by Rany Jazayerli
August 10, 2000
http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=718
Rick Ankiel is living up to the hype. With his performance Monday night, he
lowered his ERA to an impressive 4.01 and, more impressively, has now struck
out 130 batters in just 119 innings pitched.
To put that in perspective, 78 pitchers in history have struck out at least a
man an inning while qualifying for the ERA title. Of those 78, only one was
younger than Ankiel is--Dwight Gooden, who set the major-league record for
strikeouts per nine innings as a 19-year-old rookie in 1984. Ankiel turned 21
on July 19, which qualifies him as a 20-year-old this season; Kerry Wood was
one month older than Ankiel when he turned the trick in 1998.
But I’m not here to talk about Ankiel’s arm. I’m here to talk about his
bat.
This is Ankiel’s batting line so far this year:
AB H D T HR R RBI BB K AVG OBP SLG OPS
46 13 1 1 2 6 7 3 15 .283 .327 .478 805
Forget, for a moment, that Ankiel is a pitcher. If he were a 20-year-old
outfielder starting his major-league career, you would have to be impressed.
Even in such a small sample size, that kind of power is rare in a player so
young.
And then when you remember that he is a pitcher, you have to wonder just how
good a hitter he can become.
Rather than wonder about that, I decided to look at every pitcher in history
who batted more than 40 times in a season before the age of 22. The ten
pitchers with the highest OPS, in chronological order, are listed below:
Name Year Age AB H D T HR R RBI BB K AVG OBP
SLG OPS
George Mullin 1902 21 120 39 4 3 0 20 11 8 NA .325 .367
.408 775
Joe Wood 1911 21 88 23 4 2 2 15 11 10 NA .261 .343
.420 764
Babe Ruth 1915 20 92 29 10 1 4 16 21 9 23 .315 .376
.576 952
Babe Ruth 1916 21 136 37 5 3 3 18 15 10 23 .272 .322
.419 741
George Cunningham 1916 21 41 11 2 2 0 7 3 8 12 .268 .388
.415 802
George Uhle 1919 20 43 13 2 1 0 7 6 1 5 .302 .318
.395 714
Lefty Weinert 1923 21 59 19 4 0 0 5 8 1 4 .322 .333
.390 723
Carl Scheib 1948 21 104 31 8 3 2 14 21 8 17 .298 .348
.490 839
Don Drysdale 1958 21 66 15 1 1 7 9 12 3 25 .227 .261
.591 852
Ken Brett 1970 21 41 13 3 0 2 8 3 2 7 .317 .364
.537 900
Rick Ankiel 2000 20 46 13 1 1 2 6 7 3 15 .283 .327
.478 805
George Mullin was the American League’s first great-hitting pitcher. While
he would hit over .300 only once after his rookie season, he remained a
productive hitter throughout his 14-year career, finishing with career totals
of .262/.319/.344, in more than 1,500 at-bats during the height of the
dead-ball era. According to Clay Davenport, Mullin finished with a .264
career Equivalent Average. Remember, a .260 EqA is considered average for a
position player. In other words, Mullin was a better-than-league-average
hitter.
Smokey Joe Wood was already in his fourth major-league season when he made
this list as a 21-year-old. He developed into the AL’s best pitcher for one
glorious year, in 1912, when he went 34-5 with a 1.91 ERA, led the Red Sox to
the AL pennant, then won Games 1, 4 and the deciding Game 8 of the World
Series. He would never be so effective again, and after going 15-5 with a
league-leading 1.49 ERA in 1915, he blew out his arm.
The story isn't over. Wood was so good with the stick that he resurfaced two
years later as an outfielder for the Indians. He hit .366 as a part-timer in
1921, but after a productive season as a full-time hitter in 1922, he walked
away from the game to pursue other endeavors; he would go on to coach at Yale
for many years and remained a New England legend well into his nineties.
Babe Ruth, you’ve heard of.
George Cunningham was a much better hitting pitcher than he was a pitching
pitcher; he only lasted in the major leagues for three more seasons after the
one above, during which he never hit higher than .223. For his career, he
created 3.65 runs per 27 outs, compared to a league average of 3.70.
George Uhle, who along with Ruth was the only player to post a 700+ OPS at
age 20, hit over .300 nine times in his career, finishing with .289/.339/.384
career numbers. Because he played in a hitters’ era, his career EqA was
"only" .248, compared to Mullin’s .264, despite better numbers
superficially. He could also pitch a little, finishing his career with 200
wins.
Lefty Weinert was in the major leagues at age 17, but never really developed
into a major league pitcher, and after the season above, he only made five
more starts in the majors. He would go 1-for-17 at the plate after 1923.
Carl Schieb was even younger than Weinert when he made his major-league
debut, pitching for the Philadelphia A’s when he was 16 during the height of
World War II. He continued to hit fairly well after his breakout season, and
in 1951 hit .396/.418/.623 in 53 at-bats. The hapless A’s didn’t hit nearly
as well; despite Schieb's production and a solid 4.47 ERA, he went 1-12 that
season. He washed out of the majors in 1954, with career numbers of
.250/.284/.338.
Don Drysdale was not nearly as good a hitter as his reputation would suggest.
While he had tremendous power for a pitcher--he would hit seven home runs
again in 1965--he rarely did anything but hit homers. Aside from 1958 and
1965, he never hit above .200, and walked about as often as the average
pitcher.
Drysdale finished with career numbers of .186/.228/.295; I feel compelled to
point out, since the same point is used to belittle his pitching record, that
he played in a pitchers' park in a pitchers' era. His career EqA was .196,
about 50 points higher than the average pitcher.
It is not hyperbole to say that Ken Brett dominated his position offensively
as much as his brother George did at third base. Playing in a time still very
much dominated by pitchers, Ken hit .250 with a .463 slugging average in
1973, and hit .310/.337/.448 in 1974. He was so highly regarded as a hitter
that in 1976, the DH-laden White Sox let him bat 12 times. He went just
1-for-12, but it was still a better idea than Disco Demolition Night or those
awful uniform shorts.
Brett finished his career with a mark of .262/.291/.406, and his career EqA
was .252. Only a handful of pitchers in history have finished with a career
EqA above .250, and Brett remains the last of them, ignoring Terry Forster
and his 78-at-bat fluke.
Add it all up, and out of nine pitchers, you have the greatest hitter of all
time (Ruth); one pitcher (Wood) who hit well enough to convert to another
position when his arm came up lame; three other pitchers (Mullin, Uhle and
Brett) who were arguably the best-hitting pitchers of their time; another
Hall of Fame pitcher (Drysdale) who was a well-above-average hitter
throughout his career; and three pitchers (Cunningham, Weinert and Scheib)
who all enjoyed relatively little success at the plate after their big years,
but none of whom lasted as a regular rotation starter in the major leagues
for very long.
Now, looking at historic patterns is interesting but not necessarily
predictive. Ankiel doesn’t have to follow the career paths of the pitchers
who came before him.
And Snow didn’t have to follow Vanilla Ice’s career path, either.
But if history does matter, then Ankiel has better than a 50-50 chance of
becoming one of the truly great hitting pitchers of the next 10 to 15 years.
Frankly, he has as good a chance of becoming the best-hitting pitcher in
baseball as he does of becoming the best-pitching pitcher in baseball. And he
’s not exactly chopped liver on the mound.
So the next time you’re watching Ankiel pitch, whisper a quiet "thank you"
that he ended up on a National League team. Then utter a prayer that at least
one league continues to turn its nose up at the DH and let guys like Ankiel
and Mike Hampton give sportscasters the opportunity to say the phrase,
"helped his own cause".