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Sterling Hitchcock
pitcher | throws: left | bats: left | height: 6-0 | weight: 205 | born: 04.29.71
Career biography: BaseballLibrary.com In the show: Yankees (1992-95), Mariners (1996), Padres (1997-2001), Yankees (2001-03), Cardinals (2003), Padres (2004). How he was acquired: The Padres traded Scott Sanders to the Mariners for Hitchcock on Dec. 6, 1996. How he was lost: The Padres traded Hitchcock to the Yankees for Brett Jodie and Darren Blakely on July 30, 2001. How he was acquired again: Hitchcock signed a one-year contract with the Padres on Dec. 18, 2003. How he was lost again: Hitchcock retired on Sept. 3, 2004.
Players most similar to: Steve Avery, Joey Hamilton.
SAN DIEGO, Sept. 3, 2004 — Left-hander Sterling Hitchcock, the hero of the Padres’ 1998 playoff run, retired Friday night after 12 years in the big leagues. The 33-year-old Hitchcock, who had reconstructive surgery on his left elbow in 2001, was plagued by rib, groin and elbow injuries this season after returning to the Padres as a free agent. He strained his elbow on Aug. 22, forcing him out of a game against Florida. “This is not the way you want to go out, obviously,” Hitchcock said. “There are very few who get to choose the way they want to go out.” Hitchcock said it became evident at the beginning of the week that his elbow wasn't getting better. “They told me with the MRIs that there was minor damage, but at this point I’m not reading an MRI,” he said. “I’m reading how my elbow feels and it’s still sore, it’s still tight. That’s all I can go by at this point.” Hitchcock was 74-76 with a 4.80 ERA. He also pitched for the Yankees, Mariners and Cardinals. Hitchcock helped pitch the Padres into the 1998 World Series, going 2-0 with a 0.90 ERA against Atlanta to earn MVP honors in the NLCS. The Padres were swept in the World Series by the Yankees. Hitchcock said he became so fed up with baseball following his second stint with the Yankees, from 2001-03, that he planned on retiring then. Hitchcock said he became so fed up with baseball following his second stint with the Yankees, from 2001-03, that he planned on retiring then. “After going to St. Louis and getting a chance to start with that group of guys, I had a blast again,” he said. “Baseball became fun. But the work and the effort that’s had to go into this season, it comes to a point in time where the writing is on the wall. It looks like graffiti right now. “I’m learning to never say never, but at this point in time I’m closing the door.”
The Sterling Hitchcock Library
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