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Phil Niekro Week of February 18th
PHIL NIEKRO
Phil Niekro MLB Hall of Fame Entry
Phil Niekro Career Stats
Philip Henry Niekro (born April 1, 1939), nicknamed
"Knucksie" because of his usage and skill level with
the knuckleball, is a former Major League Baseball
pitcher. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of
Fame in 1997.
A native of Blaine, Ohio, Niekro attended Bridgeport
High School in Bridgeport, Ohio, and was a boyhood
friend of NBA Hall-of-Famer John Havlicek. Phil and
his younger brother, fellow major league pitcher Joe
Niekro, learned to throw a knuckleball from their
father Joe Niekro, Sr. in their backyard as kids.
With 318 career victories, Niekro is the winningest
knuckleball pitcher of all time, and currently ranks
16th on the all-time wins list. He also won the
National League Gold Glove Award five times. Phil and
Joe Niekro are the winningest brother combination in
baseball history, with 539 wins combined. Phil
Niekro's 121 career victories after the age of 40 is
a major league record, and his longevity is
attributed to the knuckleball, which, while a
difficult pitch for pitchers to master, is easy on
the arm and often baffles hitters due to its
fluttering trajectory. He is also the uncle of former
first baseman and pitcher Lance Niekro. The baseball
field in Phil's hometown of Bridgeport, Ohio has been
named Niekro Diamond in honor of Phil and Joe Niekro.
CAREER WITH THE BRAVES
Niekro pitched for 20 seasons for the Atlanta Braves
(two of those seasons when the team was still in
Milwaukee). He was popular in the city of Atlanta for
remaining loyal to a team that often had a losing
record, as well as for his contributions to Atlanta
charities. On August 5, 1973, Niekro threw a no-
hitter against the San Diego Padres. The no-hitter
was the first for the Braves since they moved to
Atlanta. He was often the only star on the Braves
teams. In 1979, for example, Niekro tied his brother
for the league lead with 21 wins while playing for a
team that only won 66. During his tenure in Atlanta,
Niekro was selected for five All-Star Teams, won five
gold gloves, led the league in victories twice and
earned run average once.
Niekro was also a key to the only two division titles
Atlanta won before 1991. In 1969, he had a 23–13
season with a 2.56 ERA and finished second in Cy
Young balloting to New York Mets sensation Tom
Seaver. In the final days of the season, Niekro
started three of seven games, going 3-0 as the Braves
won the division. He lost his only appearance in the
NLCS, as Atlanta was swept by the Mets.
In 1982, at the age of 43, Niekro led the Braves'
pitching staff with a 17–4 season. On October 1, with
the Braves clinging to a one-game lead over the Los
Angeles Dodgers, Niekro beat the San Diego Padres
almost single-handedly by throwing a complete game
shutout and hitting a two run home run. Niekro
started Game One of the subsequent NLCS against the
St. Louis Cardinals and pitched well, but the game
was called on account of rain just before it became
official. He pitched six innings of Game Two and left
with a 3–2 lead. However, the Cardinals scored 2 runs
off the bullpen to win the game and eventually sweep
the series.
CAREER AFTER THE BRAVES
The Braves released Niekro after the 1983 season and
he signed with the New York Yankees and went on to
win 16 games and make the last of his five All-Star
appearances. It was while pitching for the Yankees
that Niekro gained entry into the 300 win club with a
shutout win over the Toronto Blue Jays on October 6,
1985. At 46 years, 188 days, Niekro became the oldest
pitcher to pitch a shutout in the major leagues; this
record stood for nearly 25 years before Jamie Moyer
(47 years, 170 days) bested the feat in May 2010; for
Niekro, this complete-game shutout would be his 300th
win. He did not throw his trademark knuckleball until
the final hitter, former AL MVP Jeff Burroughs. Prior
to facing Burroughs, Niekro's teammate and brother
Joe visited the mound in the role of "substitute
pitching coach" and jokingly suggested that an
intentional walk was in order. Instead, Niekro struck
Burroughs out to end the game.
After two seasons in New York, Niekro pitched for the
Cleveland Indians and Toronto Blue Jays in 1986 and
1987. The Blue Jays released him after he pitched
ineffectively, and the Braves brought him back for
one last start to wrap up his career late in the 1987
season. At the age of 48, Niekro was the oldest
player in major league history to play regularly
until Julio Franco, and his 24 seasons in the major
leagues without a World Series appearance is a major
league record. His total of 5,404? innings pitched is
the most by any pitcher in the post-1920 live-ball
era. He only appeared in the post season twice,
making a playoff start in 1969 and again in 1982,
both for Braves teams that would go on to lose the
series.
POST-PLAYING CAREER
After the end of his professional baseball career,
Niekro managed the all-women Colorado Silver Bullets
baseball team. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in
1997. Niekro tutored his nephew, Lance Niekro to
throw a knuckleball after his unsuccessful stints as
a power-hitting first base prospect with the San
Francisco Giants.[4] Niekro was a good enough tutor
to help Lance earn a minor-league contract with the
Atlanta Braves preceding the 2009 season.
Currently, Niekro is a member of the Kiz Toys Board
of Advisors. Kiz Toys is a toy company based out of
Cumming, Georgia, and Niekro advises the company on
the KizSport baseball line, reviewing product designs
and development on an ongoing basis and offering
suggestions on current and future products.
The Gwinnett Braves' stadium has a restaurant named
Knucksie's after him; it features the Knucksie
Sandwich made of barbecue and cole slaw atop a corn
muffin, said to be his favorite.
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