In the MLB season, there were 28 left-handed relievers who were not their team's
closer and pitched 45 or more games. Only four averaged fewer than an inning per appearance. From 2001 to 2004, over 75 percent of left handed relievers meeting those criteria averaged less than one inning. Left-handed reliever
John Candelaria was one of the early specialists in 1991, pitching 59 games and averaged .571 innings. In 1992, he allowed no earned runs—excluding inherited runners—in 43 of the 50 games.
Jesse Orosco became a left-handed specialist later in his 24-season career and retired at the age of 46. From 1991 to 2003, he never averaged more than an inning pitched per appearance. During the MLB season, there were seven relief pitchers who averaged less than two outs recorded per appearance, all of whom were left-handed.
Joe Thatcher, a left-handed specialist, appeared in 72 games with innings pitched, and had the fewest outs recorded per appearance, with 1.6.
Mike Myers is considered one of the most successful LOOGY pitchers of all time, having made 883 appearances for nine different teams over the span of a 13 year career, 1995–2007. During that time, he threw innings. Recognizing the limited skill and playing time of pitchers in the role, Myers has said "We were like the field goal kicker, but only when the kicker was called in when the game was on the line. It was their best against you, every time, and you couldn't mess up." German-born
Will Ohman discovered his talent by accident while playing catch as a
walk-on player for
Pepperdine University when he tried a different
slider grip and noticed an extreme break on the ball. He went on to pitch in 483 major league games over 10 seasons between 2000 and 2012. Explaining the precarious nature of the position, Ohman said, "I was the last guy on the roster in every clubhouse I was in. You do your job and other people get the glory." ==Right-handed specialist==