Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Mark Petkovsek

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Win–loss record
  
46–28

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Mark Petkovsek

Strikeouts
  
358

Earned run average
  
4.73


Mark Petkovsek wwwrangerfanscomimagesplayersmarkpetkovsekpe

Education
  
University of Texas at Austin

Mark Joseph Petkovsek (born November 18, 1965 in Beaumont, Texas) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. He played for the Texas Rangers (1991 and 2001), Pittsburgh Pirates (1993), St. Louis Cardinals (1995–98) and Anaheim Angels (1999–2000).

Mark Petkovsek Mark Petkovsek Baseball Statistics 19862001

He attended the University of Texas, where he threw a seven-inning no-hitter in March 1987. Petkovsek was a first-round pick of the Rangers later that year, and in 1991, he made his major-league debut with the club, pitching 423 and taking the loss against the New York Yankees.

The Rangers granted him his free agency following the year, and he signed with Pittsburgh for 1992. He spent the year at AAA Buffalo, where he co-aced for the club with Tim Wakefield.

After Petkovsek appeared in 23 games for Pittsburgh in '93, the Pirates let Petkovsek walk, and the right-hander signed with the Astros for 1994. They assigned him to AAA Tucson out of Spring Training, and he spent the entire year there.

On May 16, 1994, Petkovsek threw the first nine-inning no-hitter in Tucson franchise history, beating the Colorado Springs Sky Sox, 5–0, in his only complete game of the year. For his effort, Petkovsek was named PCL Pitcher of the Week.

As had the Rangers and Pirates before them, the Astros granted Petkovsek his free agency after the 1994 season, and he found a home in the Cardinals organization, pitching at both AAA Louisville and for the major league Redbirds in 1995. His 21 major league starts that year were a career high.

He helped the Cardinals win the 1996 National League Central Division, winning 11 times against only two defeats as a swingman. The 11 wins he had for St. Louis were a career high, regardless of professional level.

References

Mark Petkovsek Wikipedia