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    Big League Stew

    Tim Wakefield calls it a career after 19 seasons

    Tim Wakefield pitched 17 seasons for the Red Sox. (AP)Without a big-league contract for the upcoming season, Tim Wakefield has decided that his famed knuckleball will no longer flutter at Fenway Park.

    Or any other ballpark for that matter. The 45-year-old right-hander is set to announce his retirement at a Friday evening press conference, ending a very noteworthy 19-year career in the big leagues.

    Seventeen of Wakefield's seasons came in a Boston Red Sox uniform and he'll end his run at or near the top of several spots in the team's record book. His 3,006 innings and 430 starts are the most in team history while his 2,046 strikeouts rank second. His 186 wins in a Boston uniform rank only behind the 192 that Roger Clemens and Cy Young won.

    Wakefield made only one All-Star team in his career (a feel-good appearance in 2009) and finished in the top five of only one Cy Young race (third in 1995, his first year in Boston), but he was as consistent as his mastery of baseball's oddest pitch. He'll carry a fun legacy into retirement as the top knuckleballer in an era when the pitch more or less died. Any discussion of the best knuckleballers of all time will feature Wakefield's name being debated among guys like Phil Niekro, Hoyt Wilhelm, Ted Lyons, Wilbur Wood and Charlie Hough.

    Wakefield's decision to retire is a good one as he struggled the past few seasons. His prolonged attempt to hit 200 wins, a number he'll retire on, was particularly painful.

    But despite that inevitability, it would now seem that baseball has a vacancy atop its king of the knuckler throne. R.A. Dickey? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

    Pitchers and catchers report this weekend, so don't miss a beat ...
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    50 comments

    • JohnW  •  3 months ago
      A real gentlemen,Thank you for all your years in "SHOW".Never turned down the ball when it was his turn to pitch.He would take one for the club,when needed,eat up the innings,when the bullpen was tired or over worked.You dont find many players like that in todays game.. Enjoy you retirement,and stay healthy.
      • draw 3 months ago
        So is everyone just going to forget the non-stop whining he did about his role for the past decade???? Obviously.
      • Ted Williams 3 months ago
        I hardly think baseball fans--Red Sox fans in particular--would carry such fond memories of someone who just whined all the time. In any case, even if it were true, it doesn't change the type of person he was off the field. This guy gave countless hours to the community and never tooted his own horn.
    • Dano  •  Upper Darby, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
      I'm a Yankees fan but Wakefield was and is a classy guy who represented his team admirably. A great competitor who gave it his all every time he took the mound. He has a lot to be proud of time and will be missed.
    • Art D  •  3 months ago
      One of the true gentlemen of the game - both on and off the field. You will be missed Tim. All the best to you and your family.
    • Jack Klompus  •  3 months ago
      A good guy, as well. I was hoping the Sox would have given him one more year so he could get more wins than that drug using cheat Clemons.
      • Richard 3 months ago
        Yes, but we can fondly remember 1995 when Tim and Roger traded stats. Tim was the ace, and Roger was ...
    • Tyler R  •  Wichita, Kansas  •  3 months ago
      what a great guy and ballplayer..I enjoyed watching him his entire career..an era is passing us by...good luck, Wake...you personify classy!!
    • Patrick  •  Buenos Aires, Argentina  •  3 months ago
      Never been a Red Sox fan but I always enjoyed watching Wakefield play.
      • isaac 3 months ago
        I'm a Yankees fan and I enjoyed watching Wakefield pitch.
    • RuthenianCowboy  •  3 months ago
      Kudos to you, Wake. Loved you as a kid in Pittsburgh. Glad you got some rings.
    • Kevin  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
      Hats off to Wake! Thanks for all the classy behaviors off-field and two RINGS on-field!
    • eagleman13148  •  Rochester, New York  •  3 months ago
      Thanks for all the memories..not only a fine Knucklballer but a great leader and great man..as a life time Sox fan I tip my cap to you and bid you farewell..we asked a ton and you delivered...enjoy retirement as much as we have enjoyed you in the uniform and community..
    • James D  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
      Thanks man. You were the back stop to the Red Sox flaky starting five these past few years, always a good soldier - a true Red Sox .
    • BD  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
      A class act with an impressive career. He knew his playing time was up. Now it's time for Jason Varitek to retire as well.
    • TM  •  3 months ago
      My favorite Red Sox player gone. Truly the end of an era!
    • JK  •  Brea, California  •  3 months ago
      Much love to Wake! This guy was a gamer, class act...
    • St. Copius de Bronze Trop ...  •  3 months ago
      I had the misfortune of being at the 8-8-2004 game where Wakefield served up six Donuts to Detroit - and still got the win...the Tigs added one more and Boston hit three - tying the AL record for most combined HR in a game at 10...what a hot mess that day was!

      Would like to have seen him go one more year, however...enjoy the golf, Wake...
    • Charles C  •  Gila Bend, Arizona  •  2 months ago
      Just simply great, and I always made a point of watching his games on TV - I just wish they would have shown the slow motion shots of the balls more. TV baseball is way too much about face close-ups, really annoying. We love you Mr. Wakefield - true class!
    • The Monk  •  Boynton Beach, Florida  •  3 months ago
      I would love to have tickets for "Wakefield Day" at Fenway. That place will rock.
    • bill l  •  3 months ago
      first momboquette. now wakefield. the class is leaving boston.
    • Johnny Guitar  •  Orlando, Florida  •  3 months ago
      One of our own , from Melbourne , Fl . If I wore a hat , I would tip it . 200 wins and 2 rings. Not bad..........
    • bill h  •  Clarksdale, Mississippi  •  3 months ago
      prooferaders teak notcie: 30006 innigs. Wel do e!
      • Challenge 3 months ago
        are you stupid blind or can't read it is 3,006 idk where you got the extra zero
      • stu 3 months ago
        not only that but every word in his incoherent sentence is spelt wrong; talk about needing a proofreader, ha
    • Mr. Disappointed  •  Warren, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
      I never was a Red Sox fan, but there's no denying that this guy had class. (I had him on my fantasy baseball team when he was with the Pirates, too.)

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