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Who are the worst starting pitchers ever?
Who are the worst starting pitchers in MLB history?
11 Answers
- Anonymous1 decade agoFavorite Answer
10. Jeff Byrd (1977) - 2-13, 6.18.
Jeff Byrd was a 20 year old right-hander who was thrown into the Toronto rotation midway through the inaugural season. Really, what were the chances that was going to work? Byrd stayed right there, bravely taking his turn every five days for the rest of the year, and getting his hat handed to him on a regular basis. He managed to win twice in 17 starts. Byrd's main problem was not unheard of in young pitchers - he couldn't throw strikes. In 87.3 innings, he managed to walk 68 batters. He never pitched again in the major leagues.
9. Bill Singer (1977) - 2-8, 6.79.
One of the reasons young Byrd was in the rotation was because Opening Day starter Bill Singer had gone down with an injury in early June. Singer had been a fine pitcher in his day, twice winning 20 games and three times striking out 200 batters. Twice, in fact, his managers had seen fit to let him throw more than 300 innings. Of course, both times Singer responded to that workload the next year by either: a) getting hurt; b) pitching poorly; or c) both. Singer in 1977 was coming off a 13-10, 3.69 season in which he had worked 236 innings. He had nothing left in 1977, and never pitched again in the majors.
8. Todd Stottlemyre (1988) 4-8, 5.69.
Unlike Byrd and Singer, Stottlemyre did have a future. But in 1988 he was a rookie. He began the season as the fifth starter. By late May, he had started eight times, and sported a 1-6, 5.54 log. That put him onto the Jimy Williams shuffle - he switched back and forth from the bullpen to the rotation for the next two months before being dispatched back to Syracuse in late July. He came back up in September, and got in five relief appearances as a call-up. While his numbers don't look as bad as Byrd's or Singer's, two things to note: a) he had a far, far better team behind him; b) in 1988, AL teams apart from Toronto scored 4.33 runs per game; in 1977, AL teams apart from Toronto scored 4.59 runs per game.
7. Jack Kucek (1980) 3-8, 6.75.
Here's someone I had completely forgotten. He was a 27 year old right-hander who'd had a few cups of coffee with the White Sox and Phillies. The Jays signed him after the Phillies released him, and in June 1980 they called him up and stuck him in the rotation. He started out just fine, going 2-1, 2.89 in his first five starts. He then got roughed up a couple of times and was sent to the bullpen. He pitched very badly in three relief appearances, and was returned to the rotation. He made another five starts, and was truly horrible - 0-3, 12.86, giving up 29 hits in 15.2 innings - which got him banished to the bullpen for the rest of the season. He never pitched again in the majors.
6. Danny Darwin (1995) 1-8, 7.62.
Danny Darwin actually seemed like a reasonable idea at the time. Granted, he was 39 years old. Granted, he was coming off a dismal (7-5, 6.30) 1994 season. But he'd won 15 games for Boston the year before that, and had been a decent major league pitcher for a long time. I always regarded him as a lesser version of Dennis Eckersley (same build, same delivery, same problems with LH batters); like the Eck, Darwin had also had his best results pitching out of the pen. But in Toronto, he was only expected to be a decent, low-cost fifth starter (behind Cone, Guzman, Hentgen, and Leiter), and in fact his first two starts were just fine (1-0, 1.80). Then the wheels fell off - he lost each of his next eight starts. He pitched well just once, a complete game loss to the Indians, before being yanked from the rotation at the end of June. After two poor outings in relief, the Jays released him in mid-July.
5. Jerry Garvin (1978) 4-12, 5.54.
Garvin was a 21 year old left-hander who was taken from Minnesota in the original expansion draft. The Jays put him in the rotation to begin that inaugural season, and Garvin won his first five decisions. He is probably best remembed for his pick-off move - he picked off an astonishing 28 base-runners in his rookie season (and committed just two balks in the process.) The team was truly, truly terrible, and Garvin would lose 10 straight decisions later in the year. Nevertheless, it was a truly impressive season - he gave up almost exactly a hit an inning, despte the awful defenders behind him, and he didn't walk a lot of people. He had some trouble keeping the ball in the park, and it would have been nice if he could have struck out more people (4.67 K per 9 IP) - but for a 21 year old rookie on an expansion team, it was a remarkable season. However, in the process he had worked 244 IP at age 21; the year before, as a 20 year old in the Twins system, he had pitched 233 IP, and the year before that, still a teenager, he worked 205 IP. The butcher's bill came due in 1978. By mid July, he was 2-11 when Roy Hartsfield first pulled him from the rotation. After a couple of relief outings, he went back into the rotation before being shut down for most of September. He missed most of 1979 with his arm problems and while did manage to put together a couple of decent years as a lefty reliever I can't help but wonder if his career might have turned out very differently if he'd come along ten years later, in an organization that had some idea of how to develop young pitchers.
4. Jack Morris (1993) 7-12, 6.19.
No one expects the Spanish Inquisition and there was no reason on earth to expect what happened to Jack Morris in 1993. You will recall that in 1991 he won 18 games and took Minnesota to the World Series; in 1992, he came to Toronto and did the same thing (the two seasons are ridiculously similar.) But then... his first three starts of 1993 completely redefined the concept of Awfulness: 0-3, with an ERA of 17.18. Don't see that too often. His next three starts were merely bad (1-1, 7.02), and the Jays stuck him on the DL for three weeks while everyone speculated as to what had gone wrong. (one school of thought was that he was tipping his pitches, but other long-time Morris watchers maintained that he had always tipped his pitches.) Upon his return, Morris finally pitched a good ball game, but he then offered up stinkers in three of his next four outings. By mid-June, after his first 11 starts, his record stood at 3-7, 9.91. He actually recovered somewhat at this point, beginning with a five-hit shutout of the Twins, and went 4-5 4.23 over his next 16 starts. But he was having some physical problems - he came out of one start after two scoreless innings and was shut down for good in early September.
Morris was not the most popular player in Blue Jays history. He did not come up through the system - on the contrary, he had been a troublesome opponent for a very long time, he did not have a warm and cuddly personality, and he seemed in many ways the embodiment of the athlete as mercenary - after going to Minnesota and herocially pitching his hometown team to a championship, he lit out for where the money was. As I recall, Mike Hogan in particular seemed to take it personally that Morris had stuck it to the people of Minnesota. Morris, of course, was one of the players caught up in the owner's Collusion Conspiracy - the older readers may remember Morris flying up to Minneosta to offer his services in the off-season of 1987. But for some reason, the Twins just couldn't find room for a 20 game winner. Neither could the Yankees or the Angels. None of them even made an offer.
3. Josh Towers (2006) 2-10, 8.42.
Just look at the stats...
2. Roy Halladay (2000) 4-7, 10.64.
The final two entries, the bottom of the barrel, are in a class all by themselves. The arrival of Roy Halladay had been anticipated long before he actually showed up in Toronto, and he arrived with a splash at the end of 1998, coming within one out of pitching a no-hitter in his second major league start. As a 22 year old rookie in 1999, he had gone 8-7, 3.92 in a season split evenly between the rotation and the bullpen. HIs K-W ratio (82-79 in 149.1 IP) was a little worrisome, but his future was assumed to be very bright.
And so it would be, but the future had to wait a while. Doc beat the Royals 6-3 in his first start of the season - from there it all went downhill. He ran off six straight terrible starts, allowing more than a run per inning each time - he went 1-4, 13.50 and you're probably wondering how he managed to win one of those games. Easy - the team staked him to an 11-1 lead, before Doc gave up six runs to let the Angels back into it. The team finally sent him to the bullpen - he emerged once to allow four hits and three runs in one inning and finally they sent him to Syracuse. He didn't pitch particularly well there, but came back a month later. He made three starts and one was pretty decent. The other two were terrible, and he went back to the bullpen, and then back again to Syracuse. He was back in September to make one nondescript relief appearance, another terrible start, and finally closed his season by allowing 7 runs, all unearned, in two-thirds of an inning against Baltimore.
1. Dave Lemanczyk (1978) 4-14, 6.26.
The surprise winner, just barely nosing Halladay's historically awful season. Lemanczyk was the Jays top winner in 1977, and he would pitch well again in 1979 (he even got to go to the All-Star Game as a result.) But the year in between was pretty ugly. He made five April starts and went 0-5, 7.67. He was worse in May, but managed a 1-3, 8.00 log - he got the win despite allowing 12 hits and 7 runs. In June, he took his 1-9, 8.52 log to the bullpen. He pitched poorly there for a few weeks, and returned to the rotation, for no apparent reason. Yet at this juncture, he suddenly seemed to recover his form. He put together three strong starts in a row, winning twice and throwing a complete game in a 2-0 loss. After a few more rough outings, he closed the month strong and actually posted a 2.85 ERA for the month. Alas, 'twas a mirage. He made two poor starts in August, went on the DL, and came back to pitch poorly out of the pen in September.
Lemanczyk was nowhere near as bad as Halladay in 2000 - he was probably not even as bad as Towers last year. But he was indeed pretty bad, and he pitched about as much as Doc and Josh put together. And to him goes the No-Prize.
- 1 decade ago
Al Travers
GP 1, IP 8, H 26, R 24, ER 14, ERA 15.75, BB 7, K 1
In 1912, Ty Cobb was suspended indefinitely for going into the stands and beating a fan. The rest of the Tigers went on strike. A team of replacements was hastily assembled to take their place, and Travers was the starter on that team-for-a-day.
Then there was Frank Bates, who went 1-18 with a 7.24 ERA for the 1899 Cleveland Spiders. He walked 105 men while striking out only 13. Granted, the Spiders went 20-134 that year, but still...
- Anonymous5 years ago
We had a guy in Tampa Bay the first few years named Dennis Springer who was supposed to be a knuckleballer. He was more of a batting practice pitcher. He was horrible!! And lasted around here for a lot longer than he should have, then went some where else.
- 1 decade ago
The pitcher with the most losses in history was, believe it or not, Cy Young, with 316 career losses.
But somehow, I don't think that makes him the worst.
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- Moore55Lv 41 decade ago
how is anthony young the worst pitcher ever? so what if he lost 800 games in a row....his era was around 4 the worst....thats not his fault, its the rest of his team.
u have to remember, pitchers like glavine and bonderman lost 1 and 19 games in one year as well.
the worst pitcher i would think in my lifetime is probably the entire devil rays bullpen and pitching staff not named shields, kazmir, and reyes......
- 1 decade ago
Hugh Mulcahy got tagged with the nickname "Losing Pitcher". That had to hurt.
Chris Holt was awful.
Bobby Witt, at the end, was an utter disaster.
- ajn4664_ksuLv 41 decade ago
I'd say Anthony Young of the Mets is near the top of the list. The guy lost 20 in a row...
- DanLv 51 decade ago
Mark Redman can't pitch himself out of a paper bag. He was so bad that the Braves dropped him.
Can't believe the Texas Rangers signed him. They made a bad choice.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
So, you've never heard of Anthony Young, right?