American baseball player and analyst (born 1964)
Baseball player
Joseph David Magrane (born July 2, 1964) is an American former Major League Baseball (MLB) pitcher who played for the St. Louis Cardinals , California Angels , and Chicago White Sox between 1987 and 1996, and is currently a color commentary broadcaster for the MLB Network .
Playing career
Amateur
In 1984, Magrane played collegiate summer baseball for the Harwich Mariners of the Cape Cod Baseball League (CCBL). He led the league in wins and threw six complete games. Magrane was the winning pitcher at the league's 1984 all-star game at Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium , where he pitched two shutout innings. He was inducted into the CCBL Hall of Fame in 2009.[ 1]
Professional
During his rookie season, he helped the Cardinals win the 1987 National League pennant, starting Game 1 and Game 7 (the first pitcher to do so with no starts between those two games), taking the loss in Game 1. He also led the National League in hit batsmen, with 10.
He led the National League in ERA (2.18) in 1988, despite winning only five games (losing nine). He holds the distinction of the fewest wins by an ERA leader, excluding strike seasons.[ 2] He finished 4th in voting for the 1989 NL Cy Young with an 18–9 win–loss record, a 2.91 ERA and surrendered only 5 home runs in 2342 ⁄3 innings.
An injured elbow in 1990 cost him almost all of the next two seasons and most of his effectiveness, and he never regained his early form. He won 11 games between the St. Louis and California ball clubs in 1993, but could not muster more than two wins or 74 innings pitched in any other season until his retirement in 1996 at the relatively early age of 32.
Broadcasting career
Prior to joining the MLB Network , Magrane was teamed with play-by-play announcer Dewayne Staats from 1998 to 2008 as part of the Tampa Bay Rays television team, and also served as an analyst for NBC Sports ' coverage of baseball at the 2008 Summer Olympics .[ 3]
Personal life
Magrane and his wife Renee,[ 4] have two daughters, Shannon and Sophia.[ 5] In 2012, Shannon was a finalist on the 11th season of American Idol .[ 6]
See also
References
^ "Class of 2009 Elected to Cape League's Hall of Fame" . capecodbaseball.org. Retrieved August 11, 2019 .
^ "These are the 9 weirdest pitching seasons ever" . MLB.com . Retrieved July 17, 2019 .
^ Medium Well: Your NBC Olympics lineup – A blog on sports media, news and networks – baltimoresun.com Archived 2008-08-03 at the Wayback Machine
^ Nightingale, Bob (November 14, 1994). "Angels Find Crack in Their Plan to Deal Away Magrane : Baseball: Injuries the pitcher sustained in late October car accident lessen his value on the trade market" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved March 3, 2012 .
^ Sherman, Joe (January 25, 2012). "Daughter of Cape League Hall of Famer Magrane Heads to Hollywood as 'American Idol' Hopeful" . Cape Cod Baseball League . Retrieved March 3, 2012 .
^ Los Angeles Times, Magrane's daughter's American Idol audition
External links
1965 : DiFabio
1966 : Lee
1967 : Simmons
1968 : Hairston
1969 : Minott
1970 : Browning
1971 : Kurpiel
1972 : Larson
1973 : Edelen
1974 : Templeton
1975 : Johnson
1976 : Durham
1977 : T. Kennedy
1978 : Hicks
1979 : Van Slyke
1980 : Collins
1981 : Meachem
1982 : Worrell
1983 : Lindeman
1984 : Dunne
1985 : Magrane
1986 : Alicea
1987 : Carpenter
1988 : Ericks , DuVall, Jordan
1989 : Coleman
1990 : Osborne , Holbert , Ellis
1991 : Young , Watson , Barber , McKinnon, Cholowsky
1992 : Lowe
1993 : Benes
1994 : Wagner
1995 : Morris , Haas
1996 : Looper
1997 : A. Kennedy
1998 : Drew , Diggins
1999 : Caple, Stocks, Duncan
2000 : Boyd, Williams
2001 : Pope
2002 : None
2003 : Barton
2004 : Lambert
2005 : Rasmus , Greene , McCormick, Herron
2006 : Ottavino , C. Perez
2007 : Kozma , Mortensen
2008 : Wallace , Lynn
2009 : Miller
2010 : Cox , Blair , Jenkins
2011 : Wong
2012 : Wacha , Ramsey , Piscotty , Wisdom , Bean
2013 : Gonzales , Kaminsky
2014 : Weaver , Flaherty
2015 : Plummer
2016 : D. Pérez , Carlson , Hudson
2017 : None
2018 : Gorman
2019 : Thompson
2020 : Walker
2021 : McGreevy
2022 : Hjerpe
2023 : Davis
2024 : Wetherholt
Current personalities Former personalities Programming Miscellaneous
Commentators Key figures
Play-by-play announcers Color commentators Field reporters
Lore AL Division Series NL Division Series World Baseball Classic Music