Gerry Staley, Joe Nathan, Pat Neshek
This little bit of research started with an off-hand comment I made in an e-mail to a friend. I was writing about the 1959 Chicago White Sox, and I said that the White Sox had two of the five best relief pitchers in baseball that season, the 35-year-old Turk Lown and the 38-year-old Gerry Staley. Then I got to wondering: Is that really true? Lown and Staley both had very good seasons, but were they actually two of the five best in baseball?
They were, actually, or at least I decided that they really were after researching the issue. The top 5 relief pitchers of 1959 were:
1. Roy Face
2. Bill Henry
3. Gerry Staley
4. Turk Lown
5. Stu Miller
There’s an argument that Lindy McDaniel belongs in there, but let’s move on. From ranking the top relief pitchers of 1959, I moved on to ranking the top relief pitchers of every season by a combination of Win Shares and Season Score—which was quite easy to do, actually—and from there, I got interested in the question of relievers who repeat at or near the top of the list.
By my ‘rithmatic, only six pitchers in baseball in baseball history have ever repeated as the #1 reliever in baseball in two consecutive seasons, and only one has made the top spot in three consecutive seasons. Those pitchers are:
Firpo Marberry, 1925-1926
Johnny Murphy, 1936-1937
Joe Berry, 1944-1945
Dick Radatz, 1962-1963-1964
Eric Gagne, 2002-2003
Mariano Rivera, 2004-2005
My rules for making these lists require a Season Score of at least 100. It’s a necessary rule, or we would otherwise be giving relievers credit, in a competitive measurement, for seasons in which they pitched 4 games, 5 innings and had a 8.70 ERA, but were nonetheless the second-best reliever in baseball. A Season Score of 100 is not a high standard. Lloyd Brown in 1935 was 8-7 with 4 Saves and a 3.61 ERA, and had a Season Score of 105, which marks him as the #1 reliever of 1935. I don’t really want players with weaker seasons than that on the list.
And then there are rules for deciding who is and is not a "reliever", as opposed to a mixed-use pitcher. Let’s not get into it. The first pitcher to qualify for my lists was Carl Mays in 1915:
1915
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1916
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1917
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1
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Carl Mays
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Bos AL
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1
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Bernie Boland
|
Det AL
|
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1
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Dave Danforth
|
Chi AL
|
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|
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1919
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1920
|
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1921
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1
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Jean Dubuc
|
NY NL
|
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1
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Bill Sherdel
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StL NL
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1
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Guy Morton
|
Cle AL
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1922
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1923
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1925
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1
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Claude Jonnard
|
NY NL
|
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1
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Allan Russell
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Was AL
|
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1
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Firpo Marberry
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Was AL
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1926
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1927
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1928
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1
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Firpo Marberry
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Was AL
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1
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Garland Branxton
|
Was AL
|
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1
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Syl Johnson
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StL NL
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2
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Joe Pate
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Phil AL
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2
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Watty Clark
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Bkn NL
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|
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3
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Hooks Dauss
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Det AL
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1929
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1
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Eddie Rommel
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Phil AL
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There was just one pitcher a year qualifying for the list through most of this era, sometimes none. The last season when NOBODY in the majors qualified for the relief-pitcher list was 1934.
Firpo Marberry’s season in 1926 was the standard of excellence for a reliever in that era. Marberry is regarded by many people as the first true reliever, with much justification. He was a very fine pitcher, worthy of note. Some people have tried to portray him as a Hall of Famer, although, in my judgment, his career is not quite near that stature. He didn’t have enough big seasons; he was not dominant enough; his impact on his teams or on the game was not substantial enough. His contributions are more on the level of Mark Langston, Bob Welch, Tom Gordon, Jimmie Key, somebody like that, rather than a Hall of Famer. If the concept of "relief ace" had taken hold through Marberry, that would not make him a Hall of Famer, but it would be a point in his favor. But that didn’t happen. The idea of a relief ace did NOT catch on after Marberry’s example. It didn’t catch on until at least 25 years later, about 1952. The 1930s:
1931
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1933
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1935
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1
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Bump Hadley
|
Was AL
|
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1
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Jack Russell
|
Was AL
|
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1
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Lloyd Brown
|
Cle AL
|
2
|
Jack Quinn
|
Bkn NL
|
|
2
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Hi Bell
|
NY NL
|
|
2
|
Don Brennan
|
Cin NL
|
|
|
|
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3
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Dolf Luque
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NY NL
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|
|
|
|
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4
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Joe Heving
|
Chi AL
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1936
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1937
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1938
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1
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Johnny Murphy
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NY AL
|
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1
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Johnny Murphy
|
NY AL
|
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1
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Jumbo Brown
|
NY NL
|
|
|
|
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2
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Clint Brown
|
Chi AL
|
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2
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Mace Brown
|
Pit NL
|
|
|
|
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3
|
Dick Coffman
|
NY NL
|
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3
|
Dick Coffman
|
NY NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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4
|
Jack Russell
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Chi NL
|
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|
|
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5
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Johnny Murphy
|
NY AL
|
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1939
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|
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1
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Clint Brown
|
Chi AL
|
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|
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2
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Joe Heving
|
Bos AL
|
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|
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3
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Hooks Dauss
|
Det AL
|
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These generalizations are essentially true:
1) Prior to 1921, there was no such thing as a relief pitcher. There were just a handful of pitchers, not considered worthy of pitching in significant situations at that time, who worked out of the bullpen.
2) From 1921 to 1935, all pitchers were both starters and relievers. Every pitcher in baseball, without exception, started games when needed, and pitched in relief when needed. Lefty Grove, Dizzy Dean, Carl Hubbell. .they all pitched in relief, and not just once or twice a season, but 15 or 20 times a season, as the need arose. And the top "relievers" of that era, Marberry and others such as one can find them, all started when they were needed.
3) In 1936 Joe McCarthy of the Yankees divided his team into starters and relievers. He stopped using his best starters, Red Ruffing and Lefty Gomez, in relief, and mostly stopped using his best relievers, Johnny Murphy and Jumbo Brown, as spot starters. This is the real dividing line that marks the emergence of professional relief pitchers.
4) While relief pitching had a herky-jerky emergence from garbage time to a key role on the team, it does seem to be true that the teams which experimented with relievers in that transitional era derived important benefits from it. When Firpo Marberry came forward for the Senators in 1924, the Senators won the pennant for the first times ever, 1924-1925. In 1928 the only National League team that had a pretty good reliever was the Cardinals—and the Cardinals won the National League, although Syl Johnson was also used as a spot starter. In 1929 the only American League team that had a pretty good reliever was the Philadelphia A’s—and the A’s won the American League pennant, although Eddie Rommel was still used as a spot starter. In 1933 the only teams that had real relievers of any quality were the Senators and the Giants, and the Senators and the Giants met in the World Series.
In the seven seasons 1929 to 1935, despite having Ruth and Gehrig and Dickey and Lazzeri and Combs and Ruffing and Gomez, the Yankees won the pennant only once in seven years. One of the things that put them back ahead of the league, helping them to four straight World Series, was McCarthy’s line of demarcation between his starters and his relievers. It is one of the little-noted breakthroughs in baseball history. The 1940s:
1940
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1941
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1942
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1
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Joe Beggs
|
Was AL
|
|
1
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Johnny Murphy
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NY AL
|
|
1
|
Ace Adams
|
NY NL
|
2
|
Joe Heving
|
Bos AL
|
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2
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Dutch Dietz
|
Pit NL
|
|
2
|
Hugh Casey
|
Bkn NL
|
3
|
Johnny Murphy
|
NY AL
|
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3
|
Joe Heving
|
Cle AL
|
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3
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Joe Haynes
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Chi AL
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|
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4
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Joe Beggs
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Cin AL
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5
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George Caster
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StL AL
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6
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Murry Dickson
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StL NL
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7
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Harry Feldman
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NY NL
|
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8
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Mace Brown
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Bos AL
|
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9
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Tom Ferrick
|
Cle AL
|
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1943
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1944
|
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1945
|
1
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Clyde Shoun
|
Cin AL
|
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1
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Joe Berry
|
Phi AL
|
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1
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Joe Berry
|
Phi AL
|
2
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Ace Adams
|
NY NL
|
|
2
|
Joe Heving
|
Cle AL
|
|
2
|
Andy Karl
|
Phi NL
|
3
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G Maltzberger
|
Chi AL
|
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3
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G Maltzberger
|
Chi AL
|
|
3
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Ace Adams
|
NY NL
|
4
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Johnny Murphy
|
NY AL
|
|
4
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Mike Ryba
|
Bos AL
|
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4
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A Carrasquel
|
Was AL
|
5
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Mace Brown
|
Bos AL
|
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5
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George Caster
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StL AL
|
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5
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Cy Buker
|
Bkn NL
|
6
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Joe Beggs
|
Cin NL
|
|
|
|
|
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6
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Frank Barrett
|
Bos AL
|
7
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Joe Haynes
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Chi AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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8
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Mike Ryba
|
Bos AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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9
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George Caster
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StL AL
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1946
|
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1947
|
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1948
|
1
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Earl Caldwell
|
Chi AL
|
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1
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Joe Page
|
NY AL
|
|
1
|
Ted Wilks
|
Stl NL
|
2
|
Hugh Casey
|
Bkn NL
|
|
2
|
Russ Christopher
|
Phi AL
|
|
2
|
Harry Gumbert
|
Cin NL
|
3
|
Emil Kush
|
Chi NL
|
|
3
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Hugh Casey
|
Bkn NL
|
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3
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Kirby Higbe
|
Pit NL
|
4
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Ted Wilks
|
StL NL
|
|
4
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Ed Klieman
|
Cle AL
|
|
4
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Bobby Hogue
|
Bos NL
|
5
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Art Herring
|
Bkn NL
|
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5
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Emil Kush
|
Chi NL
|
|
5
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Jess Dobernic
|
Chi NL
|
|
|
|
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6
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Ken Trinkle
|
NY NL
|
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6
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R Christopher
|
Cle AL
|
|
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|
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1949
|
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|
|
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|
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|
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1
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Joe Page
|
NY AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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2
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Ted Wilks
|
StL NL
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
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3
|
Jim Konstanty
|
Phi NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Firpo Marberry’s season in 1926—64 games, 12-7 Won-Lost Record, 3.00 ERA and 22 Saves—that remained the standard of excellence for a Relief Pitcher until Joe Page in 1947 and 1949, with the Yankees. I became a baseball fan in 1961, and Joe Page was still a figure, then; he was still something that the sportswriters talked about. He was a hard thrower. He was brought into the games not because the starting pitcher was tired and was getting beat up, but because the manager wanted Joe Page on the mound with the game on the line. He was brought in in preference to the starting pitcher, not as a substitute for the starting pitcher. You can argue that Joe Page was the first pitcher ever used that way; you can argue that Hugh Casey was used that way in Brooklyn, by Durocher. Hugh Casey had very good seasons in 1942 and 1946, but Joe Page 1947-1949 was the greatest reliever baseball had ever seen, up to that time.
But by the end of the 1940s, we’re still at a very primitive point in the evolution of the bullpen. Most relievers at that time are still either unproven pitchers who would later become starters, or older starters hanging on. Very few teams had a relief pitcher that they wanted in the game. In 1949 only three teams even had a reliever of any significance.
In 1950, of course, Jim Konstanty was the National League MVP. He was not only the best relief pitcher in baseball; he was the only relief pitcher in baseball of any significance:
1950
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1951
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1952
|
1
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Jim Konstanty
|
Phi NL
|
|
1
|
Ellis Kinder
|
Bos AL
|
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1
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Joe Black
|
Bkn NL
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
Al Brazle
|
StL NL
|
|
2
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
NY NL
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
Dutch Leonard
|
Chi NL
|
|
3
|
Al Brazle
|
StL NL
|
|
|
|
|
4
|
Clyde King
|
Bkn NL
|
|
4
|
Eddie Yuhas
|
StL NL
|
|
|
|
|
5
|
Luis Aloma
|
Chi AL
|
|
5
|
Satchel Paige
|
StL AL
|
|
|
|
|
6
|
Ted Wilks
|
Pit NL
|
|
6
|
Harry Dorish
|
Chi AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7
|
Frank Smith
|
Cin NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
Dutch Leonard
|
Chi NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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9
|
S Consuegra
|
Was AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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1953
|
|
1954
|
|
1955
|
1
|
Ellis Kinder
|
Bos AL
|
|
1
|
Marv Grissom
|
NY NL
|
|
1
|
Clem Labine
|
Bkn NL
|
2
|
Harry Dorish
|
Chi AL
|
|
2
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
NY NL
|
|
2
|
Ray Narleski
|
Cle AL
|
3
|
Clem Labine
|
Bkn NL
|
|
3
|
Dave Jolly
|
Mil NL
|
|
3
|
Hersh Freeman
|
Cin NL
|
4
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
NY NL
|
|
4
|
Jim Hughes
|
Bkin NL
|
|
4
|
J Konstanty
|
NY AL
|
5
|
Hal White
|
StL NL
|
|
5
|
Don Mossi
|
Cle AL
|
|
5
|
S Consuegra
|
Chi AL
|
6
|
Marlin Stuart
|
StL AL
|
|
6
|
Johnny Sain
|
NY AL
|
|
6
|
Ellis Kinder
|
Bos AL
|
|
|
|
|
7
|
Frank Smith
|
Cin NL
|
|
7
|
Dixie Howell
|
Chi AL
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
Harry Dorish
|
Chi AL
|
|
8
|
Tom Gorman
|
KC AL
|
|
|
|
|
9
|
Ray Narleski
|
Cle AL
|
|
9
|
Don Mossi
|
Cle AL
|
|
|
|
|
10
|
Ellis Kinder
|
Bos AL
|
|
10
|
Bob Miller
|
Phi AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1956
|
|
1957
|
|
1958
|
1
|
Hersh Freeman
|
Cin NL
|
|
1
|
Bob Grim
|
NY AL
|
|
1
|
Dick Hyde
|
Was AL
|
2
|
Clem Labine
|
Bkn NL
|
|
2
|
George Zuverink
|
Bal AL
|
|
2
|
Ryne Duren
|
NY AL
|
3
|
Ike Delock
|
Bos AL
|
|
3
|
Turk Farrell
|
Phi NL
|
|
3
|
Roy Face
|
Pit NL
|
4
|
Roy Face
|
Pit NL
|
|
4
|
Gerry Staley
|
Chi AL
|
|
4
|
Don Elston
|
Chi NL
|
5
|
Turk Lown
|
Chi NL
|
|
5
|
Ed Roebuck
|
Bkn NL
|
|
5
|
Leo Kiely
|
Bos AL
|
6
|
Marv Grissom
|
NY NL
|
|
6
|
Cal McLish
|
Cle AL
|
|
6
|
Turk Farrell
|
Phi NL
|
7
|
Don Bessent
|
Bkn NL
|
|
7
|
Ken Lehman
|
Bal AL
|
|
7
|
Bill Henry
|
Chi NL
|
8
|
Ellis Kinder
|
Chi AL
|
|
8
|
Virgil Trucks
|
KC AL
|
|
8
|
Murray Wall
|
Bos AL
|
9
|
Don Mossi
|
Cle AL
|
|
9
|
Marv Grissom
|
NY NL
|
|
9
|
Don McMahon
|
Mil NL
|
|
|
|
|
10
|
Ike Delock
|
Bos AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1959
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Roy Face
|
Pit NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
Bill Henry
|
Chi NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
Gerry Staley
|
Chi AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4
|
Turk Lown
|
Chi AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5
|
Stu Miller
|
SF NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6
|
Lindy McDaniel
|
StL NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7
|
Don McMahon
|
Mil NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8
|
Don Elston
|
Chi NL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9
|
Ryne Duren
|
NY AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10
|
Bobby Shantz
|
NY AL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Look, I am aware that the selection of Jim Konstanty as the National League’s MVP is, by modern standards, kind of absurd. Konstanty had 4.4 WAR; Eddie Stanky had 8.2. Earl Torgeson had 5.9 WAR, and was not mentioned in NL MVP voting. The selection of Konstanty as the MVP can be taken as an insult to Robin Roberts, Richie Ashburn and Del Ennis, the players who actually drove the 1950 Phillies to the pennant.
But what is missing here is that Konstanty was far, far more valuable than any other major league reliever. Other than Konstanty, the best relief pitcher in baseball in 1950 would have been Luis Aloma, who was 7-2 with four saves and a 3.80 ERA for the White Sox, or Dutch Leonard, who was 5-1 with six saves and a 3.77 ERA for the Cubs.
Konstanty’s MVP campaign was, in fact, the best season that any major league relief pitcher had ever had up to 1950. When the Phillies went into the World Series, they pulled Konstanty, who had not started a game all season, out of the bullpen, and had him start the first game of the World Series. Konstanty pitched well in that game, but this illustrates the extent to which they still didn’t get it. They still didn’t really believe in this "relief pitcher" thing. Konstanty did pitch well in the first game of the 1950 World Series—but then he was not available to pitch in the second game, which the Phillies lost in the 10th inning, or the third game, in which the Phillies held a 2-1 lead after seven, but lost after they gave up runs in the 8th and 9th, because they had no bullpen.
The 1950s represented continued progress on the "acceptance of relievers as a valued part of the game" front, particularly 1952. In 1952 the Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, and St. Louis Cardinals all came up with rookie relief pitchers. Joe Black of the Dodgers went 15-4 with a 2.15 ERA, Hoyt Wilhelm of the Giants was 15-3 with a 2.43 ERA, and Eddie Yuhas of the Cardinals was 12-2 with a 2.72 ERA. Those three teams finished 1-2-3 in the National League.
People were beginning to figure it out—and yet, they weren’t. In 1954 the New York Giants won the World Championship, and baseball remembers that they did that because they had the best player in baseball, Willie Mays, and the Best Pitcher in baseball, Johnny Antonelli, who was 21-7 with a 2.30 ERA. But if you look at that Giants’ team, you may notice that, by the standards of a championship team, the rest of it is terrible. The regular catcher hit .187, the regular first baseman hit .251 with 16 homers and 60 RBI, playing almost every game, and the regular second baseman hit .222 with 9 homers, 46 RBI, playing almost every game.
They won in part because they had the two best relief pitchers in baseball, Marv Grissom and Hoyt Wilhelm. Between them, Grissom and Wilhelm pitched almost as many innings as Antonelli, went 22-11, added 24 saves, and had a better ERA than Antonelli did. The bullpen is the "third reason" that team won, and the reason they had a huge advantage in the bullpen was, most teams still were not really trying to develop a bullpen.
The point I am trying to sell you is, you had to beat these guys over the head with a tire iron to get them to understand the significance of a good reliever. It had been 30 years since Firpo Marberry; it had been almost 20 years since Joe McCarthy divided his staff into starters and relievers; it had been seven years since Joe Page emerged, it had been four years since Jim Konstanty was the NL MVP, and they still didn’t get it. They still thought of relieving as a transitional stage into or out of the starting rotation. If a pitcher pitched well out of the bullpen, like Ike Delock or Don Mossi or Sandy Consuegra, they would move him into the starting rotation, see if he could handle a "real" job. Hoyt Wilhelm was moved into the starting rotation in 1959. Turk Farrell, one of the best relief pitchers in baseball in 1957, 1958 and 1960, moved into the starting rotation for several years. When he lost effectiveness, he moved back into the bullpen. Many times they were GOOD starting pitchers. Hank Aguirre, after good years in the bullpen in 1960-61, moved into the starting rotation in 1962, and led the American League in ERA.
And sometimes they weren’t. Goose Gossage in 1975 was the best relief pitcher in baseball. In 1976 he moved into the starting rotation, where he was 9-17 with an ERA 10% worse than the league. Why? Because he was being managed by a 1950s manager, Paul Richards, and that was the thinking of the 1950s:
1) Your best arms belong in the starting rotation,
2) You win or lose based on your starting pitching,
3) A good pitcher HAS to be able to pitch nine innings in a game, and
4) The bullpen is for your second-line pitchers.
In 1977, when I started the Baseball Abstract, the term "7-inning pitcher" was still an insult, still in use. It meant that the pitcher was good for seven innings, but would lose the game because he couldn’t finish it. Those ideas were so deeply rooted in the minds of baseball men that it took fifty years and many tire irons to beat them out of there.
But by the end of the 1950s, we were beginning to get there. 1958 was the last season ever (until 2020) when there were not 10 relievers who had good enough seasons to make up a ten-person list. The 1960s:
1960
|
|
1961
|
|
1962
|
1
|
Lindy McDaniel
|
StL NL
|
|
1
|
Luis Arroyo
|
NY AL
|
|
1
|
Dick Radatz
|
Bos AL
|
2
|
Roy Face
|
Pit NL
|
|
2
|
Stu Miller
|
SF NL
|
|
2
|
Roy Face
|
Pit NL
|
3
|
Gerry Staley
|
Chi AL
|
|
3
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
Bal AL
|
|
3
|
Jck Baldschun
|
Phi NL
|
4
|
Mike Fornieles
|
Bos AL
|
|
4
|
Tom Morgan
|
Cal AL
|
|
4
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
Bal AL
|
5
|
Turk Farrell
|
Phil NL
|
|
5
|
Jim Brosnan
|
Cin NL
|
|
5
|
Don McMahon
|
Hou NL
|
6
|
Jim Brosnan
|
Cin NL
|
|
6
|
Turk Lown
|
Chi AL
|
|
6
|
Rn Perranoski
|
LA NL
|
7
|
Ed Roebuck
|
LA NL
|
|
7
|
Terry Fox
|
Det AL
|
|
7
|
Ed Roebuck
|
LA NL
|
8
|
Larry Sherry
|
LA NL
|
|
8
|
Frank Funk
|
Cle AL
|
|
8
|
Dick Hlal
|
Bal NL
|
9
|
Hank Aguirre
|
Det NL
|
|
9
|
Don McMahon
|
Mil NL
|
|
9
|
Terry Fox
|
Det AL
|
10
|
Don Elston
|
Chi NL
|
|
10
|
Bill Henry
|
Cin NL
|
|
10
|
Mar Bridges
|
NY AL
|
Lindy McDaniel in 1960 had the best year that any reliever had ever had, up to that point in time. I’ve been tracing the evolution of the title "greatest season ever by a reliever." It starts with Firpo Marberry, 1926, and then passes to Joe Page, 1947-1949, then to Konstanty, 1950, then to Lindy McDaniel, 1960. McDaniel had a good year as a starter in 1957, failed as a starter in 1958 and was moved out to the bullpen, but was very good out of the bullpen in 1959. In his first eight appearances of 1960, all out of the bullpen, he pitched 13.2 innings with an ERA of 0.00, also zero un-earned runs. By the thinking of the time, this meant that he was ready to move back into the rotation, so he did—for two starts. He was shelled both times, giving up a total of 12 runs, lifting his ERA to 4.21.
So he went back to the bullpen, where he was borderline unbelievable. For the season he pitched 63 times in relief, 104 innings, was 12-2 with a 1.29 ERA, and had 27 Saves, which still were not an official statistic in 1960. He was probably the best pitcher in baseball, although he finished third in the Cy Young voting, 5th in the MVP race.
But he held the title (best season ever by a reliever) for only one year. In 1961 Luis Arroyo was 15-5 with 29 Saves and a 2.19 ERA. He was a part of a New York Yankee team that went 109-53, Arroyo often relieving Whitey Ford, who was 25-4. Bob Feller, who went into the Hall of Fame in 1962, suggested that, since starting pitchers were no longer able to finish their games, perhaps in the future they should go into the Hall of Fame as tandems, like Ford and Arroyo. Whitey Ford did not appreciate the suggestion.
But there was another transaction that season that was also instructive about the way that relief pitchers were regarded. Don McMahon was one of the best relief pitchers in baseball in 1959, had a bad season in 1960, but was one of the best relief pitchers in baseball again in 1961.
In 1962 McMahon started the season slowly, giving up one run in each of his first two outings of the season. Incredibly enough, the Braves then SOLD him to the Houston Colt .45s, a 1962 expansion team. McMahon pitched 51 times for Houston, with a 1.53 ERA. The Braves, who had as talented a roster as any team in baseball, with Henry Aaron, Eddie Mathews, Joe Torre, Del Crandall, Warren Spahn and Lew Burdette, finished 5th, in part because their bullpen was crap. Their bullpen was crap for years after that, frankly; their bullpen was crap in ’62, ’63, ’64, and those were all teams that should have been in the fight for the NL title. But they gave Don McMahon away after two so-so outings, one run in each game. They just did not respect the importance of the bullpen.
Well, I am losing focus on my project here. What I was really trying to do here was to address this question: How often is a pitcher who among the best relievers in baseball still among the best relievers in baseball the next season? That was really what I was trying to get to; I’ll get to it tomorrow. Let’s move it along at a quicker pace. Dick Radatz was the best relief pitcher in baseball in 1962-1963-1964:
1962
|
|
1963
|
|
1962
|
1
|
Dick Radatz
|
Bos AL
|
|
1
|
Dick Radatz
|
Bos AL
|
|
1
|
Dick Radatz
|
Bos AL
|
2
|
Roy Face
|
Pit NL
|
|
2
|
Ron Perranoski
|
LA NL
|
|
2
|
Hoyr Wilhelm
|
Chi AL
|
3
|
Jck Baldschun
|
Phi NL
|
|
3
|
Bill Dailey
|
Min AL
|
|
3
|
Bob Lee
|
Cal AL
|
4
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
Bal AL
|
|
4
|
Al McBean
|
Pit NL
|
|
4
|
Al McBean
|
Pit NL
|
5
|
Don McMahon
|
Hou NL
|
|
5
|
Jack Baldschun
|
Phi NL
|
|
5
|
Sammy Ellis
|
Cin NL
|
6
|
Rn Perranoski
|
LA NL
|
|
6
|
Lindy McDaniel
|
Chi NL
|
|
6
|
Dick Hlal
|
Bal AL
|
7
|
Ed Roebuck
|
LA NL
|
|
7
|
Hal Woodeschick
|
Hou NL
|
|
7
|
Wes Stock
|
KC AL
|
8
|
Dick Hlal
|
Bal NL
|
|
8
|
Stu Miller
|
Bal AL
|
|
8
|
Ron Kline
|
Was AL
|
9
|
Terry Fox
|
Det AL
|
|
9
|
Hoyt Wilhelm
|
Chi AL
|
|
9
|
Don McMahon
|
Cle AL
|
10
|
Mar Bridges
|
NY AL
|
|
10
|
Ron Taylor
|
Stl NL
|
|
10
|
John Wyatt
|
KC AL
|
Dick Radatz in 1963 beat Arroyo in 1961 for the most high-impact relief season in history, and then Radatz in 1964 beat Radatz in 1963. And, as mentioned, Radatz was and still is the only pitcher ever to be the #1 reliever in baseball for three straight seasons.
Trying to move this along now; these are the Top 10 relievers for each year 1965 to 2019. There are no Top 10 relievers for 2020, since no one had an impressive enough season in 2020 to qualify for the list.
Rank
|
First
|
Last
|
Team
|
Lg
|
Year
|
1
|
Eddie
|
Fisher
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1965
|
2
|
Stu
|
Miller
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1965
|
3
|
Bob
|
Lee
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1965
|
4
|
Hoyt
|
Wilhelm
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1965
|
5
|
Frank
|
Linzy
|
SF
|
NL
|
1965
|
6
|
Billy
|
O'Dell
|
Mil
|
NL
|
1965
|
7
|
Ted
|
Abernathy
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1965
|
8
|
Ron
|
Kline
|
Wash
|
AL
|
1965
|
9
|
Al
|
Worthington
|
Min
|
AL
|
1965
|
10
|
Al
|
McBean
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1965
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Phil
|
Regan
|
LA
|
NL
|
1966
|
2
|
Jack
|
Aker
|
KC
|
AL
|
1966
|
3
|
Stu
|
Miller
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1966
|
4
|
Joe
|
Hoerner
|
StL
|
NL
|
1966
|
5
|
Al
|
Worthington
|
Min
|
AL
|
1966
|
6
|
Billy
|
McCool
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1966
|
7
|
Clay
|
Carroll
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1966
|
8
|
Ron
|
Kline
|
Wash
|
AL
|
1966
|
9
|
Eddie
|
Fisher
|
Chi-Bal
|
AL
|
1966
|
10
|
Lindy
|
McDaniel
|
SF
|
NL
|
1966
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Ted
|
Abernathy
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1967
|
2
|
Minnie
|
Rojas
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1967
|
3
|
Bob
|
Locker
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1967
|
4
|
Frank
|
Linzy
|
SF
|
NL
|
1967
|
5
|
Hoyt
|
Wilhelm
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1967
|
6
|
Turk
|
Farrell
|
Hou-Phil
|
NL
|
1967
|
7
|
John
|
Wyatt
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1967
|
8
|
Moe
|
Drabowsky
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1967
|
9
|
Ron
|
Perranoski
|
LA
|
NL
|
1967
|
10
|
Don
|
McMahon
|
Bos-Chi
|
AL
|
1967
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Phil
|
Regan
|
LA-Chi
|
NL
|
1968
|
2
|
Wilbur
|
Wood
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1968
|
3
|
Ron
|
Kline
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1968
|
4
|
Ted
|
Abernathy
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1968
|
5
|
Joe
|
Hoerner
|
StL
|
NL
|
1968
|
6
|
Clay
|
Carroll
|
Atl-Cin
|
NL
|
1968
|
7
|
Hoyt
|
Wilhelm
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1968
|
8
|
Jim
|
Brewer
|
LA
|
NL
|
1968
|
9
|
Frank
|
Linzy
|
SF
|
NL
|
1968
|
10
|
Vicente
|
Romo
|
LA-Cle
|
B
|
1968
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Ron
|
Perranoski
|
Min
|
AL
|
1969
|
2
|
Ken
|
Tatum
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1969
|
3
|
Wayne
|
Granger
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1969
|
4
|
Sparky
|
Lyle
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1969
|
5
|
Darold
|
Knowles
|
Wash
|
AL
|
1969
|
6
|
Cecil
|
Upshaw
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1969
|
7
|
Tug
|
McGraw
|
NY
|
NL
|
1969
|
8
|
Diego
|
Segui
|
Sea
|
AL
|
1969
|
9
|
Eddie
|
Watt
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1969
|
10
|
Phil
|
Regan
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1969
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Radatz was a big guy who mostly pumped fast balls. But after him, there wasn’t another hard thrower who ranked as the #1 reliever in baseball until Goose Gossage in 1975. Eddie Fisher was a knuckle-ball pitcher, Phil Regan an aging starter, Ted Abernathy threw underhand, Perranoski lived on a big curveball, Sanders and Grant were older starters, Lyle and Hiller were crafty lefties.
1
|
Mudcat
|
Grant
|
Oak-Pit
|
AL
|
1970
|
2
|
Lindy
|
McDaniel
|
NY
|
AL
|
1970
|
3
|
Stan
|
Williams
|
Min
|
AL
|
1970
|
4
|
Dick
|
Selma
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1970
|
5
|
Dave
|
Giusti
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1970
|
6
|
Ron
|
Perranoski
|
Min
|
AL
|
1970
|
7
|
Wayne
|
Granger
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1970
|
8
|
Ken
|
Sanders
|
Mil
|
AL
|
1970
|
9
|
Don
|
McMahon
|
SF
|
NL
|
1970
|
10
|
Clay
|
Carroll
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1970
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Ken
|
Sanders
|
Mil
|
AL
|
1971
|
2
|
Tug
|
McGraw
|
NY
|
NL
|
1971
|
3
|
Fred
|
Scherman
|
Det
|
AL
|
1971
|
4
|
Clay
|
Carroll
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1971
|
5
|
Jim
|
Brewer
|
LA
|
NL
|
1971
|
6
|
Bob 4
|
Miller
|
3 tms
|
NL
|
1971
|
7
|
Tom
|
Burgmeier
|
KC
|
AL
|
1971
|
8
|
Danny
|
Frisella
|
NY
|
NL
|
1971
|
9
|
Jerry
|
Johnson
|
SF
|
NL
|
1971
|
10
|
Jim
|
Ray
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1971
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Sparky
|
Lyle
|
NY
|
AL
|
1972
|
2
|
Mike
|
Marshall
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1972
|
3
|
Tug
|
McGraw
|
NY
|
NL
|
1972
|
4
|
Clay
|
Carroll
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1972
|
5
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1972
|
6
|
Terry
|
Forster
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1972
|
7
|
Jim
|
Brewer
|
LA
|
NL
|
1972
|
8
|
Dave
|
Giusti
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1972
|
9
|
Tom
|
Hall
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1972
|
10
|
Ramon
|
Hernandez
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1972
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
John
|
Hiller
|
Det
|
AL
|
1973
|
2
|
Mike
|
Marshall
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1973
|
3
|
Dave
|
Giusti
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1973
|
4
|
Pedro
|
Borbon
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1973
|
5
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1973
|
6
|
Lindy
|
McDaniel
|
NY
|
AL
|
1973
|
7
|
Cy
|
Acosta
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1973
|
8
|
Grant
|
Jackson
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1973
|
9
|
Bob
|
Locker
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1973
|
10
|
Elias
|
Sosa
|
SF
|
NL
|
1973
|
1
|
Mike
|
Marshall
|
LA
|
NL
|
1974
|
2
|
Sparky
|
Lyle
|
NY
|
AL
|
1974
|
3
|
Tom
|
Murphy
|
Mil
|
AL
|
1974
|
4
|
John
|
Hiller
|
Det
|
AL
|
1974
|
5
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1974
|
6
|
Bill
|
Campbell
|
Min
|
AL
|
1974
|
7
|
Steve
|
Foucault
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1974
|
8
|
Clay
|
Carroll
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1974
|
9
|
Tom
|
House
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1974
|
10
|
Chuck
|
Taylor
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1974
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1975
|
2
|
Al
|
Hrabosky
|
StL
|
NL
|
1975
|
3
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1975
|
4
|
Jim
|
Todd
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1975
|
5
|
Rawly
|
Eastwick
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1975
|
6
|
Paul
|
Lindblad
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1975
|
7
|
Dave
|
LaRoche
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1975
|
8
|
Will
|
McEnaney
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1975
|
9
|
Bob
|
Apodaca
|
NY
|
NL
|
1975
|
10
|
Tug
|
McGraw
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1975
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Bill
|
Campbell
|
Min
|
AL
|
1976
|
2
|
Rawly
|
Eastwick
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1976
|
3
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1976
|
4
|
Charlie
|
Hough
|
LA
|
NL
|
1976
|
5
|
Butch
|
Metzger
|
SD
|
NL
|
1976
|
6
|
John
|
Hiller
|
Det
|
AL
|
1976
|
7
|
Mark
|
Littell
|
KC
|
AL
|
1976
|
8
|
Sparky
|
Lyle
|
NY
|
AL
|
1976
|
9
|
Skip
|
Lockwood
|
NY
|
NL
|
1976
|
10
|
Jim
|
Kern
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1976
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1977
|
2
|
Sparky
|
Lyle
|
NY
|
AL
|
1977
|
3
|
Bruce
|
Sutter
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1977
|
4
|
Bill
|
Campbell
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1977
|
5
|
Tom
|
Johnson
|
Min
|
AL
|
1977
|
6
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
SD
|
NL
|
1977
|
7
|
Gary
|
Lavelle
|
SF
|
NL
|
1977
|
8
|
Lerrin
|
LaGrow
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1977
|
9
|
Gene
|
Garber
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1977
|
10
|
Pedro
|
Borbon
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1977
|
1
|
Kent
|
Tekulve
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1978
|
2
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
NY
|
AL
|
1978
|
3
|
Bob
|
Stanley
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1978
|
4
|
Doug
|
Bair
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1978
|
5
|
Gene
|
Garber
|
Phil-Atl
|
NL
|
1978
|
6
|
John
|
Hiller
|
Det
|
AL
|
1978
|
7
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
SD
|
NL
|
1978
|
8
|
Elias
|
Sosa
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1978
|
9
|
Mike
|
Marshall
|
Min
|
AL
|
1978
|
10
|
Dave
|
LaRoche
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1978
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Jim
|
Kern
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1979
|
2
|
Aurelio
|
Lopez
|
Det
|
AL
|
1979
|
3
|
Kent
|
Tekulve
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1979
|
4
|
Mike
|
Marshall
|
Min
|
AL
|
1979
|
5
|
Bruce
|
Sutter
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1979
|
6
|
Sid
|
Monge
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1979
|
7
|
Joe
|
Sambito
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1979
|
8
|
Elias
|
Sosa
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1979
|
9
|
Ron
|
Davis
|
NY
|
AL
|
1979
|
10
|
Mark
|
Littell
|
StL
|
NL
|
1979
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Doug
|
Corbett
|
Min
|
AL
|
1980
|
2
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
NY
|
AL
|
1980
|
3
|
Dan
|
Quisenberry
|
KC
|
AL
|
1980
|
4
|
Tug
|
McGraw
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1980
|
5
|
Tom
|
Hume
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1980
|
6
|
Rick
|
Camp
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1980
|
7
|
Danny
|
Darwin
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1980
|
8
|
Aurelio
|
Lopez
|
Det
|
AL
|
1980
|
9
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
SD
|
NL
|
1980
|
10
|
Joe
|
Sambito
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1980
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Rollie
|
Fingers
|
Mil
|
AL
|
1981
|
2
|
Rick
|
Camp
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1981
|
3
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
NY
|
AL
|
1981
|
4
|
Gary
|
Lucas
|
SD
|
NL
|
1981
|
5
|
Bruce
|
Sutter
|
StL
|
NL
|
1981
|
6
|
Al
|
Holland
|
SF
|
NL
|
1981
|
7
|
Jeff
|
Reardon
|
NY
|
NL
|
1981
|
8
|
Greg
|
Minton
|
SF
|
NL
|
1981
|
9
|
LaMarr
|
Hoyt
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1981
|
10
|
Steve
|
Comer
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1981
|
1
|
Greg
|
Minton
|
SF
|
NL
|
1982
|
2
|
Dan
|
Quisenberry
|
KC
|
AL
|
1982
|
3
|
Bill
|
Caudill
|
Sea
|
AL
|
1982
|
4
|
Jeff
|
Reardon
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1982
|
5
|
Dan
|
Spillner
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1982
|
6
|
Kent
|
Tekulve
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1982
|
7
|
Luis
|
DeLeon
|
SD
|
NL
|
1982
|
8
|
Gene
|
Garber
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1982
|
9
|
Bob
|
Stanley
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1982
|
10
|
Bruce
|
Sutter
|
StL
|
NL
|
1982
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Dan
|
Quisenberry
|
KC
|
AL
|
1983
|
2
|
Jesse
|
Orosco
|
NY
|
NL
|
1983
|
3
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
NY
|
AL
|
1983
|
4
|
Tippy
|
Martinez
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1983
|
5
|
Al
|
Holland
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1983
|
6
|
Kent
|
Tekulve
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1983
|
7
|
Lee
|
Smith
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1983
|
8
|
Bob
|
Stanley
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1983
|
9
|
Tom
|
Niedenfuer
|
LA
|
NL
|
1983
|
10
|
Dave
|
Stewart
|
LA-Tex
|
NL
|
1983
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Willie
|
Hernandez
|
Det
|
AL
|
1984
|
2
|
Bruce
|
Sutter
|
StL
|
NL
|
1984
|
3
|
Dan
|
Quisenberry
|
KC
|
AL
|
1984
|
4
|
Bill
|
Caudill
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1984
|
5
|
Jesse
|
Orosco
|
NY
|
NL
|
1984
|
6
|
Aurelio
|
Lopez
|
Det
|
AL
|
1984
|
7
|
Goose
|
Gossage
|
SD
|
NL
|
1984
|
8
|
Dave
|
Righetti
|
NY
|
AL
|
1984
|
9
|
Bill
|
Dawley
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1984
|
10
|
Lee
|
Smith
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1984
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Dan
|
Quisenberry
|
KC
|
AL
|
1985
|
2
|
Bob
|
James
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1985
|
3
|
Dave
|
Righetti
|
NY
|
AL
|
1985
|
4
|
Donnie
|
Moore
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1985
|
5
|
John
|
Franco
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1985
|
6
|
Lee
|
Smith
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1985
|
7
|
Jay
|
Howell
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1985
|
8
|
Willie
|
Hernandez
|
Det
|
AL
|
1985
|
9
|
Dave
|
Smith
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1985
|
10
|
Tim
|
Burke
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1985
|
1
|
Mark
|
Eichhorn
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1986
|
2
|
Dave
|
Righetti
|
NY
|
AL
|
1986
|
3
|
Todd
|
Worrell
|
StL
|
NL
|
1986
|
4
|
Roger
|
McDowell
|
NY
|
NL
|
1986
|
5
|
Greg A.
|
Harris
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1986
|
6
|
Lee
|
Smith
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1986
|
7
|
Ron
|
Robinson
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1986
|
8
|
Tom
|
Henke
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1986
|
9
|
Charlie
|
Kerfeld
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1986
|
10
|
Jesse
|
Orosco
|
NY
|
NL
|
1986
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Tim
|
Burke
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1987
|
2
|
Todd
|
Worrell
|
StL
|
NL
|
1987
|
3
|
John
|
Franco
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1987
|
4
|
Steve
|
Bedrosian
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1987
|
5
|
Tom
|
Henke
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1987
|
6
|
Don
|
Robinson
|
Pit-SF
|
NL
|
1987
|
7
|
Andy
|
McGaffigan
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1987
|
8
|
Scott
|
Garrelts
|
SF
|
NL
|
1987
|
9
|
Dave 2
|
Smith
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1987
|
10
|
Mike
|
Henneman
|
Det
|
AL
|
1987
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
John
|
Franco
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1988
|
2
|
Dennis
|
Eckersley
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1988
|
3
|
Mike
|
Henneman
|
Det
|
AL
|
1988
|
4
|
Randy
|
Myers
|
NY
|
NL
|
1988
|
5
|
Mark
|
Davis
|
SD
|
NL
|
1988
|
6
|
Jeff
|
Reardon
|
Min
|
AL
|
1988
|
7
|
Doug
|
Jones
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1988
|
8
|
Jeff D.
|
Robinson
|
Pitt
|
NL
|
1988
|
9
|
Jeff
|
Parrett
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1988
|
10
|
Juan
|
Agosto
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1988
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Mark
|
Davis
|
SD
|
NL
|
1989
|
2
|
Tom
|
Henke
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1989
|
3
|
Jeff
|
Russell
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1989
|
4
|
Gregg
|
Olson
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1989
|
5
|
Jeff
|
Montgomery
|
KC
|
AL
|
1989
|
6
|
Dennis
|
Eckersley
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1989
|
7
|
Tim
|
Burke
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1989
|
8
|
Jay
|
Howell
|
LA
|
NL
|
1989
|
9
|
Danny
|
Darwin
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1989
|
10
|
Randy
|
Myers
|
NY
|
NL
|
1989
|
1
|
Dennis
|
Eckersley
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1990
|
2
|
Bobby
|
Thigpen
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1990
|
3
|
Doug
|
Jones
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1990
|
4
|
Gregg
|
Olson
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1990
|
5
|
Lee
|
Smith
|
Bos-StL
|
AL
|
1990
|
6
|
Rob
|
Dibble
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1990
|
7
|
Randy
|
Myers
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1990
|
8
|
Steve
|
Farr
|
KC
|
AL
|
1990
|
9
|
Tom
|
Henke
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1990
|
10
|
Jeff
|
Montgomery
|
KC
|
AL
|
1990
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Mitch
|
Williams
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1991
|
2
|
Lee
|
Smith
|
StL
|
NL
|
1991
|
3
|
Bryan
|
Harvey
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1991
|
4
|
Dennis
|
Eckersley
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1991
|
5
|
Rick
|
Aguilera
|
Min
|
AL
|
1991
|
6
|
Mike
|
Henneman
|
Det
|
AL
|
1991
|
7
|
Duane
|
Ward
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1991
|
8
|
Alejandro
|
Pena
|
NY-Atl
|
NL
|
1991
|
9
|
Jeff
|
Montgomery
|
KC
|
AL
|
1991
|
10
|
Steve
|
Farr
|
NY
|
AL
|
1991
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Dennis
|
Eckersley
|
Oak
|
AL
|
1992
|
2
|
Doug
|
Jones
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1992
|
3
|
Steve
|
Olin
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1992
|
4
|
Mel
|
Rojas
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1992
|
5
|
Jeff
|
Russell
|
TX-Oak
|
AL
|
1992
|
6
|
Xavier
|
Hernandez
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1992
|
7
|
John
|
Wetteland
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1992
|
8
|
Jeff
|
Montgomery
|
KC
|
AL
|
1992
|
9
|
Duane
|
Ward
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1992
|
10
|
Rod
|
Beck
|
SF
|
NL
|
1992
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
John
|
Wetteland
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1993
|
2
|
Rod
|
Beck
|
SF
|
NL
|
1993
|
3
|
Jeff
|
Montgomery
|
KC
|
AL
|
1993
|
4
|
Duane
|
Ward
|
Tor
|
AL
|
1993
|
5
|
Bryan
|
Harvey
|
Fla
|
NL
|
1993
|
6
|
Roberto
|
Hernandez
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1993
|
7
|
Randy
|
Myers
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1993
|
8
|
Tom
|
Henke
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1993
|
9
|
Rick
|
Aguilera
|
Min
|
AL
|
1993
|
10
|
Greg
|
McMichael
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1993
|
1
|
Doug
|
Jones
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1994
|
2
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
1994
|
3
|
John
|
Wetteland
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1994
|
4
|
Jeff
|
Brantley
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1994
|
5
|
Rod
|
Beck
|
SF
|
NL
|
1994
|
6
|
Steve
|
Howe
|
NY
|
AL
|
1994
|
7
|
Eric
|
Plunk
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1994
|
8
|
Bobby
|
Ayala
|
Sea
|
AL
|
1994
|
9
|
Mel
|
Rojas
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1994
|
10
|
Todd
|
Jones
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1994
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Jose
|
Mesa
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1995
|
2
|
Todd
|
Worrell
|
LA
|
NL
|
1995
|
3
|
Mark
|
Wohlers
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1995
|
4
|
Tom
|
Henke
|
StL
|
NL
|
1995
|
5
|
Rick
|
Aguilera
|
Min-Bos
|
AL
|
1995
|
6
|
Jeff
|
Brantley
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1995
|
7
|
John
|
Franco
|
NY
|
NL
|
1995
|
8
|
Heathcliff
|
Slocumb
|
Phil
|
NL
|
1995
|
9
|
Stan
|
Belinda
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1995
|
10
|
Todd
|
Jones
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1995
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
1996
|
2
|
Robb
|
Nen
|
Fla
|
NL
|
1996
|
3
|
Roberto
|
Hernandez
|
Chi
|
AL
|
1996
|
4
|
Jeff
|
Brantley
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1996
|
5
|
Mel
|
Rojas
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1996
|
6
|
Troy
|
Percival
|
Angels
|
AL
|
1996
|
7
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
1996
|
8
|
John
|
Wetteland
|
NY
|
AL
|
1996
|
9
|
John
|
Franco
|
NY
|
NL
|
1996
|
10
|
Mark
|
Wohlers
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1996
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Roberto
|
Hernandez
|
Chi-SF
|
AL
|
1997
|
2
|
Jeff
|
Shaw
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1997
|
3
|
Doug
|
Jones
|
Mil
|
AL
|
1997
|
3
|
John
|
Wetteland
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1997
|
4
|
Robb
|
Nen
|
Fla
|
NL
|
1997
|
4
|
John
|
Franco
|
NY
|
NL
|
1997
|
5
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
1997
|
5
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
1997
|
9
|
Randy
|
Myers
|
Bal
|
AL
|
1997
|
10
|
Rod
|
Beck
|
SF
|
NL
|
1997
|
1
|
Robb
|
Nen
|
SF
|
NL
|
1998
|
2
|
Michael
|
Jackson
|
Cle
|
AL
|
1998
|
6
|
Ugueth
|
Urbina
|
Mon
|
NL
|
1998
|
6
|
Kerry
|
Ligtenberg
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1998
|
7
|
John
|
Wetteland
|
Tex
|
AL
|
1998
|
7
|
Tom
|
Gordon
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1998
|
8
|
Jeff
|
Shaw
|
Cin-LA
|
NL
|
1998
|
8
|
Rod
|
Beck
|
Chi
|
NL
|
1998
|
9
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
1998
|
10
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
1998
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Billy
|
Wagner
|
Hou
|
NL
|
1999
|
2
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
1999
|
3
|
Scott
|
Williamson
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1999
|
4
|
John
|
Rocker
|
Atl
|
NL
|
1999
|
5
|
Armando
|
Benitez
|
NY
|
NL
|
1999
|
6
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
1999
|
7
|
Danny
|
Graves
|
Cin
|
NL
|
1999
|
8
|
Roberto
|
Hernandez
|
TB
|
AL
|
1999
|
9
|
Derek
|
Lowe
|
Bos
|
AL
|
1999
|
10
|
Matt
|
Mantei
|
Fla-Az
|
NL
|
1999
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Robb
|
Nen
|
SF
|
NL
|
2000
|
2
|
Derek
|
Lowe
|
Bos
|
AL
|
2000
|
3
|
Billy
|
Koch
|
Tor
|
AL
|
2000
|
4
|
Danny
|
Graves
|
Cin
|
NL
|
2000
|
5
|
Armando
|
Benitez
|
NY
|
NL
|
2000
|
6
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
2000
|
7
|
Keith
|
Foulke
|
Chi
|
AL
|
2000
|
8
|
Gabe
|
White
|
Cin-Col
|
NL
|
2000
|
9
|
Curtis
|
Leskanic
|
Mil
|
NL
|
2000
|
10
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
2000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
2001
|
2
|
Bob
|
Wickman
|
Cle
|
AL
|
2001
|
3
|
Keith
|
Foulke
|
Chi
|
AL
|
2001
|
4
|
Robb
|
Nen
|
SF
|
NL
|
2001
|
5
|
Jose
|
Mesa
|
Phil
|
NL
|
2001
|
6
|
Troy
|
Percival
|
Angels
|
AL
|
2001
|
7
|
Jeff
|
Zimmerman
|
Tex
|
AL
|
2001
|
8
|
Jason
|
Isringhausen
|
Oak
|
AL
|
2001
|
9
|
Armando
|
Benitez
|
NY
|
NL
|
2001
|
10
|
Billy
|
Wagner
|
Hou
|
NL
|
2001
|
1
|
Eric
|
Gagne
|
LA
|
NL
|
2002
|
2
|
Byung-Hyun
|
Kim
|
Ariz
|
NL
|
2002
|
3
|
Robb
|
Nen
|
SF
|
NL
|
2002
|
4
|
Billy
|
Koch
|
Oak
|
AL
|
2002
|
5
|
Troy
|
Percival
|
Angels
|
AL
|
2002
|
6
|
Billy
|
Wagner
|
Hou
|
NL
|
2002
|
7
|
John
|
Smoltz
|
Atl
|
NL
|
2002
|
8
|
Danny
|
Graves
|
Cin
|
NL
|
2002
|
9
|
Jose
|
Mesa
|
Phil
|
NL
|
2002
|
10
|
Armando
|
Benitez
|
NY
|
NL
|
2002
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Eric
|
Gagne
|
LA
|
NL
|
2003
|
2
|
Keith
|
Foulke
|
Oak
|
AL
|
2003
|
3
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
2003
|
4
|
Billy
|
Wagner
|
Hou
|
NL
|
2003
|
5
|
John
|
Smoltz
|
Atl
|
NL
|
2003
|
6
|
Eddie
|
Guardado
|
Min
|
AL
|
2003
|
7
|
Joe
|
Borowski
|
Chi
|
NL
|
2003
|
8
|
Rheal
|
Cormier
|
Phil
|
NL
|
2003
|
9
|
Tim
|
Worrell
|
SF
|
NL
|
2003
|
10
|
Ugueth
|
Urbina
|
Fla-Tex
|
NL
|
2003
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
2004
|
2
|
Armando
|
Benitez
|
Fla
|
NL
|
2004
|
3
|
Eric
|
Gagne
|
LA
|
NL
|
2004
|
4
|
Joe
|
Nathan
|
Min
|
AL
|
2004
|
5
|
Brad
|
Lidge
|
Hou
|
NL
|
2004
|
6
|
Francisco
|
Cordero
|
Tex
|
AL
|
2004
|
7
|
Keith
|
Foulke
|
Bos
|
AL
|
2004
|
8
|
Jason
|
Isringhausen
|
StL
|
NL
|
2004
|
9
|
John
|
Smoltz
|
Atl
|
NL
|
2004
|
10
|
Trevor
|
Hoffman
|
SD
|
NL
|
2004
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Mariano
|
Rivera
|
NY
|
AL
|
2005
|
2
|
Derrick
|
Turnbow
|
Mil
|
NL
|
2005
|
|