Pinch hitter



In baseball, a pinch hitter is a substitute batter. Batters can be substituted at any time while the ball is dead (not in active play); the manager may use any player who has not yet entered the game as a substitute. Unlike basketball, American football, or ice hockey, baseball does not have a "free substitution rule" and thus the replaced player in baseball is not allowed back into that game. The pinch hitter assumes the spot in the batting order of the player whom he replaces.


The player chosen to be a pinch hitter is often a backup infielder or outfielder. In the major leagues, catchers are less likely to be called upon because most teams have only two catchers, while pitchers are almost never used as pinch-hitters, because they tend to be worse hitters than other players on the team. The pinch hitter may not re-enter the game after being replaced with another player.


The American League of Major League Baseball, the Pacific League in Japan, the KBO League in Korea, and various other leagues use the designated hitter rule, such that pitchers seldom bat. This removes one possible situation where a pinch hitter may be desired.


For statistical and scorekeeping purposes, the pinch hitter is denoted by PH.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Usage


  • 2 MLB all-time pinch hit leaders


  • 3 All-time pinch hit records


  • 4 Single season pinch hit records


  • 5 Pinch hit home runs


  • 6 See also


  • 7 References


  • 8 External links




Usage


Pinch hitters are often used to replace a starting player when the pinch hitter is thought to have a better chance of reaching base or helping other runners to score.


In the National League of Major League Baseball, the Central League in Japan, and various other minor leagues, pinch hitters are often substituted for the pitcher in the middle or late innings of a game. This is because pitchers are often poor hitters and get tired after six to seven innings of pitching. Thus, as the manager often plans to replace the pitcher in the next inning, the major downside of using a pinch hitter, namely that the player being replaced cannot re-enter the game, is taken away.


This use of a pinch hitter is often part of a double switch, in which a relief pitcher replaces a defensive player who will not bat soon, and at the same time a defensive player replaces the pitcher who is scheduled to bat soon.


The pinch hitter may remain in the game following a pinch-hit at-bat and need not (but may) assume the same position as the player for whom he pinch-hits as long as some other player assumes that position. For example, on 16 August 2009, the Washington Nationals' Ryan Zimmerman pinch-hit for second baseman Alberto Gonzalez and then remained in the game at third base, with previous third baseman Ronnie Belliard switching positions to play second base after the change.[2] Alternatively, the manager may designate another player to replace the pinch-hitter; this scenario is common when a team pinch-hits for a pitcher without executing a double switch, such that the new pitcher then replaces the pinch hitter and assumes the previous pitcher's place in the batting order.


If a pinch hitter hits for the DH, the new pinch hitter stays in the game as a DH, and may not be used in the field. If the new DH does take the field, then the team forfeits the DH.



MLB all-time pinch hit leaders


This is a list of players with the most pinch-hits in Major League Baseball history. Names which appear in bold are active players. Includes games through July 22, 2011.




































































RankPlayerHits
  1Lenny Harris212
  2Mark Sweeney175
  3Manny Mota150
  4Smoky Burgess145
  5Greg Gross143
  6Dave Hansen138
  7John Vander Wal129
  8José Morales123
  9Orlando Palmeiro120
10Jerry Lynch116
11Red Lucas114
12Steve Braun113
13Terry Crowley108
Denny Walling108
15Gates Brown107
16Matt Stairs105
17Jim Dwyer103
Mike Lum103
19Rusty Staub100
20Dave Clark  96
21Vic Davalillo  95


All-time pinch hit records


  • Most pinch hit at-bats

Lenny Harris – 804
  • Most pinch hits career

Lenny Harris – 212
  • Most pinch hit grand slams

Rich Reese, Willie McCovey, Ron Northey – tied with three each
  • Most pinch hit home runs

Matt Stairs - 23
  • Most pinch hit game winning grand slams

Brooks Conrad – 2
  • Most pinch hit grand slams by one team in a season

Atlanta Braves – 3 total in 2010


Single season pinch hit records


  • Most pinch hit games

Ichiro Suzuki – 109 (2017)
  • Most pinch hit plate appearances

Ichiro Suzuki – 109 (2017)
  • Most pinch hit at-bats

Ichiro Suzuki – 100 (2017)
  • Most pinch hits

John Vander Wal – 28 (1995)[3]
  • Most consecutive pinch hits

Dave Philley and Rusty Staub – tied with eight each (1958 and 1983)
  • Most pinch hit home runs

Dave Hansen and Craig Wilson – tied with seven each (2000 and 2001)
  • Most pinch hit game winning grand slam home runs

Brooks Conrad – 2 (2010)
  • Most pinch hit home runs for a team in a game

St. Louis Cardinals (Jeremy Hazelbaker, Aledmys Diaz and Greg Garcia) – 3 (April 8, 2016)[4]
  • Most pinch hit RBI

Joe Cronin, Jerry Lynch, Rusty Staub – tied with 25 each (1943, 1961 and 1983)
  • Most pinch hit walks

Matt Franco – 20 (1999)


Pinch hit home runs


  • The following players have been called into a game and hit a pinch-hit home run during their first ever Major League at-bat:

































American League
Date
Name
Team
Inning
April 30, 1937

Ace Parker
Philadelphia
9th Inning
September 5, 1962

John Kennedy
Washington
6th Inning
June 19, 1963

Gates Brown
Detroit
5th Inning
September 30, 1964

Bill Roman
Detroit
7th Inning
September 12, 1965

Brant Alyea
Washington
6th Inning
August 7, 1968

Joe Keough
Oakland
8th Inning
April 7, 1977

Alvis Woods
Toronto
5th Inning





















































National League
Date
Name
Team
Inning
April 21, 1898

Bill Duggleby
Philadelphia
2nd inning
April 14, 1936

Eddie Morgan
St. Louis
7th Inning
May 21, 1948

Les Layton
New York
9th Inning
September 14, 1950

Ted Tappe
Cincinnati
8th Inning
April 12, 1955

Chuck Tanner
Milwaukee
8th Inning
September 8, 1998

Marlon Anderson
Philadelphia
7th Inning
April 17, 2001

Gene Stechschulte
St. Louis
6th Inning
August 21, 2005

Mike Jacobs
New York
5th Inning
September 1, 2005

Jeremy Hermida
Florida
7th Inning
September 4, 2006

Charlton Jimerson
Houston
6th Inning
September 8, 2008

Mark Saccomanno
Houston
5th Inning
August 28, 2009

John Hester
Arizona
6th Inning


See also



  • Designated hitter

  • Pinch runner


References




  1. ^ McMahon, Rob, ed. (2009). USA Today Baseball Scorebook. Sterling Innovation. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-4027-6245-1. 


  2. ^ "Nationals vs. Reds - Box Score - August 16, 2009 - ESPN". ESPN.com. 


  3. ^ "In A Pinch". New York Times. September 17, 2006. p. Sports p. 2. 


  4. ^ Cardinals set MLB record with 3 pinch-hit homers to beat Braves. ESPN.com. Retrieved on April 9, 2016.




External links


  • Pinch hitting record from the Baseball Almanac





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