Tim Wakefield
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Timothy Stephen (Tim) Wakefield (born August 2, 1966 in Melbourne, Florida) is a right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball who has played with the Boston Red Sox since 1995. He throws a specialty pitch, the knuckleball.
Wakefield began his minor league career as a corner infielder. He played this position until a scout told him that he would never get above AA ball with his skills. Wakefield then began experimenting with various other positions and developed the knuckleball that has made him so well known.
He started his major league career with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1992, and signed as a free agent with the Boston Red Sox in 1995. He won 17 games in his first year with the Red Sox and helped them win a division title. His longevity and consistency have helped him quietly become one of the top pitchers in Red Sox history. Wakefield is currently the longest-serving member of the Boston team.
Over his career, Wakefield has pitched in multiple roles, including starter, middle reliever, and closer.
In the 2003 ALCS, Wakefield was one of the most formidable pitchers against the Yankees, allowing only three runs in 13 innings. He started Games One and Four of the Series, with the Red Sox winning both. He was also called in to pitch in extra innings of Game Seven, after the Yankees tied the game. The Red Sox had been leading 5–2 in the eighth inning. After retiring the side in order in the 10th, Wakefield gave up a home run to Aaron Boone on his first pitch of the 11th, sending the Yankees to the World Series. Wakefield apologized to fans after the game.
In 2004, Wakefield helped the Red Sox exact revenge by winning the ALCS against the Yankees, a best-of-seven series to advance to the World Series. He helped save the wearied Boston bullpen by pitching 3.1 meaningless innings in a blowout Game Three defeat, which put the Red Sox in a 3-0 series hole. In Game Five, he was the winning pitcher in 14 inning thriller, throwing three shutout innings as the Red Sox won 5–4. He pitched Game One of the Series but did not get a decision as Boston defeated the Cardinals, 11–9, after a two-run home run from Mark Bellhorn in the eighth inning.
On April 19, 2005, Wakefield agreed to a $4 million, one-year contract extension through 2006 that gives the Red Sox the ability to keep their longest-tenured player for the rest of his career.
Facts
- Wakefield is one of ten Red Sox pitchers with 100 or more wins (131), ranking third behind Cy Young and Roger Clemens (tied with 192). The others are Mel Parnell (123), Luis Tiant (122), Pedro Martínez (117), Smokey Joe Wood (116), Bob Stanley (115), Joe Dobson (106) and Lefty Grove (105).
- He has been on the Red Sox longer than any of his current teammates.
- For several years, his personal catcher was Doug Mirabelli. Mirabelli used a league-approved mitt similar to a softball catcher's mitt for catching Wakefield. Josh Bard is his new catcher in the 2006 season.
- On August 8, 2004, Wakefield gave up six home runs to the Detroit Tigers, becoming the first pitcher to do so since 1947. The Red Sox still managed to win the game, though, 11–9, and he got the win.
- On September 11, 2005, he set his career high in strikeouts (12) in a 1–0 complete game loss to the New York Yankees.
- He is one of just a few pitchers in history to strike out four batters in one inning. This is possible because a passed ball on a swinging strike counts as a strikeout, but the batter is allowed to run to first base in the event that the catcher cannot come up with the ball. Because the fluttering knuckleball produces many passed balls, several knuckleballers share this honor with Wakefield.
- Tim has been quoted as saying that," my dad's best friend Brad Sutton was my inspiration growing up as a kid. He taught me everything I know about tossing the knuckler."
- His fastball tops out well under 80 mph.
- Due to overwhelming support of fans on a Red Sox Message Board, Wakefield was added to the banner on the team’s official website, which is considered an honor. [1]
- He is skilled in calligraphy and often uses it to commemorate special events for his teammates. [2]
Sources
- MLB - daily updates
- ESPN - profile
- ESPN - news archive
- Baseball Library - biography and highlights
- Baseball Reference - statistics and analysisja:ティム・ウェイクフィールド