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His [[1968 in baseball|1968]] season was a remarkable one, as he went 31-6, was an [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star]], won the [[Cy Young Award]], won the [[MLB Most Valuable Player award|AL Most Valuable Player Award]], and was on the [[1968 World Series|World Series]]-winning Detroit Tigers. His 31 wins that year made him the first pitcher to win 30 games in a season since [[Dizzy Dean]]. (McLain might have won 33 games that year had it not been for two 2-1 losses late in the season.) After the Tigers had clinched the '68 [[American League pennant winners 1901-68|AL pennant]], McLain exhibited a rare display of magnanimity in a game against the [[New York Yankees]]; in cruising to his 31st victory, with the Tigers leading 6-1, McLain intentionally gave up a 'fat' pitch to [[Mickey Mantle]], allowing the soon-to-retire Mantle to hit his 535th homer and pass [[Jimmie Foxx]] on the all-time home run list.
His [[1968 in baseball|1968]] season was a remarkable one, as he went 31-6, was an [[Major League Baseball All-Star Game|All-Star]], won the [[Cy Young Award]], won the [[MLB Most Valuable Player award|AL Most Valuable Player Award]], and was on the [[1968 World Series|World Series]]-winning Detroit Tigers. His 31 wins that year made him the first pitcher to win 30 games in a season since [[Dizzy Dean]]. (McLain might have won 33 games that year had it not been for two 2-1 losses late in the season.) After the Tigers had clinched the '68 [[American League pennant winners 1901-68|AL pennant]], McLain exhibited a rare display of magnanimity in a game against the [[New York Yankees]]; in cruising to his 31st victory, with the Tigers leading 6-1, McLain intentionally gave up a 'fat' pitch to [[Mickey Mantle]], allowing the soon-to-retire Mantle to hit his 535th homer and pass [[Jimmie Foxx]] on the all-time home run list.


McLain's 1968 World Series performance was not as stellar, however, as he lost Games 1 and 4 to [[Bob Gibson]] of the [[St. Louis Cardinals]]. But McLain would win the crucial Game 6, with the Tigers trailing three games to two.
McLain's 1968 World Series performance was not as stellar, however, as he lost Games 1 and 4 to [[Bob Gibson]] of the [[St. Louis Cardinals]]. But McLain would win the crucial Game 6, with the Tigers trailing three games to two. Teammate [[Mickey Lolich]] went 3-0 and won the [[World Series MVP]] award.


McLain was a three-time All-Star and won the Cy Young Award twice in his career, in 1968 and 1969; in the latter year, he shared the award with [[Mike Cuellar]]. His lifetime record includes a won-loss tally of 131-91, an ERA of 3.39, and 1282 strikeouts in 1886 innings pitched.
McLain was a three-time All-Star and won the Cy Young Award twice in his career, in 1968 and 1969; in the latter year, he shared the award with [[Mike Cuellar]]. His lifetime record includes a won-loss tally of 131-91, an ERA of 3.39, and 1282 strikeouts in 1886 innings pitched.

Revision as of 21:10, 1 May 2007

File:DennyMcLain30thWin.jpg
Denny McLain, after having won his 30th game of the 1968 season, holds a baseball commemorating the accomplishment at Tiger Stadium; he would win 31 games that season.

Dennis Dale "Denny" McLain (born March 29, 1944, in Chicago, Illinois) is a former American professional baseball player. He is the last major league pitcher to win 30 or more games during a season.

Professional playing career

McLain attended Mt. Carmel High School in Chicago, and played shortstop and pitcher. Originally signed by the Chicago White Sox, he was selected off waivers by the Detroit Tigers, with whom he broke into the major leagues in 1963. His first good season came in 1965, when he posted a 2.61 ERA and a 16-6 record. He would remain one of the top pitchers in Major League Baseball until 1969.

His 1968 season was a remarkable one, as he went 31-6, was an All-Star, won the Cy Young Award, won the AL Most Valuable Player Award, and was on the World Series-winning Detroit Tigers. His 31 wins that year made him the first pitcher to win 30 games in a season since Dizzy Dean. (McLain might have won 33 games that year had it not been for two 2-1 losses late in the season.) After the Tigers had clinched the '68 AL pennant, McLain exhibited a rare display of magnanimity in a game against the New York Yankees; in cruising to his 31st victory, with the Tigers leading 6-1, McLain intentionally gave up a 'fat' pitch to Mickey Mantle, allowing the soon-to-retire Mantle to hit his 535th homer and pass Jimmie Foxx on the all-time home run list.

McLain's 1968 World Series performance was not as stellar, however, as he lost Games 1 and 4 to Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals. But McLain would win the crucial Game 6, with the Tigers trailing three games to two. Teammate Mickey Lolich went 3-0 and won the World Series MVP award.

McLain was a three-time All-Star and won the Cy Young Award twice in his career, in 1968 and 1969; in the latter year, he shared the award with Mike Cuellar. His lifetime record includes a won-loss tally of 131-91, an ERA of 3.39, and 1282 strikeouts in 1886 innings pitched.

Statistics

W L WP GP GS CG SHO SV IP BB SO ERA WHIP
131 91 .590 280 264 105 29 2 1,886.0 548 1282 3.39 1.16

Downfall of McLain's MLB career

File:Iemclain.jpg
Denny McLain (1971)

In addition to arm trouble, allegations of bookmaking and associations with gamblers and underworld criminals shortened Denny McLain's career. Early in his career, McLain’s interest in betting on horses was piqued by Chuck Dressen, one of his first managers. McLain’s descent into his gambling obsession was further precipitated by an offhand remark made during an interview—that he drank about a case of Pepsi a day. (When he pitched, he was known to down a Pepsi between innings.) A representative from Pepsi then offered McLain a contract with the company, just for doing a few endorsements. McLain soon realized that he and the Pepsi rep shared an affinity for gambling; when the two realized how much money they were losing, and that they could earn so much more by ‘taking the action’ on bets, they attempted to set up a bookmaking operation as hands-off, silent partners.

After Sports Illustrated broke a story about McLain's nefarious activities, he was suspended by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn for the first three months of the 1970 season; McLain received another suspension later that year for carrying a gun on a team flight. Also, Sports Illustrated reported that a foot injury suffered by McLain late in 1967 had been caused when an organized crime figure stomped on it for McLain's failure to pay off on a bet. (McLain missed six starts because of this injury, coming back to pitch and lose the Tigers' final game of the season against the California Angels, which cost his team the 1967 pennant.) McLain’s ‘official’ story of what caused the injury kept changing—often a sign of prevarication or duplicity: he once claimed that he had kicked his locker after a particularly disappointing start, another time that he had fallen asleep watching television and then wrenched his toes against some furniture when he woke up in the dark, and another time that he had kicked some garbage cans being ‘terrorized’ by squirrels.

He attempted a comeback with the Washington Senators the following year, but went 10-22. (He thus earned the dubious distinction of being the only player to go from leading his league in wins [24, in 1969] to two years later leading his league in losses.) McLain last played in the majors in 1972 at age 28, after briefly pitching for the Oakland A's and Atlanta Braves, going 4-7 with a 6.37 ERA. The Braves, who had acquired McLain from Oakland in a trade for future Hall of Famer Orlando Cepeda, released McLain on March 26, 1973.

Post-professional 'career'

In 1973, McLain again tried to make a comeback, pitching in the minor leagues with Des Moines and Shreveport. The following year, he played a season for the London Majors of the Intercounty Baseball League at Labatt Memorial Park in London, Ontario, Canada. Given his arm problems, McLain only pitched nine innings for the Majors, but he did play in 14 games at either shortstop, first base, or catcher, and batted .380, including hitting two homers in one game in London.

McLain continued to earn side money at clubs playing the organ, which his father taught him to play. McLain also earned quite a bit of money hustling golf, easily attracting 'marks' due to his past baseball fame. Additionally, he reportedly once accepted over $100,000 to fly a wanted felon out of the country.

In his post-baseball career, his weight ballooned to 300 pounds. He was imprisoned for drug trafficking, embezzlement, and racketeering with Anthony Spilotro and later John Gotti Jr.. Attorney Lawrence R. Greene represented McLain before the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta, where his RICO conviction obtained in the United States District Court for the Central District of Florida at Tampa was reversed. Between his stints in prison and rehabilitation in the mid-1980s to the early 1990s, McLain could be found on various sports shows on talk radio and occasionally on panel-format sports shows on network television in the Detroit area. He could also be found signing autographs at a metro Detroit 7-Eleven store at the corner of Mound Road and Metro Parkway in Sterling Heights, Michigan, where he was employed on work-release.[1] During the Detroit Tigers 2006 playoff run, McLain was the baseball analyst for Drew and Mike on WRIF radio in Detroit.

In 2007, McLain released his autobiography "I Told You I Wasn't Perfect", co-authored by longtime Detroit sportscaster and author Eli Zaret.

McLain currently resides in Pinckney, Michigan, with his wife, Sharyn, the daughter of Hall of Famer Lou Boudreau.[2]

Trivia

See also

References

  • Nobody's Perfect by Denny McLain with Dave Diles (The Dial Press, New York, 1975).
  • Strikeout: The Story of Denny McLain by Denny McLain and Mike Nahrstedt (1988).
Preceded by American League Most Valuable Player
1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by American League Cy Young Award
1968, 1969
Succeeded by