In the early history of
professional baseball, the
National League, which began play in 1876, changed a rule in 1878 such that pinch runners were not allowed except in cases of illness or injury, with the substitute entering the game after the original player reached base. Later rule changes allowed for pinch runners at a manager's discretion. A pinch runner is not credited with a game played for the purpose of consecutive-game playing streaks, per the
Official Rules used by
Major League Baseball (MLB). For example, in May 1984,
Alfredo Griffin of the
Toronto Blue Jays scored the winning run in a game, yet his consecutive game streak ended as he appeared only as a pinch runner. One of the most famous pinch runners in major-league history was
Herb Washington of the
Oakland Athletics. Oakland owner
Charlie Finley, known as an unconventional thinker, came to believe that it would be useful to have a "designated runner"—a fast player on the roster whose only job was to periodically enter a game and run the bases for slower players. He signed Washington, a
track star with no baseball experience. Washington appeared in 105 games for the Athletics in 1974 and 1975, scoring 33 runs and stealing 31 bases, without once playing the field or coming up to bat. His 1975 Topps
baseball card is the only baseball card known to use a "Pinch Runner" position label. Outfielder
Dave Roberts made a notable appearance as a pinch runner in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 4 of the
2004 American League Championship Series, stealing a base and going on to score the tying run in a game the
Boston Red Sox went on to win in 12 innings, leading to a series victory over the
New York Yankees. As of 2023, MLB was considering allowing teams to have a "designated runner". The
Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, an official
MLB Partner League, tested rules for a designated runner in 2023. As described by BallparkDigest.com, the rules for a designated runner were:
s Between 1877 and 1949, major-league teams occasionally used "courtesy runners" in addition to pinch runners. An example of a courtesy runner occurred in a game between the
Detroit Tigers and
St. Louis Browns during the season, on August 31. With permission of the St. Louis manager, The Official Rules used by MLB now forbid courtesy runners.
Mid-play runners During major-league history, there have been a few instances of "mid-play runners". and play then resumes. Two known instances—occurring in 1977 and 2005—occurred when a baserunner entitled to score was injured such that he had to be removed from the game, and a substitute was allowed to enter the game to finish the base running and score the run. A similar instance, which occurred in 2008 but did not involve injury, occurred due to a
replay review that turned an apparent single, following which the batter was replaced by a pinch runner, into a home run—the pinch runner then ran out the home run to score the run.
Some players known primarily as pinch runners •
Herb Washington: 31 stolen bases, 33 runs scored, 0 at bats •
Matt Alexander: 103 stolen bases, 111 runs scored, 168 at bats •
Allan Lewis: 44 stolen bases, 47 runs scored, 29 at bats •
Terrance Gore: 43 stolen bases, 33 runs scored, 74 at bats •
Don Hopkins: 21 stolen bases, 25 runs scored, 6 at bats •
Sandy Piez: 4 stolen bases, 9 runs scored, 8 at bats •
Darrell Woodard: 3 stolen bases, 10 runs scored, 9 at bats •
Rico Noel: 5 stolen bases, 5 runs scored, 2 at bats •
Alberto Lois: 1 stolen bases, 6 runs scored, 4 at bats •
Miguel Mejía: 6 stolen bases, 10 runs scored, 23 at bats •
Eddie Phillips: 0 stolen bases, 4 runs scored, 0 at bats •
Blue Moon Odom: 295 games as a pitcher; 105 games as a pinch runner ==See also==