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==Retirement==
==Retirement==
Dreifort never pitched again after that game against the Marlins. He finished that big contract with a 9-15 won-lost record and a 4.53 earned run average over the years of the deal, appearing in only 86 games and pitching only 205.2 innings during that period. Dreifort finished with a career record of 48-60, 11 saves, 802 [[strikeouts]], a 4.35 [[earned run average]], and a 1.39 ratio of walks and hits per inning pitched over a nine-year career.
Dreifort finished his contract with a 9-15 won-lost record and a 4.53 ERA, appearing in only 86 games and pitching only 205.2 innings. Dreifort retired with a career record of 48-60, 11 saves, 802 [[strikeouts]], a 4.35 [[earned run average]], and a 1.39 ratio of walks and hits per inning pitched over a nine-year career.


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 04:17, 9 June 2009

Darren Dreifort
Pitcher
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
debut
April 71994, for the Los Angeles Dodgers
Last appearance
August 162004, for the Los Angeles Dodgers
Career statistics
Win-Loss record48-60
Earned run average4.36
Strikeouts802
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Darren James Dreifort (born May 3, 1972 in Wichita, Kansas) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers whose career was cut short by numerous injuries.

Early Career

Dreifort played baseball in High School at Wichita Heights High School and was drafted out of High School by the New York Mets in 1990. He chose instead to attend college at Wichita State University. As a college ballplayer, Dreifort was a two-time consensus All-American and the 1993 NCAA Player of the Year. He was 26-5 with a 2.24 ERA in his career at WSU and was inducted into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame for his performance there.

He was subsequently drafted in the 1st round (2nd overall behind Alex Rodriguez) in the MLB Draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Dreifort became one of only a select few players to make his professional debut in the Majors, without first appearing in a minor league game. He made his debut on April 7, 1994 against the Florida Marlins, working one scoreless inning as a relief pitcher. He appeared in a total of 27 games for the Dodgers that season, finishing 0-5 with a 6.21 ERA.

After missing the 1995 season due to injuries, Dreifort returned to the Dodgers bullpen for the 1996 and 1997 seasons, pitching effectively as a late inning setup man. He recorded his first career win on August 30, 1996 in relief against the Philadelphia Phillies. In 1997 he was very good out of the pen, finishing 5-2 with a 2.86 ERA in 48 appearances and notched 4 saves.

He transitioned to the starting rotation for the 1998 season, making his first start on April 11 against the Houston Astros at Dodger Stadium, working five innings and taking the loss. He finished the season 8-12 with an ERA of 4.00. He continued to pitch effectively in 1999 (13-13) and in 2000 turned in his best season with a 12-9 record, 4.16 ERA in 32 starts and 164 strikeouts.

The Contract

A free agent after the 2000 season, Dreifort re-signed with the team, and received a five-year, $55 million contract in 2001, a large contract in spite of the fact that he had had a career record of 39-45, and a history of arm trouble. But, in 2001, with a limited free-agent pitching market, Dreifort's agent Scott Boras sold the Dodgers on the right-hander's future potential, hinting he might sign with a National League West rival. The Dodgers responded with the big contract.

Injuries

Dreifort's health shut him down during the very first season of the deal; he was finished in early July when he was forced to undergo elbow reconstruction surgery that kept him out until the end of 2002. With continuing arm and shoulder trouble, plus additional knee and hip trouble, Dreifort actually pitched in only three of the five years on the deal, also missing the entire 2005 season and parts of two other seasons during the life of the deal.

In 2004, after team medical personnel advised the Dodgers Dreifort could not pitch as a starter due to his injuries, Dreifort became the Dodgers' seventh inning reliever behind setup man Guillermo Mota and closer Eric Gagne. Dreifort pitched inconsistently due to knee and hip troubles in addition to older arm and shoulder issues.

Retirement

Dreifort finished his contract with a 9-15 won-lost record and a 4.53 ERA, appearing in only 86 games and pitching only 205.2 innings. Dreifort retired with a career record of 48-60, 11 saves, 802 strikeouts, a 4.35 earned run average, and a 1.39 ratio of walks and hits per inning pitched over a nine-year career.

See also

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