Bruce Hurst

Bruce Hurst Stats & Facts

Bruce Hurst Essentials

Position: Pitcher
Bats: Left  •  Throws: Left
6-4, 200lb (193cm, 90kg)
Born: March 24, 1958  in St. George, UT us
Draft: Drafted by the Boston Red Sox in the 1st round (22nd) of the 1976 MLB June Amateur Draft from Dixie HS (St. George, UT).
High School: Dixie HS (St. George, UT)
Debut: April 12, 1980 (14,285th in major league history)
vs. MIL 1.0 IP, 4 H, 2 SO, 1 BB, 5 ER
Last Game: June 18, 1994
vs. OAK 3.0 IP, 6 H, 2 SO, 1 BB, 4 ER
Rookie Status: Exceeded rookie limits during 1981 season
Agents: Nick Lampros
Full Name: Bruce Vee Hurst
View Player Info from the B-R Bullpen
View Player Bio from the SABR BioProject

 

Nine Other Players Who Debuted in 1980

Harold Baines
Tim Wallach
Tony Pena
Mike Scioscia
Fernando Valenzuela
Bruce Hurst
Bob Ojeda
Lee Smith
Mark Davis

 

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Biography

While pitching for the 1981 Pawtucket Red Sox, Bruce Hurst appeared in the longest game in baseball history, pitching 5 shutout innings (allowing 2 hits) as the 7th PawSox hurler. He was relieved by Bob Ojeda.

Bruce Hurst made his debut with the Boston Red Sox in 1980 and pitched with the team until 1988.

Consistently good but never overpowering, Bruce Hurst used an array of pitches to keep righthanded sluggers at bay. The southpaw may not have been the natural athlete that his longtime teammate Roger Clemens was, but he turned to sneaky fastballs, knee-buckling forkballs, and changeups to play mind games with his opponents. Hurst was a rare lefthander who excelled at Fenway Park. He was 33-9 there from 1986 to 1988, and his 56 Fenway wins are second only to Mel Parnell’s among southpaws. His pickoff move to first base was a weapon as well — he caught 15 baserunners in 1984.

A highly-touted rookie coming up with the Boston Red Sox in 1980, Hurst didn’t meet expectations soon enough. But despite spending six midsummer weeks on the disabled list with a pulled groin in 1986, Hurst posted a 2.99 ERA and helped lead the Red Sox to the 1986 World Series. In the Fall Classic he baffled the Mets, winning Game One 1-0 and Game Four 4-2, prompting Darryl Strawberry to remark, “Clemens is tough, but he’s no Hurst.” He had been voted the Series MVP before the Mets rallied to win Game Six with three runs in the bottom of the 10th, and the award was given to Ray Knight when the Mets won Game Seven as well.

In 1988, Hurst became baseball’s most coveted free agent after a career-best 18-6 record, and he accepted less money from the San Diego Padres than the Red Sox had offered so he could pitch in San Diego, closer to his Utah roots. He went 15-11 with a career-best 2.69 ERA in 1989.

Hurst pitched well with the Pods for four years, going 55-37 and establishing himself as a top-notch lefty. At the end of 1992, Hurst began to feel pain in his left shoulder, and underwent surgery that October to repair a torn rotator cuff and labrum. The rehabilitation was an arduous process, and he ended up going on and off the DL for the entire 1993 season, pitching only 13 innings. Half of those innings came for the Colorado Rockies, to whom he was traded in July along with Greg W. Harris for Brad Ausmus, Doug Bochtler, and Andy Ashby.

At the end of the season, Hurst signed on with the Texas Rangers, hoping to leave his injuries in the National League. But halfway through the year, with repercussions of the surgery still lingering, the southpaw was forced to pitch through pain each time he trudged to the mound. When he realized his shoulder wasn’t getting any stronger, Hurst retired in June 1994, stating that he didn’t want to be a detriment to his team.

 

 

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