Steve Karsay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Steve Karsay
Pitcher
Born: (1972-03-24) March 24, 1972
Flushing, New York
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
August 17, 1993 for the Oakland Athletics
Last MLB appearance
June 17, 2006 for the Oakland Athletics
Career statistics
Win–Loss record 32–39
Earned run average 4.01
Strikeouts 458
Teams

Stefan Andrew Karsay (born March 24, 1972 in Flushing, New York) is a former right-handed Major League Baseball pitcher for the Oakland Athletics (1993–94, 1997, 2006), Cleveland Indians (1998–2001), Atlanta Braves (2001), New York Yankees (2002, 2004–05), and Texas Rangers (2005). Karsay is currently the pitching coach for the Cleveland Indians Class-A organization, the Lake County Captains.

Karsay grew up in the College Point neighborhood in Queens, New York City, just a few miles from Shea Stadium.[1]

A 1st round draft pick of the Toronto Blue Jays in 1990, Karsay was traded to the Athletics along with outfielder José Herrera for Rickey Henderson on July 31, 1993. A starter in his early days with the Athletics, Karsay worked mostly in middle relief and as a set-up man from 1998 on, although he also had some notable success as a closer in 2000 with the Indians and 2002 with the Yankees.

His career was marred by injuries, causing him to miss the 1995 (elbow surgery), 1996 (Tommy John surgery) and 2003 (shoulder surgery) seasons; in all, he was on the disabled list seven times.[2]

On July 28, 2005, together with Scott Feldman and A. J. Murray, he threw a perfect game against the Corpus Christi Hooks. It was the first combined nine-inning perfect game in Texas League history, and the third overall.[3][4]

Karsay announced his retirement on June 18, 2006, the day after pitching two scoreless innings against the Los Angeles Dodgers and getting the win in a 17-inning marathon for the Athletics. He finished his 11-year Major League career with a 32-39 record, 41 saves, and a 4.01 ERA in 357 career appearances, including 40 starts.[5][6]

Coaching

In 2012 the Cleveland Indians hired Steve Karsay as pitching coach for the Rookie-level AZL Indians [7]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.