New York Yankees Ron Guidry Interview on Winning Cy Young Award (November 1, 1978)
Автор: Foggy Melson Sports
Загружено: 2023-10-23
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Ronald Ames Guidry (/ˈɡɪdri/; born August 28, 1950), nicknamed "Louisiana Lightning" and "Gator",[1] is an American former professional baseball pitcher who played 14 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Yankees. Guidry was also the pitching coach of the Yankees from 2006 to 2007.
Guidry's major league career began in 1975. He was a member of World Series-winning Yankees teams in 1977 and 1978, both over the Los Angeles Dodgers. He won the American League Cy Young Award in 1978, winning 25 games and losing only 3. He also won five Gold Glove Awards and appeared in four All-Star games. Guidry served as captain of the Yankees beginning in 1986; he retired from baseball in 1989. In 2003, the Yankees retired Guidry's uniform number (49) and dedicated a plaque to him in Monument Park.
Early life
Guidry was born in Lafayette, Louisiana. He attended and pitched for the University of Southwestern Louisiana. He was a combined 12–5 with a 2.03 earned run average (ERA) and 137 strikeouts as a two-year letterman with the Ragin' Cajuns baseball team in 1969 and 1970.[2]
Playing career
Guidry was selected in the third round (67th overall) by the New York Yankees in the 1971 MLB draft.[3] After four seasons in the minor leagues, he pitched briefly in the major leagues in the 1975 and 1976 seasons.[4]
In 1977, Guidry began the season as a relief pitcher but was moved into the Yankees' starting rotation. On April 30, he was called on to make an emergency start in replace of Mike Torrez, recently acquired in a trade from the Athletics, who had not joined the team in time for what was supposed to be his first start. In the longest outing Guidry could remember since his Eastern League days of 1974, he helped the Yankees beat the Seattle Mariners 3–0.[7] Guidry finished the season with a 16–7 record.[8] His emergence as a starter after his previous seasons in the bullpen made him one of the Yankees' biggest surprises in 1977.[9] He helped lead the Yankees to a World Series championship.[10]
In 1978, Guidry posted a career year that has been described as the all-time best season by a Yankees pitcher.[11] Against the California Angels on June 17, he struck out a Yankee-record 18 batters.[12] Guidry's 18-strikeout performance is usually cited as the launching pad of the Yankee Stadium tradition of fans standing and clapping for a strikeout with two strikes on the opposing batter.[13] For the season, Guidry went 25–3,[14] setting the all-time mark for winning percentage by a pitcher with at least twenty wins. He led the league with a 1.74 ERA, an .893 winning percentage, nine shutouts, and 248 strikeouts.[14] Guidry's success in 1978 was due in large part to his mastery of the slider.[1] His 248 strikeouts set a Yankees' franchise record for most strikeouts by a pitcher in a single season,[15] a record that stood until 2022 when Gerrit Cole recorded 257 strikeouts.[16]
Guidry's 25th win of the 1978 regular season was his most significant, as it came in the Yankees' 5–4 win over the Boston Red Sox in a one-game playoff at Fenway Park in Boston to determine the American League East division winner. The game is best known for Bucky Dent's seventh-inning, three-run home run that gave the Yankees a 3–2 lead.[17] Later that month, the Yankees again won the World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers.[14] Guidry won the 1978 American League Cy Young Award unanimously.[13] He also finished second in the American League Most Valuable Player voting to Boston Red Sox slugger Jim Rice.[18] In addition, Guidry was named The Sporting News AL Pitcher and Major League Player of the Year.[14] Had he not taken the loss in Toronto on September 20, when his record at the time was 22-2, he would have become the first (and to date, only), pitcher ever with at least a .900 winning percentage, and at least 20 wins in a season.[19]
On August 7, 1984, Guidry struck out three batters (Carlton Fisk, Tom Paciorek and Greg Luzinski) on nine pitches in the ninth inning of a 7–0 win over the Chicago White Sox. Guidry became the eighth American League pitcher and the 27th pitcher in major-league history to accomplish an immaculate inning.[24] In 1985, he led the American League with 22 wins.[25] Guidry and Willie Randolph were named co-captains of the Yankees on March 4, 1986.[26]
The latter years of Guidry's 14-year major league career were hindered by shoulder and elbow injuries.[27] He retired from baseball on July 12, 1989.[28]
Personal life
Guidry is married to Bonnie Rutledge Guidry; their wedding was on September 23, 1972. They have three children: two daughters, Jamie and Danielle, and a son, Brandon.[35]
Guidry is a member of the Knights of Columbus.[36]
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