Jose DeLeon had the talent, but not the won-loss record, to be an ace. Some of it was bad luck. Some of it was bad teams. Some of it was his own doing.
DeLeon was the first Cardinals pitcher since Bob Gibson to lead the National League in strikeouts. He outdueled Roger Clemens twice in five days. Some of the game’s best hitters were helpless against him. Cal Ripken was hitless in 12 at-bats versus DeLeon. George Brett batted .091 (1-for-11) against him.
“George Brett told me he (DeLeon) was the toughest guy he ever hit against,” Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 1988. “He said his stuff was nasty.”
Yet DeLeon twice had 19 losses in a season and his career record in the majors was 86-119.
A right-hander who threw four pitches (fastball, curve, forkball and slider), DeLeon pitched 13 seasons (1983-95) in the majors with the Pirates, White Sox, Cardinals, Phillies and Expos.
Playing favorites
DeLeon was 11 when he moved with his family from the Dominican Republic to Perth Amboy, N.J., in 1972. He followed baseball and adopted pitcher Mike Torrez as his favorite player. Like DeLeon, Torrez, who began his major-league career with the Cardinals, was a big right-hander.
Though he played only one season of varsity high school baseball, DeLeon, 18, was drafted by the Pirates in 1979 and called up to the majors in July 1983. In his third appearance, a start versus the Mets, he was matched against Mike Torrez.
The result was storybook. As the New York Daily News put it, “Jose DeLeon waged a brilliant pitching war with his longtime idol, Mike Torrez.”
DeLeon, 22, held the Mets hitless until Hubie Brooks lined a single with one out in the ninth. DeLeon totaled nine scoreless innings. Torrez, 36, was even better: 11 scoreless innings. Neither got a decision. The Mets won, 1-0, in the 12th. Boxscore
Torrez said to the Daily News, “I pitched well enough to win. DeLeon pitched well enough to win. Sometimes, this game can drive you batty.”
Told that DeLeon was a fan of his, Torrez replied to the newspaper, “That’s a nice compliment. He showed a lot of poise and showed he’s a big-league pitcher.”
Three weeks later, DeLeon beat the Reds, pitching a two-hit shutout and striking out 13. “He has the best forkball I’ve ever seen,” Reds shortstop Dave Concepcion told the Dayton Daily News. “It looks like a knuckleball.” Boxscore
No-win situations
DeLeon was 7-3 with the 1983 Pirates, but it would be five years before he’d have another winning season in the majors.
“I had success early, then I thought it would be easy,” DeLeon told Mike Eisenbath of the Post-Dispatch. “My arm was ready, but my mind wasn’t.”
With the 1984 Pirates, he finished 7-13, including 0-4 versus the Cardinals. The Pirates were shut out in six of his 13 losses and scored only one run in five others. On Aug. 24, 1984, DeLeon pitched a one-hitter against the Reds _ and lost, 2-0. Boxscore
The next year was worse. His 2-19 record for the 1985 Pirates included an 0-2 mark versus the Cardinals. (DeLeon never beat the Cardinals in his career.) The Pirates were held to two runs or less in 14 of his 19 losses. They averaged 2.3 runs in his 25 starts.
Nonetheless, “His problems are a combination of his being too nice a guy and relying strictly on his arm,” Pirates general manager Syd Thrift told The Pittsburgh Press. “He has to take charge from the first pitch.”
In July 1986, DeLeon was traded to the White Sox for Bobby Bonilla. His first two wins for them came against Roger Clemens, the American League Cy Young Award recipient that year. Boxscore and Boxscore
Though he was 11-12 for the 1987 White Sox, DeLeon won six of his last seven decisions, totaled more than 200 innings (206) for the first time in the big leagues and led the White Sox in strikeouts (153).
“Trying to catch his forkball is like trying to catch Charlie Hough throwing a 90 mph knuckleball,” White Sox catcher Carlton Fisk told The Pittsburgh Press.
The Cardinals saw DeLeon, 27, as a pitcher on the verge of fulfilling his potential. On Feb. 9, 1988, they sent Ricky Horton, Lance Johnson and cash to the White Sox for DeLeon.
That’s a winner
For the next two seasons, DeLeon was a winner and did things no Cardinals pitcher had done since Bob Gibson.
In 1988, DeLeon struck out 208 batters, the most for a Cardinal since Gibson had the same total in 1972. DeLeon averaged 8.2 strikeouts per nine innings. He had a 13-10 record, but the Cardinals were 20-14 in his 34 starts. In DeLeon’s 10 losses, the Cardinals scored a total of 15 runs.
(DeLeon did it all that season. In a 19-inning marathon against the Braves, he played the outfield for four innings while Jose Oquendo pitched.)
On Sept. 6, 1988, DeLeon beat the Expos with a three-hit shutout. He also doubled versus Dennis Martinez and scored the game’s lone run. Boxscore
“His forkball and curveball were really working,” Expos slugger Andres Galarraga told the Post-Dispatch. “You didn’t know what to expect.” (Galarraga, a National League batting champion, hit .061 in 33 career at-bats versus DeLeon.)
Late in the 1988 season, DeLeon pitched in Pittsburgh for the first time since the Pirates traded him. He threw a three-hitter and won. “He looks different and acts different,” The Pittsburgh Press noted. “This was not the confused, defeated, befuddled child of a man the Pirates had traded away. This was a confident, mature adult who stuck it to the Pirates.” Boxscore
The 1989 season was DeLeon’s best. He was 16-12 and had 201 strikeouts, becoming the first Cardinals pitcher since Gibson in 1968 to lead the league in fanning the most batters. DeLeon also joined Gibson as the only Cardinals pitchers then with consecutive seasons of 200 strikeouts.
Batters hit .197 versus DeLeon in 1989. Right-handed batters had the most trouble against him, hitting .146 with more than twice as many strikeouts (115) as hits (54).
“I wish I had what he had,” Scott Sanderson, an 11-game winner with the 1989 Cubs, said to the Post-Dispatch.
On April 21, 1989, DeLeon beat the Expos on a two-hit shutout. Boxscore Four months later, he did even better _ holding the Reds scoreless on one hit (a Luis Quinones broken-bat single) for 11 innings. The Cardinals, though, stranded 16 base runners and the Reds won, 2-0, in the 13th against reliever Todd Worrell. Boxscore
Down and out
DeLeon appeared headed for another good season in 1990, winning four of his first six decisions. One of those wins came against the Reds when DeLeon pitched 7.1 scoreless innings _ “The Reds appeared to be swinging at pebbles” columnist Bernie Miklasz wrote in the Post-Dispatch _ and also tripled and scored versus Tom Browning. The triple occurred when right fielder Paul O’Neill tried unsuccessfully to make a shoestring catch and the ball skipped to the warning track. “DeLeon had no choice but to leg out a slow-motion triple,” Jack Brennan of The Cincinnati Post observed. Boxscore
After beating the Expos on June 17, DeLeon’s record was 6-5. Then he went 1-14 over his last 18 starts, finishing at 7-19.
Cardinals broadcaster Mike Shannon told Bill Conlin of the Philadelphia Daily News, “Jose DeLeon defines the word ‘siesta.’ If he could just establish some intensity, there’s no doubt he could be the best pitcher in the game. He’s got the best pure stuff in our league.”
DeLeon pitched a lot better for the Cardinals in 1991 (2.71 ERA in 28 starts) but his record was 5-9. The Cardinals totaled 17 runs in his nine losses. DeLeon had the lowest run support among National League starters (3.5 runs per nine innings). “Bad luck seems to find him,” Cardinals manager Joe Torre said to the Post-Dispatch.
Back-to-back seasons like DeLeon had in 1990 and 1991 might put almost anyone into a funk. Torre and pitching coach Joe Coleman worked to boost his confidence. “I was really down,” DeLeon said to Dan O’Neill of the Post-Dispatch. “In my mind, everything was negative.”
After a strong spring training, DeLeon was named the 1992 Cardinals’ Opening Day starter. He pitched well (one run in seven innings) but the Mets won. Boxscore and video
From there, his season unraveled. In a stretch from May 22 to June 8, DeLeon lost four consecutive starts, dropping his record to 2-6, and was moved to the bullpen. The Cardinals released him on Aug. 31 and he got picked up by the Phillies.
“DeLeon is a swell fellow,” Bernie Miklasz wrote in the Post-Dispatch. “Quiet. Unobtrusive. A gentleman. Doesn’t whine. Doesn’t blame others for his problems. Doesn’t make excuses _ but he doesn’t win as many games as he should.”

He must have been a real student of the game to be able to throw so many different pitches. I wonder who taught him to throw the forkball since it’s not so common a pitch? Dave Stewart is another thrower of the pitch that comes to mind and he was taught by none other than Sandy Koufax.
Jose DeLeon learned baseball in the Dominican Republic, but didn’t play in any organized youth leagues there. According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, DeLeon learned a lot from his three brothers. Two were catchers and the other was a pitcher.
DeLeon’s baseball coach at Perth Amboy High School, Denny Hrehowsik, told the St. Louis newspaper that DeLeon already threw a forkball when he got to high school. “We went through a slew of catchers,” Hrehowsik said to reporter Mike Eisenbath. “We couldn’t find anyone who could catch him.”
At spring training in 1984, the Pirates brought their retired closer, Roy Face, to spring training to work with DeLeon. Face threw a forkball when he pitched, including in 1959 when he was 18-1 with 10 saves for the Pirates. Regarding his work with Face, DeLeon told the Associated Press, “I hold my forkball differently. His acts more like a fastball. Mine acts more like a knuckleball.”
It appears DeLeon added Face’s forkball to his mix, because in June 1984, Pirates pitching coach Harvey Haddix told the Associated Press, “He (DeLeon) throws his forkball two different ways. He has one forkball he throws hard and another easier that acts like a knuckleball. That sets up the fastball.”
Haddix said DeLeon threw the forkball with the same motion as he did a fastball. “I’ve never seen anyone come to the major leagues and have command of a pitch like he did with the forkball,” Haddix told the Associated Press.
I’m sorry to hear that Jose DeLeon has passed away at only 63 years of age. Baseball sure was fun and exciting during the 80’s. When Jose DeLeon first came up he made his share of headlines. It’s a darn shame he never could overcome his control problems, lack of consistency and tendency to lose confidence. You just can’t help but think that he could have won 200 games for his career. If I read correctly, in 45 percent of the games in which he pitched he had only 2 runs or less of run support.
That lack of confidence you cite, Phillip, seemed to be a significant factor in what kept Jose DeLeon from winning more often. In March 1985, he told Bob Hertzel of The Pittsburgh Press, “Every time I went out to pitch last year, I thought, ‘How am I going to lose this time?’ ”
Three years later, as he neared the completion of his winning season with the Cardinals, DeLeon told Hertzel that pitching coach Mike Roarke deserved credit. “He is doing a great job of helping me not get mad at myself,” DeLeon said.
I vaguely remember seeing Jose DeLeon pitch for the White Sox in 1986 or 1987, but I don’t remember his forkball. I had no idea what a forkball was back then. I’m not sure if I know what it does now other than drop out of the strike zone. That guy on the Mets, Kode Senga throws a ghost fork these days and it does drop a tremendous amount. I don’t see how batters check their swing. Baseball is hard.
I wonder if DeLeon was pitching today if he’d enjoy more praise in that wins and losses have lost some importance among the baseball community like when Felix Hernandez won the Cy Young with a 13-12 record.
Whatever Jose DeLeon was doing to put movement on his pitches came at a painful price. He literally bled with nearly every pitch. According to Rick Hummel of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “DeLeon cuts the upper side of his thumb with his index finger when he releases a pitch.” Trainers put bandages on the thumb, but that hampered DeLeon’s grip, and he would tear off the Band-Aids, Hummel reported.
The so-called “baseball community” that de-emphasizes the importance of wins is one of a myriad of reasons I no longer care about major league baseball. The emphasis is on style rather than results. WHIP? Seriously? I’ll take a winner over a stylist.
I’m happily reminded of Vuke’s WHIP in 1982, not too good, but he knew how to win. He wore two different shoes and often asked for a popsicle stick to clean the dirt away, stall tactics, the psychological game. Men were always on base and he knew how to focus in and get batters out. That’s the kind of pitcher I would want on the mound if I were manager.
Excellent example, Steve. I’d take my chances with a pitching staff of 10 Pete Vuckovich types in any era.
Forgot to mention in my earlier response: The Brewers were tough on Jose DeLeon. His career numbers against them: 1-3, 6.69 ERA.
What I think of when I read this is how risky it is to sign a pitcher to a long term contract. Fast forward DeLeon’s career to the current day and you know some team would have laid out a ton of cash and signed him for six years or more. And you know how that would have ended up.
Good point, Ken. As it was, Jose DeLeon made $9.8 million during his big-league career, according to baseball-reference.com. A staggering sum for anyone, especially a guy with an 86-119 record and who never pitched for a World Series champion.