Monday, April 18, 2016

The Great Offensive Explosion of 1996 – One and Done

The Great Offensive Explosion of 1996 – One and Done

Coming off of the strike in 1994, baseball needed a way to bring the fans back to the game.  What better way to do it than by hitting dingers?  I’m going to explore who set career highs for home runs in 1996.  These were the pioneers who set forth a great decade of run scoring.

Before I begin, I’m not even going to address what role performance enhancing drugs may have played in this.  I’m sure it was everywhere, and at the time, no one cared.  Not really sure what triggered everyone’s attitude to change.  But man, it was a fun time to watch baseball.  Not that it isn’t fun now, but an 11-10 game, to me, is much more fun to watch than a 1-0 sleeper.

By my count, 605 players appeared in some sort of offensive capacity in 1996.  This doesn’t include pitchers, because half the teams weren’t batting at all (no interleague yet, bro), and even if they were, pitcher home runs are more of a small sample size exercise than anything else.
I traded my dingers
for this sweet hat.

The first thing I’m going to do is to delete out all players that didn’t have a home run at all.  They obviously didn’t set career highs.  I guess they could have tied them though.  That eliminates 147 players.  Names like, well, hmm.  Trying to find someone you might have actually heard of.  Oh, here’s a few.  A 22-year old Bobby Abreu only registered 22 at bats for the Astros in a late season callup.  A 24-year old Raul Ibanez only had 5 at bats.  And the player with the most career home runs that only hit a single one in 1996?  Vladimir Guerrero.  He hit 449 for his career, but only one in 27 at bats in his first taste of the big leagues.  Most of these players just had a handful of at bats during the season, but Bip Roberts registered 339 at bats as a utility player for the Royals, hitting 21 doubles and two triples, driving in 52 runs, all without hitting a single dinger.

Today, we’re going to examine the nine guys that, despite only hitting one home run, set their career single-season high.  For six of them, that would be the only home run of their career.  The other three also had other seasons where they only managed to hit one home run.  Let’s get started!

Allen Battle

Allen Battle was originally drafted in the 45th round of the 1990 draft by the Chicago White Sox (ironically one position behind the Phillies drafting Jeffrey Gunn).  Battle would not sign, and would be drafted a year later in the 10th round by the St. Louis Cardinals.  He would immediately be assigned to the Cardinals rookie ball affiliate Johnson City, where he hit .387 in 17 games.  He would be promoted to single A Savannah, where he would come back to Earth, only hitting .243 in 48 games.  He started in single A again in 1992 at Springfield, hitting .302 in 67 games and earning a promotion to high A St. Petersburg, where he would hit .320 in 60 games.  He would hit a total of five home runs in 1992 and steal 43 bases along the way.

In 1993, he would be promoted to AA Arkansas, where he would hit .274 adding 12 triples and three home runs along with 20 stolen bases.  He would reach AAA Louisville in 1994, having one of his best professional seasons, hitting .313 with 104 runs scored, 44 doubles, seven triples and six home runs, and adding 23 stolen bases.  He would start out 1995 in St. Louis, making his major league debut on April 26.  Pinch hitting for starter Ken Hill in the bottom of the 4th, he would have a full count strike out against the Phillies’ Curt Schilling in a 7-6 win.  Three days later, pinch hitting for Brian Jordan (?), he would again fall victim to a full count strikeout to the Mets’ Dave Mlicki in the bottom of the 11th in a 5-4 loss.  The next day, he would get his first career hit against the Mets’ Kevin Lomon as a pinch hitter for Rich DeLucia in a 3-0 victory.

He would only play in six games for the Cardinals in May, including his first start and first RBI in a 4-1 victory on May 25th.  He would spend 47 games in Louisville in May and June before coming up to the show for good on July 5th.  In his first four games back, he went 7-16 with three runs scored and his first three-hit game and first career double, with the Cardinals winning all four games.  Only getting 24 starts in 61 appearances for the Cardinals, he would finish the season hitting .271 in 118 at bats, with five doubles and only two RBIs, despite amassing 32 hits on the season.  And no dingers!

After the 1995 season, along with three other players you’ve never heard of, Battle would be traded to the Oakland A’s for Todd Stottlemyre.  Stottlemyre would go 35-29 for the Cardinals before they flipped him to the Rangers for Darren Oliver and TWO GRAND SLAMS IN ONE INNING!  The A’s wouldn’t get much from Battle though.  He would be with the big club through June 4th in 1996, only appearing in one game with them after that.  We’re not here to talk about all of that junk though.  We’re here to talk about dingers.  On April 16th, in the top of the 5th inning, Battle would take the Rangers’ Bobby Witt deep for his first and only career home run, driving in himself and Scott Brosius as well in a 5-3 loss.  Fun fact – this game also featured Matt Stairs throwing out back to back runners – Kevin Elster and Darryl Hamilton – at second base from right field.


Battle would have a couple of hits the next day, raising his average above the .300 mark, but by May 23rd, it fell below .200.  Other than three hitless at bats on August 14th, he would spend the rest of the season at AAA Edmonton.  For the A’s, he hit .192 with three doubles, the one home run and five RBIs.  He did manage to steal 10 bases, including two in a game on three separate occasions.  Battle would never return to the big leagues, spending time in three different organizations over the next three seasons.  He had a pretty good season at AAA Ottawa for the Expos in 1998, hitting .304 with 11 home runs and 34 stolen bases, but by this time, the Expos had a pretty good right fielder with the big club.  After hitting .245 in the Cubs minor league system in 1999, he was done with baseball.

Matt Howard

Matt Howard was drafted in the 34th round of the 1989 draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers.  Howard was assigned to the Dodgers rookie ball affiliate in Great Falls.  He excelled in his first professional stop, hitting .333 with three home runs and 23 stolen bases in 59 games.  This earned him a promotion to high A Bakersfield in 1990, where he hit .261 with one home run and 47 stolen bases in 137 games.  He would return to high A again in 1991, this time at Vero Beach.  He basically had the same season, hitting .261 again with three home runs and 50 stolen bases.  1992 would see a couple of promotions for Howard, first at AA San Antonio, where he hit .270 with two home runs and 18 stolen bases in 95 games, and then at AAA Albuquerque, where he hit .293 with two home runs and one stolen base in 36 games.

From there, Howard’s career pretty much stalled.  Over the next two years, he hit .284 with one home run and 20 stolen bases in 147 games between San Antonio and Albuquerque.  After the 1994 season, he became a free agent, and signed with the San Diego Padres in the offseason.  However, he was released before the start of Spring Training on February 3rd.  He signed with the Baltimore Orioles at the end of April, and would spend the season at their AA affiliate in Bowie.  There, he would hit .303 with one home run and 22 stolen bases in 70 games.  At the end of the 1995 season, he once again would become a free agent.

Howard would sign with the New York Yankees for the 1996 season.  He would start the year at AAA Columbus, where across the season, he hit .347 with two home runs (but only nine stolen bases).  In mid-May, the Yankees called him up, and he made his major league debut on May 17th in an 8-5 win vs. the California Angels.  He had three hitless at bats that game, but he would get his first career hit, RBI and run scored the next day off of the Angels’ Shad “Not Chad” Williams in a 7-3 victory.

Howard would have his finest game in the majors on June 8th.  The Yankees would lose 9-7, but not due to the efforts of Howard.  Hitting second between Wade Boggs and Paul O’Neill, Howard would single in the first inning, eventually make his way to third, and STOLE HOME giving the Yankees the lead.  Kenny Rogers would give up eight runs for the Yankees by the time that Howard came up to lead off the fifth inning.  He would hit his only career home run off of Tigers starter Tom Urbani, the first of a trio of solo shots hit by the Yankees that inning.  By the time the ninth inning came around, the Yankees were down 9-5.  Howard led off the inning with a walk, and was knocked in by Bernie Williams two batters later.  The Yankees scratched another run across, but fell short that day.  The starting lineup on June 8th featured players that hit 1746 career home runs.  1745 of those home runs were hit by players other than Matt Howard.  His steal of home that day was also the only stolen base of his career.

Howard would finish the 1996 campaign hitting .204 with one double, one home run, nine RBIs and one stolen base.  That would be the only season he would have in the majors.  But at least he got a ring!  He would spend the 1997 season back in Columbus as organizational depth, hitting .312 with six home runs and 22 stolen bases.  1998 would find him playing with the San Francisco Giants’ AAA affiliate in Fresno, where hit hit .278 with two home runs and 10 stolen bases.  He would spend his last professional season with the Pittsburgh Pirates’ AAA affiliate in Nashville, where he hit .293 with two home runs and 13 stolen bases.  Let’s not forget his pitching efforts in the minors.  In four games across his career, he threw 4.1 innings, allowing six runs, one walk and two strikeouts, with an ERA of 12.46.  He also allowed one home run.  Ironic.

Mike Hubbard

Mike Hubbard was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the eighth round of the 1992 draft.  The catcher was assigned to low A Geneva, where he hit .240 with three home runs.  He would advance to high A Daytona the next season, where he had better results, hitting .294 with one home run.  He even played one errorless game at second base.  Hubbard would check the AA box off his resume in 1994, advancing to Orlando, where he would hit .286 with 11 home runs.  He would spend most of the next season at AAA Iowa, where he hit .260 with five home runs.

The Cubs’ catching situation in 1995 was, at best, not good.  Six players spent time behind the dish that season, one of which was Hubbard.  On July 13th, he would make his major league debut as a pinch hitter in an 11-5 loss to the Cincinnati Reds, drawing a walk off Chuck McElroy.  Brian McRae would strike out stranding him at first base.  Five days later, he would get his first hit against Bobby Jones in a 12-3 loss to the New York Mets.  Overall, in 23 at bats across 15 games, he would hit .174 with no home runs.

Hubbard would split time between Iowa and Chicago in 1996.  When down on the farm, he had decent success, hitting .293 with seven home runs.  In Chicago, however, he was proving himself to be more of a AAA player.  In nine June appearances spanning 21 at bats, he didn’t have a single hit, striking out 10 times and only producing one RBI on a sac fly.  He would have a couple of hits on the season before unexpectedly entering the game on August 7th.

The Mets’ Brent Mayne would take out starting catcher Scott Servais in the middle of the sixth inning, pressing Hubbard into action.  In the bottom of the frame, he would ground into a double play, but in the bottom of the eighth, he would hit his first career home run off of Jerry Dipoto, briefly giving the Cubs a 7-6 lead.  It wouldn’t hold though, as the Mets would put up five runs in the top of the ninth.  This included a bases loaded triple in the first career three RBI game for Mets’ rookie Rey Ordonez.   A week later, Hubbard would have his final hit of the season.  He would finish the year hitting .105 with one home run.  He didn’t have a single walk in 38 at bats, with 15 strikeouts.

In 1997, Hubbard would again split time between Iowa and Chicago.  On May 7th, in his first game with the Cubs, he would hit a solo home run.  That was the high point of his major league season though, as he finished the year hitting .203, with the one home run being his only extra base hit.  In 64 at bats, he would walk twice with 21 strikeouts.

1998 would find Hubbard with a new club – the Montreal Expos.  Spending time with both AAA Ottawa and the big club, he would hit career home run number three in a 14 inning, 5-3 loss to the Phillies on May 25th.  Across 55 at bats in 32 games with Montreal, he hit .145 with one home run, with no walks and 17 strikeouts.

Hubbard wouldn’t play in the majors at all in 1999, and between 2000 and 2001, he would only play in seven games – two with the Atlanta Braves in 2000, and five with the Texas Rangers in 2001.  He would hit his fourth and final career home run on May 11th, 2001, off of White Sox’ starter David Wells in a 6-5 loss to the Rangers.

Hubbard would spend parts of the next two seasons in the minors with a couple of different teams before finally hanging it up.  For his career, Hubbard would hit .167 with four home runs.  In 192 at bats, he would walk four times with 60 strikeouts.

Dax Jones

Dax Xenos Jones (first and middle names ARE spelled correctly) was originally drafted in the 49th round of the 1988 draft by the Toronto Blue Jays.  Figuring he could do better, he went on to Creighton University, where he would improve his draft stock, this time being drafted in the eighth round of the 1991 draft by the Houston Astros.  Upon signing, the outfielder would join low A Everett, where he would hit .306 with five home runs, adding six triples and 15 stolen bases for good measure.

He would debut at A ball Clinton in 1992, hitting .298 with one home run and 18 stolen bases, before a late season promotion to AA Shreveport, where he hit .303 with one home run and two stolen bases.  He would spend another season at Shreveport in 1993, where he would hit .284 with four home runs and 13 stolen bases.  1995 and 1996 would see Jones at AAA Phoenix, where he would hit .278 and .267 respectively, with a combined six home runs.  Then came his magical 1996 season.

Jones would start 1996 again at AAA Phoenix, where he would hit .309 with six home runs and 13 stolen bases.  The Giants felt that Jones was now ready for the majors.  He would make his debut on July 11th.  Pinch hitting for Marvin Benard, Jones would ground out to shortstop to end the game in an 8-3 loss to the Dodgers.  He would have to wait exactly one month to get his first career hit, and three days later, he would get his first career triple.  August 18th is the day that you’re all here to hear about though.  On that day, Jones would start in center field.  In the top of the first, Barry Bonds would hit a two run home run.  Not to be outdone, Jones would strike for a two run, inside the park home run off of the Phillies’ Matt Beech, putting the Giants up 4-0.  After five innings, the Phillies were ahead 7-6, and despite manager Jim Fregosi’s attempts to lose (Curt Schilling pinch hit in the bottom of the seventh), that would end up being the final score.  On the season, he hit .172 with two triples, one home run and two stolen bases.

Jones would never get any closer to Bonds’ career total of 326 home runs at the end of that day.  He would spend the entire season in Phoenix in 1997, hitting .255 with three home runs.  1998 would find him at the Astros’ AAA affiliate in New Orleans, where he hit .275 with one home run.  He would give it one more shot in 2000 in independent ball before finally calling it quits.

Jesse Levis

Jesse Levis was originally drafted in the 36th round of the 1986 draft by the Philadelphia Phillies.  Both he and fellow 36th rounder Scott Erickson decided not to sign and attend college instead.  Both players would improve their stock, and were drafted in the fourth round of the 1989 draft (along with Jeff Bagwell).  Levis would sign with the Cleveland Indians, where he would be assigned to their rookie ball affiliate in Burlington.  After punishing the competition with a .344 average and four home runs, he would move up to single A Kinston, hitting .299 with two home runs.  He even managed to get one hitless at bat at AAA Colorado Springs.  He would get to settle down in 1990, playing the entire season at high A Kinston, where he hit .296 with seven home runs.  He also had a very good 64/42 walk/strikeout ratio, all while fielding the catching position at a .991 fielding percentage.  1991 would find Levis at AA Canton-Akron, where he wouldn’t have quite as much success.  He hit .264 with six home runs.

In 1992, even though With Sandy Alomar Jr. had the starting job locked down in Cleveland, and Junior Ortiz being the primary backup, Levis broke camp with the big team.  He would make his major league debut on April 24th, grounding out as a pinch hitter in the bottom of the eighth for Felix Fermin in a 5-0 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers.  Officially signaling to the Kansas City Royals the game was over, he would pinch hit for Albert Belle on May 4th, and promptly picked up his first career hit off of Mike Boddicker in an 11-6 loss.  Towards the middle of May, he would return to AAA Colorado Springs.  There, he did not disappoint, hitting .364 with six home runs.  He would return to the Tribe at the end of the season.  He would hit his first career home run off of the Detroit Tigers’ Kurt Knudsen on September 26th in a 7-4 victory.  He would finish the season hitting .279 with the one home run.

Levis would split time between Cleveland and their new AAA affiliate in Charlotte in 1993.  With the big club, in 31 games he would only manage 63 at bats, hitting .175 with no home runs.  In Charlotte, across 47 games, he would only hit .248 with two home runs.  He would only manage one at bat with Cleveland in 1994, making it count, picking up a pinch hit single in the ninth inning of a 4-3 loss to the New York Yankees on May 9th.  He would spend the rest of his time in Charlotte, where he hit .285 with 10 home runs.  Cleveland would have yet another AAA affiliate in 1995 in Buffalo, and this is where Levis would play the majority of his season.  There, he hit .311 with four home runs.  He did manage to get 18 at bats in 12 games with the Indians, hitting .333 with no home runs.

Just as the season was about to start in 1996, the Indians traded Levis to the Brewers.  His lone home run of the season came on September 10th, leading off the top of the seventh with a shot off of Boston Red Sox’ reliever Kerry Lacy.  This proved to be the game winner, as it up the Brewers up 11-9.  In a game that would feature career home run number 150 for Mo Vaughn, the Sox put up another run in the bottom of the eighth, but Mike Fetters came in and closed the door in the bottom of the ninth to seal the victory.  Overall, Levis would hit .236 with the one home run, and set career highs in games played, at bats, runs, RBIs and walks.  He would also hit his lone career triple.

Levis would only play in 121 games with the Brewers over the next two seasons, hitting a combined .295 with one home run.  He would sign with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays for the 1999 season, but after hitting a solid .352 with three home runs across 40 games, he was released at the end of July.  The Indians would sign him for the remainder of the season.  In Cleveland, he hit .154 with no home runs in 10 games.  After spending time in the Braves minor league system in 2000, he would resign with the Brewers for 2001, but would only play in 12 games with them at the end of the season, hitting .242 with no home runs.  He would play parts of three more minor league seasons with the Reds, Phillies and Mets before finally calling it a career.

Ray Montgomery

Ray Montgomery was drafted in the 13th round of the 1990 draft by the Houston Astros.  The outfielder was assigned to low A Auburn, where he hit just .233 with no home runs.  He would spend the 1991 season at A ball Burlington, doing a little better, hitting .252 with three home runs.  He also stole 16 bases.  He was also caught stealing 14 times.  He would only play in 51 games at AA Jackson in 1992, hitting .209 with one home run.  In 1993, he played mostly in Jackson again, faring much better, hitting .281 with 10 home runs.  This would earn him a promotion to AAA Tucson, where in the last 15 games of the season, he hit .340 with two home runs.  Montgomery would spend his fifth minor league season back in Tucson in 1994, where he hit .256 with seven home runs on the season.

He would split the 1995 season between Jackson and Tucson, when he developed a sudden power surge.  Between the two stops, he hit .301 with 21 home runs.  Ten of those home runs came in Jackson in just 127 at bats.  He would continue his home run binge in 1996 in Tucson.  There, in 359 at bats across 100 games, he hit .306 with a team leading 22 home runs.  He would take a break in hitting home runs in the southwest to make his major league debut on July 3rd.  Entering the game as a pinch runner for Mike Simms in the bottom of the seventh, he didn’t get an at bat that day.  The Florida Marlins would put up three runs in the top of the ninth, which featured the second to last walk of Andre Dawson’s career and Kevin Brown pinch running for him, but the Astros would hang on for a 4-3 victory.

The next day, as the nation celebrated its 220th birthday, Montgomery would get his first career at bat, hit, and run.  Once again entering the game for Simms, he would single off of Atlanta Braves’ reliever Pedro Borbon to lead off the ninth, and come around to score two batters later on Craig Biggio’s single as the Astros won 5-2.

Montgomery would get five hitless at bats across two games before his epic at bat on July 24th.  He would once again enter the game as a pinch hitter, this time for Astros’ reliever Xavier Hernandez in the bottom of the tenth.  John Cangelosi led off the inning with a strikeout against San Diego Padres’ reliever Ron Villone.  Ricky Gutierrez would then single, setting up Montgomery.  He would drive an 0-1 pitch to center field for his only home run of 1996 (and career), and the Astros walked off with a 6-4 victory.

Two days later, Montgomery would play in his last game in Houston before returning to Tucson.  When he came back up after the minor league season was over, he only managed six at bats in six games, with his only hit being a two run double on September 15th.  He would finish the season hitting .214 with one home run.  His three hits did manage four RBIs.

Montgomery would spend most of the first half of 1997 in Houston.  In the Astros’ fourth game of the season, he would pinch hit in the bottom of the eleventh, and he would come around to score the winning run in a 3-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.  Two days later, he would score the tying run after reaching on an error in the eighth in another 3-2 win over the Cardinals.  He wouldn’t have much success the rest of the season.  He would play in his final game with the Astros on June 17th before returning to AAA New Orleans.  With the Astros, he hit .235 with no home runs.  He would only play in 20 games with the Zephyrs, but there he hit .288 with six home runs in just 73 at bats.

In 1998, Montgomery would make his last appearances in the majors, getting two hits in five at bats across six games in the middle of the season.  He would spend most of the season in New Orleans, where he hit .290 with nine home runs.  He would sign with the Pittsburgh Pirates for the 1999 season, and spend the next two seasons with them at AAA Nashville, hitting a combined .298 with 23 home runs across 161 games.  He would have one more professional season in 2001, this time with the Mets’ AAA affiliate in Norfolk, where he hit .320 with seven home runs in 57 games.

Luis Ortiz

Luis Ortiz was drafted by the Boston Red Sox in the eighth round of the 1991 draft (seven spots behind fellow solo-dinger hitter Dax Jones).  Upon his signing, the corner infielder was assigned to the GCL Red Sox, where he would hit .333 with four home runs in 42 games.  He would spend all of 1992 with high A Lynchburg, where he hit .290 with 10 home runs.  He would jump all the way to AAA Pawtucket for the 1993 season, where he had perhaps his finest professional season, hitting .294 with 18 home runsin 102 games.  His 13 walks vs. 74 strikeouts were certainly concerning to most, but apparently, not to the Red Sox.  They decided it was time to bring him up.

Ortiz would make his major league debut on August 31st, going two for three with the only RBI of the day for the Red Sox against the Texas Rangers’ Kenny Rogers in an 8-1 loss.  He would only get nine at bats with one hit in eight games the rest of the season, finishing up hitting .250 with no home runs.

Ortiz would spend most of the 1994 season in Pawtucket, where in 81 games, he hit .312 with six home runs, but he did improve his walk/strikeout ratio with an even 29 of both.  He would only play in seven games with the Red Sox in 1994, getting three hits in 18 at bats with no home runs.  Two of his three hits were doubles, and he added six RBIs.

After the 1994 season, Ortiz was traded with Otis Nixon to the Rangers for Jose Canseco (perhaps the Red Sox were looking for pitching depth).  He would spend the first part of the season at AAA Oklahoma City, where he hit .306 with two home runs.  The Rangers’ starting third baseman, Dean Palmer, got off to a fantastic start to the season in 1995, hitting .333 with nine home runs through the first 35 games before injury struck.  This opened the door for Ortiz.  On June 4th, he would start at third base for the Rangers.  In his second at bat of the day, he would hit a home run off of the first pitch he saw from Minnesota Twins’ starter Eddie Guardado in a 7-2 victory.  Across 108 at bats in 57 games with the Rangers, he would hit .231 with one home run and 18 RBIs.

A healthy Palmer meant Ortiz would spend most of his time back at Oklahoma City in 1996.  There, in 124 games, he hit .317 with 14 home runs.  He would only play in three games for the Rangers in a late season callup.  He would get a start on the last game of the regular season, as the Rangers rested most of their starters gearing up for a playoff run.  In his final game as a member of the California Angels*, Chuck Finley would serve up a solo home run to Ortiz in his first at bat.  He would later triple in the fifth inning, but would be thrown out at home trying to score on a wild pitch from Finley.

*Finley would spend three more seasons with the Angels, who would change their name to the Anaheim Angels for the 1997 season (see what I did there).  I was trying to find interesting side notes in all of these games where these guys hit their only home run, but aside from Tim Salmon’s 10th career triple, not much else happened in this season-ending mail-it-in game.

Ortiz would spend the first part of the 1997 season in Japan with the Yakult Swallows, but after hitting just .172 with no home runs in 20 games, he would return to the states, back with the Rangers in Oklahoma City.  Back in more familiar settings, he hit .305 with one home run in 22 games.  He would spend the 1998 season with the Kansas City Royals’ AAA affiliate in Omaha, hitting .304 with five home runs in 44 games.

We could go on and on about minor league seasons, but the bottom line is that Ortiz would never return to the majors.  Between 1999 and 2004, playing for various teams in AAA, Mexico and independent leagues, he hit a combined .288 with 51 home runs in 729 games.

Arquimedez Pozo

Arquimedez Pozo was signed by the Seattle Mariners as a free agent out of the Domincan Republic in August of 1990.  He wouldn’t make his professional appearance until the spring of 1992, when he reported to low A Bellingham.  There, the 18 year old second baseman hit .322 with seven home runs in 39 games.  That earned him a promotion to high A San Bernardino, where he struggled somewhat against competition that was an average of four years older, hitting .261 with three home runs in 54 games.  He would play the entire 1993 season at high A Riverside, where he hit .342 with 13 home runs (adding 44 doubles and three triples) to go along with an even 56 walks and strikeouts.

Pozo would advance to AA Jacksonville for the 1994 season, hitting .289 with 14 home runs.  1995 would find him at AAA Tacoma, where he hit .300 with 10 home runs.  After the minor league season ended, he would get the call to Seattle.  On September 12th, he would make his major league debut, popping out as a pinch hitter for Joey Cora in a 14-3 victory over the Minnesota Twins.  That would be the only at bat he would get on the season.

In 1996, Pozo would spend most of the first half of the season back at AAA Tacoma, where he would hit .279 with 15 home runs.  On July 23rd, he would be traded to the Boston Red Sox for Jeff Manto.  Two days later, he would make his Red Sox debut, getting his first major league hit and RBI in a 16-6 loss to the Twins.  Two days later, he would hit his first career triple and add three more RBIs in a 9-5 win over the Twins.

I actually have this
baseball card!
The next day, Pozo would make his second start at second base for the Red Sox.  He would have an RBI groundout in the top of the seventh, bringing closing the gap to 6-4 in favor of the Twins.  The Twins would add three in the bottom of the eighth, seeming putting the game out of reach.  The Twins’ Greg Hansell gave up a single to Troy O’Leary and a walk to Mike Stanley, before being relieved by Eddie Guardado.  Guardado himself walked Jeff Frye before Pozo stepped to the plate.  In the last game of the Kevin Mitchell era in Boston, Pozo jumped all over an 0-1 pitch from Guardado and sent it over the left field wall, unloading the bases and pulling the Red Sox within a run.  John Valentin would add a single off of new reliever Dan Naulty before Mo Vaughn grounded into a double play and Mitchell flew out to left field to end the game.

Pozo’s grand slam that day would be the high point of his career.  He would add a hit in his next two games, but would go hitless in 22 at bats across nine games in August.  He would be sent down to AAA Pawtucket to finish out the minor league season, where he hit .243 with one home run.  He would return to Boston for the rest of the season, getting four more hits in 16 at bats.  For the major league season, he would end up hitting .172 with one home run and 11 RBIs.

Most of the 1997 season saw Pozo back in Pawtucket.  There, mainly playing third base, he hit .284 with 22 home runs.  He would only play in four games in Boston, hitting .267 with no home runs in 17 plate appearances across four games.  He would remain in Boston’s system for the 1998 campaign, hitting .305 with 12 home runs at Pawtucket.

At this point, he was done with baseball in America.  He would play in Japan for the Yokohama Bay Stars in 1999, appearing on the same team as Bobby Rose, who hit .369 with 37 home runs and 153 RBIs that season, the second most in Japanese baseball history.  Pozo himself didn’t have a bad year, hitting .297 with nine home runs.  In 2000, he would split his time between Mexico and Korea, where he hit a combined .238 with 10 home runs.  That would be his last season in professional ball – at age 26, he was done.  Pozo’s stay in the majors was brief, and although he only hit .189 overall, his 14 hits in 26 major league games included six extra base hits, and he drove in 14 runs.

Tony Rodriguez

This is the only image
the internet can find of
Tony Rodriguez.  Time
has forgotten him.
Tony Rodriguez was drafted in the 10th round of the 1991 draft by the Boston Red Sox, 19 spots behind today’s first victim – Allen Battle.  Upon his signing, the infielder would be assigned to low A Elmira, where he hit .257 with one home run, adding 29 stolen bases vs. just being caught four times.  This earned him a promotion to high A Lynchburg for the 1992 season.  There, he found himself overmatched, hitting .223 with one home run.  His stolen base total fell to 11, and he was caught six times.  All of this while striking out 84 times vs. drawing a walk only 25 times.

Apparently, the Red Sox saw something in Rodriguez, as they promoted him to AA New Britain in 1993.  He would not not disappoint, hitting .228 with no home runs.  His days as a stolen base threat were basically over, as he stole eight bases against being caught seven times.  He would play for three teams in 1994.  He had 15 games at high A Sarasota, where he hit .224, six games at AA New Britain, where he hit .150, and 64 games at Pawtucket, where he hit .254 with four home runs.  At Pawtucket, he only drew five walks in 183 plate appearances with 22 strikeouts.  He would return to Pawtucket in 1995, firmly establishing himself as a known quantity, hitting .268 with no home runs.

In 1996, Rodriguez would again play most of his season in Pawtucket, where he would hit .245 with three home runs.  Mysteriously, the Red Sox would call him up in early July.  The only reason I can see is they needed to make room for Nomar Garciaparra while he was raking at Pawtucket.  Whatever the reason, Rodriguez would make his major league debut on July 6th as a pinch runner for Mike Stanley in a 4-3 loss to the Baltimore Orioles.  Six days later, he would get his first major league at bat, where he struck out facing the Tigers’ Gregg Olson in the ninth inning of an 11-3 loss.  He would get his first major league hit and RBI on July 25th in the bottom of the ninth against Greg Hansell, putting the finishing touches on a 16-6 loss to the Twins.

On August 7th, Rodriguez would get the start at shortstop, hitting ninth (one spot ahead of Arquimedez Pozo).  He would ground out in his first at bat, but would step to the plate with the bases loaded in the bottom of the fourth inning, singling home Mike Greenwell and Troy O’Leary.  In his next at bat in the bottom of the seventh, he would deposit a 1-0 pitch over the Green Monster off of Blue Jays’ starter Pat Hentgen, who was on his way to winning the Cy Young Award that year.  Red Sox’ starter Tom Gordon would throw the third of his four career shutouts that day, three-hitting the Blue Jays on the way to an 8-0 victory.  The first hit that Gordon surrendered that day was to Ed Sprague, on a 3-0 count (nice).

Rodriguez would actually get the majority of starts at shortstop for the Red Sox in August of 1996.  Then August 31st happened.  Garciaparra would make his major league debut.  The next day, Garciaparra would have three hits, including his first career home run.  Rodriguez would only appear in two more games the rest of the season – once as a defensive replacement, and once as a pinch hitter.  He would finish the season hitting .239 with one home run.  For the 1997 season, he would return to Pawtucket, where in 82 games, he hit .249 with two home runs.  In 298 plate appearances, he only walked nine times, with 47 strikeouts.  The 23 year old Garciaparra would lead the league in hits and triples, while hitting .306 with 30 home runs and winning Rookie of the Year.  No longer in the market for a shortstop, the Red Sox cut Rodriguez loose after that season.

After spending just 13 games with the Seattle Mariners’ AA affiliate in Orlando, where he hit just .220, Rodriguez found himself heading to independent baseball in 1998.  He would play with the Nashua Pride through most of the 2001 season, hitting a combined .279 with 24 home runs.  He would play in 33 games for the Chicago Cubs’ AA affiliate in West Tennessee at the end of 2001, where he hit .282 with one home run.  Over the next four years, he would return to independent ball, where he would hit a combined .256 with 12 home runs.  Truly a jack of all trades, over the years, he would play every position except catcher.  In his pitching trials, he threw seven innings, allowing 14 hits and five runs, with one walk, three strikeouts and one hit batsman.

There you have it!  That’s the first round of players that hit career highs in home runs in 1996.  Our next look will include the 20th Indiana Hoosier to play in the majors, a number two draft pick (of sorts), and a handful of other guys that set their single season career high in home runs with two.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

There is Nothing to Save


In the history of baseball, there have been 26 guys that have 300 or more saves.  Only five have saved more than 400.  If you look at active players, Joe Nathan could get to that number with one more decent season.  Francisco Rodriguez and Jonathan Papelbon should finish around there at the end of the 2016 season.  But we’re not here to talk about those guys.  Today, we’re looking at a guy that barely hit 300.  And, like I do a lot of times around here, I’ll speculate it’s probably because of bad timing and/or bad luck that he didn’t have more.  Today’s subject is Doug Jones.

Jones was drafted in the third round of the 1978 Major League Baseball draft by the Milwaukee Brewers out of Central Arizona College in Coolidge, AZ.  The Vaqueros have produced a total of 16 major leaguers, including Scott Hairston, Ian Kinsler and Tom Pagnozzi, but have produced an astounding 152 draft picks since 1972.  Only five other players from the third round in 1978 made the majors, combining for 24 career WAR, vs. 21.8 career WAR from Jones.
Upon signing with the Brewers, Jones was assigned to A- ball Newark.  Despite being slightly older than league average, he struggled in his first taste of professional ball, going 2-4 with a 5.21 ERA in 38 innings in 15 games, with 15 walks and two saves.  Three of his games were starts, and he completed one of them.  He had an unknown number of strikeouts, because that would have been too hard to keep count.  Being New Jersey, the scorekeeper was probably too busy embezzling or gardening.

How could the defense
respect a pitcher
without a mustache?
By the time 1979 rolled around, Jones was 22, and the Brewers figured it was time to move him up, even if his prior year stats were less than impressive.  He would be promoted to A ball Burlington, and he would do much better.  Although he only went 10-10, he had a fantastic 1.75 ERA in 190 innings across 28 games, with 115 strikeouts vs. 73 walks.  He started 20 games that year, and completed 16 with three shutouts.  He likely would have had more wins that season if 42% of the runs he allowed that season were not of the unearned variety.

Jones was quickly moved up the ladder in 1980, and he was used exclusively as a starter that year.  He started the season in A ball Stockton, where he went 6-2 with a 2.84 ERA in 76 innings across 11 games, with 54 strikeouts vs. 31 walks.  He was then promoted to AA Holyoke, where he went 5-3 with a 2.90 ERA in 62 innings across eight games, with 39 strikeouts vs. 26 walks.  He then advanced to AAA Vancouver, where he went 3-2 with a 3.23 ERA in 53 innings across eight games, with 28 strikeouts vs. 15 walks.  Overall, he went 14-7 with a 2.97 ERA in 191 innings across 27 games, with 121 strikeouts vs. 72 walks.  He had 10 complete games with two shutouts.

Jones would find himself back in AA to start 1981, this time in El Paso.  He would go 5-7 with a 5.80 ERA in 90 innings across 15 games, with 62 strikeouts vs. 28 walks.  Still, the Brewers promoted him back to Vancouver, where he was able to right the ship.  He went 5-3 with a 3.04 ERA in 80 innings across 11 games, with 38 strikeouts vs. 22 walks.  Overall, he went 10-10 with a 4.50 ERA in 170 innings across 26 games.  All but one of those games were starts, and he had five complete games with one shutout.

In 1982, Jones would actually start the season with the big club.  He would make his Major League debut on April 9th that season.  In a 15-4 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays, Jones quickly retired Tony Johnson, Lloyd Moseby and Willie Upshaw in the bottom of the ninth to finish the game.  Two days later, again in mop up duty in a 14-5 victory over the Blue Jays, he allowed a solo home run to Ernie Whitt, a single to Damaso Garcia and a walk to Otto Velez, but that was all the Blue Jays could get against him that day.  Three days later, he would get his first career strikeout, getting the Indians Chris Bando.  He would pitch his last major league game of the season four days later, when he allowed two runs on two hits in a third of an inning in a 9-6 loss to the Texas Rangers.  In those four games, he no record, throwing 2.2 innings in four games with a 10.13 ERA, with one strikeout and one walk.

Jones was sent back down to AAA Vancouver for the remainder of the 1982 season.  At age 25, he was right in line with the league average age, but the mix of younger guys and older guys probably had him wondering what his major league future would be like, if he had one at all.  The Brewers still couldn’t decide what they wanted to do with him in Vancouver.  There, he went 5-8 with a 2.97 ERA in 106 innings across 23 games, with 60 strikeouts vs. 31 walks.  He started nine games, throwing four complete games and two shutouts, and he also had two saves.
Jones was injured for much of the 1983 season.  He only threw seven innings in three games, going 0-1 with a 10.29 ERA, with four strikeouts and five walks at AAA Vancouver.

In 1984, he was back in AA El Paso for most of the season.  He went 6-8 with a 4.28 ERA in 109.1 innings across 16 games, with 62 strikeouts vs. 35 walks.  He started all 16 games, and completed seven of them.  He was then promoted to AAA Vancouver, where he went 1-0 with a 10.12 ERA in eight innings across three games, with two strikeouts vs. three walks.  He pitched all three games in relief.
After the 1984 season, Jones was granted free agency.  In early April of 1985, he signed with the Cleveland Indians.  He would spend all of that season at AA Waterbury, going 9-4 with a 3.65 ERA in 116 innings across 39 games, with 113 strikeouts vs. 36 walks.  He only started one game, finished 35 games, and had one save.

In 1986, back with the Indians organization, he found himself at AAA Maine.  There, he went 5-6 with a 2.09 ERA in 116.1 innings across 43 games, with 98 strikeouts vs. 27 walks.  He started three of those games, finished 21 games, and had nine saves.
His performance at Maine earned him a September callup.  More than four years after his last major league appearance, the 29 year old Jones would pitch in his fifth Major League game on September 5th.It was a shaky return, as he gave up three runs on three hits and a walk, with three strikeouts, in 1.1 innings in a 13-5 loss to his old team, the Brewers.  Nine days later, he would earn his first career save in a 5-2 victory over the Oakland A’s.  Twelve days after that, he would earn his first career win.  He would throw the final two innings of a 12 inning victory over the Seattle Mariners.  In the top of the 12th, Otis Nixon hit a one out double, stole his 55th career base, and was knocked in with a Brook Jacoby triple.  Jacoby would score on a throwing error, and Jones would shut the door in the bottom of the frame, with the Indians winning 9-7.

After giving up five runs in his first three appearances back in the majors, Jones ended the month throwing 14.1 scoreless innings in his final eight games.  Overall, he went 1-0 with a 2.50 ERA in 18 innings across 11 games, with 12 strikeouts vs. six walks, and one save.  The Indians that season went 84-78, which may get you a playoff berth in 2014, but in 1986, that meant a fifth place finish, 11.5 games back of the Boston Red Sox.  Despite 84 wins, the Cleveland bullpen only had 34 saves.  Tom Candiotti didn’t help things, as he completed exactly half of his 34 starts that season, only three of which were shutouts.  Things were about to get better for Jones.  Things were about to get worse for the Indians.

Jones would start the 1987 in Cleveland, where he would stay for most of the month of April.  Being used as primarily a middle reliver, he threw 14 innings across seven games, going 0-1 with a 5.79 ERA, with 15 strikeouts vs. nine walks.  The Indians’ defense didn’t help him any, as only nine of the 16 runs he allowed were earned.  With only one of his seven appearances being scoreless, he was sent down to AAA Buffalo, where he seemed to quickly work out his issues.  There, he threw 61.2 innings across 23 games, going 5-2 with a 2.04 ERA and seven saves, with 61 strikeouts vs. just 12 walks.
When Jones was called back to Cleveland, they were riding a six game losing streak where they were outscored 52-18, with a record of 25-47 overall.  Jones, always a team player, helped contribute to the cause by allowing six earned runs in 2.2 innings over his first two appearances back in the majors.  Starting with his next appearance on July 2nd, through the end of the season, he was very good.  He would get the win in three of the next five games in which he pitched.  He would only allow more than one earned run in two games the rest of the season.  He would finish 6-5 with a 3.15 ERA in 91.1 innings across 49 games, with 87 strikeouts vs. 24 walks, and eight saves.  His eight saves actually led the Indians, who only had 25 saves a team on their way to finishing 61-101.  He actually fell one win short of being tied for the team lead in wins with Candiotti, Scott Bailes, and 48 year old Phil Niekro.

By the time 1988 rolled around, Jones was officially the Indians closer.  He didn’t allow a run in five April appearances, earning four saves.  On May 1st, he allowed six earned runs, losing to the A’s 8-4.  He wouldn’t allow another run the rest of May, adding an additional seven saves.  At the end of June, he had only allowed one additional run, with a total of 18 saves and a 1.75 ERA.  Despite not being as untouchable the rest of the season, he still finished the year at 3-4 with a 2.27 ERA in 83.1 innings across 51 games, with 72 strikeouts vs. just 16 walks, and 37 saves.  He was an All Star, and finished 15th in the AL MVP voting.  The Indians were still not good, finishing 78-84, but they were much less not good with Jones at the back end of the bullpen.
Jones was back doing Jones things in 1989.  At the end of June, he had allowed the exact same number of earned runs (seven) and had the same number of saves (18) as he did the previous year, with his ERA only slightly higher at 1.89.  By the middle of July, his ERA would fall to 1.42.  He had a rough patch between July 17th and August 1st, where he gave up nine earned runs in seven innings, going 1-3 with two saves and three blown saves.  After that stretch though, he got back on track, with a 1.53 ERA for the remainder of the season.  Overall, he was 7-10(!) with a 2.34 ERA in 80.2 innings across 59 games, with 65 strikeouts vs. 13 walks, and 32 saves.  His efforts again resulted in an All Star appearance.  The Indians finished 73-89, 16 games back of the first place Blue Jays, tied for the third worst record in the American League.

Jones started the 1990 campaign on fire.  Through May 15th, he threw 20 innings across 15 appearances without allowing a run, earning 13 saves.  At the end of June, Jones had yet again allowed a total of seven earned runs on the season for the third straight year.  However, this time, he had increased his saves total to 22, with a 1.50 ERA.  He wouldn’t allow a run the entire month of July, and on August 22nd, his ERA sat at 1.29.  Then came trouble.  In his next appearance, he allowed three runs, losing to the Red Sox 6-5.  Two days later, he allowed SEVEN runs on three hits and FIVE WALKS in one inning, losing again to the Red Sox, this time 9-2.  Over his next three appearances, he would allow three more earned runs in four innings, giving him an 18.90 ERA over that five game stretch.  The Indians stuck with him though, and through his last 12 appearances of the season, he only allowed one earned run in 15 innings, good for a 0.60 ERA.  In total that season, he was 5-5 with a 2.56 ERA in 84.1 innings across 66 games, with 55 strikeouts vs. 22 walks, with a career high 43 saves.  He was once again an All Star, and finished 23rd in the AL MVP voting.  The Indians were slightly better, finishing at 77-85, but still well behind the first place Red Sox.

1991 would mark the last year in Cleveland for Jones.  Well, for a few years anyway.  He never could quite get it going that season.  After allowing six earned runs on May 10th in a 12-2 loss to the California Angels, his ERA hit a season high 11.32.  He would make his last relief appearance on July 16th, losing to the A’s 7-6 in 13 innings, dropping his record to 1-7 on the season.  Whoa there, back up, friend.  Last RELIEF appearance?  What does that mean?
Whether it was injury, or just something mechanical, Jones would next pitch at AAA Colorado Springs.  There, he went 2-2 with a 3.28 ERA in 35.2 innings across 17 games, with 29 strikeouts vs. five walks, and seven saves.  Two of those games were starts, and one was a complete game shutout, his first complete game and shutout since pitching at AAA Vancouver in 1982.

At this point, I’m assuming the Indians had already made up their minds that Jones wouldn’t be back the following year.  Why?  In his first game back on September 10th, Jones fell one inning short of a complete game, only allowing two runs in a 5-2 victory over the Brewers.  He threw 139 pitches.  I guess if you’re not bringing him back, there’s no need to look at pitch count.  A week later, Jones would scatter nine hits and two walks over eight innings of one run ball, striking out 13 in a 3-1 win over the Detroit Tigers.  He would throw 133 pitches that game.  Eight days later, he would beat the Tigers again, this time allowing four runs in seven innings of a 6-4 victory.  A week later, he would lose to the Brewers 11-4, allowing six runs in 7.1 innings.  In his final appearance on October 5th, he earned a save in the 12th inning in a 7-5 victory over the New York Yankees.  With a broken Jones, and no plan B, the 1991 Cleveland Indians finished 57-105.  They had 33 saves, and 18 blown saves.  At least no one noticed – they averaged less than 13,000 fans per game.  Jones finished 4-8 (but 3-1 as a starter!) with a 5.54 ERA in 63.1 innings across 36 games, with 48 strikeouts vs. 17 walks, and seven saves.
Jones would sign with the Houston Astros for the 1992 season.  Jones opened the season with 9.2 scoreless innings across seven appearances for the Astros.  By the end of June, he was 4-5 with 17 saves and a 2.09 ERA.  He would lead the team in wins and saves in July, with four of each.  He was exceptional down the stretch, going 3-0 with eight saves and a 0.83 ERA in September.  Jones led the Astros that season in wins, going 11-8 with a career low 1.85 ERA in 111.2 innings across 80 games, with 93 strikeouts vs. 17 walks, and 36 saves.  He was a big part of the Astros improvement, when they went 81-81, 16 wins better than the previous season.  Still, he would have had many more save opportunities if he wasn’t busy earning wins.  He was again an All Star, and he finished 14th in the NL MVP voting.

In 1993, Jones would find himself back in Houston.  Through June 12th, when he would earn his 13th save of the season, he had an ERA of 3.13.  Then, the wheels came off.  He allowed 12 earned runs on 20 hits over 4.2 innings over his next four appearances, good for a 23.14 ERA.  For the remainder of the season, he would have a rough outing here and there, but he had a 3.74 ERA with 13 more saves.  He finished the season 4-10 with a 4.54 ERA in 85.1 innings across 71 games, with 66 strikeouts vs. 21 walks, and 26 saves.  Other than his brief appearances in 1982 and 1986, this was the first time that he was on a team that finished over .500, as the Astros finished 85-77, so his struggles that season were certainly a case of bad luck.
Jones quickly adopted
the "Phillies" look.
Before the start of the 1994 season, Jones was traded with Jeff Juden to the Philadelphia Phillies for Mitch Williams.Being that the Phillies were the defending National League champions, surely this was the opportunity for Jones to finally be on a winner, and even taste the postseason.  Unfortunately, this would not be the case.  He had two bad games the first half of the season – a four run outing on May 10th in a loss to the Braves, and a three run outing on June 30th in a loss to the Dodgers – but other than that, he was solid.  At the end of June, he had 20 saves with a 2.33 ERA.  He would only have another six weeks to play, due to the strike that season, but over that time frame, he added an additional seven saves with a 1.76 ERA.  If you take out the two games listed above, he only allowed six earned runs in his additional 45 appearances.  Overall, he was 2-4 with a 2.17 ERA in 54 innings across 47 games, with 38 strikeouts vs. just six walks, with 27 saves.  He would make the All Star team for the fifth and final time of his career.  The Phillies would finish 54-61.  Once again, Jones had very little to save.

The now 38 year old Jones would sign with the Orioles for the 1995 campaign.  His return to the American League did not go smoothly.  At the end of June, he only had 11 saves with a 4.12 ERA.  His July was a little better, as he had eight saves with a 2.92 ERA, but in his first three appearances in August, he allowed 10 runs in just two innings.  He would only have four appearances and two saves September.  He finished the year at 0-4 with a 5.01 ERA in 46.2 innings across 52 games, with 42 strikeouts vs. 16 walks, and 22 saves.  Most were probably wondering if this was the end of the road for him, probably even Jones himself.  The Orioles finished 71-73.
In 1996, Jones would return to the National League for the start of the season, signing with the Chicago Cubs.  He would only last there through mid-June, when he had two saves vs. five blown saves, and a 5.01 ERA.  At the end of June, the Brewers resigned their former player.  In his first appearance back with them after 14 years away, he got his first hold of the season in a 4-3 win over the Mariners.  With the Brewers, he went 5-0 with a 3.41 ERA and two holds, one save and three blown saves.  Between the Cubs and Brewers, he went 7-2 with a 4.22 ERA in 64 innings across 52 games, with 60 strikeouts vs. 20 walks, and just three saves.  With the Cubs and Brewers having Turk Wendell and Mike Fetters at the back end of their bullpen, there were few save opportunities for Jones.  Both teams finished under .500.

Jones became a free agent, but resigned with the Brewers for the 1997 season.  At age 40, he had perhaps his finest season.  At the end of June, he had 19 saves, with only one blown save, and a 2.68 ERA.  He would make a quick trip to the disabled list the second half of July.  In his third appearance back, he gave up a run in a loss to the A’s on August 7th.  He wouldn’t give up another run until his final appearance of the season on September 27th, a streak that covered 27 innings in 23 games.  Overall, he went 6-6 with a 2.02 ERA in 80.1 innings across 75 games, with 82 strikeouts vs. just nine walks, and 36 saves.  He didn’t make the All Star team, but he did finish 20th in the AL MVP voting.  He finished 73 of the games he appeared in, leading the league and setting a career high.  He also set career highs in K/9 (9.18) and BB/9 (0.99), and he set career lows in H/9 (6.9) and WHIP (0.884).  He was player of the week for the week of July 13th, where he earned three saves in three innings in three games, only allowing one hit and striking out two.  OK, it was the short half-week after the All Star break.  It was a good belated 40th birthday present.  Despite Jones’ career-season efforts, the Brewers finished 78-83.

The Brewers would bring their talents to the National League for the 1998 season.  Jones would start the season with them, but he wouldn’t be nearly as effective as the previous season.  He would have a blown save in the first and last two appearances in April, and by the end of June, he had eight total, with 12 actual saves, along with a 4.21 ERA.  He would only make four appearances for the Brewers in July, allowing nine runs in seven innings, including five in an 11-6 loss to the Atlanta Braves on July 19th.  Four days later, he was traded back to the Indians for Eric Plunk.  With Michael Jackson on his way to a 40 save season, there was no full time save opportunities for Jones, but he did return to respectability.  After rolling up a 5.17 ERA with the Brewers, he brought it down to 3.45 with the Indians.  He would earn his final save with the Indians on August 31st, throwing 3.1 innings of shutout ball in a 15-6 win over the A’s.
While Jones was probably happy to be back in Cleveland, reliving his youth, he was probably more excited he was on a winner.  The Indians went 89-73, earning them a showdown with the Red Sox in the ALDS.  Jones would relieve starter Jaret Wright in the first game of the series.  Wright gave up six runs in 4.1 innings, and Jones wasn’t exactly sharp.  He allowed a two run home run to Mo Vaughn, which would be his only blemish in 2.2 innings pitched that day.  The Indians would go on to lose Game 1 11-3, but they would win the next three games to advance to the ALCS.  Jones was left off of the roster, and the Indians would go on to lose to the Yankees in six games.  For the season, between Milwaukee and Cleveland, Jones combined to go 4-6 with a 4.54 ERA in 85.1 innings in 69 games, with 71 strikeouts vs. 17 walks, with 13 saves.

Jones would head out west in 1999, joining the A’s.  He did a fine job that season, setting up closer Billy Taylor, and providing veteran leadership.  At the end of June, he would have three saves and six holds, with a 3.20 ERA.  He had a rough August, with an ERA of 6.88, but he finished the season strong with a 1.32 ERA in September.  The A’s finished the season 87-75, but that wasn’t good enough to win the AL West, finishing eight games back of the Rangers.  Jones would finish the season at 5-5 with a 3.55 ERA across 104 innings in 70 games, with 63 strikeouts vs. 24 walks, with 10 saves.  He was the second oldest player in the league, less than two months younger than Jessie Orosco, and his 70 games pitched were 10th most in the league.

The 2000 season would be Jones’ last year in the majors.  It didn’t start out too well, as he gave up three or more runs in three different games through is first 15 appearances.  After the last one, his ERA sat at 7.52 on May 21st.  He got things back in order for the rest of the season, with a 2.55 ERA through the rest of the season.  He would earn his last career save in a 10-4 win over the San Diego Padres on June 7th, and his last career win came in a 9-7 win over the Angels on September 27th.  The A’s finished the season at 91-70.  The Mariners also had 91 wins, but they also had one more loss.  The A’s were awarded first place due to winning the season series.  They would lose in the ALDS to the Yankees, but Jones would have two scoreless appearances in the series, finishing Games 2 and 4 in non-save situations.  Overall for the season, he went 4-2 with a 3.93 ERA in 73.1 innings across 54 games, with 54 strikeouts vs. 18 walks, with two saves.
For his career, Jones went 69-79 with a 3.30 ERA in 1128.1 innings across 846 games, with 909 strikeouts vs. just 247 walks, and 303 saves.  Of his walks, 53 of them were intentional.  His unintentional walk rate was 1.57/9 innings.  His career K/9 innings rate of 7.251 ranks 100th all time, but his career K/BB rate of 3.68 is 10th all time.  His saves total is 24th all time, two places and seven saves behind Hall of Famer Rich Gossage, and one place and three saves ahead of Hall of Famer Bruce Sutter.

1.  Grow an epic mustache.
2.  Save a lot of games.
3.  PROFIT.
When the Hall of Fame came calling for Jones in 2006, he only received 0.4% of the vote.  This was not nearly high enough to continue on the ballot, so he fell off after that one year.  Ironically enough, this was the same year that Sutter and Gossage were elected, while fellow relievers John Wetteland and Rick Aguilera also dropped off the ballot.  There were a lot of “Ifs” working against Jones to have a shot at the hall.  If he had started earlier, if he had been on better teams, if he had save opportunities when he was on a good team, etc.

Not counting his brief appearance in 1982, Jones’ teams combined for a .484 winning percentage over his career.  What if he had been on better teams?  If they could have kicked that up to around .520, that would have equaled roughly 83 more wins over 15 years.  Even if you figure a conservative 35% conversion rate for those additional wins, that would give him close to 30 more saves.  Would 330+ saves have helped his cause?  Wetteland would like to point out that his 330 saves did nothing to convince the writers.  But Hall of Famer Rollie Fingers, sitting in with 341 saves, might object.
NO MUELLER YOU'RE
DOING IT ALL WRONG
LOOK AT THE BALL
NOT THE CAMERA!!!
Maybe if Jones had more pickoffs, he could have made the Hall of Fame.  Through his 809th game on May 31st, 2000, he had never had a pickoff.  That changed in game 810 on June 2nd.  He entered the game in the top of the seventh, relieving starter T.J. Mathews.  After getting Jeff Kent to fly out to right, he picked off Barry Bonds, who had singled and knocked Mathews out of the game.  Bill Mueller walked to lead off the inning, but he was stranded at third after Jones got Ellis Burks to ground out to short.  Jones would then come out of the game in the eighth, but would earn the hold after Jason Isringhausen earned career save number 21, and the A’s won 5-4 over the San Francisco Giants.

Perhaps if he had been more of an offensive force, he may have also got some votes.  He only had one career hit in eight plate appearances.  This was in a 6-4 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on May 12th, 1994.  After entering the game in the bottom of the eighth, he came to bat in the top of the ninth with one out.  He singled off of Dan Miceli to right field, and reached second on a wild pitch to Lenny Dykstra.  Dykstra would then walk, and then Miceli hit Mariano Duncan.  Jones could smell his first career run coming on, but it was not to be.  Dave Hollins popped out to catcher, and Darren Daulton struck out swinging, stranding the bases loaded.  Jones shut the door in the bottom of the frame for the save.

When you look back at his career, Jones was a very good closer on some very bad teams.  In other words, there was nothing to save.  Good thing he had some epic facial hair to mask his tears.