckersley became the only relief pitcher
in baseball history to have more saves than baserunners allowed (48
SV, 41 H, 4 BB, 0 HBP).
He was the American League's Cy Young Award
winner and the American League's Most
Valuable Player in 1992, a season in which he posted 51 saves.
Only two relievers had previously accomplished the double feat: Rollie Fingers in
1981 and
Willie Hernandez in 1984. In 1987, the
Phillies' Steve
Bedrosian was named the National League Cy Young Award winner.
Since Eckersley, one other reliever, Éric Gagné, has
won Cy Young honors (Gagné won the National League award in 2003 with the
Los
Angeles Dodgers). His numbers slipped noticeably following
1992: although Eckersley still was among the league leaders in
saves, his ERA climbed sharply, and his number of saves never
climbed above 36.
In 2002, then-Atlanta Braves pitcher John Smoltz matched Eckersley's feat of
having a 20-win season and a 50-save season.
Final
playing years
When Tony LaRussa left the A's after the 1995 season, he became
the St. Louis Cardinals' new manager and arranged to bring
Eckersley along with him. Eckersley continued in his role as closer
and remained one of the league's best, but following the 1997
season, he signed on with the Red Sox for one final season, 1998.
Eckersley's 390 career saves ranks fifth on the all-time list.
Post-playing
career
He currently works as a studio analyst for the Boston Red Sox on
NESN.
Primarily, Eckersley provides post game coverage, working to
analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the team's play. He also
has a multi-year deal with TBS to serve as an analyst
for their post-season coverage.[1] In the
Spring of 2009, regular NESN commentator Jerry Remy took time off for health reasons.
Eckersley filled in for Remy, providing game coverage alongside Don Orsillo.[2] Unlike
many other commentators, he is willing to point out sloppy plays by
the team that employs him. This has earned him the nickname "Honest
Eck" among fans[3][4]
Eckersley has been known to use the phrase "cheese" referring to
a pitcher's ability to throw in the mid to upper 90's. [5] He also
spends time with kids Jake and Allie. During the summer, Eckersley
lives in the Turner Hill golf community in Ipswich, Massachusetts.
Honors
- In 1999, he ranked Number 98 on The Sporting News' list of the 100
Greatest Baseball Players and was nominated as a finalist for the
Major League Baseball
"All-Century Team."
- As mentioned in the early part of this article, on January 6,
2004, he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in his first year
of eligibility, with 83.2% of the
votes.
- On August 13, 2005, Eckersley's uniform number (43) was
officially retired by the Oakland Athletics.
- The baseball field at his alma mater, Washington
High School, has been named in his honor.
Legacy
The role of the closer had been around since the late 1950s and
early 1960s (Pittsburgh Pirates manager Danny Murtaugh is
credited with inventing the role by using Elroy Face late in close
games), and there had always been feared relievers and closers with
Hall of Fame-caliber careers, such as Rollie Fingers, Bruce Sutter, and Rich "Goose" Gossage.
However, even in the late 1980s and early 1990s, a closer was
considered a weaker and less valuable pitcher than a top starter.
Pitchers started games and if they were real men, they finished
them (or so the mentality went). Relievers were either "firemen"
(pitchers who only came into pressure-packed situations, with
runners on and few out late in a game, and thus "put out the
fire"), or pitchers not good enough to start; the vast majority of
relievers were considered to be the latter.
The A's used Eckersley almost exclusively for the ninth inning
and inserted him regardless of the pressure or game situation.
Instead of being a fireman or a mop-up man, Eckersley became a
one-inning pitcher. Starters were no longer expected to finish
games; there was another pitcher who was coming into the game in
the ninth inning, no matter what. Although the idea of a dedicated
closer was hardly new (Lee Smith was already closing for
the Cubs by the time Eck was converted to the closer role), it was
rejected outright by old-school purists; it took Tony La Russa and
Eckersley to popularize it.
Eckersley's incredible short-term dominance of the position was
perhaps the most influential aspect of this popularization. He was
seen to shut down a game after the eighth inning; he was fresh,
cocky, and usually hit his spots. He pointed his finger at an
opposing batter after a whiff or a ground out (something Eck was
known for because of his great sinker, a pitch he primarily
developed after becoming a closer) or at the opposing dugout, and
his glare became well-known after he and Boston's Dwight Evans famously
battled during the 1988 and 1990
playoffs.
After Eckersley, every team wanted a pitcher who would end a
game after eight innings, save their starters from overextending
themselves, and give their fans something exciting to look forward
to late in the game. Although the value of a closer is still
debatable, Eckersley's influence is indisputable; by 2006, the
notion of a team without a dedicated closer seemed as ridiculous as
a pre-Eckersley team with one. In fact, a complete game by a starter is now rarer
than a save
by a relief pitcher was 40 or 50 years ago.
Career
statistics
See also
References
[5] http://bleacherreport.com/articles/190717-websters-new-world-ecktionary-your-guide-to-watching-the-sox/show_full
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1970: Peters, GaryGary Peters | 1971: Culp, RayRay
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Tiant | 1976: Jenkins, FergusonFerguson Jenkins | 1977: Jenkins, FergusonFerguson Jenkins | 1978: Torrez, MikeMike
Torrez | 1979: Eckersley, DennisDennis
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| 1980s |
1980: Eckersley, DennisDennis
Eckersley | 1981: Eckersley, DennisDennis
Eckersley | 1982: Eckersley, DennisDennis
Eckersley | 1983: Eckersley, DennisDennis
Eckersley | 1984: Hurst, BruceBruce
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Gordon | 1998: Martínez, PedroPedro Martínez | 1999: Martínez, PedroPedro Martínez
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Eckersley | 1977: Eckersley, DennisDennis
Eckersley | 1978: Garland, WayneWayne Garland | 1979: Wise, RickRick
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