Former pitcher Wilbur Wood died Saturday at age 84. He used a knuckle ball to amass a prodigious number of innings:
Wood, a knuckleballer who developed into one of the best pitchers in baseball with the White Sox in the 1970s, truly embodied the meaning of chewing up innings. At his peak from 1971-75 with Chicago, Wood threw a whopping 1,681 2/3 innings, nearly 100 more than any other pitcher during that time and an average of 336 2/3 per season.
Wood combined incredible durability with run prevention at the height of his career. In 1971, Wood broke out in a career-best season, posting a 1.91 ERA and 11.7 WAR (per Baseball Reference) in 334 innings. The left-hander finished third in American League Cy Young Award voting and ninth in MVP voting, and was selected to his first All-Star Game.
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My thoughts go out to his family and friends.
Wood today would likely have won the 1971 Cy Young Award, but Vida Blue did win, with all the voting indicators favoring Blue.
Here is the list of innings leaders from 1971 to 1975, chock full of Hall of Famers. It was the last gasp of starting pitchers starting frequently and going deep in games. Pitchers were making starts in the high 30s, and a number of them came close to completing half those games.
Wood did not start off as knuckleball pitcher, although he did use the pitch occasionally. Hoyt Wilhelm mentored Wood and told he if he was going to use the pitch, he needed to throw it all the time. The along came Johnny Sain, who thought pitchers should throw all the time, and in 1971 got Wood to start a number of games on two days rest. The rest is history.
Control was Wood’s great strength as a knuckleball pitcher. He averaged just 2.4 walks per nine innings in his career, 2.14 per 9 IP during his five years of dominance. He did not strike out many batters, less than five per nine innings, but opponents could not put good wood on the ball.
My favorite Wood day came in a doubleheader against the Yankees. He started game one and faced six batters without recording an out, getting charged with six runs, five earned. He then started the night-cap, going 4 1/3 innings, allowing seven more runs, five earned, and taking the loss in both games. He is one of four pitchers to lose two starts on the same day since 1920, and the only one since 1930.