Today’s
blog post has a career-capping 1975 card for pitcher Steve Blass of the
Pittsburgh Pirates, who had a very nice career end suddenly because of a
lack of control that was never fully explained, and left me fascinated
all these years later:
In 1972 Blass was pretty much at the top of the baseball world, having
come off a World Championship season in 1971, helping the Pirates beat
the Baltimore Orioles for their first title since 1960.
He would go on to finish the 1972 season with a career-high 19 wins
along with a sparkling 2.49 earned run average, even making his first,
and only, All-Star team.
He was already an eight year Major League veteran pitcher, yet still 31
years of age when the 1973 season opened up, ready to continue building
on what was shaping up to be a solid career.
Then the inexplicable happened: Blass could not find any control on the
mound. There was no injury. He was still healthy and young.
Yet for some reason Blass lost the ability to pitch, and it eventually
got so bad that in the blink of an eye his career was over by the time
the 1974 season began.
To put things into perspective, in 1972 Blass pitched 249.2 innings and
walked 84 batters, while in 1973, he walked the same amount, in only
88.2 innings.
His ERA rose from 2.49 in 1972 to 9.85 in 1973, while giving up 69
earned runs in 1972 to 97 in 1973. Again, we’re talking 249.2 innings in
1972 to just 88.2 a year later.
In 1974, still suffering from this undetermined inability to throw a
strike, Blass attempted to continue his career, and it ended up being
one more game, as he pitched five innings on April 17th, allowing five
hits while walking seven batters, eventually giving up five earned runs.
He tried fixing whatever the problem was in the Minors, but there was no
fix, as he’d end up throwing 61 innings, and walking an incredible 103
batters, getting hit hard as well to a ballooned 9.74 ERA in 17 games.
Though his career was sadly over at only 32 years of age, he did manage
to turn that into another great career, this time in broadcasting as he
would jump right into what turned out to be a 34 year career as a
Pirates commentator on television.
It’s odd to think that Blass could have easily pitched well into the
1980’s, being so identified with 1970’s sports. Kind of like imagining
Koufax playing into the 1970’s, or Mel Stottlemyre and Dick Allen
playing into the 1980’s.
Luckily for Blass he took the tough break and turned it into something
great, a broadcasting career that even surpassed his success on a Big
League mound.