Multiple Appearances by Pitcher in Same Game

JASON LANE, BR/TL
2012: OF-LHP
SUGAR LAND SKEETERS

 Our SABR trip to Sugar Land brought us in touch with the news that former Houston Astro Jason Lane had just joined the Skeeters on Friday night, arriving in time to play left field in the earlier day first game of the Skeeters’  doubleheader. He went 1 for 3, but missed a chance in the 7th inning to drive in what would have been the game-winning run. Lane did not play in the second game, which the Skeeters also lost.

We also learned from the Skeeters folks that Jason has now gone back to his USC roots to combine left-handed pitching with his everyday role as an outfielder. The thought aroused interesting possibilities that I later discussed with Tal Smith during the game. If Jason Lane can handle both roles, I wondered, is there a possibility that the Skeeters might us use him for more than one “special lefty” appearance in the same game out of the pen. I could recall clubs in the Texas League doing that sort of thing “once upon a time,” but I wasn’t sure if the rules still allowed a man who never leaves the game to make more than one double position shift appearance as a pitcher in the same game. So, I asked Tal Smith about it.

Tal said that it was possible. As long as a player was double shifting from a field position spot to pitcher, he could do it as often as he proved to be effective and never left the game in between his separate appearances on the mound. (I later learned from someone else that a designated hitter is not permitted to double shift back and forth with a pitcher, but that the field position players could do so unlimited times and remain eligible to pitch again as long as they never left the game as active players.

Wow! The thought of possible success here is mind-boggling!

A good position player with an effective rubber pitching arm, especially if he were a lefty, as Lane is, could be a Godsend answer to that special pitcher you bring into certain situations to face one batter. As manager, you could do it as many times as it worked – as long as the player stayed in the game as a fielder in between these separate mound appearances.

As Tal Smith pointed out, there’s no current rule against the move, as he also noted that Paul Richards used to use the move back in the early 1950s. I’m not sure if Richards, or any other MLB manager ever used the same stays-in-game-elsewhere pitcher for more multiple separate appearances in the same game. At some point, such a practice would run crashing into the current rules for pitching wins, holds, and saves. A pitcher cannot get the “W” and a “Sv” in the same game, but the multiple times use of the same guy as pitcher in the same would set up the fun. – If a lefty-out-of-the-pen in the 6th just happened to be the pitcher of record when his team took the lead, and then left, but later returned in the 9th to retire the last man in a one-run lead game with the bases loaded, he would not be entitled to the normal “Sv” that usually goes with success in that moment because he was already on record as the winning pitcher.

It’s not just mind-goggling. It’s mind-numbing. You can almost hear the bricks falling off the great wall of baseball tradition.

It’s highly improbable that Jason Lane, or anyone else, is going to become this history-twisting guy, but it is intriguing to consider that the possibility is out there for someone to do it. It’s not against the current rules.

The wizened Mr. Tal Smith put the serious cap on this whole “what if” business. “If a club ever came up with a player who could succeed on a regular basis in that role,” Smith added, “you can bet that there would be a large group of teams who had no such player clamoring for a change in the rules that would make multiple pitching appearances by one player in the same game illegal.”

Today’s subject is like so many others in baseball. It simply proves, once again, that it’s not merely the probabilities of the game that fill our cups of interest. We baseball people also feed on thoughts of the possible, no matter how improbable these possibilities may be.

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5 Responses to “Multiple Appearances by Pitcher in Same Game”

  1. Mark Hudec's avatar Mark Hudec Says:

    great job.

  2. Jon Potter's avatar Jon Potter Says:

    Paul Richards was a GM. In my opinion…Tal Smith should have been the commissioner of baseball. One of the brightest baseball minds in the World and……one great guy. He would have NEVER used extortion to move a team from one league to the other as the used car salesman did with the Astros.

  3. Bob Hulsey's avatar Bob Hulsey Says:

    There have been situations where a pitcher has been sent from the mound to (usually) the outfield while a spectialist was brought in to take advantage of a righty/lefty matchup and then the manager brought the first pitcher back from the outfield to the mound to face the following batter. I believe that happened with Wesley Wright last year.

    However, you are talking about a position player also being a LOOGY more than once in a game, possibly in different innings. I don’t know of any rule forbidding it but it would seem doubtful it would be done except in an extreme circumstance because of the need for most pitchers to warm up their arms before coming into pitch. Also. if the position player were a valuable hitter, a manager might not want to risk hurting his arm using him twice in relief in the same game.

    • Bill McCurdy's avatar Bill McCurdy Says:

      Bob:

      The reasons you underscore are exactly why it remains a possibility, not a probability. There is no rule against it, but a guy would need the true version of what I described earlier as a rubber arm to pitch, then stand, then pitch again, then stand, then pitch again and again. Rubber arms seemed more common in the old days. – Plus, as you point out, concerns about injury to the good hitter from his pitching jump quickly into the mix. Were that not true, Babe Ruth might have made it into the HOF as the only guy there with over 700 homers and 300 pitching wins.

  4. Doug S.'s avatar Doug S. Says:

    Whitey Herzog in the 80’s was known to use Todd Worrell (RHRP)and Ken Dayley (LHRP) in a OF / Pitcher switcharoo. Dayley might face a batter move to LF and Worrell come up for a batter then Dayley return with Worrell going to the RF.

    It wasn’t often but he did it a few times.

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