Sign In to Send Message
Country :
  
Fave Sport :
Fave Team / Event :

Orel Hershiser

Orel Hershiser
Personal Information

Full Name : Orel Leonard Hershiser, IV
Public : Orel Hershiser
Nickname : Bulldog
Country : United States (USA) 
DOB : September 16, 1958  (Age 51)
Place : Buffalo, New York
Height : 6' 3"
Weight : 192 lbs.
Sport : Baseball - MLB
Team : Retired
Level : Professional
Status : Superstar
   
 Quick Facts
Retired
Pitcher
Jersey # 55
Batted : Right Threw : Right

MLB Teams :
Los Angeles Dodgers (2000)
New York Mets (1999)
San Francisco Giants (1998)
Cleveland Indians (1995 - 1997)
Los Angeles Dodgers (1983 - 1994)


College : Bowling Green State University

Achievements :
1988 World Series champion
1988 World Series MVP
3x MLB All-Star (1987, 1988, 1989)
1988 Gold Glove Award
1993 Silver Slugger Award
1988 Cy Young Award
1988 Babe Ruth Award
1988 NLCS MVP
1995 ALCS MVP


Expand
 Top Fans
Outline   |   Full Article   
 Mini Biography

Orel Leonard Hershiser IV (born September 16, 1958) is a former right-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball. He is currently an analyst for Baseball Tonight and Wednesday Night Baseball on ESPN and a professional poker player for PokerStars. In 1988, he won the Gold Glove, Cy Young Award, the NLCS MVP and the World Series MVP with the Dodgers.

Known for his slight frame and fierce competitive spirit, Hershiser was nicknamed "Bulldog" by team manager Tommy Lasorda.


 Early Life

Hershiser was born in Buffalo, New York to Mildred I. Gillman and Orel Leonard Hershiser III. He attended Cherry Hill High School East in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, where he was the star pitcher on the school's baseball team. He first caught the attention of pro scouts as a pitcher at Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio where he was a member of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.


 Career (Pro, College, HS, Olympic, International, Contracts, Earnings)

Baseball Career

Minor League Career

Hershiser was selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 17th round of the 1979 amateur draft and was assigned to their farm team in Clinton, Iowa. He spent four more seasons in the minor leagues with San Antonio and Albuquerque before being called up to the major leagues.


Major League Career

Hershiser was called up to the Los Angeles Dodgers on September 1, 1983. He began as a middle reliever in 1984, and he went 11-8 with a 2.66 ERA and four shutouts. He became a full-fledged starter in the Dodger rotation on July 14, 1984.

He had a breakthrough season in 1985 when he led the National League in winning percentage, compiling a 19-3 record with a 2.03 ERA. The Dodgers won the National League West, and Hershiser finished third in Cy Young Award voting.

In 1986, Hershiser went 14-14 with a 3.85 ERA. The next year he was selected to his first All-Star game while compiling a 16-16 record with a 3.06 ERA.

1988

Hershiser put together one of the best single seasons in pitching history in 1988. That year, he led the league in wins (23), innings (267), and complete games (15). He finished the season with a record 59 consecutive scoreless innings pitched, breaking the mark held by Dodger great Don Drysdale. He also won his first Gold Glove. He was unanimously selected as the Cy Young Award winner, with a record of 23-8 and a 2.26 ERA.

In the 1988 National League Championship Series between Hershiser's Dodgers and the New York Mets, Hershiser not only started Games 1 and 3, but recorded the final out in Game 4 in relief for a save. He then pitched a complete game shutout in Game 7. He was selected MVP of the series.

Hershiser then capped his historic season in the World Series by pitching a complete game shutout in Game 2 and allowing two runs in a complete game in the clinching victory in Game 5, winning the World Series MVP Award.

Hershiser is the only player to receive the Cy Young award, the Championship Series MVP award, and the World Series MVP award in the same season. He later received both The Sporting News Pitcher of the Year and Sports Illustrated magazine's Sportsman of the Year award for his accomplishments in 1988.


Post-1988 with the Dodgers

In 1989, Hershiser's performance on the mound was very similar to his previous year's effort. However, he suffered from a lack of offense from the Dodgers, as his average run support fell from 4.05 runs/start in 1988 to 3.19 in 1989. His ERA was virtually unchanged in 1989, rising only to 2.31 from 2.26, while league average ERA rose from 3.35 to 3.43. His won-loss record plummeted to 15-15. The scoreless innings streak ended on April 5, 1989, in Cincinnati. Barry Larkin ended the string in the top of the first by singling, moving to second on an errant pickoff throw by Hershiser, and scoring on a Todd Benzinger single. However, he did strike out Chris Sabo and Eric Davis prior to Benzinger's streak-breaking RBI.

After averaging over 250 innings per season from 1985-89, Hershiser suffered a career-threatening injury when he tore the rotator cuff in his pitching arm on April 25, 1990, against the St. Louis Cardinals. He missed 13 months before coming back on May 29, 1991. He went 7-2 as the Dodgers finished in second place.

Although he was a good starter after his comeback, Hershiser would never regain the level of dominance that he had prior to the injury. He pitched for the Dodgers through the 1994 season.


Cleveland Indians

In 1995, he joined the Cleveland Indians, and posted a 16-6 mark to play a pivotal role in helping the team reach the World Series for the first time since 1954.

Hershiser became the most valuable player of the 1995 American League Championship Series against the Seattle Mariners, and is the only player to win the LCS Most Valuable Player Award in both leagues. He pitched two more seasons for the Indians, and was 14-6 for the pennant-winning team in 1997.

While with the Indians, Hershiser became somewhat of a folk hero in Cleveland and still is today. Although he only played with the Tribe for three seasons, he became the face of the franchise in the mid 1990s. A lasting image in Cleveland is the Bulldog screaming "take that" at the Atlanta Braves dugout following a strikeout during the 1995 World Series.


Later Career

He later joined the San Francisco Giants (1998) and New York Mets (1999) before rejoining the Dodgers for a final season in 2000.

Hershiser appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated three times: twice by himself, and once in a group photo with other Dodgers while celebrating the 1988 World Series victory.


 Stats
 Recognition (Records, Awards, Achievements, Highlights, Milestones)
 Endorsements
 Personal Life

Hershiser was married to Jamie Byars until their divorce in 2005. He currently lives in Las Vegas, Nevada. They have two sons, Orel Leonard V (known as Quinton) and Jordan. Jordan graduated high school in 2007 from St. Mark's School of Texas in Dallas and plays college baseball at the University of Southern California as a pitcher and first baseman. Jordan's head coach is Orel's former Dodger teammate Chad Kreuter. Jordan also plays for the Madison Mallards in the Summer Collegiate Northwoods League.

 Trivia & Notes

Poker

Hershiser started playing poker competitively in 2006. After being out of baseball for a few years, he needed a competitive fix, moved to Las Vegas and befriended a poker instructor. He has become a regular at Red Rock's poker room in Las Vegas, playing $2-$5 NLHE. In the baseball off-season, he plays about five days per week. And even during baseball season when he flies to the ESPN studios several days a week, he still manages to get in one or two sessions a week. Soon, Hershiser was known as The Bulldog at the poker table.

Hershiser signed with Poker Royalty to represent his poker career. He was invited to participate in the 2008 NBC National Heads-Up Poker Championship. Playing under the PokerStars banner. Hershiser stunned the poker world by making the quarterfinals, defeating 2006 event champion Ted Forrest, Allen Cunningham, and Freddy Deeb-players who had won a total of 12 World Series of Poker bracelets heading into the event. Andy Bloch finally defeated him in the quarterfinals.

After his finish in the 2008 NBC Heads-Up Championship, Hershiser signed a deal to become a professional poker player with PokerStars under the screen name ‘O. Hershiser'. Hershisher won $54,570 on Sept 7, 2008 by taking 9th place in the $10,000 Pokerstars WCOOP (World Championship of Online Poker) Event 5.



 Equipment
 Health & Fitness (Injuries & Illnesses, Diet & Nutrition, Training Schedule)
 Off the Field (Charity, Pop Culture, Controversy)
 Legacy
More Baseball - MLB Athletes