Salomé Barojas

Mexican baseball player
Baseball player
Salomé Barojas
Pitcher
Born: (1957-06-16) June 16, 1957 (age 67)
Córdoba, Veracruz, Mexico
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 11, 1982, for the Chicago White Sox
Last MLB appearance
September 26, 1988, for the Philadelphia Phillies
MLB statistics
Win–loss record18–21
Earned run average3.95
Strikeouts177
Teams
Member of the Mexican Professional
Baseball Hall of Fame
Induction2002

Salomé Barojas Romero (born June 16, 1957, in Córdoba, Veracruz) is a Mexican former relief pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Chicago White Sox, Seattle Mariners, and Philadelphia Phillies from 1982 to 1988.

Career

Barojas was an integral part of the 1983 Chicago White Sox team which won the American League West division – the first White Sox team to make it to postseason play since 1959.

His performance includes 17 seasons in the Mexican Summer League. He finished with 115 wins and only 58 defeats for a .665 percentage, the second highest figure in the history of the circuit. He played four years with Cordoba, two with Reynosa and eleven in Mexico.

Best campaigns were 1978, 81, 87, 88 and 91 respectively. In 78 he was with 8-3 and 2.45 ERA playing with Cordoba. In 81 he finished with 12.03 and 3.03 in the 87 to 13.04 and 3.10 in the 88 to 14.04 and 3.14 and 91 at 10-1 and 2.44, all those years in Mexico. He pitched 543 games, started 85 and finished 30. The Veracruz was a great relief because he managed 152 rescues. He pitched 1,406 innings with a third, struck out 773 enemies and gave 648 walks.

In 1981 he shared the lead with win–loss record 12-3 (.800) being part of the Red Devils. In '91 he led won and lost with 10-1 (.909) playing with Mexico. He played five years in the major leagues. Two and a half years with the Chicago White Sox, one and a half with the Seattle Mariners and the other with the Philadelphia Phillies.

In the Mexican Pacific he won 51 games and lost 39. In 1989–1990 to Mazatlan was saves leader with 17. He is fourth in saves with 53. It is ranked 14th in effectiveness of all time with 2.68.

Barojas was one of New York Yankees public address announcer Bob Sheppard's favorite names to announce.[1]

References

  1. ^ BASEBALL: YANKEES NOTEBOOK; An Especially Warm Reception for the Low-Profile Stottlemyre

External links

  • Career statistics and player information from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
  • Salomé Barojas at SABR (Baseball BioProject)
  • Salomé Barojas at Baseball Almanac
  • Salomé Barojas at Baseballbiography.com
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Members of the Mexican Professional Baseball Hall of Fame
Pitchers
CatchersFirst basemen
  • William Berzunza
  • Ronnie Camacho
  • Ángel Castro
  • Héctor Espino
  • Carlos Galina
  • Cornelio García
  • René González
  • Ramón Montes de Oca
  • Jack Pierce
Second basemenThird basemen
ShortstopsLeft fielders
Center fielders
Right fielders
Designated hitter
  • Eduardo Jiménez
Managers
Journalists
  • Alfonso Araujo
  • Jorge Blanco
  • Fernando Manuel Campos
  • Abel Francisco Cano
  • Jorge de la Serna
  • Agustín de Valdez
  • Oscar Esquivel
  • Humberto Galaz
  • Manuel González Caballero
  • José Isabel Jiménez
  • Enrique Kerlegand
  • Raúl Mendoza Mancilla
  • Jorge Menéndez Torre
  • Tommy Morales
  • Eduardo Orvañanos
  • Rafael Reyes Nájera
  • Pedro Septién
  • Domingo Setién
  • Eduardo Valdez Vizcarra
Executives
Umpires
  • Francisco Alcaraz
  • Gabriel Atristain
  • Salvador Castro
  • Carlos Alberto González
  • Efraín Ibarra
  • Juan Lima
  • Amado Maestri
  • Jesús Monter
  • Armando Rodríguez
  • Ismael Ruiz
  • Victor Saiz
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Mexican Pacific League Most Valuable Player Award
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Diablos Rojos del México
  • Established in 1940
  • Based in Mexico City
Franchise
Ballparks
Hall of Fame
Championships (16)


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