The term
save was being used as far back as 1952. Executives Jim Toomey of the
St. Louis Cardinals and Irv Kaze of the
Pittsburgh Pirates, and statistician
Allan Roth of the
Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers awarded saves to pitchers who finished winning games but were not credited with the win, regardless of the margin of victory. The statistic went largely unnoticed. The concept of a reliever "saving" a baseball game for a starting pitcher goes back even further. A 1933
Goudey baseball card of
Firpo Marberry of the
Detroit Tigers states he "Specializes in saving ball games when other pitchers are getting their bumps." A formula with more criteria for saves was invented in 1960 by baseball writer
Jerome Holtzman. He felt that the existing statistics at the time,
earned run average (ERA) and
win–loss record (W-L), did not sufficiently measure a reliever's effectiveness. ERA does not account for
inherited runners a reliever allows to score, and W-L record does not account for relievers protecting leads.
Elroy Face of the
Pittsburgh Pirates was 18–1 in 1959; however, Holtzman wrote that in 10 of the 18 wins, Face allowed the tying or lead run but got the win when the Pirates offense regained the lead. Holtzman felt that Face was more effective the previous year when he was 5–2. When Holtzman presented the idea to
J. G. Taylor Spink, publisher of
The Sporting News, "[Spink] gave [Holtzman] a $100 bonus. Maybe it was $200." Holtzman recorded the unofficial save statistic in
The Sporting News weekly for nine years before it became official in 1969. In conjunction with publishing the statistic,
The Sporting News in 1960 also introduced the
Fireman of the Year Award, which was awarded based on a combination of saves and
wins. The save became an official MLB statistic in . On April 27, 1969,
Frank Linzy of the
San Francisco Giants became the first pitcher to be credited with two saves in one day, registering saves in both games of a
doubleheader against the
Houston Astros. On April 29, 1970,
Stan Williams of the
Minnesota Twins became the first pitcher credited with a save without facing a batter. In a home game against the
Cleveland Indians with the Twins holding a 1–0 lead, Williams entered in relief of
Jim Kaat in the top of the ninth inning with two outs and runners on first and second; he then
picked off runner
Tony Horton at second base, ending the game. On September 3, 2002, the
Texas Rangers won 7–1 over the
Baltimore Orioles as
Joaquín Benoit pitched a seven-inning save, the longest save since it had become an official statistic in 1969. Benoit relieved
Todd Van Poppel (who entered the game in the first inning after starter
Aaron Myette was ejected for throwing at
Melvin Mora) at the start of the third inning, and finished the game while allowing just one hit. The
official scorer credited the win to Van Poppel and not Benoit, a decision that was also supported by Texas manager
Jerry Narron. On August 22, 2007,
Wes Littleton earned a save with the largest winning margin ever, pitching the last three innings of a 30–3 Texas Rangers win over the Baltimore Orioles. Littleton entered the game with a 14–3 lead, and the final 27-
run differential broke the previous record for a save by eight runs.
The New York Times noted that "there are the preposterous saves, of which Littleton's now stands out as No. 1." On October 29, 2014, in Game 7 of the
2014 World Series,
Madison Bumgarner of the San Francisco Giants recorded the longest save in World Series history, pitching five scoreless innings of relief in a 3–2 victory over the Kansas City Royals. In a 20–1 Philadelphia Phillies victory over the Miami Marlins on April 7, 2018, pitcher Jake Thompson recorded his first career save by pitching the final three innings. ==Usage==