Dave Stewart (baseball)

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275+23 innings pitched. [16] Stewart started two games in the A's four-game sweep of the Boston Red Sox in the 1988 American League Championship Series. [29] After the series, his manager Tony La Russa said he had "never met a player or person of higher quality." [30] Stewart was the starting pitcher in game one of the 1988 World Series against the Dodgers. Prior to the game, he told Dodgers' second basemanSteve Sax that he was going to hit him in the neck during the game. He came close, drilling Sax in the left shoulder and glaring at him. [31] He allowed three runs in eight innings and was in line for the win before Kirk Gibson's walk-off homer off closerDennis Eckersley gave the game to the Dodgers. [32] Working on three days rest, Stewart was not as good in game four, allowing four runs (only two earned) and leaving the game with one out in the sixth to pick up the loss. [33] The Dodgers finished off their championship with a win in Game five. [34]

In 1989, Stewart was 21–9 with a 3.32 ERA in 36 starts. [16] His manager, La Russa, was also the manager of the American League team at the All-Star Game and picked Stewart to start for the AL team over fan favorite Nolan Ryan. [35] He allowed two runs to score in his one inning of work in the game. [36] He finished second in the voting for the American League Cy Young Award to Kansas City Royals pitcher Bret Saberhagen. [37]

In the 1989 American League Championship Series, Stewart won both of the games he pitched with a 2.81 ERA. [38] In the World Series, Stewart pitched a complete-game shutout in the first game against the San Francisco Giants. [39] The series was interrupted when an earthquake struck the Bay Area just prior to the start of Game 3. [40] [41] When the series resumed, 10 days later, Stewart started game three for the A's, and picked up his second win of the series when he allowed three runs in seven innings. [42] The A's swept the series in four games and Stewart was selected as the MVP of the series going 2–0 with a 1.69 ERA. [43] Stewart signed a new two-year $7 million contract extension with the Athletics after the season. This was the largest contract in baseball at the time. [44]

In 1990, Stewart was 22–11 (his fourth straight 20-win season and tied for 2nd in the majors) with a 2.56 ERA in 36 starts. He led the league in innings pitched (267), complete games (11) and shutouts (4) while being third in ERA and finishing third in the Cy Young voting. [16] On June 29, he no-hit the Toronto Blue Jays, at SkyDome, the first no-hitter by an African American since Jim Bibby in 1973. [45] That same day, Fernando Valenzuela of the Dodgers no-hit the St. Louis Cardinals at Dodger Stadium – the first time in Major League history that no-hitters had been thrown in both leagues on the same day. [46] The A's won their third straight pennant, beating the Boston Red Sox in the American League Championship Series, and Stewart was named the ALCS MVP going 2–0 with a 1.13 ERA. [47] Stewart got the start in Game one of the 1990 World Series for the heavily favored A's against the Cincinnati Reds. However, Eric Davis hit a two-run home run off him in the first inning and he only lasted four innings as the Reds pulled off the upset. [48] He pitched better in game four, allowing only one earned run while pitching a complete game, but the Reds won the game and finished off a sweep of the series. [49] Despite being the losing pitcher in games 1 and 4, Stewart had a 2.77 ERA in the 1990 World Series.

After the 1990 season, Stewart was part of a Major League All-Star team that played an eight-game series in Japan against a Japanese all-star team. [50] He went on the disabled list for the first time in his career in 1991 because of a strained rib muscle, [51] which caused him to miss three weeks of the season. When he returned he was not as dominant as he had been before. [52] His troubles were partly because of an inability to throw his forkball for strikes and as a result he was pitching with less confidence. [53] In 35 starts, Stewart finished 11–11 with a league-high 5.18 ERA in 1991 as the Athletics missed the playoffs for the first time since 1987. [16]

Stewart was bothered by elbow tendinitis for much of the 1992 season [54] but still made 31 starts (his fewest since 1986) and had a 12–10 record and 3.66 ERA. [16] The A's returned to the playoffs, but this time were seen as underdogs to the Toronto Blue Jays in the American League Championship Series. [54] Stewart started the opener of the series and pitched 7.2 innings while allowing only three runs in a game the A's won. [55] The A's lost the next three games and were on the verge of elimination, so he called a team meeting in order to give his teammates a pep talk. [56] He responded by pitching a complete game victory in game five, allowing only two runs. [57] It was the first complete game victory in an ALCS game since Bruce Hurst of the Boston Red Sox pitched one in 1986 against the California Angels. [58] However, the Blue Jays won the next game to take the series and eliminate the A's from the post-season. [59]

Toronto Blue Jays

Stewart signed a two-year, $8.5 million contract with the Blue Jays on December 8, 1992. He said that he was sad to leave the A's, whom he had envisioned spending the rest of his career with, but he felt the Blue Jays treated him with more respect with their offer. [60] He said that the A's general manager, Sandy Alderson, was disrespectful of him and all he had done for Oakland, and was insulted that he was accused of disloyalty when he signed with the Blue Jays. [61]

As a member of the Blue Jays rotation in 1993, Stewart made 26 starts and was 12–8 with a 4.44 ERA. [16] He suffered from a number of injuries during the season but the Blue Jays stuck with him because of his heart and competitiveness, as well as the support he offered to other pitchers on the staff. [61] The Blue Jays made it to the ALCS where Stewart got the call in game two. He allowed only one run in six innings of work to pick up the win. [62] The day before his next start, while the rest of his team was already in Chicago, he was in Toronto helping the Salvation Army deliver food to the homeless on Thanksgiving Day in Canada. [63] He made it to the game on time, and pitched 7.1 innings for his second win of the series, in the clinching game six that sent the Blue Jays back to the World Series. [64] He was selected as ALCS MVP for the second time in his career. [65] In the 1993 World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies, Stewart got the start in game two and struggled, allowing five runs in six innings to take a rare post-season loss. [66] Nevertheless, he was confident heading into his next start, in game six, saying he was pitching for respect as much as for another championship. [61] He allowed four runs in six innings but that was enough as the Blue Jays, thanks to a three-run walk-off homer by Joe Carter, won the game 8–6 and with it took the series, 4 games to 2. [67]

Stewart remained with the Blue Jays for the 1994 season, making 22 starts for them with a 7–8 record and 5.87 ERA [16] before the 1994–95 MLB strike wiped out the rest of the season in August (and delayed the start of the next season). He had planned to retire at the end of the season but was bothered by the lack of empathy on the part of the fans toward the players. [68] He would later say that he never felt the same passion for baseball after the strike. [69]

Return to the Oakland Athletics and retirement

When the strike finally ended, he re-signed with the Athletics on April 8, 1995, and was their opening day starter on April 26, 1995. However, he could not recapture his prior form. Stewart was rocked for nine runs and was removed from the game with only one out in the second inning. [70] In 16 starts, he was 3–7 with a 6.89 ERA, [16] prompting the manager to announce publicly that Stewart would move to the bullpen for the first time since 1986 and be replaced in the rotation by Todd van Poppel. [71] Stewart chose to retire rather than make the move to the pen. He made the public announcement on July 24, 1995, saying it was a low point in his life and he just couldn't perform like he wanted to anymore. [71] [72]

Over his career, he started 18 games in the postseason, compiling a stellar 2.84 ERA and 10–6 (10–4 as a starter) record. In the LCS, he was especially dominant, going 8–0. [16]

Post-playing career

Dave Stewart's number 34 was retired by the Oakland Athletics in 2022. Stewart34.png
Dave Stewart's number 34 was retired by the Oakland Athletics in 2022.

Stewart served as the assistant to Sandy Alderson, the general manager of the Athletics, in 1996. [73] In 1997, he left that position to serve in a similar capacity under Kevin Towers of the San Diego Padres. [74] In 1998, he agreed to become the Padres' pitching coach, despite some worry that it would detract from his goal of becoming a GM and some personal conflict between him and team president Larry Lucchino. [74] He turned around a pitching staff that had been awful the year before and helped get the team into the World Series. Several of the Padres pitchers (including Andy Ashby, Sterling Hitchcock and Joey Hamilton) credited Stewart directly with the improvement of the staff. [75] He maintained some of his front office duties, including running the Latin America scouting department, during the season and often remarked that he would leave for the right front office position. [76]

Stewart left San Diego after the season and interviewed for assistant GM positions with Oakland and the Florida Marlins. He was a finalist to replace Frank Wren in Florida, but his concern about the high crime rate in South Florida led him to turn down the position. His familiarity with the Blue Jays organization was the main reason he accepted the job there under Gord Ash. [77] When the Blue Jays fired pitching coach Rick Langford in the middle of the 2000 season, Stewart moved into the position on July 24, 2000. [78] After the 2001 season, when the Blue Jays had an opening at general manager, they passed on Stewart, hiring J. P. Ricciardi instead. Stewart chose to resign from his dual role as pitching coach and assistant general manager. He was outspoken about the fact that he felt minorities were being discriminated against in the front office and that the decision by team president Paul Godfrey was racist. Frustrated, he said, "I think the whole process is a waste of time." [79]

He joined the Milwaukee Brewers as their pitching coach for the 2002 season under manager Davey Lopes. After the team started 3–12, Lopes was fired and Stewart was a candidate to replace him, but it instead went to bench coach Jerry Royster. [80] He resigned on July 29, 2002, in order to care for his mother and spend more time with family. [81] After leaving that position, he was the pitching coach for the United States national baseball team at the Olympic Qualifying tournament. [82]

Stewart in 2019 after throwing a first pitch for the A's. Dave Stewart stands on the mound, Aug 25 2019.jpg
Stewart in 2019 after throwing a first pitch for the A's.

Stewart started a sports agency called Sports Management Partners. His first big deal was negotiating a six-year, $66 million contract extension between the A's and third baseman Eric Chavez. He also negotiated contracts for Matt Kemp and Chad Billingsley. [83] [84]

On September 25, 2014, the Arizona Diamondbacks hired Stewart to become their general manager, replacing Towers; he was the fourth GM hired by the team since 2010. He reported to La Russa, his former manager when he played for Oakland, who served as the Diamondbacks' chief baseball officer. [85] He transferred his management company to former A's teammate Dave Henderson and his wife, Lonnie Murray, when he took the Diamondbacks job. [86] [87] On December 4, 2015, the Diamondbacks agreed to a six-year contract with free agent pitcher Zack Greinke worth a total of $206.5 million. At that time, it held the highest annual average value in MLB, exceeding $34.4 million per year, and was also the largest contract by total value in team history. [88] Stewart later said of the contract, "It could be franchise-changing for us, if everything goes well." [89] Five days later, they traded for Shelby Miller and Gabe Speier, doing so by trading Dansby Swanson, Ender Inciarte, and Aaron Blair to the Atlanta Braves. [90]

The Diamondbacks went 79–83 in 2015 and 69–93 in 2016 with Stewart as general manager. On October 3, 2016, Stewart and manager Chip Hale (hired around the same time as Stewart) were fired by the Diamondbacks. [91]

Stewart was about to have his #34 jersey retired by the Oakland Athletics in 2020, but the ceremony was postponed until further notice, due to the COVID-19 pandemic; the lack of plans in 2021 prompted questions from fans and even Stewart himself in April 2022 before it was announced that Stewart will have his jersey retired by the Athletics on September 11, 2022. [92] [93] Stewart would break the A's tradition in that his number would be a re-retirement, as well as his not being in the Hall of Fame.

In 2021, following the Dodgers victory in the 2020 World Series, Stewart said he would not be attending the 40th anniversary celebration of the Dodgers’ 1981 World Series championship because of how he believed the team mishandled the Trevor Bauer sexual assault allegations by waiting an entire week to put him on administrative leave. [94]

Personal life

Stewart and his ex-wife, Vanessa, have two children, Adrian and Alyse. [1] Stewart is romantically linked to sports agent Lonnie Murray. [95]

In 1985, Stewart was arrested on suspicion of lewd conduct with a prostitute later revealed to be a transsexual. [96] After pleading no contest to a lesser charge of soliciting a prostitute, Stewart's judgment was a fine, probation, and a suspended sentence. [97] Two days after the arrest, Stewart was honored with the Good Guys award from Dallas-Fort Worth sportswriters. Accepting the award, he admitted both his guilt and that he was ashamed. [1]

In 1994, Stewart and teammate Todd Stottlemyre stood trial for seven days in Hillsborough County, Florida on charges of battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting arrest with violence. Stewart also faced charges of disorderly conduct. Stewart was accused of punching a police officer in the face at a club. The jury deliberated for 36 minutes before finding the pitchers not guilty. [98]

See also

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Dave Stewart
Dave Stewart on August 1, 2009.jpg
Stewart on August 1, 2009.
Pitcher
Born: (1957-02-19) February 19, 1957 (age 67)
Oakland, California, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 22, 1978, for the Los Angeles Dodgers
Last MLB appearance
July 17, 1995, for the Oakland Athletics
Preceded by American League All-Star Game Starting Pitcher
1989
Succeeded by
Preceded by No-hitter pitcher
June 29, 1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by Arizona Diamondbacks General manager
20142016
Succeeded by