Lefferts helped the Padres win the
1984 National League pennant and the Giants win the 1987
National League West division title and the
1989 National League pennant. The 83 games he pitched in during 1986 not only led the National League but remains a Padres single season record. Lefferts was traded from the
Padres to the
Orioles for
Erik Schullstrom on August 31, 1992 in a transaction which was completed four days later on September 4 when
Ricky Gutiérrez was sent to San Diego. After going 1–3 with a 4.09
earned run average (ERA) with the Orioles, he elected to become a
free agent on November 2, 1992. In 12 seasons he had a win–loss record of 58–72, 45 games started, 1 complete game, 286 games finished, 101 saves, 1,145 innings, 1,108 hits allowed, 490 runs allowed, 436 earned runs allowed, 120 home runs allowed, 322 walks allowed, 719 strikeouts, 31 wild pitches, 4,754 batters faced, 55 intentional walks, 10 balks and a 3.43 ERA. , Lefferts is the most recent pitcher to hit a
walk-off home run, doing so on April 25, 1986, in the bottom of the 12th inning against the San Francisco Giants'
Greg Minton. He will likely be the last pitcher to do so, as MLB permanently implemented a universal
designated hitter in 2022. He was the first pitcher to hit a walk-off home run since
Moe Drabowsky in 1969. A few years after retiring as a player, Lefferts became a coach in the
Toronto Blue Jays system before joining the
Oakland Athletics system in 2001 and, in 2015, became the team's pitching rehab coordinator. Lefferts underwent two failed eye surgeries in retirement which damaged his vision even further. ==See also==