Mickey Lolich

Mickey Lolich

Lolich in 2009
Pitcher
Born: September 12, 1940
Portland, Oregon
Batted: Switch Threw: Left
MLB debut
May 12, 1963 for the Detroit Tigers
Last MLB appearance
September 23, 1979 for the San Diego Padres
Career statistics
Win–loss record 217–191
Earned run average 3.44
Strikeouts 2,832
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Michael Stephen Lolich (born September 12, 1940) is an American former professional baseball player.[1] He played in Major League Baseball as a pitcher from 1962 until 1979, most notably for the Detroit Tigers.[1] He is best known for his performance in the 1968 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals when he won three games, including a victory over Bob Gibson in the climactic Game 7.[2] He is of Croatian origin.[3]

Baseball career

Lolich was signed by the Detroit Tigers as an amateur free agent in 1958.[1] After five seasons in the minor leagues, he made his major league debut with the Tigers on May 12, 1963 at age 22.[1] He blossomed in 1964 with 18 wins and 192 strikeouts in his first full major league season.[1] In 1965, he fell to 14-14 but improved with 226 strikeouts, second best in the American League behind Sam McDowell.[4]

In 1967, the Tigers hired former major league pitcher Johnny Sain as their pitching coach.[5] Sain helped develop Lolich's pitching skills and taught him psychological aspects of pitching.[2][5] The 1967 season was a memorable one for the tight four-way pennant race among the Tigers, the Boston Red Sox, the Minnesota Twins and the Chicago White Sox.[6] The Tigers were in contention until the final day of the season, finishing one game behind the Red Sox.[7] Lolich finished 14-13, but led the league in shutouts with six.[1][8]

In 1968, the Tigers quickly rose to first place, winning nine straight after losing the season opener to Boston.[9] Lolich was overshadowed by teammate Denny McLain's 31-game win season, and was sent to the bull pen in August due to a late-season slump.[2] He made six relief appearances before returning to the starting rotation.[2] He posted a 17-9 record with 197 strikeouts, as the Tigers won the American League pennant by 12 games over the second-place Baltimore Orioles.[1][10]

After Gibson had defeated McLain in Game 1 of the 1968 World Series in St. Louis, Lolich helped the Tigers recover by allowing only one run to win Game 2 by a score of 8-1.[11] He also helped his own cause by hitting the first and only home run of his 16-year career.[11] But the Tigers lost the next two games at home to fall behind the Cards 3-1 and were facing elimination when Lolich returned to pitch in Game 5. Despite an unsettled start, when he surrendered a two-run home run to Orlando Cepeda in a three-run first inning, Lolich remained calm and proceeded to pitch eight scoreless innings as the Tigers scored two runs in the fourth and took the lead in the seventh on Al Kaline's bases loaded two-run single.[12] They added another run for a 5-3 win, staving off elimination.[11] Back in St. Louis, the Tigers then won Game 6 behind McLain's solid pitching and a grand slam home run from Jim Northrup in a Series-record-tying ten-run second inning rally to force a crucial Game 7.[13] With just two days of rest, Lolich faced Gibson in Game 7, both having won their previous two starts.[11] They each pitched six scoreless innings, Lolich picking off baserunners Lou Brock and Curt Flood to end a Cardinal threat in the bottom of the sixth, before the Tigers broke through with three runs in the top of the seventh starting with a two-out, two-run triple to deep center by Northrup just over Flood's head for an eventual 4-1 Tiger win and a 4-3 Series triumph.[2][14] Detroit became only the third team in World Series history to rally from a 3-1 deficit to win in seven games.[11] Lolich became the 12th pitcher to win three games in a World Series, and the last with three complete games in a single Series.[2] He was the last pitcher with three wins in the same Series before Randy Johnson in 2001 for the Arizona Diamondbacks. Lolich's performance earned him the World Series Most Valuable Player Award.[15]

Lolich was consistency itself, winning 14 or more games for ten consecutive seasons, climaxing in 1971 when he led the American League with 25 victories (which no subsequent Tiger pitcher has done) and 308 strikeouts (also a Tiger record to this day), finishing as the AL Cy Young Award runner-up. He would win 22 games in 1972, helping the Tigers to the American League East championship that season and finishing 3rd for the AL Cy Young Award. The Tigers would bow to the eventual world champion Oakland A's, three games to two, in the American League Championship Series.[1] Lolich pitched superbly in both of his ALCS starts, but did not earn a win in either game. In Game 1, he pitched 10 innings of 1-run baseball before losing the game in the bottom of the 11th on an unearned run. He pitched nine innings in Game 4, again allowing only 1 run, but the win went to Tiger reliever John Hiller as the Tigers rallied in the 10th inning.

Mickey struck out 200 or more batters in a season seven times in his career, and ranks third among left-handers (behind Steve Carlton and Randy Johnson) in career strikeouts with 2,832.

After suffering through the 1975 season, in which he lost 18 games for a declining Tiger team, he was traded to the New York Mets with outfielder Billy Baldwin in exchange for star outfielder Rusty Staub and pitcher Bill Laxton.[1] But Lolich continued to slump with the Mets in 1976 at 8-13, and retired.[1] He opened a doughnut shop in suburban Detroit and sat out the 1977 season. He returned in 1978, signing with the San Diego Padres as a free agent, for whom he pitched in 1978 & 1979 seasons before permanently retiring, holding at that time the major league record (and still the AL record as of the end of the 2012 season) for most career strikeouts by a southpaw.

He was originally right-handed all the way, but a tricycle accident in early childhood forced him to throw left-handed from older childhood on. He batted right-handed and still writes with his right hand.

He ran his doughnut shop in Lake Orion, Michigan (a small suburb roughly 40 miles north of Detroit) for several years before he sold the business and retired. He is still active in charity work, and serves as a coach at the Detroit Tigers' fantasy camp in Lakeland, Florida. Because of his humble "everyman" qualities, many long-time Tiger fans celebrate him as one of the most popular sports figures in a working man's city. As the Detroit News put it, "He didn't act like a big shot superstar, he was one of us."[16]

In 2003, Lolich was one of 26 players chosen for the final ballot by the National Baseball Hall of Fame's Veterans Committee but garnered only 13 votes, far below the 75% required for election. A frequent claim of his is that never having won the Cy Young Award was a factor in his lack of success in Hall of Fame balloting (as of 2012).

Detroit Tigers records

Lolich ranks among the Tigers' all-time leaders in many categories, including the following:

Lolich's other records and accomplishments

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 "Mickey Lolich statistics". Baseball-Reference. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Holmes, Dan. "The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
  3. Croatian Chronicle Network 35 Pacific Northwest Croatian Athletes
  4. "1965 American League Pitching Leaders". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Sargent, Jim (February 2004). Jim Northrup Recalls His Playing Days With Tigers. Baseball Digest. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  6. "1967: The Impossible Dream". thisgreatgame.com. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  7. "1967 American League Team Statistics and Standings". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  8. "1967 American League Pitching Leaders". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  9. "1968 Detroit Tigers Schedule, Box Scores and Splits". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  10. "1968 American League Team Statistics and Standings". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 "1968 World Series". Baseball-almanac.com. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  12. "1968 World Series Game 5 box score". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
  13. "1968 World Series Game 6 box score". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  14. "1968 World Series Game 7 box score". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
  15. "1968 World Series". Baseball-reference.com. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  16. detnews.com | Michigan History

External links