- Wally Bunker
Wallace Edward Bunker (born
January 25 ,1945 , inSeattle, Washington ) is a formerMajor League Baseball pitcher . Infobox MLB retired
name=Wally Bunker
position=Pitcher
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date and age|1945|1|25Seattle, Washington
debutdate=September 29
debutyear=by|1963
debutteam=Baltimore Orioles
finaldate=May 26
finalyear=by|1971
finalteam=Kansas City Royals
stat1label=Win-Loss record
stat1value=60-52
stat2label=Earned run average
stat2value=3.51
stat3label=Strikeouts
stat3value=569
teams=
*Baltimore Orioles (by|1963-by|1968)
*Kansas City Royals (by|1969-by|1971)
highlights=
*World Series champion (1966)Biography
Bunker pitched for the
Capuchino High School varsity baseball team inSan Bruno, California in 1962 and 1963, as the team won the Mid-Peninsula League championships. He also played on the varsitybasketball team. [Cap 62 and Cap 63 yearbooks] While still a student at Capuchino, Bunker was recruited by theBaltimore Orioles and joined their organization after graduating from Capuchino. ["San Bruno Herald"]In eight-plus major league seasons, Bunker pitched for the
Baltimore Orioles (by|1963-by|1968) andKansas City Royals (by|1969-by|1971).As a 19-year old in by|1964, Bunker won his first six starts of the season and pitched a one-hit
shutout in another game. He became the ace of a staff that also consisted ofMilt Pappas and Robin Roberts. He finished the season 19-5 with a 2.69earned-run average and wonThe Sporting News American League Rookie pitcher of the Year (and finished runner-up toTony Oliva for Rookie of the Year) on an Oriole team that fell short of the American League pennant, finishing in third place, two games behind theNew York Yankees and one behind the second-placeChicago White Sox .Impressive as his rookie season was, however, arm ailments — most likely torn tendons or ligaments of some kind, which often went undiagnosed in Bunker's era — in subsequent seasons prevented him from enjoying a 1964 sequel. A "sore arm" during the by|1965 season reduced him to a part-time starter afterwards. He posted a 10-8 record that year and a 10-6 record in by|1966. In the latter year, the Orioles won the World Series in a four-game sweep of the defending champion
Los Angeles Dodgers . In Game 3 of that Series, Bunker pitched a six-hit, 1-0 shutout (offsettingClaude Osteen 's three-hit pitching), which was sandwiched in between shutouts byJim Palmer andDave McNally as the Orioles set a Series record by not allowing a run for 33 1/3 consecutive innings. Following that triumph, Bunker was honored by the San Bruno City Council and served as honorary mayor at a council meeting. [Eyewitness account by Robert E. Nylund]In by|1968 the Kansas City Royals selected Bunker in the
expansion draft , and he was their winningest pitcher in by|1969 with a 12-11 record. OnApril 8 of that year, he threw the very first pitch in Kansas City Royals history. The Royals defeated theMinnesota Twins 4-3 in 12 innings, with another 1966 World Series pitching star,Moe Drabowsky , gaining the victory in relief.After the 1969 season, the arm troubles that limited Bunker to a part-time starter shortened his career. After slumping to 2-11 in by|1970, he was released in May, by|1971. Bunker had pitched his final major-league game at just 26 years of age.
In his career, Bunker won 60 games against 52 losses, with 569 strikeouts and a 3.51 earned-run average in 1,085 1/3
innings pitched . He was also a weak hitter in those days prior to thedesignated hitter , with only 31 hits in 331 at-bats for a .094batting average .Bunker's sinker was his most effective pitch in his short career. Yankees slugger
Mickey Mantle once referred to Bunker's sinker as the type of pitch "you could break your back on." [http://www.baseball-almanac.com/players/playerpost.php?p=bunkewa01&ps=ws]Bunker presently lives in
Lowell, Ohio , where he makesearthenware pottery and writes children's books with his wife, Kathy. [http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.whatever06oct06,0,1368333.story]References
External links
* [http://www.baseball-reference.com/b/bunkewa01.shtml Bunker's career stats and analysis]
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