Tag Archives: Mickey Lolich

1970 Rewind: Game Eighty-nine

MINNESOTA 2, DETROIT 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, July 20.

Batting stars:  Cesar Tovar was 2-for-4.  Frank Quilici was 1-for-2 with a walk.

Pitching stars:  Jim Perry pitched 7.2 innings, giving up one run on two hits and no walks and striking out three.  Ron Perranoski retired all four men he faced, striking out one.

Opposition stars:  Don Wert was 2-for-3 with a double.  Mickey Lolich pitched seven innings, giving up two runs on seven hits and a walk and striking out two.

The game:  The Twins put two on with none out in the first, but a double play took them out of the inning.  Neither team threatened again until the fifth, when Quilici walked, singles by Perry and Tovar loaded the bases, and Harmon Killebrew delivered a two-out two-run single, putting the Twins up 2-0.

The Tigers did not get a hit, or even a baserunner, until the sixth, when Wert led off with a single.  They did not get another hit until the eighth.  At that time Bill Freehan was hit by a pitch with one out, Wert doubled, and Elliot Maddox hit a sacrifice fly to cut the lead to 2-1.  The tying run was on third with two out, but Perranoski came in to retire Jim Price on a ground out to end the inning.  Detroit went down in order in the ninth.

WP:  Perry (15-7).

LP:  Lolich (9-11).

S:  Perranoski (24).

Notes:  Rick Renick was again in left field in place of Brant Alyea.  Quilici was at second base in place of Rod Carew.  Jim Holt replaced Renick in left in the seventh.  Danny Thompson replaced Killebrew at third base in the ninth.

Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 and was batting .320.  Killebrew was 1-for-4 and was batting .319.  Tovar was batting .318.  Perry was 1-for-2 and was batting .316.  Perranoski had an ERA of 1.43.

Quilici was 1-for-2 and was batting .197.

Lolich was having an off year, although he wasn't that bad.  He was 9-11 at this point, but with an ERA of .356.  He would finish the season 14-19, with a 3.80 ERA and a 1.40 WHIP.  He still pitched 272.2 innings and had 13 complete games, he clearly didn't have a lot of short starts.  He would come back in 1971 to win 25 games and lead the league in complete games, innings pitched, and strikeouts.  He would finish second in Cy Young voting to Vida Blue.

Record:  The Twins were 58-31, in first place in the American League West, five games ahead of California.

1970 Rewind: Game Fourteen

MINNESOTA 6, DETROIT 0 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Sunday, April 26.

Batting starsLuis Tiant was 3-for-4 with a double and a stolen base.  Cesar Tovar was 2-for-4 with a stolen base, his sixth.  Rich Reese was 2-for-4.  Harmon Killebrew was 2-for-5 with two RBIs.  Tony Oliva was 2-for-5.

Pitching stars:  Tiant pitched a complete game shutout, giving up three hits and a walk and striking out six.

Opposition star:  Dick McAuliffe was 2-for-4.

The game:  The Twins put men on second and third with two out in the third but did not score.  They broke through in the fourth, however.  Oliva singled, Brant Alyea walked, Reese had an infield single to load the bases, and George Mitterwald had another infield single to make it 1-0 Twins.

The Twins put two on in the fifth, but did not score.  They broke the game open in the sixth with a two-out rally.  The first two men were retired, but Frank Quilici singled, Tiant hit an RBI double, Tovar had an infield single, Tiant and Tovar pulled off a double steal, Leo Cardenas tripled them both home, and Killebrew had an RBI single, making the score 5-0 Twins.

The Twins added one more in the eighth.  Tiant singled, a wild pitch moved him to second, Tovar bunted him to third, and Killebrew singled him home.

The Tigers never had a man beyond first base and only once had the leadoff man on base.

WP:  Tiant (3-0).

LP:  Mickey Lolich (4-2).

S:  None.

Notes:  Quilici was again at second in the absence of Rod Carew.  Cardenas remained in Carew's number two spot in the batting order.

Jim Holt replaced Brant Alyea in left field in the eighth inning.  Minnie Mendoza pinch-ran for Killebrew in the eighth and remained in the game at third base.

Tiant was batting .556.  Brant Alyea was 0-for-3 and was batting .390.  Tovar was batting .367.  Oliva was batting .344.  Killebrew was batting .341.  Quilici was batting .308.

Mitterwald was 1-for-4 and was batting .175.  Cardenas was 1-for-5 and was batting .192.

Tiant wasn't a terrible batter over his career, but he wasn't exceptional, either:  a career line of .164/.185/.224.  In 1970, however, he was exceptional:  .406/.424/.531 in 32 at-bats.  Small sample size, obviously, and maybe that's the full explanation.  But it's still pretty amazing.  The stolen base he got in this game was the only one he had in his career, and it was a steal of third on the front end of a double steal.  I don't know how many players have a steal of third as the only stolen base of their career, but I suspect it's a pretty short list.

This was Tiant's only shutout in 1970, and one of two complete games.

Lolich pitched 5.2 innings, allowing five runs on ten hits and a walk and striking out six.  It was the Tigers' fifteenth game of the season, and it was Lolich's sixth start.  The other five had been complete games (one of them 9.2 innings) and two of them had been shutouts.  Lolich pitched over 200 innings every year from 1964-1975; over 220 from 1968-1975; over 240 from 1969-1975; over 270 from 1970-1974, and over 300 from 1971-1974, with a high of 376 in 1971.  Interestingly, he only led the league in starts and complete games once, both 1971, when he had 45 starts and 29 complete games.  He continued to be an effective starter through age 35, and had a really good half-season as a reliever for the Padres in 1978, when he was thirty-seven.  Memory and a google search reveal that he was considered overweight, but he's listed at 6' 1", 170.  If he was overweight, it certainly didn't affect his pitching.

The Twins had won four, lost two, won four, lost two, and now won two.  Could they win four?

Record:  The Twins were 10-4, in first place in the American League West by winning percentage, but a half game behind California.