clock menu more-arrow no yes mobile

Filed under:

Happy Birthday Mark Eichhorn

Mark Eichhorn: Talk about perseverance — from a non-roster player to ace of the Blue Jays’ bullpen. Photo by Tony Bock/Toronto Star via Getty Images

Mark Eichhorn turns 60 today. The Blue Jays drafted him in the 2nd round, 30th overall, in the 1979 amateur draft, out of Cabrillo College, CA, where he played shortstop and pitched. Mark quickly rose through the Jay’s farm system and made 7 starts for the Jays as a September call up in 1982. They didn’t go well. He went 0-3 with a 5.45 ERA, and to make matters worse, he suffered a shoulder injury. The injury cost him the speed off his fastball.

Returning to the minors, he learned to throw submarine style in the fall instructional league in 1984. As a right-handed submarine pitcher, Mark threw, quite possibly, the slowest pitches in the majors. He threw an extremely slow change-up, a ‘fastball’ and a slider. He had a huge split in his stats with releasing the ball from very low to the ground, coming from behind a right-handed batter. Righties couldn’t hit him at all, while lefties hit him pretty good. In 1986, his return year to the majors and his best season as a Jay right handed batters only hit .135/.186/.165 against him, while lefties went .259/.345/.434.

In 1986 Mark had the best season ever for a Jay reliever. He pitched in 69 games, throwing an amazing 157 innings and finishing with a 1.72 ERA. Manager Jimy Williams offered to let him start in one of the season’s final games so that Mark could have enough innings to get the ERA title, but he passed on it. Had he not spent a couple of weeks on the DL, he would have likely had the ERA title at the start of the season. Fangraphs has him at a 5.3 WAR and Baseball Reference 7.4 (good for 7th best in Jays history) that year. The Sporting News selected him as the Rookie Pitcher of the Year. He also finished 6th in Cy Young voting and 3rd in Rookie of the Year voting. Williams often used him for multiple innings, pitching as many as 6 innings in a game out of the pen and going 3 or more innings several times.

It is hard to blame Williams for the overuse of Eichhorn. When you have a ‘get some shutout innings free card,’ you tend to use it. Mark was terrific, finishing the 1986 season 14-6 with 10 saves. He gave up only 105 hits in the 157 innings, striking out 166 while walking 45. He was 3rd in the Rookie of the Year voting, trailing Jose Canseco and Wally Joyner, and was 6th in the Cy Young voting. I’d call it the best season ever for a Blue Jays reliever.

In 1987 Mark wasn’t the same, but still was very effective with a 3.17 ERA in 89 games, setting the Jays record for games pitched in a season. Number 2 on the list is Paul Quantrill at 82 games pitched in 1998. He won 10 games and saved 4 more, serving as a setup man for Tom Henke. Even though he pitched in 20 more games than 1986 he pitched 30 less innings. Williams still would have him out there for 3 or more innings on several occasions. He also used him to get one or two right-handers out several times. Jimy used him as an all-propose reliever, sending him out there in any situation. Eichhorn made the most appearances and faced the most batters of any AL reliever. As always, he had a large split with a .642 OPS vs. RHB and a .760 OPS vs. lefties.

In 1988 he was on pace to get into a ton of games again, but he suffered an injury in early June that kept him out till September. He altered his delivery to make it harder for runners to steal on him, which cost him some effectiveness. His ERA jumped to 4.19. Some of that was because of the number of innings he had pitched over the last couple of years. Since some of his effectiveness might have been due to his unusual delivery, batters may have been able to get comfortable with it and maybe had an easier time picking up the ball when he released it. And, even throwing sidearm, that much work has to cause some wear and tear on the arm.

After the 1988 season, feeling he had lost his effectiveness, the Jays sold Eichhorn to the Braves. After a pretty average season in Atlanta, the Angels signed him as a free agent. There he was again, a handy pitcher. After 2.5 good seasons with the Angels, the Jays traded Rob Ducey and Greg Myers to get him back on July 30, 1992, just in time for Mark to get 2 World Series rings. He pitched 4.1 shutout innings, over 4 games, in the two postseasons.

In 1993, he pitched in 54 games and had a 2.72 ERA. Cito started the season using him as a multiple-inning reliever, but as the season went on he was used more as a 1 inning or less, late-inning setup man. After the second World Series win, he signed as a free agent with the Orioles. Near the end of an excellent season with the O’s he was injured and missed the 1995 season. He signed back with the Angels in 1996 but didn’t do well. Mark bounced around the minors after that, pitching in the Jays farm system in 2000. He didn’t pitch in the majors again.

I’ve always wondered why we don’t see more side arm/submarine type pitchers in the majors. The ones we do see have success; I think if I were a minor league pitcher who wasn’t likely to make the majors (the only kind of minor league pitcher I’d be), I’d give it a try, or try a knuckleball. In the 70’s and 80’s Kent Tekulve and Dan Quisenberry were very successful submarine-style closers. As a group, sidearmer’s tend to have excellent control, but they don’t have much in common beyond that. Some have been hard throwers, some have had great curves or sliders, some throw sinkers, Dan Quisenberry even threw a knuckleball for a while, and Eichhorn got by with a slow, slow change. You can see Mark Eichhorn’s delivery in this YouTube video:

Sidearmers seem to be pretty durable and have, on average, had long careers. The most infamous one is Carl Mays, the only major league pitcher who killed a batter with a pitch. Likely the strange delivery had something to do with why Ray Chapman didn’t pick up the pitch and get out of the way. There were many other factors. Balls were used longer back then and tended to be dirtier. With no lights at the stadium, the ball would have been hard to see in the late afternoon. But I digress a lot. Mays was a straight underhand pitcher who threw very hard, an outstanding starting pitcher, just short of being a Hall of Fame type.

My father-in-law threw sidearm, much the same as Eichhorn’s delivery. He tore a muscle in his upper arm, and, having a distrust of doctors, he never had it fixed. He couldn’t raise his arm, but man, could he whip a ball. Playing catch with him, I’d always back up about as far as I could throw. Course, he was throwing to his son-in-law and likely wanted to prove a point. He also had a nice natural curve on his throws. But, again, I digress.

Mark ended his career with a 3.00 ERA in 885.2 innings over 563 games. He is now a pitching coach for a high school baseball team in California.

Mark coached his son’s Little League team featured in a documentary movie called Small Ball, A Little League Story in 2002. It was about their team trying to make the Little League World Series.

And he sings and plays keyboards in a band named “Soulwise”. They make music with a reggae beat.

Effective and a lot of fun to watch pitch makes him one of those guys I remember very fondly.