Don Sutton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Number retired 14 August 1998 - Dodgers)
#21 - Brewers; #27 - Angels
Don Sutton
Position Pitcher (RH)
MLB Seasons 23 (16 LAD)
Teams Dodgers
(1966-1980, 1988; 550 games)
Astros (1981-1982; 50 games)
Brewers (1982-1984; 71 games)
A's (1985; 29 games)
Angels (1985-1987; 74 games)
Debut 14 April 1966 (LAD)
Final Game 9 August 1988 (LAD)
Total Games 785 batting
(774 pitching)
LCS Appearances NLCS:
1974 (LAD),
1977 (LAD),
1978 (LAD)
ALCS:
1982 (Brewers),
1986 (Angles)
World Series Teams 1974 (LAD),
1977 (LAD),
1978 (LAD),
1982 (Brewers)
Allstar Teams 1972, 1973,
1975, 1977
(no ERA's allowed)
Awards The Sporting New Rookie Pitcher of the Year (1966)
ML Shutout Leader (1972; 9)
Lou Gehrig Memorial Award (1976)
All-Star Game MVP (1977)
ML ERA Leader (1980; 2.20)
Hall of Fame (1998)
Nicknames'
"Little D"
"Mr. Consistency"
"Black & Decker"
Baseball Hall of Fame
Don Sutton
is a member of
the Baseball
Hall of Fame

Donald Howard Sutton (born April 2, 1945 in Clio, Alabama) is a former Major League Baseball player and current television sportscaster.

A right-handed pitcher, Sutton played for the Sioux Falls Packers as a minor leaguer, and entered the major league at the age of 21. In the majors, he played 23 years for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers, Oakland Athletics, and California Angels. He won a total of 324 games, 58 of them shutouts and five of them one-hitters, and he is eighth on baseball's all-time strikeout list with 3,574 K's. He also holds the major league record for number of consecutive losses to one team, having lost 13 straight games to the Chicago Cubs.

He was known for doctoring baseballs. His nickname was "Black & Decker"; legend has it that when Sutton met notorious greaseballer Gaylord Perry, Perry handed him a tube of Vaseline, and Sutton responded with a thank-you, then handed him a sheet of sandpaper.

A 4-time All-Star, Sutton was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1998. His candidacy and subsequent election were controversial, with critics pointing out that he had never won a Cy Young Award, had won 20 games only once, and had rarely led his league in any statistical category. However, supporters noted that no pitcher with either 300 victories or 3000 strikeouts had ever failed to be elected to the Hall of Fame, and that his 324 wins were, at the time of his retirement, the most by any right-handed pitcher since the 1920s, and many pitchers with worse records were in the Hall Of Fame.

Contents

  • Height: 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
  • Weight: 185 lb (85 kg)
  • Throws: Right
  • Bats: Right
  • Wins: 324 - Losses: 256
  • Lifetime ERA: 3.26
  • Total Innings: 5,282.1
  • Stikeouts: 3,574
  • One-Hitters: 5
  • Two-Hitters: 9
  • All-time Dodger leader in:
    • Wins (233)
    • Games Pitched (550)
    • Games Started (533)
    • Innings Pitched (3,814)
    • Strikeouts (2,696)
    • Shutouts (52)
    • Opening Day Starts (7)
  • LC Series Games
    • Record: 4-1
    • ERA: 2.02
    • Total Innings: 49
  • World Series Games
    • Record: 2-3
    • ERA: 5.26
    • Total Innings: 51
  • All-Star Games
    • ERA: 0.00
    • Total Innings: 8
    • Record 1-0 (NL 4-0)

Sutton started his broadcasting career in 1989 with the Atlanta Braves on TBS, a position that he held through 2006. He left TBS after the 2006 season, mainly because the network will broadcast fewer games in future seasons. Sutton will be a color commentator for the Washington Nationals on the MASN network. [1]

Sutton has also broadcast golf and served as a pre- and post-game analyst for NBC's coverage of the 1987 League Championship Series.

Sutton was born on the same date as former Dodger teammate Reggie Smith.

He also appeared on episodes of the Match Game between 1976 & 1978.

His son, Daron, is a broadcaster for the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Sutton was born in Clio, Alabama, a small town in Barbour County. It can be argued that Sutton is the second most famous person born in Clio, since it is also the place of birth of former Alabama governor George Wallace.

Preceded by
Joe Torre
Major League Player of the Month
April, 1972
Succeeded by
Bob Watson
Preceded by
Johnny Bench
Lou Gehrig Memorial Award
1976
Succeeded by
Lou Brock
Preceded by
George Foster
Major League Baseball All-Star Game
Most Valuable Player

1977
Succeeded by
Steve Garvey
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