Pat Dobson best known for being one of the 4-20 game winners in one season,dead at 64

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Pat Dobson, best known for his years with the Orioles, and being one of 4-20 game winners for Baltimore in 1971 has died at age 64.


Dobson died Wednesday night in the San Diego area, the San Francisco Giants said Thursday. He was a special assistant to Giants general manager Brian Sabean this year, his ninth with the club. The team didn't immediately know the cause of death.

Dobson went 20-8 with a 2.90 ERA for the AL champion Orioles in 1971, rounding out a famous rotation that also included Hall of Famer Jim Palmer (20-9), Dave McNally (21-5) and Mike Cuellar (20-9). The 1920 Chicago White Sox are the only other team in major league history to have four 20-game winners.


"He had a great curveball," said Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, Dobson's teammate with the Orioles. "He was a real gamer, a real competitor. He didn't give in to anybody."

Dobson made the AL All-Star team in 1972 with Baltimore. Though he finished that season 16-18, he had a solid 2.65 ERA.
He went 122-129 with a 3.54 ERA in 11 major league seasons and won a World Series ring with the 1968 Detroit Tigers. Dobson was 19-15 with a 3.07 ERA for the 1974 New York Yankees. The right-hander also pitched for San Diego, Atlanta and Cleveland.

Dobson spent eight seasons as a big league pitching coach for Milwaukee (1982-84), San Diego (1988-90), Kansas City (1991) and Baltimore (1996). He joined the Giants in 1997 and served as an advance scout before becoming a special assistant to Sabean.
Dobson's bio in San Francisco's media guide said he was living in El Cajon. He was born on Feb. 12, 1942, in Depew, N.Y., and is survived by wife Kathe and six children: Pat III, Nancy, Stacy, Chris, Shannon and Stephanie.

oriolespitchers.jpg


1971 4 -20 game winners..nice uniforms
 
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Quite a few Orioles have died from that 1970's era teams and all have died relatively young.

Mark Belanger
Dave McNally
Johnny Oates
Elrod Hendricks
Pat Kelly
Jim Hardin
Marcelino Lopez

all died before age 65
 

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Journeyman said:
Quite a few Orioles have died from that 1970's era teams and all have died relatively young.

Mark Belanger
Dave McNally
Johnny Oates
Elrod Hendricks
Pat Kelly
Jim Hardin
Marcelino Lopez

all died before age 65
Heavy Smokers? I know Belanger was like a chimney
 

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Didn't realize Belanger and McNally had even passed.

Give us some MARK BELANGER stories JMAN.
 

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Fishhead said:
Didn't realize Belanger and McNally had even passed.

Give us some MARK BELANGER stories JMAN.

Belanger was a heavy smoker, he died quite a while back ,of lung cancer...

Many will remember he was a great, great fielder who never dove for the ball, what I remember most about The Blade, he owned Nolan Ryan of all people.

He also has the third lowest career batting average of all players who have batted over 5000 times in MLB history.

I was at a game many years ago where he homered of Yankees fieballer Robn Guidry and just missed a second homer, he seemed to have his best at bats versus the flame throwers.

He won 8 gold gloves and believe it or not, as bad a hitter as he was finished in the top 29 on 3 occasions for Al MVP honors..he batted .226 in 1973 and was 21st in MVP voting, quite an accomplishment when you bat for such a low average.

His career OBP was only .300... he was one of the four players who led negotiations during the MLB strike of 1981 , after retiring he remained in baseball as a member of the MLBPA for several years.
 

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Fishhead said:
Didn't realize Belanger and McNally had even passed.

Give us some MARK BELANGER stories JMAN.

McNally died about 4 years ago, he's one of the least remembered dominant pitchers, his career ended prematurely due to injury, he had won 180 games at age 31 and was all done by age 32....he was the best in baseball from '68-'71 winning 87 games
 

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I never heard of him before, but sounds like he was a hell of a pitcher.

Agree on the UNI's
 
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wow i acually know him...was good friends with his son chris growing up....he was a good guy....this is the 1st i've heard....sad...
 

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RobFunk said:
I never heard of him before, but sounds like he was a hell of a pitcher.

Agree on the UNI's

Rob, one of my favorite pictures, this was the Orioles celebrating their 4 game sweep of L.A.

Brooks Robinson leaping over to greet McNally who just shutout the Dodgers.

Brooks%20Robinson.jpg
 

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Journeyman said:
Rob, one of my favorite pictures, this was the Orioles celebrating their 4 game sweep of L.A.

Brooks Robinson leaping over to greet McNally who just shutout the Dodgers.

Brooks%20Robinson.jpg

Brooks looks like he had a pretty good vertical leap.
 

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