Roger McDowell

Roger McDowell

Infobox MLB retired
name=Roger McDowell


caption=McDowell, as pitching coach for the Braves in 2007
width=190
position=Pitcher
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date and age|1960|12|21
Cincinnati, Ohio
debutdate=April 11
debutyear=by|1985
debutteam=New York Mets
finaldate=August 14
finalyear=by|1996
finalteam=Baltimore Orioles
stat1label=Win-Loss record
stat1value=70-70
stat2label=Earned run average
stat2value=3.30
stat3label=Saves
stat3value=159
teams=
* New York Mets (by|1985-by|1989)
* Philadelphia Phillies (by|1989-by|1991)
* Los Angeles Dodgers (by|1991-by|1994)
* Texas Rangers (by|1995)
* Baltimore Orioles (by|1996)
highlights=
* World Series champion (1986)

Roger Alan McDowell (born December 21 1960) is the pitching coach of the Atlanta Braves and was a right-handed relief pitcher for twelve seasons in Major League Baseball from 1985 to 1996. He played for the New York Mets, Philadelphia Phillies and Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League and the Texas Rangers and Baltimore Orioles of the American League. McDowell was a key component in the 1986 World Series champion New York Mets and was the winning pitcher in the deciding Game 7.

Prankster reputation

While McDowell was a stable Major League-level pitcher, he was also notorious in the league and among fans as a prankster who would light firecrackers in the dugout and light matches hidden under teammates' cleats. This was known as the Hot Foot. During a nationally televised game, he was filmed with his uniform on upside down – his pants over his head with his shoes on his hands. He also took part in an on-field mariachi band and wore earrings in the clubhouse to protest Cincinnati Reds' owner Marge Schott's banning of earrings.

In 1992, McDowell made a cameo appearance in a two-part episode of Seinfeld called "". The episode starred McDowell's ex-teammate, Keith Hernandez, and featured McDowell as a grassy knoll-type figure spitting on Cosmo Kramer and Newman during a Zapruder film parody after Kramer and Newman insulted Hernandez.

McDowell also made several appearances on the MTV series of Rock 'n Jock softball games, often donning humorous costumes such as kilts and wigs.

In the television show, Seinfeld, McDowell was named as the second spitter.

New York Mets (through 1989)

Roger McDowell was born in Cincinnati, Ohio and was acquired by the Mets in the third round of the by|1982 Major League Baseball Draft. He spent 1982 in the A-level minor leagues and spent by|1983 with the AA Jackson Mets, both as a starting pitcher. In by|1984, McDowell was at Jackson when he suffered an elbow injury which limited him to only three games. As a result of the injury, he became a relief pitcher and developed a fantastic sinker ball that became the main weapon in his arsenal for his entire career.

McDowell debuted in the majors in by|1985. He was impressive as both a middle relief pitcher and as a closer, splitting the duties with Jesse Orosco. Orosco was a lefty and a strikeout threat while McDowell was a righty and a groundball specialist, making them a challenging pair late in games. McDowell posted a 2.83 earned run average. The Mets continued on an upward surge that saw them barely miss their first postseason in over a decade. McDowell averaged more than two innings pitched per appearance in his rookie season and even logged the only two games started of his career. He never again averaged more than two innings per appearance and, through most of his career, averaged less than one-and-a-half inning, as became customary throughout the majors.

In by|1986, McDowell was again impressive and was part of a strong core of Mets farm-hands — players that had come up through the minor leagues in the Mets' system — which, together with a few fiery veterans, helped the Mets win the 1986 World Series. McDowell was involved in many close games, posting an amazing 23 pitching decisions despite never starting a game. His 14-9 record, which included winning his first seven decisions, and 3.02 ERA resulted in five points in the voting for National League MVP. McDowell was fantastic in the 1986 National League Championship Series, allowing a single hit in seven innings pitched including five innings in the famous sixteen-inning Game 6. He was less impressive in the World Series, where he pitched in five of the seven games. Although Sid Fernandez gets much deserved recognition for holding the Boston Red Sox silent in the middle innings of Game 7, McDowell was credited with the win by pitching an important scoreless seventh inning before the Mets broke the tie in the bottom of the inning.

by|1987 was McDowell's first down year, with an ERA over four after missing the first six weeks of the season with a hernia. He did manage to post a career-high 25 saves but his most infamous game occurred on September 11, 1987 when he gave up a game-tying 9th inning two-run home run to the St. Louis Cardinals' Terry Pendleton. The Cardinals won the game the following inning. With the Cardinals and Mets in the midst of a close division race, many credited the home run with ending the Mets' chances for a repeat championship. [ [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/nl/braves/2006-02-14-mcdowell-cover_x.htm#pendleton USATODAY.com - McDowell's delivery a bit different ] ]

After the season, Jesse Orosco was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers and, in by|1988, McDowell improved his ERA back down to 2.63 and moved into third place on the Mets' all-time save list behind Orosco and Tug McGraw. The lefty-righty closer platoon system was maintained with McDowell and Randy Myers. The Mets won 100 games and were pitted against Orosco and the Dodgers in the 1988 National League Championship Series. In Game 4, the Mets had a chance to take a commanding 3-1 series lead but Mike Scioscia tied the game with a 2run shot off Dwight Gooden in the 9th inning. McDowell would later give up the game-winning home run to Kirk Gibson in the 12th inning. Overall, McDowell gave up a run in three of his four games. The favored Mets lost in seven games in their last postseason for over a decade. It also spelled the last postseason appearance of the 27-year-old McDowell's career.

Philadelphia Phillies (1989-1991)

In by|1989, McDowell pitched about average for the Mets before the Mets blundered in mid-June by trading him and Lenny Dykstra to the Phillies for potential superstar Juan Samuel. Samuel proved to be a huge disappointment for the Mets, batting .228 before the Mets re-traded him after the season, and he never regained the combination of speed and power he had shown in his few years with the Phillies. Dykstra, meanwhile, became a fixture for the Phillies, twice finishing in the top ten in MVP voting including a second-place finish in 1993 when he led the Phils to the 1993 World Series. McDowell was untouchable in his first partial season with Philadelphia, compiling a microscopic 1.11 ERA in 44 games for the last-place 1989 Phillies.

McDowell was rewarded with his first million-dollar contract for by|1990 but was only average as the Phillies again finished below .500. In by|1991, McDowell improved for the Phillies but was traded at the trading deadline to the Dodgers for two minor leaguers. Neither minor leaguer accomplished much in Philadelphia but the Phillies shocked the National League by winning the pennant two years later.

Los Angeles Dodgers (1991-1994)

McDowell was again impressive after a mid-season trade with a 2.55 ERA. Similar to 1990, however, he was less impressive in the first full season after a trade and his ERA ballooned to over four in by|1992, leading the league in relief losses and lowest save percentage. The Dodgers finished with their worst winning percentage in eighty years and their only last-place finish of the 20th century.

After his poor 1992, McDowell re-signed with the Dodgers for by|1993, but for only $1.35 million as opposed to the $2.2 million he was paid for 1992. He responded with a 2.25 ERA which was the last time his season ERA was below 4.00. The Dodgers defense was a factor for McDowell as nearly half of the runs he allowed were unearned in 1993. The Dodgers rose from last in 1992 to .500 in 1993 to first place in by|1994 when the 1994 Major League Baseball strike prematurely ended the season. The unearned runs of 1993 were replaced by earned runs in 1994 and McDowell's ERA skyrocketed to a career-worst 5.23. He was granted free agency after the season and was signed by the Texas Rangers shortly before the strike ended in April by|1995.

American League (1995-1996)

In his first year in the American League, the 34-year-old McDowell fit in well and was given the most innings he'd pitched since 1991. He also pitched in the second-highest number of games in the American League. While his 4.02 ERA was poor compared to his career average, it was far better than the 4.67 A.L. average for 1995. Nearing his 35th birthday, the Rangers granted him free agency and he signed on with the Orioles for by|1996. His ERA was again high but better than the league average in 1996 but shoulder surgery ended his season in mid-August. After the season, he was again a free agent before the Chicago White Sox signed him for the by|1997 season. Unfortunately for McDowell, he had two more shoulder surgeries wiping out the whole season. In by|1998, he attended spring training with Chicago but retired before the season began at age 37.

Post-retirement and coaching

McDowell was hired as the pitching coach of the Dodgers' single-A minor league South Georgia Waves for by|2002 and by|2003. [ [http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0330,cooper,45712,3.html village voice > news > Pranks for the Memories by Jon Cooper ] ] He was promoted to the AAA Las Vegas 51s for by|2004 and by|2005.

On October 29, 2005, McDowell was hired to replace Leo Mazzone as the pitching coach of the Atlanta Braves after Mazzone became the coach for the Baltimore Orioles.

McDowell and his wife, Gloria, have two daughters. [ [http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20050502&content_id=1035936&vkey=news_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb The Official Site of Major League Baseball: News: Major League Baseball News ] ]

ee also

*List of Major League Baseball all-time saves leaders

References

External links

* [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/M/McDowell_Roger.stm BaseballLibrary.com]
* [http://www.baseballdigestdaily.com/bullpen/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=48&Itemid=26 Roger McDowell Interview at Baseball Digest Daily - February 2006]


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