Juan Eichelberger | |||
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Pitcher | |||
Born: St. Louis, Missouri |
October 21, 1953 |||
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MLB debut | |||
September 7, 1978, for the San Diego Padres | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
June 20, 1988, for the Atlanta Braves | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Win–loss record | 26–36 | ||
Earned run average | 4.10 | ||
Strikeouts | 281 | ||
Teams | |||
Career highlights and awards | |||
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Juan Tyrone Eichelberger (born October 21, 1953 in St. Louis, Missouri) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. He graduated from Balboa High School of San Francisco, California in 1971, played collegiately at the University of California, Berkeley and pitched for the San Diego Padres (1978–82), Cleveland Indians (1983) and Atlanta Braves (1988). He also pitched one season in Japan (1989) for the Yakult Swallows.
In 7 seasons he had a 26–36 win-loss record, 125 games, 79 games started, 14 complete games, 1 shutout, 16 games finished, 603 ⅓ innings pitched, 575 hits allowed, 312 runs allowed, 275 earned runs allowed, 50 home runs allowed, 283 walks allowed, 281 strikeouts, 8 hit batsmen, 25 wild pitches, 2,605 batters faced, 20 intentional walks, 14 balks and a 4.10 ERA.
Eichelberger was known for his unusual set position. While most pitchers would come to a standing position with their feet together and bring the ball and glove to their chest or chin, Eichelberger would keep his feet spread apart with his knees bent in a crouch and ball and glove at his belt.
Juan Eichelberger's son Jared followed his father into professional baseball, as a RHP originally drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 2001. Juan is the founder and head instructor at Baseball Science a baseball training program in San Diego, California.