Mickey Lolich

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox baseball biography Michael Stephen Lolich (born September 12, 1940) is an American former professional baseball pitcher.<ref name=BR>Template:Cite web</ref> He played in Major League Baseball from 1963 until 1979, almost entirely for the Detroit Tigers.<ref name=BR/> A three-time All-Star, Lolich is most notable for his performance in the 1968 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals when he earned three complete-game victories, including a win over future Hall-of-Famer Bob Gibson in the climactic Game 7.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Mickey Lolich's epic World Series wins still turn heads, 50 years later">Template:Cite news</ref>

At the time of his retirement in 1979, Lolich held the Major League Baseball record for career strikeouts by a left-handed pitcher;<ref name="It’s time Lolich gets his name called for the Hall">Template:Cite news</ref> as of the 2025 MLB season, he is fifth, having been surpassed by Randy Johnson, Steve Carlton, CC Sabathia (all of whom are in the Hall of Fame), and Clayton Kershaw.

Early years

Lolich was born in Portland, Oregon of Croatian descent.<ref>Croatian Chronicle Network 35 Pacific Northwest Croatian Athletes</ref> He was born right-handed but, began to throw left-handed after a childhood accident. At age two, he rode his tricycle into a parked motorcycle, which fell on him. The accident broke his left collarbone, requiring him to wear a cast for four months. Post-injury efforts to strengthen the left arm helped Lolich develop into throwing left-handed.<ref name=Sideways>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news(The Joe Falls account indicates the left shoulder was broken and attributed the strength of the left arm to post-injury efforts to strengthen the arm.)</ref> Known as an eccentric, a sports writer in 1964 wrote of Lolich: "He now eats, writes and bats right-handed, pitches left-handed and thinks sideways."<ref name=Sideways/>

As a teenager, he excelled playing in American Legion Baseball and in the Babe Ruth League, setting Oregon state records for strikeouts.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> He attended Lincoln High School in Portland and posted a record of 19 wins against 5 losses for the school team in 1958.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/>

Professional baseball

Knoxville and Durham

Lolich was signed by the Detroit Tigers as an amateur free agent at age 17 on June 30, 1958.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He began his professional career playing the 1959, 1960, and 1961 seasons with the Knoxville Smokies of the South Atlantic League and the Durham Bulls of the Carolina League. In his first three seasons, he compiled a 17–29 record in 82 games.

Denver and Portland

Lolich was assigned to the Triple-A Denver Bears at the start of the 1962 season and went 0–4 with a 16.50 ERA in nine games. After the poor start, Detroit ordered him back to Knoxville. Lolich refused to report to Knoxville and was placed under indefinite suspension. He returned home to Oregon and struck out all 12 batters he faced in a four-inning outing in semi-pro ball with the Archer Blower team in Portland.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In early June, Lolich was acquired by the Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League in a deal with the Tigers.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Lolich turned his career around, compiling a 10–9 record and 3.95 ERA with 138 strikeouts in 23 games with the Beavers. The key to Lolich's turnaround was finding control of his pitches. He had developed a reputation as "a flamethrowing wildman" in the minors but developed his control while playing for Portland.<ref name=Pounce>Template:Cite news</ref>

Detroit Tigers

1963–1967

Buoyed by a strong performance with Portland, Lolich was reclaimed by the Tigers in 1963. He irked Detroit's management by reporting late to spring training, saying he had remained in Portland to take an examination to become a mailman during the off-season.<ref name=Pounce/> He was cut by the Tigers on April 3 and optioned to the Syracuse Chiefs, then recalled to Detroit on May 9 after compiling a 2.45 ERA in 22 innings at Syracuse. He made his major league debut on May 12 and secured his first win on May 28, allowing one run in nine innings against the Los Angeles Angels. He was plagued by lack of run support during his rookie campaign, losing a 2–1 decision on July 29, allowing only one hit through Template:Frac innings before giving up a home run in the ninth inning. He finished the 1963 season with a 5–9 record, 3.55 ERA, and 103 strikeouts in Template:Frac innings pitched.<ref name=BR/>

Lolich blossomed in 1964 with an 18–9 record and 3.41 ERA in 232 innings pitched.<ref name=BR/> He pitched his first shutout, a three-hitter against the Minnesota Twins, on April 24.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On September 9, he pitched his sixth shutout of the season and struck out 12 Yankees. For the season, Lolich ranked fourth in the American League with six shutouts and fifth with 192 strikeouts.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In November 1964, Lolich married Joyce Fleenor, a former airline stewardess from Los Angeles. At spring training in 1965, Lolich told reporter Joe Falls that marriage had a calming influence on him: "She's done so much for me, to settle me down, that I can hardly put it into words. She's made me a very happy guy."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1965, he compiled a 15–9 record with a 3.44 ERA.<ref name=BR/> His 226 strikeouts ranked second in the American League behind Sam McDowell.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Always known as a weak hitter, Lolich hit .058 and struck out 37 times in 86 at-bats during the 1965 season.<ref name=BR/>

After two strong seasons, Lolich regressed in 1966. His ERA jumped by more than a run to 4.77, and he compiled a 14–14 record in 40 games.<ref name=BR/> After the season, Lolich rejected claims that his weight was the problem. He noted that he weighed 200 pounds when he won 18 games in 1964 and weighed only two pounds more in 1966. Lolich instead opined: "The big problem for me was loss of concentration. I blew a lot of leads this year."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1967, the Tigers hired former major league pitcher Johnny Sain as their pitching coach.<ref name="Jim Northrup Recalls His Playing Days With Tigers">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Sain helped develop Lolich's pitching skills and taught him psychological aspects of pitching.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/><ref name="Jim Northrup Recalls His Playing Days With Tigers"/> The 1967 season was a memorable one for the tight four-way pennant race among the Tigers, Boston Red Sox, Minnesota Twins and Chicago White Sox.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Tigers were in contention until the final day of the 1967 season, finishing one game behind the Red Sox.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lolich finished the season with a 14–13 record, but led the league with six shutouts.<ref name=BR/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In late July 1967, Lolich was called to active duty with the Michigan Air National Guard in response to the ongoing riot. Lolich spent twelve days on active duty and was promoted to Airman First Class.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Upon returning to the team, he received death threats, allegedly from the Black Panthers, for his role in quelling the riot. In response, the Federal Bureau of Investigation placed a team of snipers on the roof of Tiger Stadium during his subsequent two starts.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

1968 World Series championship

In 1968, the Tigers quickly rose to first place, winning nine straight after losing the season opener to Boston.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lolich was overshadowed by teammate Denny McLain's 31-win season, and was sent to the bullpen in August due to a late-season slump.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> He made six appearances as a relief pitcher before returning to the starting rotation.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> He posted a 17–9 record with 197 strikeouts, as the Tigers won the American League pennant by 12 games over the second-place Baltimore Orioles.<ref name=BR/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

After Bob Gibson defeated McLain in Game 1 of the 1968 World Series in St. Louis, Lolich helped Detroit recover by allowing only one run to win Game 2 8–1.<ref name="1968 World Series">Template:Cite web</ref> He also helped his own cause by hitting the only home run of his 16-year career.<ref name="1968 World Series"/> But the Tigers lost the next two games at home to fall behind the Cardinals 3–1 and were facing elimination when Lolich returned to pitch in Game 5, just four days after pitching a complete game. Despite an unsettled start, when he surrendered an RBI single to Curt Flood and a two-run home run to Orlando Cepeda in the first inning, Lolich remained calm and proceeded to pitch eight scoreless innings as the Tigers scored two runs in the fourth and took the lead in the seventh on Al Kaline's bases loaded two-run single.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> They added another run for a 5–3 win, staving off elimination.<ref name="1968 World Series"/>

Back in St. Louis, the Tigers then won Game 6 by a score of 13–1 behind McLain's solid pitching and a grand slam home run from Jim Northrup in a Series-record-tying ten-run third inning rally to force Game 7.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> With just two days of rest, and having pitched two complete games in the past week, Lolich faced Gibson in Game 7, both having won their previous two starts.<ref name="1968 World Series"/> They each pitched six scoreless innings, Lolich picking off Lou Brock and Curt Flood to end a Cardinal threat in the bottom of the sixth, before the Tigers broke through with three runs in the top of the seventh starting with a two-out, two-run triple to deep center by Northrup just over Flood's head for an eventual 4–1 Tigers win and a 4–3 Series triumph.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Detroit became only the third team in World Series history to rally from a 3–1 series deficit to win in seven games.<ref name="1968 World Series"/> Having completed Game 7, Lolich became the 12th pitcher to win three games in a World Series, and the last with three complete games in a single Series.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/><ref name="Mickey Lolich's epic World Series wins still turn heads, 50 years later"/> He was the last pitcher with three victories in the same World Series until Randy Johnson won 3 games in the 2001 World Series. He is the only left-handed pitcher with three complete-game wins in the same World Series in baseball history.<ref name="It’s time Lolich gets his name called for the Hall"/> No other pitcher has thrown three complete game World Series victories in the same series since.<ref name="It’s time Lolich gets his name called for the Hall"/> Lolich's performance earned him the World Series Most Valuable Player Award.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

1969–1975

In 1969, Lolich won 19 games and earned his first All-Star selection.<ref name=BR/> He struck out 16 batters in a game twice in 1969, his career high.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> 1971 marked the best season of Lolich's career when, he led the American League in victories (25), games started (45), complete games (29), strikeouts (308) and innings pitched (376), all career-highs.<ref name=BR/> His 308 strikeouts is also a Tigers' team record.<ref name="Detroit Tigers team records">Template:Cite web</ref> At the 1971 All-Star Game which featured 21 future members of the Baseball Hall of Fame, Lolich pitched the final two innings to preserve the first All-Star game victory by an American League team since 1962.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He finished second to Vida Blue in the 1971 Cy Young Award voting.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lolich became known for his endurance and his ability to pitch complete games.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> He reached the 300-innings pitched mark every season between 1971 and 1974.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/>

Lolich won 22 games and posted a career-best 2.50 ERA in 1972 to help the Tigers win the American League Eastern Division championship.<ref name=BR/> He pitched impressively in the 1972 American League Championship Series against the Oakland Athletics, posting a 1.42 ERA in two starts. In Game 1, he pitched 10 innings allowing only 1 run before losing the game in the bottom of the 11th inning on an unearned run. He pitched nine innings in Game 4, again allowing only 1 run, but the win went to reliever John Hiller as the Tigers rallied in the 10th inning. The Tigers eventually lost the series to Oakland in five games. He finished third in the 1972 Cy Young Award voting behind Gaylord Perry and Wilbur Wood.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Lolich won 16 games in 1973 and 1974. However, the Tigers dropped to last place in the American League East. In 1975, Lolich eclipsed Warren Spahn’s Major League Baseball record of 2,583 career strikeouts by a left-handed pitcher.<ref name="It’s time Lolich gets his name called for the Hall"/> Although Lolich pitched effectively in 1975, the Tigers' poor performance continued as they failed to provide him with much offensive support. He received only 14 runs of support during a 14-game stretch in which his win–loss record was 1–13, even though he managed to post a respectable 3.88 earned run average in that period.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/>

Mets and Padres

Lolich was traded with Billy Baldwin to the New York Mets for Rusty Staub and Bill Laxton on December 12, 1975. As a major leaguer for at least ten years with the last five on the same ballclub, he had initially exercised his right to veto, which he eventually lifted after his attorney and Mets administrators M. Donald Grant, Joe McDonald and Bob Scheffing convinced him that the transaction was financially beneficial and would not negatively affect his family.<ref name="v998">Template:Cite web</ref>

Lolich posted an 8–13 record with a respectable 3.22 ERA for the Mets in 1976; however, he had disagreements with the Mets pitching coach as well as the Mets trainer and retired after the season.<ref name=BR/><ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> He opened a doughnut shop in suburban Detroit and sat out the 1977 season. He returned to baseball in 1978, signing with the San Diego Padres as a free agent.<ref name=BR/>

He played mostly as a relief pitcher for the Padres in 1978, going 2–1 with a 1.56 ERA in 20 games.<ref name=BR/> The following season, Lolich added a knuckleball to his pitching.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> Lolich had an inconsistent season in 1979 and decided to retire. He pitched in his final major league game on September 23, 1979, at the age of 39.<ref name=BR/>

Career statistics

In a 16-year major league career, Lolich played in 586 games, accumulating a 217–191 win–loss record along with a 3.44 earned run average.<ref name=BR/> He struck out 200 or more batters in a season seven times in his career. His 2,832 career strikeouts were the most by a left-handed pitcher in Major League history until he was surpassed by Steve Carlton in 1981, and the most in the American League by a left-handed pitcher until being surpassed by CC Sabathia in 2017.<ref name="Mickey Lolich's epic World Series wins still turn heads, 50 years later"/><ref name="It’s time Lolich gets his name called for the Hall"/> Lolich threw 41 shutouts and 195 complete games during his career, completing nearly 40 percent of his starts.<ref name=BR/> He holds Detroit Tigers team records in single-season strikeouts (308), career strikeouts (2,679), shutouts (39), games started (459) and home runs allowed (329).<ref name="Detroit Tigers team records"/>

In 1,017 plate appearances, he had 105 walks and 90 hits. He has the most career plate appearances of anyone with more walks than hits.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Life after baseball

File:2009 Jan 24 -27 Mickey Lolich.jpg
Lolich in 2009.

In 1979, Lolich invested in a doughnut shop in Rochester, Michigan, with the understanding that his partner would run the business. Following disagreements, Lolich bought out his partner and began running the business. After losing his lease, he moved the doughnut business to Lake Orion in 1983.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In the late 1990s, Lolich sold the doughnut shop and retired.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> He remained active in charity work and served as a coach at the Detroit Tigers' baseball fantasy camp in Lakeland, Florida.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> Because of his humble "everyman" qualities, many long-time Tiger fans celebrate him as one of the most popular sports figures in a working man's city. As The Detroit News put it, "He didn't act like a big shot superstar, he was one of us."<ref>detnews.com | Michigan History Template:Webarchive</ref>

Lolich also had a small role in The Incredible Melting Man,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> a 1977 horror movie released during his first retirement. He plays a security guard who is killed by the Melting Man near the end of the movie.

In 2003, Lolich was one of 26 players chosen for the final ballot by the National Baseball Hall of Fame's Veterans Committee but garnered only 13 votes, far below the 75% required for election.<ref name="The Baseball Biography Project: Mickey Lolich"/> Lolich had previously appeared on the BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot for all 15 years of the allotted time players were eligible to stay on the ballot, topping out at 25.5% of the vote in 1988 before falling off of the ballot in 1999.

In 1982, Lolich was inducted into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame. In October 2022, he was inducted in the Croatian-American Sports Hall of Fame.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Lolich's other records and accomplishments

  • His 2,679 strikeouts is the second-most in AL history by a left-hander.
  • His 2,832 career strikeouts in both leagues ranked in the top 10 in major league history when he retired in 1979.
  • His 1,538 batters faced in 1971 was the most in the majors since George Uhle faced 1,548 in 1923. Only two other pitchers have faced at least 1,500 hitters since 1923, Wilbur Wood with 1,531 in 1973 and Bob Feller with 1,512 in 1946.
  • His 376 innings pitched in 1971 is the second highest in the majors since 1917. Wilbur Wood holds the modern record with Template:Frac just a year later, 1972. Only four have pitched 350 or more innings in a season since 1929: Wilbur Wood (1972 and 1973), Lolich (1971), Bob Feller (1946) and Tiger forerunner Dizzy Trout (1944).
  • His 29 complete games in 1971 was the highest in the AL since Bob Feller's 36 in 1946.
  • In the 1965–74 decade, he struck out more (2,245) than any other major league pitcher. Bob Gibson was second with 2,117 during the same period.
  • In the same decade, he was second in major league innings pitched (Template:Frac) to Gaylord Perry's 2,978.
  • In the same decade, he had more wins (172) than any other AL pitcher. Gaylord Perry led the majors with 182.
  • In the same decade, he threw more complete games (155) than any other AL hurler. Gaylord Perry led the majors with 205.
  • He is the only left-hander with three complete World Series games in the same Series.
  • Lolich started 324 games with Bill Freehan playing as catcher, setting a major league record for most starts together as a battery<ref name=Highheat>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> that stood until Adam Wainwright and Yadier Molina of the St. Louis Cardinals broke it in 2022.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Commons category

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