Pete Richert Biography
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- Born Oct. 29, 1939
In his Major League debut on April 12, 1962 against the Cincinnati Reds at Dodger Stadium, Richert set a record by striking out the first six batters he faced. He entered the game with two outs in the top of the second inning with his Dodgers trailing 4–0, and struck out Vada Pinson for the final out. Richert then recorded a four-strikeout third inning in which his victims were Frank Robinson (his future Oriole teammate), Gordy Coleman (who reached first base on a passed ball by Johnny Roseboro), Wally Post and Johnny Edwards; his record-tying sixth strikeout was of Tommy Harper leading off the fourth. As of 2015[update], Richert is the only pitcher to record a four-strikeout inning in his Major League debut. He also set a Major League record by retiring 12 consecutive batters, the most by a pitcher making his MLB debut as a reliever; Max Scherzer would break this record in 2008 by retiring 13 consecutive batters. Richert won the game in 31⁄3 innings of relief, giving up no hits or walks and striking out seven.\n', '
That year, he went 5–4 as a spot starter in a rotation led by the future Hall-of-Fame duo of Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax. In 1963, he went 5–3 on a Dodger team that won the World Series; Richert did not pitch in the Series, which the Dodgers swept from the New York Yankees.\n', '
After the 1964 season, Richert, Frank Howard, Ken McMullen, Dick Nen and Phil Ortega were traded to the Washington Senators for fellow pitcher Claude Osteen, infielder John Kennedy and $100,000 cash. Richert\'s two full seasons with the Senators, 1965 and 1966, were the two best seasons of his career. In the former he won a career-high 15 games with a 2.60 earned run average, also a career high. In the latter he went 14–14 with a 3.37 ERA and set a career-high with 195 strikeouts. He struck out seven consecutive batters in an April 24 game against the Detroit Tigers in the latter year, but still lost, 4–0. Richert was also an All-Star during both seasons and was the losing pitcher in the 1966 game, giving up a single to ex-Dodger teammate Maury Wills, which scored Tim McCarver for the winning run in the 10th inning.\n', '
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