Ken Holtzman, one of the Oakland A’s original Big Three pitchers, dies at the age of 78

Ken Holtzman, who along with Catfish Hunter and Vida Blue anchored the dominating rotation that helped lead the Oakland A’s to three straight World Series championships in the 1970s, has died. He was 78.

Holtzman’s death was confirmed by his brother, Bob, according to Benjamin Hochman of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Holtzman’s hometown newspaper. His death was also reported by ESPN and MLB Network Radio’s Dani Wexelman. Holtzman had been hospitalized for the past three weeks due to heart issues, according to Hochman.

Holtzman often was overshadowed by Hunter, a Hall of Famer and Cy Young winner, and Blue, an MVP and Cy Young winner, but was every bit as valuable to the A’s teams that won championships in 1972, ’73 and ’74.

Pitcher Ken Holtzman, of the Oakland As, hurls a pitch towards a Mets batter in fifth inning, of the first game of the World Series, Saturday, Oct. 13, 1973, Oakland, Calif. Holtzman pitched five complete innings. (AP Photo) 

Related Articles

Oakland Athletics |


Athletics’ Lawrence Butler excited to wear Jackie Robinson’s ’42’

Oakland Athletics |


A’s relocation: Last Dive Bar, Oakland 68s taking ‘SELL’ movement to Sacramento ballgame

Oakland Athletics |


Brandon Crawford comes home . . . to Oakland, not SF Giants

Oakland Athletics |


Why does Major League Baseball have so few Black players?

Oakland Athletics |


Athletics wake up with six-run sixth to beat Washington and win another series

Holtzman never won fewer than 18 game in four seasons with the A’s — he won a career-high 21 in 1973, when he, Hunter and Blue all won 20 games — and had a 2.92 ERA with Oakland. He made two All-Star teams during that period, but never received a single Cy Young award vote.

  Jets Free Agent Can Be Dan Quinn’s Micah Parsons for Commanders

Holtzman was known as being an avid bridge player when he was with the A’s and his pitching style very straight forward: he throw almost exclusively fastballs. But he had terrific control and was a fierce competitor. During the 1973 ALCS against the Baltimore Orioles, Holtzman pitched all 11 innings of a Game 3 win that gave the A’s a 2-1 lead in a series that went five games.

When Dick Williams approached Holtzman about coming out after the 10th inning (and the scored tied 1-1), Holtzman told reporters he told the then-manager that “If you pull me out, I’ll kill you. I don’t (care) if this games goes 40 innings, I’m not leaving.”

Holtzman set the Orioles down in order in the 11th, and then Campy Campaneris hit a walk-off homer to lead off the bottom half of the inning.

The St. Louis native was drafted by the Cubs and pitched two no-hitters by the time he was 25. But coming off a 9-15 season (with a then career-worst 4.48 ERA) in 1971 after back-to-back 17-win seasons, the A’s acquired the left-hander for Rick Monday. The A’s had won the A.L. West for the first time that season, but were swept by the Orioles in the ALCS. Holtzman’s arrival helped get the A’s over the top.

Oakland won the West in each of Holtzman’s four seasons with the team and won the three Series titles. Holtzman went 4-1 with a 2.55 ERA in eight World Series games and had a 2.06 ERA in five ALCS games with the A’s.

Former Oakland Athletics pitcher and Hall of Famer Rollie Fingers chats with fellow pitcher Ken Holtzman on the field as the 1973 World Series championship team is honored in a ceremony celebrating the 40th anniversary prior to the Athletics’ game against Baltimore Orioles at O.co Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., Saturday, April 27, 2013. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group) 

  Letters: Lieber for supervisor | Reelect Lofgren | Strongest candidate | Fiscal responsibility | Vote Sreekrishnan | Return expertise | Prop. 1 | Liccardo for Congress | Best prepared

Holtzman was the A’s Game 1 starter in all three World Series appearances.

He won the first World Series game in Oakland franchise history against the heavily favored Reds in 1972, and again in Game 1 in 1973 against the Mets. He also started — and won — Game 7 against the Mets, holding New York to one run in 5 1/3 innings. Holtzman was at his most dominating in the 1974 Series against the Dodgers, allowing two earned runs and striking out 10 in 12 innings. He won Game 4 — and also socked a solo home run.

During spring training in 1976, Holtzman was included in the deal that sent Jackson to the Orioles as then-owner Charlie O. Finley started to dismantle the team as a cost-cutting move. Later that season, he was was traded to the Yankees, where he was reunited with Hunter. Holtzman — along with Hunter and Jackson — won his fourth World Series ring in 1977.

The Yankees traded Holtzman to the Cubs early in 1978, and he retired after going 6-9 with a 4.59 with the Cubs in 1979.

ATHLETICS CELEBRATE: Mike Epstein, Ken Holtzman and Jim “Catfish” Hunter celebrate in the Cincinnati dressing room after beating the Reds in the 7th game of the 1972 World Series. (Ron Riesterer / Oakland Tribune photo) 

Holtzman finished his MLB career with a 174-150 record, 3.49 ERA. Holtzman is the winningest Jewish pitcher in MLB history — Sandy Koufax is second with 165 wins.

Hunter died in 1999 at the age of 53. Blue died last May at the age of 73.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *