Esteban Antonio Loaiza Veyna
[lo-EYE-sa] (born December 31, 1971 in Tijuana
, Baja California
, México
) is a
retired Major League Baseball
pitcher. He most recently played for
the
Chicago White Sox.
Early career
A graduate
of Mar Vista High School in
Imperial Beach,
California
, Loaiza was signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates as an undrafted free
agent on March 21, . With the
Gulf Coast Pirates in the
Rookie leagues he started five games in 1991, finishing with a 5–1
record and a 2.26
ERA. He moved
through the Pirates farm system with stops at
Augusta (class A - ),
Salem (class A - ) and
Carolina (class AA - 1993- ). He also
played for the
Mexico City
Red Devils of the
Mexican
Summer League during the 1993 season.
Major Leagues
Loaiza made the jump to the big league club in , making his major
league debut on April 29, 1995, for the Pirates against the
Philadelphia Phillies. He
worked 4 2/3 innings in the game, giving up five
hits and one unearned run to get the first
major league
win of his career. He
finished his rookie season with a 8–9 record and a 5.16 ERA in 31
starts.
He began the season back in the minors with the Triple-A
Calgary Cannons, but was recalled to the
majors on
June 7 and has remained in the
major leagues ever since.
The Pirates traded him to the
Texas Rangers on July 17, , for
Todd Van Poppel and
Warren Morris. He spent the next two seasons
with Texas, pitching both as a starter and a reliever for the
Rangers.
Traded again, to the
Toronto Blue
Jays by the Rangers on July 19, for
Michael Young and
Darwin Cubillan, he pitched with the Blue
Jays through .
Chicago White Sox (2003–2004)
After signing with the Chicago White Sox as a free agent, Loaiza
enjoyed a career season in , leading
American League pitchers in
strikeouts (207), and was second in wins (21) and
strikeouts per nine
innings (8.23); third in ERA (2.90), and sixth in
innings pitched (226.3). Considered for the
Cy Young Award, Loaiza finished
second behind
Roy Halladay, ahead of
Pedro Martínez and
Tim Hudson. He was an
All-Star selection both
in 2003 and . Loaiza's 21 wins in 2003 are tied for the most ever
in a season for a Mexican pitcher;
Fernando Valenzuela won 21 games in
.
Journeyman
In 2004, Loaiza was traded to the
New
York Yankees mid-season for
José
Contreras. He did not perform well in New York and was banished
to the bullpen during the regular season. During the ALCS against
the
Boston Red Sox, he pitched well
in two relief outings despite recording the loss in Game 5. That
off-season he signed a one-year contract with the
Washington Nationals as a free agent.
He went 12–10 with a 3.77 ERA for the Nationals in .
Prior to the season, Loaiza signed a three-year, $21.4 million
dollar contract with the
Oakland
Athletics. He had a disastrous start to his Oakland career,
which led many fans to question his acquisition. Loaiza went 0–3 in
April with an 8.35 ERA and opponents batted .385 against him. His
early season troubles reached a nadir on April 29 when he gave up
10 runs in two innings to the
Kansas
City Royals, who had the worst record in baseball at the time;
the game was not official since it was later rained out, or his
statistics would have been even worse. Loaiza's poor performance
was at least partly due to injury, as he seemed to have very little
velocity on his
fastball early in the
season (throwing it at as little as 82-83 mph) and was placed on
the
disabled list with back and
shoulder problems on May 2. When he returned on June 8, he was
inconsistent, but appeared to be much healthier, due to his ability
to demonstrate a much harder 95 mph fastball. On June 25, 2006,
Loaiza pitched his first
complete game
in over two years in a 10-4 victory over the
San Francisco Giants. Loaiza finished
the 2006 regular season with a 4.89 ERA and a record of 11 wins and
9
losses. His injuries may have
played a role in his sub-par ERA for that season.
During the regular season, Loaiza spent a large amount of time on
the disabled list due to spasms in his right
trapezius. The A's activated him and moved him
back to the 25-man roster on August 22, 2007.
Los Angeles Dodgers
On August 29, 2007, the Los Angeles Dodgers claimed Loaiza off
waivers from the Athletics. Instead of trading for Loaiza, the
Dodgers purchased the remainder of his contract.
He made an impressive debut for the Dodgers, working seven innings
and getting the win in a 11-3 victory over the
Chicago Cubs, but struggled during the rest of
the season, losing his last four decisions.
Going into the season, he had fully recovered from his injuries and
regained his spot as the fifth starter in the Dodgers rotation.
Loaiza struggled at the beginning of the season, and as a result
lost his starting position to lefty
Hong-Chih Kuo. After a stint on the DL, Loaiza
was designated for assignment on
May 24 and
subsequently released.
Chicago White Sox (2008)
On June 4, 2008, Loaiza was signed by the Chicago White Sox. After
3 relief appearances and 6 weeks on the disabled list, he was
released.
He is currently playing in winter league pro ball
DUI arrest
On June
14, 2006, Loaiza was arrested after being pulled over by police who
clocked his Ferrari
doing 120
MPH on a California
freeway near San
Lorenzo
. He subsequently failed a sobriety test. He
appeared in court on July 14, 2006. After the incident, GM
Billy Beane banned alcohol in both the home and
visitor clubhouse, citing liability issues.
See also
References
- "Loaiza joins Zito, Harden, Haren and Blanton in
rotation", Associated Press, November 29, 2005
- "Twin killing: A's lose, Loaiza hurt", Tony
Kuttner, MLB.com, April 23, 2006
- "Sizzling A's finish sweep of Rays", Associated
Press, August 14, 2006
- "Loaiza's Career stats on Yahoo! Sports"
- "Dodgers claim Loaiza off waivers from A's"
- Sox sign pitcher Esteban Loaiza to one-year
contract
- White Sox make three roster moves
- "Loaiza faces drunken driving, speeding
charges", Associated Press, June 15, 2006
External links