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1 Team, 1 Position, 1 Player

Posted by Raphy on December 6, 2009

There are many ways to fill each position over the course of an entire season. Most often, a few players are used by each team. However, there are also teams that are extreme. Some may rotate a truckload of players in and out all season long. Others are able to accomplish the rare feat of using only one player at a particular position for an entire season. Over the next few days I would like to take a look as some of these oddities.

In the early years of baseball it was not uncommon for a player to fill a position for his team for every play of a season. Even into the '30s and '40s it was done on a fairly regular basis. However as the '50s progressed and especially after the schedule expanded in 1961, teams with only 1 player in a position became quite rare, (particularly if Cal Ripken Jr. was not on your team). Here are the teams since 1961 to have only 1 player man a position for an entire season. (National League DHs are not included for obvious reasons.)

Rk Year Tm Lg Position Player
1 2004 Florida Marlins NL CF Juan Pierre
2 2003 Milwaukee Brewers NL 1B Richie Sexson
3 1995 Detroit Tigers AL 3B Travis Fryman
4 1986 Baltimore Orioles AL SS Cal Ripken
5 1985 Baltimore Orioles AL SS Cal Ripken
6 1984 Baltimore Orioles AL SS Cal Ripken
7 1983 Baltimore Orioles AL SS Cal Ripken
8 1979 Seattle Mariners AL DH Willie Horton
9 1978 Detroit Tigers AL DH Rusty Staub
10 1975 Detroit Tigers AL DH Willie Horton
11 1969 Oakland Athletics AL 3B Sal Bando
12 1965 Chicago Cubs NL 3B Ron Santo
13 1963 Chicago Cubs NL 3B Ron Santo
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 12/6/2009.

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A couple of notes on the list above:

  • Ripken's prominence on this list is no surprise. Well before he was close to Lou Gehrig's consecutive game streak, RipkenĀ  was setting unofficial records by playing in 8,243 consecutive innings.
  • At the time, Pierre was stalwart in CF, playing 162 games every year from 2003-2007.
  • After the 2003 season Sexson was traded to Arizona where he was hurt for most of the season.
  • Fryman's season was the shortened 1995. He only played 144 games that year and never played 162 in season in his career.
  • Staub became the first player to play 162 games in a season without playing the field. (The Tigers only played 159 games the year that Horton DHed every inning for them.)
  • Horton, who pulled off this trick with with two separate teams, was an unlikely candidate. With the exception of the two listed years, Horton never played more than 146 games in a season.
  • Bando was a player who played consistently. He played at least 160 games four times in his career and at least 150 another 6.
  • In the year between his complete seasons, Ron Santo played 161 games. He only missed 1 game that year, butĀ  was also taken out of the game in another 3.

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Next, we'll go position-by position and take a closer look at the history of playing only a few players.

6 Responses to “1 Team, 1 Position, 1 Player”

  1. ImAShark2 Says:

    But will Jim Devlin's 1877 feat of pitching every single inning for a team ever be matched?

  2. DavidRF Says:

    Its a little easier to pitch every single inning for a team when you aren't always trying to win. Devlin was banned for life based on things he did that season.

  3. DoubleDiamond Says:

    One of my favorite questions to trick someone knowledgeable at least about the Ripken streak:

    Who led American League shortstops in games played in 1986?

    The answer is:

    Tony Fernandez

    The Blue Jays played 163 games that year, with a replayed tie game in there somewhere. Fernandez played shortstop in all of them, but I figured he didn't play the whole game at least once. And in fact Garth Iorg's page shows that he played a total of 4 innings in 2 games at shortstop for Toronto that year. (There may be others; I just checked the first possibility I saw on the Blue Jays' 1985 page.) The Orioles played the standard 162.

    I remember when Ripken's innings streak ended. His father was the manager, and he took him out of a game so that he wouldn't have the pressure of two streaks at once. And in fact there were probably times when the Orioles would have wanted to at least pinch run for him. (Ironically, his major league debut was as a pinch runner.)

  4. eorns Says:

    Regarding Horton and Staub, I guess it's easier to play 162 games if you never take the field, but, man, it just seems wrong.

  5. ImAShark2 Says:

    If you're trying to win or not it's still hard to pitch every inning in a season.

  6. tmckelv Says:

    Willie Horton was able to perform this "feat" (DH for every inning of the season) for 2 different teams. He really loved to NOT get out there.

    If a DH doesn't bat in an inning, did he really "play" that inning? I guess it is the same as when a RF stands on the field while the pither strikes out the side 1-2-3.