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Former Blue Jays reliever Dennis Lamp turns 67 today.
Lamp pitched three season for the Jays, in the middle of a 16 year MLB career.
His career started in 1977, with the Cubs, pitching 4 seasons there. In 126 games, 108 starts, he had a 28-41 record and a 4.08 ERA. In 1981 he crossed over to the south side to play for the White Sox for the next 3 years, going 25-21 with a 3.45 ERA in 120 games, 42 starts.
Before the 1984 season the Blue Jays signed him as a free agent. He signed a 3-year deal at $550,000 a year, with a vesting option for 2 more years at $600,000 a year. In 1983 Lamp had 15 saves and a 3.71 and the Jays thought they were getting a closer type.
In 1984, Lamp went 8-8, 9 saves, with a 4.55 ERA in 56 games, 4 starts. In 85 innings, he allowed 97 hits 38 hits and 45 strikeouts. The 9 saves was just 1 short of the team leaders Jimmy Key and Roy Lee Jackson. He pitched ok, but not really what you would like from a closer.
In 1985 he went 11-0, with a 3.32 ERA in 53 games, 1 start. In 105.2 innings he allowed 96 hits, 27 walks and 68 strikeouts. The 11-0 record impressed the BBWAA, he finished 21st in MVP voting. We would finish 99-62, first in the AL East, 2 games up of the Yankees.
We made the playoffs for the first time that year. We lost out to the Royals, in 7 games, in the ALCS. Dennis had a great series, pitching in 3 games, 9.1 innings, allowing just 2 hits, 1 walk with 10 strikeouts. He and Dave Stieb were our best pitchers. Stieb made 3 starts, had a 3.10 ERA in 20.1 innings. Our other starters had a rough time. Doyle Alexander had a 8.71 ERA in 2 starts and Jimmy Key a 5.19 ERA in 2 starts.
Dennis had 11 wins, but also 5 ‘blown saves’. He had 2 saves and 8 holds. Relief work was different in those days, in 28 of Lamp’s relief appearances he would pitch 2 or more innings and in 11 games he would go 3 or more innings of relief. FanGraphs has him at a 2.0 WAR for the season.
1986 didn’t go as well for Lamp, he had a 5.05 ERA, 2-6 record in 40 games, 2 starts.
And, not surprisingly, he came up just short of his vesting option. It was a bit of a complicated option. The option would be picked up if he got ‘100 points’ over 1985 and 1986. He got 1 point for a relief appearance and 2 points for a start. By the start of September he had 94 points, and if he appeared in just 6 games his option would be picked up. The Jays sat Lamp from September 2nd to the 28th, getting him into two games in the last week of the season.
It seemed like a short sighted decision at the time. As the Jays entered September they were just 3.5 games back of first place and from the All-Star break until the start of September 2, he had a 2.95 ERA in 9 games. The Jays would finish 9.5 games back of first.
Lamp wasn’t happy and filed a grievance against the team, but wasn’t successful. He said:
No matter what I did they were going to release me, even if I pitched well and even if I won a pennant. It’s frustrating as heck. They should have just released me so I could have been picked up by another team.
I’ve always thought that vesting options were a bad idea, at least for the players, although if you have a team that doesn’t use one of their best pitchers, for most of the last month, while in playoff race, i think it is a bad idea for the team as well.
Lamp would play 6 more seasons, one with the A’s, four with the Red Sox and the last with the Pirates.
In a 16 year career he had a 96-96 record, 35 saves, and a 3.93 ERA in 639 games, 163 starts.
He gave up Cal Ripken first MLB hit and Lou Brock 3000th. He also came within 3 outs of a no-hitter in 1981.
I don’t remember much about him, other than his mustache. I thought he wasn’t the happiest guy, but that might just be from the way his time with the Jays ended.
He threw from a low 3⁄4 arm slot and sometimes would go lower to where it was a straight sidearm. I looked for video of him, you can see him throw one pitch at the end of this, but that’s about the best I could find. There is video of him imitating Dave Winfield’s batting.
I couldn’t find a picture of Lamp that I could use in the headline of this post (we are limited to using stuff that SB Nation has the legal rights to use) but I found this old baseball card (man I have a lot of stuff in my house).
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Happy birthday Dennis. I hope it is a good one.
It is also Willie Greene’s birthday. Willie turns 48 today.
Willie had a 9 year MLB career and his second last season was with the Blue Jays.
We signed him as a free agent before the 1999 season. I remember being fairly happy about the signing. He was just 27. The season before he had hit .270/.370/.424, with 15 home runs. Coming into his prime I thought ‘this could be good’.
I was wrong. He hit .204/.266/.394 with 12 home runs in 81 games with the Blue Jays, mostly at DH, with a few games at third base and right field. The next season he played for the Cubs, and hit much the same as he had with the Jays and that was the end of his career.
In all he played 9 seasons (or at least parts of 9 seasons, he only played 100 games 3 times). In 655 MLB games he hit .23/.326/.423 with 86 home runs.
Happy Birthday Willie. I hope it is a good one.