286. Preacher Roe

  • Published in Baseball
  • Read 2836 times
  • Rate this item
    (3 votes)
  1. General
  2. Awards
  3. Career Stats
  • Born: February 26, 1916 in Ash Flat, AR USA
  • Weight: 170 lbs.
  • Height: 6'2"
  • Bats: R
  • Throws: L
  • Debut: August 22, 1938
  • Final Game: September 04, 1954
 
WLERAGGSSVIPSO
127844.51333261101,914.3956
 

Preacher Roe played a whopping 2.2 Innings for the St. Louis Cardinals in 1938, and he went back to the minors for the next five years before being traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates organization.  The Pirates called him up, and at age 28 in the World War II depleted Majors, he had his second chance.  

Roe did well, as he was named to the All-Star Game in 1945 (it wasn’t played), and he led the National League in FIP (2.49) and Strikeouts (148).  A head injury and the returning players upon the end of the war saw Roe’s stats deteriorate, and as he was now on the north side of 30, the Pirates had no problem dealing him to Brooklyn after the 1947 season.  This was the city where Roe became a star.

With a name like “Preacher," Roe fit in with the colorful Dodgers, and in his 30s, he became one of the more unlikely pitching stars in baseball.  Roe went to four straight All-Star Games (1949-52), and he received MVP votes in all of those years.  Roe was fifth in MVP voting in 1951, and The Sporting News named him the Pitcher of the Year.  Roe helped Brooklyn win three National League Pennants, but he could never win the World Series.

Age finally caught up to Roe, and his last year in the Majors was in 1954, where he finished his career with a 127-84 Record.

The Bullet Points

  • Country of Origin: Ash Flat, Arkansas, U.S.A.
  • Eligible In: Friday, 01 January 1960
  • Position: Pitcher
  • Games Played: 333
  • Notable Statistics: 127 Wins
    84 Losses
    3.43 ERA
    261 Games Started
    101 Complete Games
    17 Shutouts
    42 Games Finished
    10 Saves
    1,914.1 Innings Pitched
    956 Strikeouts
    3.76 FIP
    1.259 WHIP
    1.90 SO/BB
    29.7 bWAR

    5 Playoff Games
    2 Wins
    1 Loss
    2.54 ERA
    3 Games Started 
    3 Complete Games
    1 Shutout
    1 Game FInished
    28.1 Innings Pitched
    14 Strikeouts
    4.60 FIP
    1.059 WHIP
    1.40 SO/BB

    37 Runs Scored
    68 Hits
    3 Doubles
    0 Triples
    1 Home Run
    28 Runs Batted In
    0 Stolen Bases
    .110/.161/.119 Slash Line

    0 Runs Scored
    0 Hits
    0 Doubles
    0 Triples
    0 Home Runs
    0 Runs Batted In
    0 Stolen Bases
    .000/.000/.000 Slash Line

    8 Playoff Plate Appearances 
  • Played For: Brooklyn Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals
  • Major Accolades and Awards:

    World Series Rings (None) 
    The Sporting News Pitcher of the Year (1) (NL) (1951)
    All-Star (5) (1945, 1949, 1950, 1951 & 1952)
    Highest bWAR for Pitchers (1) (NL) (1945)
    Lowest BB/9 (1) (NL) (1948)
    Highest SO/9 (1) (NL) (1945)
    Most Strikeouts (1) (NL) (1945)
    Highest SO/BB (1) (NL) (1949)
    Lowest FIP (1) (NL) (1945)
    Highest Fielding Percentage by a Pitcher (4) (NL) (1945, 1948, 1952 & 1953)

  • Other Points of Note:

    Top Ten MVP Finishes:
    (NL: 1951, 5th)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (bWAR for Pitchers)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (ERA)
    4 Top Ten Finishes (Wins)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (WHIP)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (H/9)
    7 Top Ten Finishes (BB/9)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (SO/9)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (Innings Pitched)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (Strikeouts)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (Games Started)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (Complete Games)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (Shutouts)
    8 Top Ten Finishes (SO/BB)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (ERA+)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (FIP)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (Win Probability Added)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (Championship Win Probability Added)

  • Notable All Time Rankings: 65. Championship Win Probability Added: 35.0
  • Vote Percentage Received for the Hall of Fame: 1960: 0.4%
    1962: 0.6%
    1968: 0.7%
    1970: 0.3%
    1971: 0.8%
    1972: 0.5%
  • Should be Inducted As A: Brooklyn Dodger

Should Preacher Roe be in the Baseball Hall of Fame?

Definitely put him in! - 50%
Maybe, but others deserve it first. - 50%
Probably not, but it wouldn't be the end of the world. - 0%
No opinion. - 0%
No way! - 0%

Comments powered by CComment