Al Worthington

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al Worthington
Pitcher
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
July 6, 1953 for the New York Giants
Final game
October 2, 1969 for the Minnesota Twins
Career statistics
ERA     3.39
Wins     75
Strikeouts     834
Teams
Career highlights and awards
On August 18, 1957, Al threw a 3-hit Shutout to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies 1-0.

Allan Fulton Worthington (born February 5, 1929 in Birmingham, Alabama), nicknamed "Red", is a former pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Giants (New York, 1953-54, 1956-57 and San Francisco, 1958-59), Boston Red Sox (1960), Chicago White Sox (1960), Cincinnati Reds (1963-64) and Minnesota Twins (1965-69). Worthington batted and threw right-handed. He has been considered the first great closer in Twins history.

Worthington began his career with the Giants pitching two shutouts in his first two major league games. After that, however, he turned in a less-than-modest starter the rest of the way and was demoted to the bullpen.

After successive transactions between the Giants, Red Sox, White Sox and Reds, Worthington landed in Minnesota, only to blossom into one of the American League's most dominant closers. His most productive season came in 1965, when he posted career-highs in saves (21) and ERA (2.13), and also won 10 games. From 1966-67 he saved 32 games, and in 1968 he led the league relievers with 18 saves.

In a 14-year career, Worthington compiled a 75-82 record with 834 strikeouts, a 3.39 ERA, and 110 saves in 1,246.2 innings pitched.

[edit] External link