Mike Myers (baseball)

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Mike Myers (baseball) bigraphy, stories - American baseball player

Mike Myers (baseball) : biography

June 26, 1969 –

Michael Stanley Myers (born June 26, 1969 in Arlington Heights, Illinois) is a former left-handed Major League Baseball relief pitcher.

Pitching style

Myers (left) and [[Brian Bruney (right) warm up in the bullpen.]] Myers is a submarine pitcher, throwing the ball with his arm at or below his shoulder rather than above. When Myers was with the Tigers, Baseball Hall of Famer Al Kaline, then a broadcaster with the team, suggested that Myers experiment with the submarine style of pitching. His luck improved in his next two appearances against Baltimore, retiring three batters in a row both times. "Kaline suggested my throwing sidearm to give me a little bit of funk and mystery against left-handed hitters. After what I did against Baltimore, I just kept going from there," Myers said. He throws two different breaking balls with a deceptive movement that disconcerts opposing hitters, especially left-handed hitters. Myers is particularly durable as well. Since his first full major league season in , he has appeared in at least 60 games every year, topping 80 appearances in his first two seasons to lead the league both years, and over 70 in his next four seasons.

Myers’s primary role was as a left-handed relief specialist (known in the sport as a "LOOGY, or "Lefty One-Out Guy"), against baseball’s left-handed hitters, though the statistics say he has difficulty performing his job against the very best of the group. With the Rockies and Diamondbacks, he would frequently come into games to face Giants slugger Barry Bonds, and was similarly used by the Red Sox against Hideki Matsui of the Yankees and by the Yankees against David Ortiz of the Red Sox. However, through the end of the season, Bonds is 8-for-25 (.320) with a home run and eight walks against Myers, while Ortiz is 5-for-17 (.294) with a home run and two walks, and Matsui is 3-for-9 (.333) with a home run and a walk.

High school and college

Myers attended high school at Crystal Lake Central High School in Illinoishttp://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/myersmi01.shtml and later attended Iowa State University, where he played college baseball for the Iowa State Cyclones baseball team. In the summers of 1988 and 1989, he pitched for the Brewster Whitecaps of the Cape Cod Baseball League.

Minor league career

Myers was in the minor leagues for parts of six seasons. In his final four minor league seasons, he was 14-27 with a 4.29 ERA. He was used primarily as a starting pitcher until , when he pitched 42 games, all in relief, for the Charlotte Knights and Toledo Mud Hens.

Professional career

The San Francisco Giants drafted Myers in the fourth round of the 1990 Major League Baseball Draft. Before he ever played for the Giants at the major league level, he was drafted by the Florida Marlins in the Rule 5 draft. He made his major league debut with the Marlins on April 25, 1995, pitching an inning of scoreless relief. In August of that year, the Marlins traded Myers to the Detroit Tigers as the player to be named later from an earlier deal between the two clubs, in which the Marlins acquired Buddy Groom.

Myers pitched for Detroit through the season. After the season, Myers was traded by the Tigers with Rick Greene and Santiago Perez to the Milwaukee Brewers for Bryce Florie. After the 1999 season, the Brewers traded Myers to the Colorado Rockies for Curt Leskanic. Before the 2002 season, the Rockies traded Myers to the Arizona Diamondbacks for JD Closser and Jack Cust. He signed as a free agent with the Seattle Mariners for the 2004 season, but was selected off of waivers by the Boston Red Sox in August 2004. He signed as a free agent with the St. Louis Cardinals in the 2004-05 offseason, but was traded back to the Red Sox for two minor league players before the 2005 season began. During the 2005-06 offseason, Myers signed as a free agent with the New York Yankees. The Yankees released Myers in August 2007, and he signed with the Chicago White Sox.

On January 25, , Myers signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers to a minor league contract and was invited to spring training. Myers did not make the Dodgers team, but was assigned to play for the Las Vegas 51s in Triple-A. He asked for his release from the 51s on April 25 and became a free agent.

On March 17, 2009, Myers was hired as a special assistant to the head of the Major League Baseball Players Association, Donald Fehr.