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Battery (baseball)
Baseball term for pitcher and catcher
Baseball term for pitcher and catcher
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In baseball, the battery is the pitcher and the catcher, who may also be called batterymen, or batterymates in relation to one another.
History

Origins of the term
The use of the word 'battery' in baseball was first coined by Henry Chadwick in the 1860s in reference to the firepower of a team's pitching staff and inspired by the artillery batteries then in use in the American Civil War.
Pitching to a preferred batterymate
Throughout the history of baseball, although teams have typically carried multiple catchers, star pitchers have often preferred the familiarity of working consistently with a single batterymate.
In the early 20th century, some prominent pitchers were known to have picked their favorite catchers. Sportswriter Fred Lieb recalls the batteries of Christy Mathewson / Frank Bowerman beginning in 1899 with the New York Giants, Jack Coombs / Jack Lapp beginning in 1908 with the Philadelphia Athletics, Cy Young / Lou Criger gaining the greatest attention in 1901 with the Boston Americans (later the Red Sox), and Grover Cleveland Alexander / Bill Killefer beginning in 1911 with the Philadelphia Phillies.
In 1976, several major league pitchers chose their preferred catchers; a notion that had fallen out of practice for some decades. For instance, catcher Bob Boone of the Philadelphia Phillies, though one of the best catchers of his day, was replaced with Tim McCarver at the request of pitcher Steve Carlton. The Carlton/McCarver combination worked well in 32 out of Carlton's 35 games that season, plus one playoff game. The two had previously been batterymates for four years (1966–69) with the St. Louis Cardinals. Another battery-by-choice was superstitious rookie pitcher Mark Fidrych who was new to the Detroit Tigers in 1976, insisting on rookie catcher Bruce Kimm behind the plate. The Fidrych/Kimm combination started all 29 of Fidrych's 1976 season games. The two continued as a battery through 1977.
Knuckleballers have often preferred pitching to "personal" batterymates due to the difficulty of catching the unusual pitch. One notable example was Boston Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield and his preferred catcher, Doug Mirabelli.
Most starts
The below table shows battery-mates that have appeared in more than 200 starts together since 1914.
Especially notable are the five Hall of Fame batteries below, including Lefty Grove (ranked by Bill James as the second-greatest pitcher of all time) and Mickey Cochrane (ranked by James as the eighth-greatest catcher) of the 1925–1933 Philadelphia Athletics,
| Games started | Pitcher | Catcher | Years | Team |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 328 | Adam Wainwright | Yadier Molina | 2007–2022 | St. Louis Cardinals |
| 324 | Mickey Lolich | Bill Freehan | 1963–1975 | Detroit Tigers |
| 316 | Warren Spahn | Del Crandall | 1949–1963 | Boston / Milwaukee Braves |
| 306 | Red Faber | Ray Schalk | 1914–1926 | Chicago White Sox |
| 283 | Don Drysdale | John Roseboro | 1957–1967 | Brooklyn / Los Angeles Dodgers |
| 282 | Red Ruffing | Bill Dickey | 1930–1946 | New York Yankees |
| 270 | Steve Rogers | Gary Carter | 1975–1984 | Montreal Expos |
| 264 | Bob Lemon | Jim Hegan | 1946–1957 | Cleveland Indians |
| 250 | Early Wynn | Jim Hegan | 1949–1957 | Cleveland Indians |
| 248 | Tom Glavine | Javy Lopez | 1994–2002 | Atlanta Braves |
| 247 | Lefty Gomez | Bill Dickey | 1931–1942 | New York Yankees |
| 240 | Bob Feller | Jim Hegan | 1941–1956 | Cleveland Indians |
| 239 | Fernando Valenzuela | Mike Scioscia | 1981–1990 | Los Angeles Dodgers |
| 237 | Stan Coveleski | Steve O'Neill | 1916–1923 | Cleveland Indians |
| 237 | Tom Seaver | Jerry Grote | 1967–1977 | New York Mets |
| 230 | Lew Burdette | Del Crandall | 1953–1963 | Milwaukee Braves |
| 228 | Steve Carlton | Tim McCarver | 1965–1969, 1972–1979 | St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Phillies |
| 224 | Lefty Grove | Mickey Cochrane | 1925–1933 | Philadelphia Athletics |
| 221 | Paul Derringer | Ernie Lombardi | 1933–1941 | Cincinnati Reds |
| 212 | Whitey Ford | Yogi Berra | 1950–1963 | New York Yankees |
| 208 | Sandy Koufax | John Roseboro | 1957–1966 | Brooklyn / Los Angeles Dodgers |
| 208 | Mike Flanagan | Rick Dempsey | 1976–1986 | Baltimore Orioles |
| 207 | Jack Morris | Lance Parrish | 1978–1986 | Detroit Tigers |
| 207 | Cole Hamels | Carlos Ruiz | 2006–2015 | Philadelphia Phillies |
| 203 | Rube Walberg | Mickey Cochrane | 1925–1933 | Philadelphia Athletics |
| 203 | Billy Pierce | Sherm Lollar | 1952–1961 | Chicago White Sox |
| 202 | Dave Stieb | Ernie Whitt | 1980–1989 | Toronto Blue Jays |
Most no-hitters
The table below lists the battery combinations that share the record for most major league no-hitters (2).
| No-Hit | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Games | Pitcher | Catcher | Date | Team | Ref | ||||
| 2* | Larry Corcoran | Silver Flint | August 19, 1880 | Chicago White Stockings | title=Catchers Who Caught No Hitters | url=http://bb_catchers.tripod.com/catchers/catchnoh.htm | work=bb_catchers.tripod.com | publisher=Encyclopedia of Baseball Catchers | access-date=July 19, 2012}} |
| September 20, 1882 | |||||||||
| 2* | Larry Corcoran | King Kelly | August 19, 1880 | Chicago White Stockings | |||||
| June 27, 1884 | |||||||||
| 2 | Pud Galvin | Jack Rowe | August 20, 1880 | Buffalo Bisons | |||||
| August 4, 1884 | |||||||||
| 2 | Adonis Terry | Jimmy Peoples | July 24, 1886 | Brooklyn Grays | title=In The Base Ball Field | url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1886-07-25/ed-1/seq-7/ | newspaper=The Sun (New York) | date=July 25, 1886}} | |
| May 27, 1888 | Brooklyn Bridegrooms | title=A Big Day For Terry | url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1888-05-28/ed-1/seq-3/ | newspaper=The Sun (New York) | date=May 28, 1888}} | ||||
| 2 | Cy Young | Lou Criger | May 5, 1904 | Boston Americans | |||||
| June 30, 1908 | Boston Red Sox | ||||||||
| 2 | Addie Joss | Nig Clarke | October 2, 1908 | Cleveland Naps | |||||
| April 20, 1910 | |||||||||
| 2 | Johnny Vander Meer | Ernie Lombardi | June 11, 1938 | Cincinnati Reds | |||||
| June 15, 1938 | |||||||||
| 2 | Allie Reynolds | Yogi Berra | July 12, 1951 | New York Yankees | |||||
| September 28, 1951 | |||||||||
| 2 | Carl Erskine | Roy Campanella | June 19, 1952 | Brooklyn Dodgers | |||||
| May 12, 1956 | |||||||||
| 2 | Sandy Koufax | John Roseboro | June 30, 1962 | Los Angeles Dodgers | |||||
| May 11, 1963 | |||||||||
| 2 | Steve Busby | Fran Healy | April 27, 1973 | Kansas City Royals | |||||
| June 19, 1974 | |||||||||
| 2 | Roy Halladay | Carlos Ruiz | May 29, 2010 | Philadelphia Phillies | |||||
| October 6, 2010 | |||||||||
| 2 | Homer Bailey | Ryan Hanigan | September 28, 2012 | Cincinnati Reds | |||||
| July 2, 2013 | |||||||||
| 2 | Max Scherzer | Wilson Ramos | June 20, 2015 | Washington Nationals | |||||
| October 3, 2015 |
(*) Catchers Silver Flint and King Kelly shared catching duties for Corcoran's August 19, 1880 no-hitter.
Sibling batteries
The following chart of major league sibling batteries lists pitcher/catcher siblings who played on the same major league team during a single major league season. The pair may or may not have performed as a battery in an actual major league game.
Unique among those listed below are Mort and Walker Cooper, who formed the National League's starting battery at both the 1942 and 1943 Major League Baseball All-Star Games, and also appeared as a battery in the 1942, 1943, and 1944 World Series, the only sibling battery to achieve either feat.
Other records and firsts
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Most games
The battery that appeared in the most games together was Mariano Rivera and Jorge Posada, with 598 games together for the New York Yankees between 1995 and 2011.
Most wins
The record for most team wins by a starting battery is 213 by Adam Wainwright and Yadier Molina.
Most innings
Red Faber and Ray Schalk, who played together for the Chicago White Sox between 1914 and 1928, recorded the most total innings as a battery (2553.2).
Single-game records
Madison Bumgarner and Buster Posey of the San Francisco Giants became the major league's first battery to hit grand slams in the same game when they accomplished the feat on July 13, 2014 against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The home run was pitcher Bumgarner's second grand slam of the season (April 11).
First Black battery
Pitcher George Stovey and catcher Moses Fleetwood Walker formed the first Black battery in professional baseball history when they teamed up for the 1887 Newark Little Giants of the International Association. The tandem recorded ten consecutive wins to begin the season before the Chicago White Stockings refused to take the field on July 15, leading to the league's implementation of the color line.
Father-son batteries
Frank Duncan, Jr. and his son, Frank Duncan III, of the 1941 Kansas City Monarchs are thought to be the only father-son battery in major league history.
In a game on September 7, 2012, former major leaguer Roger Clemens came out of retirement to pitch for the minor league Sugar Land Skeeters of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, and formed a battery with his son Koby Clemens.
References
References
- "Battery (baseball) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". [[Encyclopædia Britannica]].
- Edward Gruver. "Koufax". BaseballLibrary.com.
- (March 9, 2015). "Major league teams wrestle with personal catchers". usatoday.com.
- Other successful batteries were [[Ed Walsh]] / [[Billy Sullivan (baseball, born 1875). d0d341b0. Billy Sullivan Sr.. Trey Strecker. November 20, 2011
- "Muddy Rule New York Times obituary at thedeadballera.com". thedeadballera.com.
- (September 11, 1951). "Hank DeBerry Dead". The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
- Grosshandler, Stan. "Pitcher's Choice". Society for American Baseball Research.
- Aaron Gleeman. (February 21, 2013). "R.A. Dickey and his knuckleball will have a personal catcher". nbcsports.com.
- (May 1, 2019). "Doug Mirabelli got a police escort to Fenway Park 13 years ago today". nbcsports.com.
- Brita Meng Outzen. (March 15, 2008). "Knuckleballer saddened by Boston's release of personal catcher". thesunchronicle.com.
- (March 13, 2008). "Wakefield's personal catcher Mirabelli released". espn.com.
- Doug. (January 28, 2016). "200 Game Batteries". High Heat Stats.
- Silver, Zachary. (February 9, 2021). "'This is my home': Molina ready to chase title". MLB.com.
- David Schoenfield. (December 13, 2012). "Hall of 100: Best pitcher of all time". ESPN.
- Bill James. (December 14, 2017). "Catchers of the Last 40 years". Bill James Online.
- Barra, Allen. (2009). "Yogi Berra: Eternal Yankee". W. W. Norton.
- "Yogi Berra's Pitchers". Society for American Baseball Research.
- "Whitey Ford's Battery Mates". Society for American Baseball Research.
- "Catchers Who Caught No Hitters". Encyclopedia of Baseball Catchers.
- (July 25, 1886). "In The Base Ball Field". The Sun (New York).
- (May 28, 1888). "A Big Day For Terry". The Sun (New York).
- "Philadelphia Athletics at Boston Americans Box Score, May 5, 1904". baseball-reference.com.
- "Boston Red Sox at New York Highlanders Box Score, June 30, 1908". baseball-reference.com.
- "Chicago White Sox at Cleveland Naps Box Score, October 2, 1908". baseball-reference.com.
- "Cleveland Naps at Chicago White Sox Box Score, April 20, 1910". baseball-reference.com.
- "Boston Bees at Cincinnati Reds Box Score, June 11, 1938". baseball-reference.com.
- "Cincinnati Reds at Brooklyn Dodgers Box Score, June 15, 1938". baseball-reference.com.
- "New York Yankees at Cleveland Indians Box Score, July 12, 1951". baseball-reference.com.
- "Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees Box Score, September 28, 1951". baseball-reference.com.
- "Chicago Cubs at Brooklyn Dodgers Box Score, June 19, 1952". baseball-reference.com.
- "New York Giants at Brooklyn Dodgers Box Score, May 12, 1956". baseball-reference.com.
- "New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers Box Score, June 30, 1962". baseball-reference.com.
- "San Francisco Giants at Los Angeles Dodgers Box Score, May 11, 1963". baseball-reference.com.
- "Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers Box Score, April 27, 1973". baseball-reference.com.
- "Kansas City Royals at Milwaukee Brewers Box Score, June 19, 1974". baseball-reference.com.
- "Philadelphia Phillies at Florida Marlins Box Score, May 29, 2010". baseball-reference.com.
- "2010 National League Division Series (NLDS) Game 1, Reds at Phillies, October 6". baseball-reference.com.
- "Cincinnati Reds at Pittsburgh Pirates Box Score, September 28, 2012". baseball-reference.com.
- "San Francisco Giants at Cincinnati Reds Box Score, July 2, 2013". baseball-reference.com.
- "Pittsburgh Pirates at Washington Nationals Box Score, June 20, 2015". baseball-reference.com.
- "Washington Nationals at New York Mets Box Score, October 3, 2015". baseball-reference.com.
- Larry Amman and L. Robert Davids. "Baseball Brothers". Society for American Baseball Research.
- (August 12, 2021). "Cubs' Andrew, Austin Romine form 16th 'sibling battery' in MLB history".
- Dan Holmes. (December 26, 2018). "The greatest batteries in baseball history". Baseball Egg.
- John Denton. (September 15, 2022). "Time-tested Waino-Yadi battery sets record that may never be broken". mlb.com.
- Kevin Johnson. (April 24, 2018). "Long-Term Battery Combinations". Seamheads.com.
- (July 13, 2014). "Giants' battery of Bumgarner, Posey provide charge heading to All-Star break". San Jose Mercury News.
- Peter Mancuso. "May 2, 1887: The first African-American battery". sabr.org.
- Peter Mancuso. "July 14, 1887: The color line is drawn". sabr.org.
- Chris Landers. (June 7, 2016). "The little-known but awesome story of professional baseball's first father-son battery". mlb.com.
- Ryan Whirty. (February 11, 2016). "Seventy five years ago, father-son battery made baseball history with Kansas City Monarchs". kansascity.com.
- "Long Island Ducks vs Sugar Land Skeeters: 0–4.". pointstreak.com.
- (August 20, 2012). "Roger Clemens returning to mound". espn.com.
- (September 7, 2012). "Roger Clemens solid in outing". espn.com.
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