- Mark Mulder
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Mark Mulder Pitcher Born: August 5, 1977
South Holland, IllinoisBatted: Left Threw: Left MLB debut April 18, 2000 for the Oakland Athletics Last MLB appearance July 9, 2008 for the St. Louis Cardinals Career statistics Win–Loss record 103–60 Earned run average 4.18 Strikeouts 834 Teams Career highlights and awards - 2× All-Star selection (2003, 2004)
- World Series champion (2006)
Mark Alan Mulder (born August 5, 1977 in South Holland, Illinois) is a retired left-handed starting pitcher in Major League Baseball.
Contents
Baseball career
Oakland Athletics
After playing for Michigan State University, Mulder was selected by the Oakland Athletics with the second overall pick in the 1998 Major League Baseball Draft.
Mulder was quickly placed on the fast track to the major leagues and made his major-league debut on April 18, 2000; he was still only 22 years old and had less than two seasons of minor-league experience. He had a rocky start to his MLB career, going 9-10 with a 5.44 ERA.
In 2001, Mulder played his first full major-league season and quickly became a dominant pitcher. Leading the American League with 21 wins, he was in contention for a Cy Young Award, anchoring a powerful Oakland rotation along with Barry Zito and Tim Hudson, called the "The Big Three". He continued to do well in 2002, winning 19 games and striking out a career-high 159 batters in 207.1 innings. Limited by injuries in 2003, he would only log 26 starts, he still won 15 games and had a career-best 3.13 earned run average. 2004 was an inconsistent year for Mulder. He started the season strong, and was chosen to start that season's All-Star Game. However, he had a higher ERA and walked more batters in the second half of the season. The A's traded him to the St. Louis Cardinals on December 18, 2004, for pitchers Dan Haren and Kiko Calero, and minor league catcher Daric Barton.
Mulder, Hudson, and Zito were able to carry their team to the postseason four seasons in a row, from 2000 to 2003. Mulder competed in the playoffs in 2001 and 2002, logging two starts each against the New York Yankees (2001) and the Minnesota Twins (2002). He carried over his strong regular-season performance by pitching 24 innings in the four playoff starts, with an ERA of 2.25 and 19 strikeouts.
St. Louis Cardinals
Mulder began the 2006 season strong, with a 5-1 record and 3.69 ERA through May 17. However, his next six starts were mediocre to awful, and his ERA ballooned to 6.09. He turned out to be suffering from rotator cuff and shoulder problems, and the Cardinals placed him on the disabled list June 23. In August he was taken off the disabled list and made several starts in the minors. On August 23, he made his first ML start in two months and gave up 9 runs, all of which were earned, in 3 innings.
After undergoing rotator cuff surgery, and with a return for the opening of the 2007 season unlikely, Mulder's future with the Cardinals looked somewhat uncertain in the 2007 offseason. However, despite being offered comparable deals with the Cleveland Indians and the Texas Rangers, Mulder re-signed with the St. Louis Cardinals on January 10, to a two-year $13 million contract, with performance-based incentives and a club option that could take the deal to three years at a possible $45 million.
After being re-activated on September 5, 2007, he continued to struggle with his command, losing all three of his starts with an ERA of 12.27. In that time, he pitched only 11 innings, and gave up 22 hits and seven walks. This prompted an MRI scan, which led the team to the conclusion that Mulder needed additional clean-up rotator cuff surgery. Although he was expected to recover from surgery in time for Spring Training, Mark started the 2008 season on the disabled list. On June 30, 2008, Mulder made his return. He came in from the bullpen with a 7-1 lead over the New York Mets in the top of the ninth. Mulder finished the ballgame with no runs. On July 9, 2008, Mulder started his first game of the season against the Philadelphia Phillies. After striking out Jimmy Rollins to begin the game, Mulder threw eight consecutive pitches out of the strike zone, and left the game with a shoulder injury while attempting a pickoff throw.
On October 20, 2008, Greg Clifton, Mark Mulder's agent, said that the Cardinals have decided not to exercise his client's $11 million option for the 2009 season, instead buying out his contract for $1.5 million.[1]
On June 15, 2010, Mulder officially announced his retirement, saying "I guess I have retired".[2]
Accomplishments
- Led American League in wins in 2001 (21)
- Led American League pitchers in complete games in 2003 (9) and 2004 (5)
- Led American League in shutouts in 2001 (4) and 2003 (2)
- American League All-Star, 2003 and 2004
Post-playing career
Since retiring from baseball, Mulder has taken up golf.[3]
He now is an analyst on ESPN's Baseball Tonight.
See also
References
- ^ Cards are done with Mulder
- ^ Boeck, Scott (2010-06-15). "Mark Mulder Says He's Retired; Now Playing Competitive Golf". USA Today. http://content.usatoday.com/communities/dailypitch/post/2010/06/mark-mulder-says-hes-retired-now-playing-competitive--golf/1. Retrieved 2010-06-15.
- ^ DiMeglio, Steve (2010-09-23). "Mark Mulder makes switch from diamond to links". USA Today. http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/2010-09-23-mulder-switches-baseball-to-golf_N.htm. Retrieved 2010-09-26.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube, or Baseball-Reference (Minors)
- Mark Mulder page at stlcardinals.scout.com
Awards and achievements Preceded by
Tim Hudson & David WellsAmerican League Wins Champion
2001Succeeded by
Barry ZitoPreceded by
Esteban LoaizaAmerican League All-Star Game Starting Pitcher
2004Succeeded by
Mark BuehrleOakland Athletics first-round draft picks 1965: Rick Monday | 1966: Reggie Jackson | 1967: Brian Bickerton | 1968: Pete Broberg | 1969: Don Stanhouse | 1970: Dan Ford | 1971: William Daniels | 1972: Chet Lemon | 1973: Randy Scarbery | 1974: Jerry Johnson | 1975: Bruce Robinson | 1976: Thomas Sullivan | 1977: Craig Harris | 1978: Mike Morgan, Tim Conroy | 1979: Juan Bustabad, Mike Stenhouse | 1980: Mike King | 1981: Tim Pyznarski | 1982: No first round pick | 1983: Stan Hilton | 1984: Mark McGwire | 1985: Walt Weiss | 1986: Scott Hemond | 1987: Lee Tinsley | 1988: Stan Royer | 1989: No first round pick | 1990: Todd Van Poppel, Don Peters, David Zancanaro, Kirk Dressendorfer | 1991: Brent Gates, Mike Rossiter | 1992: Benji Grigsby | 1993: John Wasdin, Willie Adams | 1994: Ben Grieve | 1995: Ariel Prieto | 1996: Eric Chavez | 1997: Chris Enochs, Eric DuBose, Nathan Haynes, Denny Wagner | 1998: Mark Mulder | 1999: Barry Zito | 2000: No first round pick | 2001: Bobby Crosby, Jeremy Bonderman, John Rheinecker | 2002: Nick Swisher, Joe Blanton, John McCurdy, Ben Fritz, Jeremy Brown, Stephen Obenchain, Mark Teahen | 2003: Bradley Sullivan, Brian Snyder, Omar Quintanilla | 2004: Richard Robnett, Danny Putnam, Huston Street | 2005: Cliff Pennington, Travis Buck | 2006: No first round pick | 2007: James Simmons, Sean Doolittle, Corey Brown | 2008: Jemile Weeks | 2009: Grant Green | 2010: Michael Choice | 2011: Sonny GrayBaseball Tonight Personalities Hosts Karl Ravech (Lead Host, 1996–present) · Chris Berman (Host, 1990–present) · Steve Berthiaume (Host, 2003–2005, 2007–present) ·Analysts Orel Hershiser (Analyst, 2006–present) · John Kruk (Lead Analyst, 2004–present) · Chris Singleton (Analyst, 2008–present) · Fernando Viña (Analyst, 2007–present) · Aaron Boone (Analyst, 2010–present) · Bobby Valentine (Lead Analyst, 2003, 2009–present) · Barry Larkin (Analyst, 2011-present) · Mark Mulder (Analyst, 2011-present)Reporters Tim Kurkjian (Reporter, 1998–present) · Buster Olney (Reporter, 2003–present) · Jayson Stark (2000–present)Correspondents Former Peter Gammons (Lead Reporter, 1990–2009) · Steve Phillips (Lead Analyst, 2005–2009) · Eric Young (Analyst, 2007–2009) · Dusty Baker (Analyst, 2007) · Larry Bowa (Analyst, 2005) · Jeff Brantley (Analyst, 2002–2006) · Dave Campbell (Lead Analyst, 1990–2004) · Rob Dibble (Analyst, 1998–2004) · Ray Knight (Analyst, 1998–2003) · Mike Macfarlane (Analyst, 1999) · Tino Martinez (Analyst, 2006) · Brian McRae (Analyst, 2000–2005) · Harold Reynolds (Lead Analyst, 1996–2006) · Bill Robinson (Analyst, 1990–1991) · Buck Showalter (Lead Analyst, 2001–2002, 2008–2010) · Rick Sutcliffe (Analyst, 2002–2003) · Gary Miller (Lead Host, 1990–1995) · Dave Marash (Host, 1990) · Rich Eisen (Host, 1996–2002) · Brian Kenny (Host, 2003) · Chris Myers (1991–1995) · Scott Reiss (Host, 2006) · Eduardo Pérez (Analyst, 2007–2011)
· Orestes Destrade (Analyst, 2005–2010)See also: Major League Baseball on ESPNCategories:- 1977 births
- Living people
- American League All-Stars
- American League wins champions
- Oakland Athletics players
- St. Louis Cardinals players
- Major League Baseball pitchers
- Vancouver Canadians players
- Sacramento River Cats players
- Memphis Redbirds players
- Swing of the Quad Cities players
- Palm Beach Cardinals players
- Springfield Cardinals players
- Baseball players from Illinois
- Michigan State Spartans baseball players
- All-Star Futures Game players
- American people of Dutch descent
- People from South Holland, Illinois
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