Jim Mecir

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Jim Mecir
Pitcher
Born: May 16, 1970 (1970-05-16) (age 38)
Batted: Switch Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 4, 1995
for the Seattle Mariners
Final game
September 28, 2005
for the Florida Marlins
Career statistics
Win-Loss Record     29-35
ERA     3.77
Strikeouts     450
Teams
Career highlights and awards
  • 2003 Tony Conigliaro Award

James Jason Mecir (born on May 16, 1970 in Queens, New York) is an American former baseball player. He played for 5 teams in an 11-year career, and retired from the Florida Marlins in 2005. He is a right-handed pitcher.

Mecir is notable for having overcome a birth defect (namely club feet) to become an effective Major League pitcher, as well as for being the last pitcher to regularly throw a screwball. He spent 4½ years as a member of the Oakland Athletics, and is prominently mentioned in Michael Lewis's bestselling book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game.

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[edit] Career

He was drafted by the Seattle Mariners from Eckerd College in the 3rd round of the 1991 amateur draft. He played for the Seattle Mariners in 1995, the New York Yankees in 1996 and 1997, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays from 1998 to 2000, the Oakland Athletics from 2001 to 2004, before spending the last year of his career with the Marlins. He announced his retirement on October 2, 2005, following the Marlins' last game of the season.

[edit] Adversity

In 2003, Mecir received the Tony Conigliaro Award, given annually to the player who most effectively overcomes adversity to succeed in baseball. Mecir was born with two club feet; despite several childhood surgeries that enabled him to walk, he was left unable to properly push off the rubber with his right foot. He was forced to develop an unorthodox delivery that gave him an unusually violent screwball. He was one of the last screwball pitchers active in the major leagues.

Mecir was inadvertently involved in a controversy which began on May 15, 2005. On that Sunday, Mecir pitched poorly in a game against the Padres, and ESPN analyst John Kruk cited Mecir's limp when he walked to the mound as evidence that the Marlins were negligent for asking Mecir to pitch while he appeared to be injured. Kruk was apparently unaware of Mecir's birth defect, and he came under heavy public criticism for being insensitive, although Mecir himself did not appear to take offense when informed of the remark.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links