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LaMarr Hoyt

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Win–loss record
  
98–68

Role
  
Baseball pitcher

Date joined
  
1979

Name
  
LaMarr Hoyt

Position
  
Strikeouts
  
681

Weight
  
101 kg

Earned run average
  
3.99

Height
  
1.85 m


LaMarr Hoyt LaMarr Hoyt Flickr Photo Sharing

Number
  
31 (Chicago White Sox / Pitcher)

Billy staples before the glory lamarr hoyt cy young award winner 1 of 2


Dewey LaMarr Hoyt, Jr. (born January 1, 1955, in Columbia, South Carolina) is a former Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher who won the 1983 American League Cy Young Award.

Contents

LaMarr Hoyt 50 Years in 50 Days 1978 Rattler Radio

August 1983 - White Sox & Pitcher LaMarr Hoyt Heat Up


Chicago White Sox

LaMarr Hoyt httpsiytimgcomvinkmBCn0Vx34hqdefaultjpg

Originally signed by the New York Yankees in the fifth round of the 1973 Major League Baseball draft, Hoyt was traded with fellow pitching prospect Bob Polinsky, outfielder Oscar Gamble and $200,000 to the Chicago White Sox in a 1977 season-opening deal that sent the Yankees shortstop Bucky Dent. A relief pitcher when he made the White Sox to stay in 1980, Hoyt was switched to the starting rotation in 1982 and tied a club record by winning his first nine decisions. The record was first set by Lefty Williams in 1917 and equaled by Orval Grove in 1943. Hoyt ended up leading the American League with nineteen wins and showed devastating control on the mound; he walked a mere 48 batters in 239.2 innings.

LaMarr Hoyt ChiSox Collector Project Rookie Card LaMarr Hoyt 1981

Hoyt was even better in 1983, winning the American League Cy Young Award. His 24-10 won-lost record, 3.66 earned run average and even better control than the previous season, (walking 31 batters in 260.2 innings, and leading the league in fewest walks per nine innings for the first of three straight seasons), helped the White Sox capture the American League West title.

LaMarr Hoyt WhiteSoxlamarrhoytjpg

He pitched a complete game victory over the Baltimore Orioles in the first game of the 1983 American League Championship Series, giving up only one run on five hits with no walks. This was the only game the ChiSox won in the series.

The White Sox faltered in 1984, as Hoyt's record fell to 13-18 with a 4.47 ERA. Ironically, he went from winning the most games in the American League in 1983 to losing the most games the following year. Hoping for a rebound from the former Cy Young Award winner, the San Diego Padres traded Ozzie Guillén, Tim Lollar, Bill Long and Luis Salazar to the White Sox for Hoyt, Kevin Kristan and Todd Simmons during the 1984-1985 off-season. Guillen would win the American League Rookie of the Year award in 1985.

San Diego Padres

Hoyt began his National League career promisingly enough, making the NL's All-Star team his first season in the league (though named by his own manager Dick Williams over fellow Padre Andy Hawkins who started the year 11-0) and winning the game's Most Valuable Player award, giving up one run in three innings of work to earn the win. For the season he went 16-8 with a 3.47 ERA.

Following the 1985 season, he was arrested twice within a month (between January and February 1986) on drug-possession charges, checking into a rehabilitation program nine days after the second arrest. This prevented him from playing most of Spring training, and he logged an 8-11 won-loss record with a 5.15 ERA.

Hoyt missed a start in July 1986 after accidentally burning his back hair while attempting to light his flatulence.

More off the field problems

Barely a month after the season ended Hoyt was arrested again for drug possession, this time on the U.S.-Mexico border. He was sentenced to 45 days in jail on December 16, 1986, and suspended by then-Commissioner Peter Ueberroth on February 25, 1987. An arbitrator reduced his suspension to sixty days in mid-June and ordered the Padres to reinstate him, but the team gave him his unconditional release the following day.

The White Sox gave him a second chance, signing him after his San Diego release and giving him time to get back into shape, but a fourth arrest on drug charges in December 1987 ended that.

Career stats

A poor hitter, even by pitchers' standards, Hoyt had just ten hits in 110 career at-bats. The only extra base hit of his career was an RBI double on July 13, 1986 against Tim Conroy of the St. Louis Cardinals.

References

LaMarr Hoyt Wikipedia