Ticket stub for the August 8, 1987 game. (Photo by Mark C. Taylor) |
On August 8, 1987, Steve Carlton won his 329th major league game. It would prove to be his final win in the majors. It was Carlton’s only win with the Minnesota Twins. I wish Lefty could have won one more game to finish at 330 instead of 329, but so it goes. Lefty has such a Zen attitude about life, I’m sure he doesn’t care if he finished with 330 wins or 329.
1987 was a frustrating season for the future Hall of Famer, but Carlton still had moments of brilliance on the mound. Over 4 starts in June for the Indians, Lefty threw 2 complete games, and had a sparkling ERA of 2.56.
Carlton was traded to the Twins at the deadline on July 31st, and his first start for the Twins came on August 4th, against fellow 300-game winner Don Sutton of the Angels. Sutton won that game, as Lefty surrendered 9 runs in 5 innings.
But on August 8th at the Metrodome, Lefty turned back the clock and held the Oakland A’s scoreless for 8 innings, needing just 74 pitches to get through 8 frames as he tried for his first shutout since August 15, 1983. In the top of the 9th, the A’s scored 2 runs off Steve, and manager Tom Kelly called on George Frazier to get the final out of the game. Reggie Jackson was pinch-hitting with the bases loaded, and Frazier got him to fly out to left field.
After the game, Lefty talked to reporter Howard Sinker of the Minneapolis Star Tribune. In a 2017 article, Sinker recounted that he had talked to Carlton before, off the record. Fitting with Lefty’s reputation as a thinking man’s ballplayer, they chatted about Being There, the Jerzy Kosinski novel made into a great film starring Peter Sellers. Sinker thought that Carlton was breaking his decade-long media silence by talking to him, but that wasn’t the case. Carlton actually gave press conferences when he was signed by the Giants and the White Sox in 1986.
So, what did Steve say about the game? “That felt good...it was frustrating (losing the shutout) I have 3 complete games, but not a game like this, not a shutout for 8 innings. Not even close.” Tom Kelly said of Steve’s performance: “I thought he did an outstanding job.” Kirby Puckett also praised Lefty: “He was going right at the hitters and did his job. He got us off the field real quickly and gave us chances to swing the bat.”
Lefty struck out Mark McGwire twice for his only strikeouts of the game.
Pictured is a ticket stub from Lefty’s 329th win, and a press photo from that game, two of the highlights of my Steve Carlton memorabilia collection.