Jamie Moyer was joined by Ken Griffey Jr., Jay Buhner and Edgar Martinez at the Mariners Hall of Fame luncheon Friday at Safeco. / Alan Chitlik, Sportspress Northwet

In a ceremony Saturday at Safeco Field prior to the Mariners’ game against the Texas Rangers, Jamie Moyer will become the ninth inductee into the club’s Hall of Fame, joining Alvin Davis (1997), Dave Niehaus (2000), Jay Buhner (2004), Edgar Martinez (2007), Randy Johnson (2012), Dan Wilson (2012), Ken Griffey Jr. (2013) and Lou Piniella (2014). The tributes coming Moyer’s way are easy to predict.

His fellow members, most of whom will be in attendance, are likely to offer some good-natured ribbing over Moyer’s boggling assortment of Bugs Bunny pitches (81 mph fastball, 74 mph curve) that inexplicably baffled hitters for a quarter of a century even if the offerings couldn’t break windows.

Moyer will be lauded for the 145 victories (most in franchise history) he achieved in a Seattle uniform between 1996-06, for his two 20-win seasons (20-6 in 2001, 21-7 in 2003) and his three designations as the Mariners’ Pitcher of the Year by the Seattle chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America.

It will probably be pointed out that Moyer, nearly a decade after his Aug. 19, 2006 trade to the Philadelphia Phillies, still ranks among the club’s top 10 in appearances, starts, innings, WAR, ERA, WHIP, win percentage, shutouts and strikeouts. And much is likely to be made about his longevity.

Moyer came to Seattle with an uninspiring (66-77 with an ERA in the high 4.00s) record as a 33-year-old, 10-year veteran in a July 30, 1996 trade with Boston for OF Darren Bragg. He left for Philly at 43, and threw his last pitch May 27, 2012 for Colorado against Cincinnati at 49.

By that time, Moyer had become the oldest pitcher in history to record a win (49 years, 150 days April 17, 2012 against San Diego), the only pitcher to throw at least one shutout in four decades, the oldest to throw a shutout (47 years, 170 days May 17, 2010 vs. Atlanta), the oldest to drive in a run (49 years, 179 days May 16, 2012 vs. Arizona), and the second-oldest, first-time All-Star (42), eclipsed only by Satchel Paige.

Even more rare, Moyer notched 105 of his 269 career victories after turning 40. Only Hall of Famer Phil Niekro won more after breaching the four-decade mark:

Pitcher From-To Ages Wins
Phil Niekro 1979-87 40-48 121 Not only won 21 at  40, lost 20
Jamie Moyer 2003-12 40-49 105 Went 21-7, 3.27 for 2003 Mariners
Jack Quinn 1924-33 40-49 96 Won 18 for 1928 A’s at 44
Warren Spahn 161-65 40-44 75 23-7, 2.60 for 1963 Braves at 42
Cy Young 1907-11 40-44 75 Won 21 twice (1907-08) after 40
Randy Johnson 2004-09 40-45 73 First-ballot Hall of Famer this year
Nolan Ryan 1987-93 40-46 71 Led AL with 301 K’s at 42 (1989)
Charlie Hough 1988-94 40-46 67 Pitched for Texas, CWS, Miami
Roger Clemens 2003-07 40-44 61 Led NL in ERA (1.87) at 42 in 2005

Pitchers with 269 wins usually receive Cooperstown consideration. Jim Palmer (268), Bob Feller (266), Carl Hubbell (253), Bob Gibson (251) and Whitey Ford (237) all are in with fewer victories than Moyer. But Moyer never won a Cy Young or any other top award and never led a league in a major pitching category except for the 44 home runs he surrendered in 2004, and the MLB-record 522 he permitted over 25 seasons.

But Moyer would be a first-ballot inductee if the BWAA counted community service and philanthropy.

Each year since 1965, the Hutch Award has been presented in Seattle to the major league player who best exemplifies “the fighting spirit and competitive desire of the legendary leader, Fred Hutchinson,” a local icon who died of lung cancer in 1964. Twelve Hall of Famers have won the Hutch Award, which went to Moyer in 2003.

That same year, Moyer also won the Roberto Clemente Award, presented annually to the major league player who “best exemplifies the game of baseball, sportsmanship, community involvement and the individual’s contribution to his team.”

Moyer made it a trifecta when he won the Lou Gehrig Award, given every year since 1955 to the player who “best exhibits the character and integrity of Lou Gehrig, recognizing contributions in a player’s community and his philanthropy.”

A year later (2004), Moyer added the Branch Rickey Award, named for the man who made it possible for Jackie Robinson to break the color barrier. Created by the Rotary Club of Denver, the award recognizes “outstanding community service and role models for young people.”

Nine individuals have won three of these awards, but only two have won all four, Moyer and Curt Schilling.

Winner Career No. Awards
Curt Schilling 1988-07 4 ’95 Gehrig, ’01 Clemente, ’01 Hutch, ’01 Rickey
Jamie Moyer 1986-12 4 ’03 Hutch, ’03 Clemente, ’03 Gehrig, ’04 Rickey
Al Kaline 1953-74 3 ’69 Hutch, ’68 Gehrig, ’73 Clemente
Lou Brock 1961-79 3 ’75 Clemente, ’77 Gehrig, ’79 Hutch
Willie Stargell 1962-82 3 ’74 Clemente, ’74 Gehrig, ’78 Hutch
Pete Rose 1963-86 3 ’66 Hutch, ’69 Gehrig, ’76 Clemente
Tony Gwynn 1982-01 3 ’95 Rickey, ’98 Gehrig, ’99 Clemente
Craig Biggio 1988-07 3 ’97 Rickey, ’05 Hutch, ’07 Clemente
John Smoltz 1988-09 3 ’05 Gehrig, ’05 Clemente, ’07 Rickey

Moyer’s recognition came via his involvement with The Moyer Foundation, which he co-founded with his wife, Karen, in 2000 while he was pitching in Seattle.

A public, 501 (c) 3 non-profit, the Moyer Foundation supports programs that help children experiencing grief and family addiction. Since its inception, the foundation has raised millions of dollars through corporate sponsorships and private donations in support of these causes.

Moyer’s Hall of Fame induction ceremony Saturday isn’t likely to dwell much on his civic and philanthropic contributions to the communities, especially Seattle and Philadelphia, where he has been most active. It’s not really the time or the place.

But the newest enshrinee in the Mariners Hall of Fame is a greater citizen than he was a ballplayer, and he was pretty amazing at that.

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4 Comments

  1. Loved the fact he ran sprints in the outfield prior to games in which he did not pitch. His modeling for the younger players was absolutely superb. Hard to put a price tag on that as far as management is concerned. Guy was worth every penny.

  2. Mariners probably won’t make 85 wins this year. No mo Moyer. 6 of the 9 times the club reached that total Jamie was on the roster.

  3. Moyer is a prototypical example of a guy who made the most of his limited physical gifts and is one of the all-time overachievers.

    You don’t get to pitch until you’re 50 without working your butt off. I’m about the same age that Moyer was when he got his last win. I pitched a little, so I have some idea of the physical wear and tear. I can’t imagine doing the amount of work that he did to stay major-league viable for that long.

    He’s also maybe the last of a dying (maybe dead) breed: pure control pitchers who never threw harder than the mid-80s. You don’t get a sniff from scouts these days unless you throw at least in the low-90s. Occasionally you’ll find veterans who learn to pitch when they lose their velocity, but most of those guys still break 90 occasionally. I doubt that we’ll ever see the likes of Moyer again.