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Rod Beck

Posted by Andy on June 24, 2007

Some very sad news today about the passing of Rod Beck. I never heard or read a single bad thing about him, and he was certainly much too young to pass away. My heart goes out to all people struggling with substance abuse or addiction issues.

In celebration of Rod Beck's life, here are a few tidbits about his career:

Most times striking out an individual player, taken from his PI Event Finder page for strikeouts:

Ken Caminiti 7
Delino DeShields 7
Marquis Grissom 7
Terry Pendleton 7

From his splits page, we can learn that in his career, he limited opposing batters to a .243 BA, .292 OBP, and a .391 SLG, which are some pretty impressive numbers. But he was really money in the clutch. For example, with RISP and 2 outs, those numbers fall to .195 / .286 / .313.

Beck's career apex was 1993 to 1998, and he led all of baseball in saves for that period:

                   Games Link to Individual Games
+-----------------+-----+-------------------------+
 Rod Beck            232 Ind. Games
 Randy Myers         216 Ind. Games
 John Wetteland      215 Ind. Games
 Trevor Hoffman      188 Ind. Games
 Roberto Hernandez   179 Ind. Games
 Jeff Montgomery     177 Ind. Games
 John Franco         171 Ind. Games
 Rick Aguilera       153 Ind. Games
 Dennis Eckersley    151 Ind. Games
 Robb Nen            148 Ind. Games

For those for of us who never knew Mr. Beck personally, let's at least remember him as this much: one of the dominant closers of the 1990s.

2 Responses to “Rod Beck”

  1. Damno Te Says:

    That's really sad news. Always loved watching him pitch and you could tell the concentration he gave for each throw. Thanks for putting up those stats too. I would have thought Hoffman would have lead.

  2. birtelcom Says:

    The guy was absolutely unhittable when he first came up. Using PI, I found that since 1901, there have been only a dozen pitchers who have managed two separate seasons with a WHIP under 0.90 and at least 75 IP. Except for Beck, the youngest to have achieved two such seasons was Eric Gagne, who managed it by age 27. Beck was 24 and had already racked up two seasons of a WHIP less than .9 over 75+ IP.

    Here are all the pitchers (according to the PI Pitching Season Finder)who have managed two such seasons in their careers (no one has ever had three):
    Starters: Cy Young, Christy Mathewson, Three-Finger Brown, Sandy Koufax, Greg Maddux, Ed Walsh, Babe Adams
    Relievers: Billy Wagner, Eric Gagne, Rod Beck, Keith Foulke, Hoyt Wilhelm