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BaseballLibrary.com
Copyright © 2002
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John Tudor
Born: 1954

LHP 1979-90 Red Sox, Pirates, Cardinals, Dodgers

John Tudor's Teammates

IPW-LERA
Career 1797
League CS 332-23.00
World Series 30.13-23.86

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» John Tudor: A Class Act by John Bayer

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Tudor's brief stint in the baseball spotlight was somewhat dimmed because of his unwillingness to cooperate with the press. Often overwhelmed by media attention, especially after tough games, the southpaw became unfairly known for a cold nature with the media, though teammates defended him as a very warm person. Nothing much affected his pitching in 1985, however, when he finished second in the Cy Young Award balloting. But Tudor enjoyed just a few seasons as a top National League pitcher before an elbow injury ended his career.

Tudor honed his talents as a lefthander in the shadow of Fenway Park's Green Monster. After a 1-2 record in his first call-up, he went 8-5 with a 3.03 ERA in 1980 and didn't have a losing record in the '80s. After two straight 13-win seasons, he went to the Pirates in return for Mike Easler for the 1984 season and went 12-11 for the first team ever to lead the league in ERA but finish last in the standings.

Tudor experienced his greatest season in 1985, despite a 1-7 start after coming from the Pirates with Brian Harper in return for George Hendrick and a minor leaguer. With every loss, Tudor got more incensed at the press for badgering him. His terse answers and eye rolling to journalists' questions made him a target as an arrogant ballplayer by the media.

But despite the bad picture painted of him, Tudor completely turned his season around -- with the help of his high school catcher, who noticed a flaw in Tudor's delivery while watching a Cardinals game on TV. On the advice of his old teammate, Tudor adjusted his pitching motion and won 20 of his last 21 decisions. The lefty's emergence on the mound more than compensated for Joaquin Andujar's poor pitching in the stretch as the Cardinals won the title.

Tudor finished 1985 at 21-8 with a 1.93 ERA and led the National League with ten shutouts. He would have been a lock for the Cy Young Award had Dwight Gooden not enjoyed an even more brilliant season. Tudor finished second to Gooden in ERA, wins (tied for second), complete games (tied for second), and innings pitched. After losing the first game of the League Championship Series 4-1, Tudor came back to win game four 12-2. In the World Series, he pitched masterfully at first, winning Game One 3-1 and throwing a five-hit shutout to win Game Four 3-0. But he was knocked out in the third inning of Game Seven, allowing five runs to the Kansas City Royals. He punched a rotating fan in the clubhouse, severely cutting his hand, and was even surlier than usual to members of the press.

After his fine 1985 campaign, Tudor was plagued by injuries. He continued his fine performance in 1986, going 13-7 with a 2.92 ERA, but missed the final three weeks of the season and had his fewest complete games (three) since 1981. He missed over three months in 1987 after New York Mets catcher Barry Lyons fell into the St. Louis dugout and broke Tudor's leg; Tudor finished 10-2 but had a 3.84 ERA.

That postseason, Tudor lost Game Two 5-0 to the San Francisco Giants and tied a National League Championship Series record by allowing ten hits. Combining with Todd Worrell and Ken Dayley, he won Game Six 1-0. Tudor then won Game Three of the World Series 3-1, but was knocked out of Game Six, when he allowed four hits and four runs in the fifth inning without retiring a batter.

Starting 1988 on the disabled list, Tudor was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers in mid-August for Pedro Guerrero. The Mets hit him hard in his no-decision in Game Four of the LCS, and he had to take himself out of Game Three of the World Series in the second inning with an elbow injury. The same injury limited him to just 8 1/3 innings in three games in 1989 and eventually ended his career despite a fine comeback season with the Cardinals in 1990. (SFS/GL)


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FROM THE BASEBALL CHRONOLOGY
» December 6, 1983: The Pirates trade OF Mike Easler to the Red Sox for lefthanded starter John Tudor.

» December 12, 1984: St. Louis sends slugger George Hendrick and a minor leaguer to the Pirates for P John Tudor and Brian Harper. Tudor, at 12–11, was the ace of the Bucs' staff, which set a record by having the National League's best ERA, though the team finished last. The 35-year-old Hendrick will play just a half season in the Iron City before going to California.

» August 8, 1985: Cardinals pitcher John Tudor one-hits the Cubs 8–0 for his 6th shutout of the season, allowing only Leon Durham's 5th-inning single. Tudor started the season 1–7 but will win 20 of his last 21 decisions to finish 21–8.

» September 11, 1985: John Tudor allows three hits in 10 innings for his 3rd consecutive shutout, outdueling Dwight Gooden and the Mets 1–0 to move St. Louis back into a first-place tie with New York in the National League East. Cesar Cedeno's 10th-inning homer provides the game's only run.

» September 26, 1985: The Cards John Tudor picks up his 20th win of the season with his ML-leading 10th shutout, a 5–0 four-hitter against the Phillies. It's the most in 10 years and the most by a lefty since Sandy Koufax in 1963.

» October 1, 1985: In the first game of a 3-game showdown between the Mets and Cardinals, Ron Darling and John Tudor each pitch 10 shutout innings before Darryl Strawberry belts a titanic home run off reliever Ken Dayley. The Mets' 1–0, 11-inning win cuts the Cardinals' lead in the National League East to two games.

» October 5, 1985: The Cardinals, Royals, and Blue Jays all clinch their division championships. John Tudor pitches a 4-hitter and Cesar Cedeno goes 3-for-3 with a home run, as St. Louis beats the Cubs 7–1. It is Tudor's 20th win in 21 decisions after starting the season 1–7.

» October 9, 1985: The first game of the NLCS results in a 4–1 Dodger win over St. Louis's John Tudor, only his 2nd loss in his last 22 decisions.

» October 19, 1985: St. Louis wins the opener of the "I-70 Series" behind ace John Tudor 3–1.

» October 23, 1985: John Tudor wins again as he pitches a nine inning, 3–0 shutout.

» October 27, 1985: The Royals rout the Cardinals 11–0 in game seven to become only the 6th team to rally from a 3-1 deficit and win the World Series. Series MVP Bret Saberhagen pitches the shutout while Cardinals ace John Tudor allows five runs in 21/3 innings and fellow 20-game winner Joaquin Andujar is ejected for arguing balls and strikes during Kansas City's 6-run 5th inning. The Cardinals finish the World Series with a .185 team batting average, lowest ever for a 7-game Series.

» April 27, 1986: The Mets win their 9th consecutive game 5–3 at St. Louis, and in the process end John Tudor's 18-game winning streak at Busch Stadium. Kevin Mitchell hits his first ML home run for the Mets.

» April 19, 1987: Cardinals ace John Tudor suffers a broken leg when Mets catcher Barry Lyons crashes into the St. Louis dugout while chasing a foul pop. Tudor, who was not pitching in the 4–2 Cardinals win, will be sidelined until August 1st.

» October 13, 1987: John Tudor and two relievers shut down the Giants 1–0 to even the NLCS at 3-3.

» August 16, 1988: The Dodgers trade Pedro Guerrero to the Cardinals for pitcher John Tudor, whose 2.29 ERA is leading the National League.