Mike Timlin
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Michael August (Mike) Timlin (born March 10, 1966 in Midland, Texas) is a middle relief pitcher in Major League Baseball who plays for the Boston Red Sox since 2003. Previously, he played for the Toronto Blue Jays (1991-1997[start]), Seattle Mariners (1997[end]-1998), Baltimore Orioles (1999-2000[start]), St. Louis Cardinals (2000[end]-2002[start]) and Philadelphia Phillies (2002[end]). He bats and throws right handed.
An important man in the Boston bullpen, Timlin has a good command of his 93-MPH fastball. He also throws a decent slider and a sinker that have a downward break, so he induces a significant number of ground balls. He keeps runners close enough to give his catcher a chance. Defensively, he is below average.
In 2004 Timlin made 76 pitching appearances, the third most in Red Sox history and tied for fourth in American League history. On September 3, he made his 800th major league appearance, becoming only the 29th pitcher in majors history to reach that mark.
As of 2005, Timlin is the only active player to have played on three non-New York Yankees championship teams (the 1992 and 1993 Toronto Blue Jays and the 2004 World Series Boston Red Sox).
In a 15-year career, Timlin has compiled a 63-62 record with 130 saves and a 3.50 ERA in 893 games.
Facts
- Mike Timlin ended the 1992 season as a genuine hero to an entire nation. Not only did he save the game that gave Toronto -and Canada- its first world title, but he made the final play himself on Otis Nixon's spine-tingling bunt.- STATS, Inc., 1994.
- In 2002, Timlin was send by the Cardinals to the Phillies in the same trade that brought Scott Rolen to St. Louis.
See also
Sources
- Baseball Reference - statistics and analysis
- ESPN - profile and daily updates
- Mike Timlin Appreciation Page
- MLB - player page
Categories: Baltimore Orioles players | Boston Red Sox players | 1992 Toronto Blue Jays World Series Championship Team | 1993 Toronto Blue Jays World Series Championship Team | 2004 Boston Red Sox World Series Championship Team | Philadelphia Phillies players | St. Louis Cardinals players | Seattle Mariners players | Toronto Blue Jays players | Major league pitchers | People from Texas | 1966 births | Living people | 2006 World Baseball Classic players of the United States