James Richard Harden (born
November 30, 1981, in Victoria
, British
Columbia
) is a
Canadian
Major League
Baseball starting pitcher who
is currently a free agent.
Early years
Harden attended Claremont Secondary School (Victoria, BC, Canada)
in 1999, and was drafted by the
Seattle
Mariners in the 38th Round of the
1999 Major League Baseball
Draft. He did not sign with the Mariners, but instead attended
Central Arizona College,
where he graduated from in 2001. While there he played baseball
alongside future All Star second baseman
Ian
Kinsler.
Harden was drafted by the
Athletics in the 17th round of the
2000 Major League
Baseball Draft, and signed by the team on
May
28, , shortly after graduating.
He led all Division I Junior College pitchers with 127
strikeouts in 2001, and his
ERA of 2.14 was the 5th lowest in the
nation. In his first professional season as a 19 year old with the
Vancouver Canadians in Single-A,
Harden had a 2-4 record in 18 games (14 starts), a 3.39 ERA,
allowed only 47
hits and struck out
100 batters in 74 innings.
In , Harden began the year with the Single-A
Visalia Oaks of the
California League and was very impressive
in 12 starts, as he had a 4-3 record with an ERA of 2.91, and
struck out 85 batters in 68 innings. Halfway through the 2002
season, Harden was promoted to the Double-A
Midland RockHounds of the
Texas League, where he continued his impressive
season, earning a record of 8-3, with an ERA of 2.95 in 16 starts.
He also struck out 102 batters in 85 innings. His combined 2002
stats were 12-6, 2.93 ERA, 187 strikeouts and 75
walks in 153 innings.
Harden began the season with Midland, and in 2 games, he had a 2-0
record and pitched 13 perfect innings, striking out 17 along the
way. He was then promoted to the Triple-A
Sacramento River Cats of the
Pacific Coast League, where he pitched
very well. In 16 games, 14 of which he started, Harden went 9-4
with an ERA of 3.15. Overall, Harden finished with a combined 11-4
record, 2.74 ERA, 107 strikeouts and 35 walks in 102 innings in the
Minor leagues during the 2003 season. He was then promoted to the
Oakland Athletics in July .
Major league career
Oakland Athletics

Harden pitching for the Athletics in
2005
Harden made his major league debut on
July
21, 2003, against the
Kansas City
Royals. He held the Royals to only one
run on four hits in seven innings, earning a
no decision. Through Harden's first five starts, he had a 3-1
record, with an ERA of 1.69. In his next two, he allowed six runs
in four innings against the
Toronto
Blue Jays on
August 21, and then eight
runs in 2.2 innings on
August 26 against
the
Boston Red Sox. He finished the
season with a 5-4 record with an ERA of 4.46. Harden pitched in two
games in relief with the Athletics in their Division Series matchup
with the Red Sox. In his playoff debut on
October 1, Harden earned the
win, pitching a scoreless inning. However in
his second appearance, he pitched only one-third of an inning, and
allowed two runs and was tagged with the
loss.
Harden began the season with the Sacramento River Cats, coming out
of
spring training as the A's 5th
starter. But the Athletics had two off days in the first eight days
of the season, and they optioned him down to get a start in the
minor leagues. He pitched in one game, losing 5-3 to the
Edmonton Trappers. The Athletics called
him up on
April 10, and he put together a
very solid season with an 11-7 record and an ERA of 3.99. Harden
complied an 8-2 record and an ERA of 3.49 after the All-Star break.
He ranked 8th in the
AL with 167
strikeouts, and was tied for 7th with 81 walks. Harden allowed just
16
home runs in 189.2 innings, an average
of 0.76 per nine innings, which was tied for 4th lowest in the
American League. He threw the fastest fastball of all major league
starters, averaging 94.3 miles per hour.
[141446]
In , Harden began the season with the Athletics, but was sidelined
with an oblique injury, and missed more than a month. Harden came
back and pitched a two-hit game against the
Texas Rangers on
July 14, in which he allowed no runs for 7+ innings.
One month later on
August 14, Harden
allowed only one hit, but received a no decision, en route to a 2-1
loss against the
Minnesota Twins. On
August 19, Harden had a 10-5 record with
an ERA of 2.63 ERA, until he injured his right shoulder, sidelining
him until September 25, by which time the Athletics were already
out of the playoff hunt. Harden appeared in three games late in the
season, pitching 5 innings of shutout ball, striking out seven and
walking one. He finished the year with a 10-5 win-loss record, an
ERA of 2.57 and 121 strikeouts in 128 innings. He allowed only
seven HR's all season long, and despite the injuries, he emerged as
the
ace of the Oakland Athletics
pitching staff.
In , Harden had two lengthy stints on the
DL, spending most of the season there. He came
back from the DL on
September 21, 2006,
for a short but outstanding start, going 3 innings allowing 1 run
and recording 7 strikeouts.
He started off the season with a win against the Seattle Mariners,
going 7 innings, striking out 7, and allowing two walks and two
hits, before returning to the DL, on
April
23.
After another injury-plagued season, Harden started off the season
with a strong start against the Boston Red Sox, pitching six strong
innings and giving up a run and three hits while walking three and
striking out nine batters. However, after his second start, he was
again placed on the disabled list. Harden was activated on
May 11 and struggled in his return allowing 8 hits
and 5 runs in 3.2 innings and earning a no decision. In Harden's
next start against his former teammate
Tim
Hudson and the
Atlanta Braves, he
pitched 7 innings only allowing 4 hits and 1 run while earning the
win. In this start against the Braves on
May
17, Harden also achieved his first major league hit.
On
June 8, 2008, he became the 38th pitcher
to strike out three batters on nine pitches. This was done in the
first inning, against the
Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim.
Chicago Cubs
Harden was traded to the Chicago Cubs on July 8, 2008, in a
six-player deal. The Cubs traded away
Matt
Murton,
Eric Patterson,
Sean Gallagher, and a minor league
catcher. The A's traded away Rich Harden and
Chad Gaudin. He made his Cubs debut on
July 12, against the
San Francisco Giants, leaving the game
with a 7-0 lead after pitching 5 1/3 scoreless inning and striking
out 10. Though the Cubs won 8-7, Harden earned a no decision after
Carlos Marmol was unable to hold a
five run lead in the ninth. Harden registered ten strikeouts and
allowed only one run in both of his following starts, but was not
able to earn a win. He finally recorded his first win as a Cub on
July 31, 2008, against the
Milwaukee Brewers. Harden has the highest
winning percentage among all starting pitchers over the last three
years, with a record of 15-4 (.789).On October 8, 2008, the Cubs
picked up the $7 million option in Harden's contract for the
season. . .
Pitching style
Harden's only two pitches are his
fastball
and his
changeup. Harden's fastball
typically reaches speeds of 93–95 mph, and on occasion has broken
100 mph. He throws his changeup in a variety of ways, ranging from
a typical slow changeup to a pitch similar to a slider to a pitch
with the effect of a
splitter. This helps
him to provide the effect of throwing many pitches, when in reality
he only throws two (the fastball and the changeup). When used with
the grip that causes it to act similar to a splitter, his changeup
often reacts much like a knuckleball (because it is difficult to
predict what it will do), resulting in it often being referred to
as the "ghost pitch". Former Oakland Athletics
catcher Adam Melhuse
coined the term "spluckle" (a combination of splitter and
knuckleball) to refer to this innovative pitch.
Statistics
| Year |
Ag |
Tm |
Lg |
W |
L |
G |
GS |
CG |
SHO |
IP |
H |
R |
ER |
HR |
BB |
SO |
HBP |
WP |
BFP |
BK |
ERA |
WHIP |
OBA |
| 2003 |
21 |
OAK |
AL |
5 |
4 |
15 |
13 |
0 |
0 |
74⅔ |
72 |
38 |
37 |
5 |
40 |
67 |
1 |
6 |
324 |
0 |
4.46 |
1.500 |
.259 |
| 2004 |
22 |
OAK |
AL |
11 |
7 |
31 |
31 |
0 |
0 |
189⅔ |
171 |
90 |
84 |
16 |
81 |
167 |
3 |
4 |
803 |
1 |
3.99 |
1.329 |
.242 |
| 2005 |
23 |
OAK |
AL |
10 |
5 |
22 |
19 |
2 |
1 |
128 |
93 |
42 |
36 |
7 |
43 |
121 |
2 |
6 |
514 |
0 |
2.53 |
1.063 |
.201 |
| 2006 |
24 |
OAK |
AL |
4 |
0 |
9 |
9 |
0 |
0 |
46⅔ |
31 |
22 |
22 |
5 |
26 |
49 |
1 |
0 |
191 |
0 |
4.24 |
1.221 |
.191 |
| 2007 |
25 |
OAK |
AL |
1 |
2 |
7 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
25⅔ |
18 |
7 |
7 |
3 |
11 |
27 |
0 |
0 |
100 |
0 |
2.45 |
1.130 |
.202 |
| 2008 |
26 |
OAK |
AL |
5 |
1 |
13 |
13 |
0 |
0 |
77 |
57 |
21 |
20 |
5 |
31 |
92 |
1 |
1 |
311 |
0 |
2.34 |
1.143 |
.206 |
|
|
CHC |
NL |
5 |
1 |
12 |
12 |
0 |
0 |
71 |
39 |
17 |
14 |
6 |
30 |
89 |
2 |
2 |
284 |
0 |
1.77 |
0.972 |
.157 |
| Totals: |
41 |
20 |
109 |
101 |
2 |
1 |
612⅔ |
481 |
237 |
220 |
47 |
262 |
612 |
10 |
19 |
2,527 |
1 |
3.23 |
1.213 |
.216 |
|
See also
References
- Chuck, Bill. 100 random things about the Red Sox, Rays, and
Yankees, The Boston Globe. Published April 2,
2009.
External links