Mike Loynd
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Michael Loynd (born March 26, 1964 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a Major League Baseball pitcher with the Texas Rangers. He was drafted in June 1986 out of Florida State University and made the jump from college to the big leagues in less than two months. At Florida State he had tied an NCAA record by winning 20 games during the '86 season and was largely responsible for their trip to the College World Series. He was the '86 Golden Spikes winner as the best college baseball player in the nation. After an initial flurry of success in the Majors his career flamed out and he was demoted to the minor leagues. He had a career total of 3 wins, 7 losses, an E.R.A. of 5.82 with 81 strikeouts in 111 1/3 innings pitched.
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[edit] A quick start
Loynd, age 22, made his debut on Thursday, July 24, 1986. Like the much heralded David Clyde in 1973, Loynd was expected to contribute immediately upon being called to the Majors. The Rangers were involved in a close pennant race and manager Bobby Valentine was strapped for pitching. Loynd won his first start in front of 34,256 fans with a 6-3 win over future Hall of Famer Phil Niekro and the Cleveland Indians. Loynd hurled 6 innings, allowed 3 runs, walked 3, and struck out 6.
After his next three starts resulted in no decisions, Loynd was back in the win column again on Thursday, August 14, 1986 after defeating Teddy Higuera and the Milwaukee Brewers 8 to 2. Loynd surrendered only one run over 7 strong innings while giving up only 5 hits and one walk. He struck out 4. The victory improved his record to 2-0 and moved the Rangers just 1.5 games behind the first place California Angels.
[edit] The decline and fall
After moving his record to 2-0, Loynd would begin to struggle. Many experts felt it was due to his not having pitched as many innings before during a season. Rangers' manager Bobby Valentine began to use him more selectively, but yet he struggled greatly and for the year ended with 2 wins, 2 losses, and an ERA of 5.36.
In 1987 he began the year in the bullpen and had some initial success in the first month. The Rangers however had been a team predicted by many pundits to contend for their first ever title. Instead, the club started the year 1-10 and never recovered. Perhaps the most iconic moment of that frustration involved Loynd in front of the home town crowd at Arlington Stadium. On Saturday, May 9, 1987 Loynd was brought in relief of Edwin Correa against the Toronto Blue Jays. After Tony Fernández connected off him for a home run that pushed the score to 7-0, Loynd vented his anger by hitting the next batter, Lloyd Moseby, with a pitch. Moseby proceeded to charge the mound while Loynd ran away. Both were ejected from the game and Toronto ended up winning 15 to 4.
For the year, Loynd wrapped up 1987 with 1 win, 5 losses, and a horrid ERA of 6.10. It was his last time in the Major Leagues.
[edit] Loynd returns Home
Ultimately the Rangers grew tired of Loynd's struggles in the minor leagues and they traded him to the Houston Astros for catcher Robbie Wine. The change of scenery did little good. Eventually Loynd ended his career pitching for the St. Louis Cardinals' Triple A affiliate, the Louisville Redbirds. Loynd is currently living in St. Louis, Missouri with wife Lori.
[edit] Trivia
- Loynd's father was the CEO of Converse during the 1980s.
- Though born in Missouri, Loynd grew up in Millburn, New Jersey, where he attended Millburn High School.
- He was a walk on at Florida State and was an alternate to the 1984 U.S. Olympic Baseball team.
[edit] Sources
- Mike Loynd's career stats [[1]]
- 1987 Texas Rangers media guide
[edit] External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube
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