In
baseball, a
save
(abbreviated
SV or
S) is credited
to a
pitcher who finishes a game for the
winning team under certain prescribed circumstances. The number of
saves, or percentage of save opportunities successfully completed,
is an oft-cited statistic of
relief
pitchers. It first became an official
Major League Baseball statistic in
.
Usage
In
baseball statistics, the term
save is used to indicate the successful maintenance of a lead by a
relief pitcher, usually the
closer, until the end of the game. A save
is a statistic credited to a relief pitcher, as set forth in Rule
10.19 of the
Rules of Baseball.
That rule states the
official scorer
shall credit a pitcher with a save when such pitcher meets all four
of the following conditions:
- He is the finishing pitcher in a game won by his team;
- He is not the winning
pitcher;
- He is credited with at least ⅓ of an inning pitched; and
- He satisfies one of the following conditions:
- He enters the game with a lead of no more than three runs and pitches for at least one inning
- He enters the game, regardless of the count, with the potential tying run either
on base, at bat or on deck
- He pitches for at least three innings
If the pitcher surrenders the lead at any point, he cannot get a
save, but he may be credited as the winning pitcher if his team
comes back to win. No more than one save may be credited in each
game.
If a relief pitcher satisfies all of the criteria for a save,
except he does not finish the game, he will often be credited with
a
hold (not an officially recognized
statistic by Major League Baseball).
Save rules have changed over the years; the above rules are the
current as defined in Section 10.19 of
Major League Baseball's Official
Rules. The statistic was formally introduced in , although research
has identified saves earned prior to that point.
A
blown save (abbreviated
BS or
B) is charged to a pitcher who enters a game in a
situation which permits him to earn a save (a
save
situation or
save opportunity), but who
instead allows the tying run to score. Note that if the tying run
was scored by a runner who was already on base when the new pitcher
entered the game, that new pitcher will be charged with a blown
save even though the run will not be charged to the new pitcher,
but rather to the pitcher who allowed that runner to reach
base.
If that same pitcher also allows the go-ahead run to reach base and
score, and if his team does not come back to tie or gain a lead in
the game, said pitcher will be charged with both the loss (as in
any other similar situation) and a blown save. The blown save is
not an officially recognized statistic, but many sources keep track
of them. Once a pitcher blows a save, he is no longer eligible to
earn a save in that game (since the lead that he was trying to
"save" has disappeared), although he can earn a win if his team
regains the lead. For this reason, most closers' records include a
few wins. Closers make the majority of their appearances with their
team ahead, so a loss usually includes a blown save.
If a pitcher enters a game in a save situation (for a team
leading by three runs or fewer) in an inning which is not
the last (e.g. in a regulation nine inning home game, pitching the
top of the eighth inning), and his team later scores one or more
runs to extend their lead beyond three runs, then as long as the
same pitcher pitches until the end of the game, he is still
credited with the save. As the various roles of relief pitchers
have changed since the 1960s, closers who often pitch two or more
innings have become increasingly rare; although exceptions
remain.
A pitcher also cannot create his own save situation. For instance,
if he enters the game with a lead too large for a save, he would
not make himself eligible for a save by surrendering enough runs to
contract the lead to within save range. It must be a save situation
when he enters the game, or he will not be able to earn one.
A notable occurrence of the "three innings pitched" save scenario
is the save earned by
Wes Littleton in
the
Texas Rangers' 30–3 win
over the
Baltimore Orioles on
August 22, 2007. Littleton entered the game at the beginning of the
bottom of the seventh inning, when the Rangers had a 14–3 lead, and
pitched the final three innings. The Rangers subsequently scored an
additional 16 runs, resulting in the final 27 run margin. However,
despite the final score of the game, Littleton was credited with
the save as he met all four criteria: 1) he was the finishing
pitcher in the game that the Rangers won, 2) he was not the winning
pitcher (the Rangers were leading when he entered the game), 3) he
was credited with at least 1/3rd of an inning pitched, and 4) he
pitched at least three innings (the 7th, 8th, and 9th).
Leaders in Major League Baseball
Saves
(
Bold denotes active players.)
(The statistic was formally introduced in
1969,
although research has identified saves earned prior to that
point.)
300-career-saves club
Listed are all Major League Baseball players with at least 300
career saves.
Through October 4,
2009
| Rank |
Player |
Saves |
Team(s) |
Year(s) |
| 1 |
Trevor
Hoffman |
591 |
Florida Marlins, San Diego Padres, Milwaukee Brewers |
1993–present |
| 2 |
Mariano
Rivera |
526 |
New York Yankees |
1995–present |
| 3 |
Lee Smith |
478 |
Chicago Cubs, Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cardinals, New York Yankees, Baltimore Orioles, California Angels, Cincinnati Reds, Montreal Expos |
1980–1997 |
| 4 |
John FrancoL |
424 |
Cincinnati Reds, New York Mets, Houston Astros |
1984–2005 |
| 5 |
Dennis
EckersleyH |
390 |
Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs, Oakland Athletics, St. Louis Cardinals |
1975–1998 |
| 6 |
Billy
WagnerL |
385 |
Houston Astros, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets, Boston Red Sox |
1995–present |
| 7 |
Jeff Reardon |
367 |
New York Mets, Montreal Expos, Minnesota Twins, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, Cincinnati Reds, New York Yankees |
1979–1994 |
| 8 |
Troy
Percival |
358 |
California/Anaheim
Angels, Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Cardinals, Tampa Bay Rays |
1995–2005, 2007–present |
| 9 |
Randy MyersL |
347 |
New York Mets, Cincinnati Reds, San Diego Padres, Chicago Cubs, Baltimore Orioles, Toronto Blue Jays |
1985–1998 |
| 10 |
Rollie
FingersH |
341 |
Oakland Athletics, San Diego Padres, Milwaukee Brewers |
1968–1985 |
| 11 |
John Wetteland |
330 |
Los Angeles Dodgers,
Montreal Expos, New York Yankees, Texas Rangers |
1989–2000 |
| 12 |
Roberto
Hernández |
326 |
Chicago White Sox, San Francisco Giants, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Kansas City Royals, Atlanta Braves, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets, Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Yankees, Cleveland Indians, Los Angeles Dodgers |
1991–2007 |
| 13 |
José Mesa |
321 |
Baltimore Orioles, Cleveland Indians, San Francisco Giants, Seattle Mariners, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, Colorado Rockies, Detroit Tigers |
1987, 1990–2007 |
| 14 |
Todd Jones |
319 |
Houston Astros, Detroit Tigers, Minnesota Twins, Colorado Rockies, Boston Red Sox, Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Phillies, Florida Marlins |
1993–2008 |
| 15 |
Rick Aguilera |
318 |
New York Mets, Minnesota Twins, Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs |
1985–2000 |
| 16 |
Robb Nen |
314 |
Texas Rangers, Florida Marlins, San Francisco Giants |
1993–2002 |
| 17 |
Tom Henke |
311 |
Texas Rangers, Toronto Blue Jays, St. Louis Cardinals |
1982–1995 |
| 18 |
Rich "Goose"
GossageH |
310 |
Chicago White Sox, Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Yankees, San Diego Padres, Chicago Cubs, San Francisco Giants, Texas Rangers, Oakland Athletics, Seattle Mariners |
1972–1994 |
| 19 |
Jeff Montgomery |
304 |
Cincinnati Reds, Kansas City Royals |
1987–1999 |
| 20 |
Doug Jones |
303 |
Milwaukee Brewers, Cleveland Indians, Houston Astros, Philadelphia Phillies, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago Cubs, Oakland Athletics |
1982, 1986–2000 |
| 21 |
Bruce
SutterH |
300 |
Chicago Cubs, St. Louis Cardinals, Atlanta Braves |
1976–1986, 1988 |
L denotes left-handed pitcher.
H denotes
membership in the Baseball Hall of Fame
.
Most in a single season
L denotes left-handed pitcher.
Most consecutive
- All streaks achieved over the course of two or more
seasons.
- Éric
Gagné, Los Angeles
Dodgers ( – ) – 84
- Tom Gordon, Boston Red Sox ( – ) – 54 (counting regular
season saves only)/43 (counting a streak-ending blown save during
the 1998 postseason)
- Brad Lidge, Houston Astros, Philadelphia Phillies ( – ) – 47
(counting regular season saves only)/54 (counting seven postseason
saves recorded in 2008)
- Rod Beck, San Francisco Giants ( – ) – 41
- Trevor Hoffman,
San Diego Padres ( – ) – 41
- Dennis Eckersley, Oakland Athletics ( – ) – 40
Blown saves
Career
As of August 9, 2006:
- Rich "Goose" Gossage – 112
- Rollie Fingers – 109
- Jeff Reardon – 106
- Lee Smith – 103
- Bruce Sutter – 101
- John FrancoL – 100
- Sparky LyleL – 86
- Gene Garber – 82
- Kent Tekulve – 81
- Gary LavelleL – 80
L denotes left-handed pitcher.
Single season
- Rollie Fingers, Oakland Athletics (1976) – 14
- Bruce Sutter, Chicago Cubs (1978) – 14
- Bob Stanley, Boston Red Sox (1983) – 14
- Ron Davis, Minnesota Twins (1984) – 14
- John HillerL, Detroit Tigers (1976) – 13
- Rich "Goose" Gossage, New York Yankees (1983) – 13
- Jeff Reardon, Montréal Expos (1986) – 13
- Dan PlesacL, Milwaukee Brewers (1987) – 13
- Dave RighettiL,
New York Yankees (1987) – 13
L denotes left-handed pitcher.
Value
During the 2008 baseball season Francisco Rodriguez of the Los
Angeles Angels pursued the single-season saves record, inventor of
the save statistic
Jerome Holtzman
died, and discussion erupted about the value of the save as a
statistic. According to statistical measures other than saves, 2008
is not Rodriguez's best single season, and he is not the best
relief pitcher in 2008—even on his own team. Instead, he has
pitched for a team that provides many save opportunities, and is
used almost exclusively in save situations.
Furthermore, the use of the save statistic has changed the way
people perceive the role of a reliever, and some believe this
change has been for the worse. ESPN.com columnist Jim Caple has
even argued that the save statistic has turned the closer position
into "the most overrated position in sports". Caple and others
contend that using one's best reliever in situations such as a
three run lead in the ninth—when a team will almost certainly win
even with a lesser pitcher—is foolish, and that using a closer in
the traditional "fireman" role exemplified by pitchers such as
Goose Gossage is far wiser. (A
"fireman" situation is men on base in a tied or close game, hence a
reliever ending such a threat is "putting out the fire.") Another
example of this model being used was
Keith
Foulke in the 2004 ALCS, who mainly served in his team's most
important innings rather than save situations. Managers may be
afraid of trying such moves due to them occasionally backfiring and
leading to criticism. Closers themselves are also reluctant to
enter games in non-save spots because of the huge monetary value of
saves in the free agent market.
See also
References
- Divisions Of The Code
- Baseball Prospectus writer Joe Sheehan and K-Rod's
season
- Kansas City Star columnist Bradford Doolittle on
the save
- Jim Caple on the closer position
External links