Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

John Smiley (baseball)

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Win–loss record
  
126–103

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
John Smiley

Strikeouts
  
1,284

Earned run average
  
3.80


John Smiley (baseball) wwwbaseballalmanaccomplayerspicsjohnsmiley

John Patrick Smiley (born March 17, 1965) is an American former Major League Baseball pitcher who played for four teams: the Pittsburgh Pirates, Minnesota Twins, the Cincinnati Reds and the Cleveland Indians in a twelve-year career from 1986 to 1997.

Contents

Early life

Smiley graduated from Perkiomen Valley High School in 1983, where played sports as a baseball pitcher, basketball point guard, and football quarterback.

Career

Despite never playing minor league baseball higher than Class A, Smiley entered spring training before the 1987 Pittsburgh Pirates season with a relief pitcher role already in place, with manager Jim Leyland saying he would have to "pitch his way off the club". In Smiley's first full season, he led the Pirates in appearances with 63 games. Smiley was converted to a starting pitcher in 1988, lowering his earned run average by a full 2.5 runs per game, posting a 3.25 ERA and 13 wins against 11 losses.

Smiley was a two time All-Star: as a Pirate in 1991, a season in which Smiley led the National League with twenty wins and finished third in the Cy Young Award balloting; and in 1995 with the Reds, a season in which he had twelve wins and five losses. In August 1995, Smiley surrendered a home run to Braves pitcher Tom Glavine — the only homer Glavine hit in his major league career. Shortly after, he was traded to the Indians by the Reds with Jeff Branson for Jim Crowell, Danny Graves, Damian Jackson and Scott Winchester. Smiley broke his left humerus while warming up for a start in 1997. The injury ended his career.

References

John Smiley (baseball) Wikipedia