'Anibal Alejandro Sanchez' or 'Aníbal Alejandro Sánchez, Jr.' (born
February 27,
1984 in
Maracay,
Venezuela) is a
starting pitcher who plays in the
Florida Marlins organization.
Listed at 6 feet tall and 180 pounds, he bats and throws right handed. On
September 6,
2006, in his 13th career Major League start, he threw a
no-hitter against the
Arizona Diamondbacks.
Baseball career
Minor leagues
Sánchez possesses a
fastball clocked as high as the mid-90's, an above-average
curve, a good
changeup and a
slider . He was signed by the
Boston Red Sox as a non-drafted
free agent in 2001. After playing in the
Venezuelan Summer League for two seasons, Aníbal suffered an elbow injury that required
Tommy John surgery, causing him to miss the entire
2003 season.
In the following year, he returned to the mound, this time making his debut on American soil with the short-season Single-A
Lowell Spinners. In 15 starts, Aníbal posted a 3-4 record with a 1.77
ERA, and by the end of the year was widely considered one of Boston's top pitching prospects. After the 2004 season,
Baseball America named Sánchez Boston's fifth-best prospect, behind shortstop
Hanley Ramirez, outfielder
Brandon Moss, and pitchers
Jonathan Papelbon and
Jon Lester.
[1] By 2006, Ramirez, Papelbon, and Lester had all played in the majors; Moss was selected as the
Portland Sea Dogs' most valuable player in 2006.
[2]
2005 saw the young prospect starting the season off in
Wilmington, Boston's High-A ball affiliate. After posting a 6-1 record with a 2.40 ERA, receiving a selection for the
All-Star Futures Game, and making the
Carolina League All-Star team, he was promoted to the Double-A
Portland Sea Dogs. Aníbal got off to a hot start there, but tired toward the end of the season, creating some concern about his durability. Still, Sánchez put up a 3.45 ERA over 11 starts in his first year in Double-A; at 21 years old, he was still one of the youngest players in his league.
Joining the Florida Marlins
At the end of the season, Boston traded Sánchez along with
Hanley Ramirez, Jesús Delgado, and Harvey García to the Florida Marlins, in the same transaction that brought
Josh Beckett,
Guillermo Mota, and
Mike Lowell to the Red Sox. In addition to Beckett and Lowell, the Marlins traded several of their other star players after the
2005 season, including
Carlos Delgado,
Juan Pierre,
Paul Lo Duca, and
Luis Castillo, for mainly minor-league prospects. Baseball America ranked Sánchez third in the Marlins' system (after
Jeremy Hermida and Ramirez) and 40th overall in the major leagues at the start of the
2006 season.
[3] [4]
The Marlins started six
rookies in their
Opening Day lineup in 2006
[5], but elected to have Sánchez return to Class AA to start the season with the
Carolina Mudcats. Sánchez made his first 15 starts in 2006 with Mudcats, for whom he posted a 3-6 record with a 3.15 ERA. While with Carolina, he pitched two complete games, one of which was a seven-hit shutout.
[6] [7]
On
June 25, he was called up to the majors to start the second half of a doubleheader in
Yankee Stadium against the
Yankees. Aníbal's major league debut was a strong one, as he allowed seven hits and no runs in 5 2/3 innings against the Yankees. He then turned the game over to his
bullpen, which blanked the Yankees the rest of the way,
shutting out the Yankees for the first time all year, 5–0. Sánchez became just the second visiting starter in the past decade to win his big-league debut at
Yankee Stadium. (Fellow
Venezuelan Gustavo Chacín of
Toronto, who beat the Yankees in
September 2004, is the other.) On
July 14, the 22-year-old Sánchez started against and defeated
Astros pitcher
Roger Clemens, who made his MLB debut when Sánchez was just three months old.
No-hitter
On
September 6,
2006, Sánchez threw a
no-hitter for the
Florida Marlins. In a 2-0 win over the
Arizona Diamondbacks, Sánchez went nine innings at home to record the feat. He walked four batters and struck out six, throwing only 103 pitches. The Marlins, who used 21 rookies during the 2006 season, started six in Sánchez's no-hitter, setting the record for most rookies to play for the winning team in a no-hitter.
[8]
Sánchez's no-hitter against Arizona ended the longest no-hitter drought in Major League Baseball history; there had been 6,364 consecutive major-league games without a no-hitter since
Randy Johnson's perfect game on
May 18,
2004. The previous record was a 4,015-game streak without a no-hitter, which lasted from
September 30,
1984, to
September 19,
1986. On the same night that Sánchez recorded a no-hitter, Johnson nearly pitched another one, taking a no-hitter into the seventh inning for the
New York Yankees against the
Kansas City Royals.
[9] Just two days earlier,
Ramon Ortiz of the
Washington Nationals nearly ended the no-hitter drought himself, taking one into the ninth inning against the
St. Louis Cardinals.
[10]
Sánchez became the 19th rookie pitcher since 1900 to pitch a no-hitter, and the first since
Bud Smith of the
St. Louis Cardinals no-hit the
San Diego Padres on
September 3,
2001.
[11] His no-hitter was also the fourth no-hitter in Marlins history, after
Al Leiter,
Kevin Brown, and
A. J. Burnett. Sánchez became the second Venezuelan pitcher to pitch a no-hitter in the major leagues, joining
Wilson Alvarez, who pitched a no-hitter with the
Chicago White Sox against the
Baltimore Orioles on
August 11,
1991.
[12]
On
September 27, Sánchez earned his tenth win against the
Cincinnati Reds, joining teammates
Josh Johnson,
Scott Olsen, and
Ricky Nolasco in the first set of four rookie teammates in MLB history to record ten or more wins in their rookie seasons. Marlins lefthander
Dontrelle Willis had a record of 12-12, so with Sánchez's tenth win, the Marlins had their first set of five pitchers with ten or more wins in franchise history.
[13] He finished his first season with the Marlins with a record of 10-3 and an ERA of 2.83 in 18 major-league games (17 starts).
Before their game against the
Philadelphia Phillies on
September 30, the Marlins presented Sánchez with the pitching rubber and home plate used in his no-hitter. The
Miami-Dade County Office of the Mayor and Board of County Commissioners officially named
September 30,
2006, Aníbal Sánchez Day.
[14]
2007
Sánchez suffered shoulder problems during spring training
[15] but still started 2007 with the Marlins, going 2-1 with a 4.80 ERA in six starts. When reliever
Jorge Julio returned to the team from the disabled list on May 4, the Marlins demoted Sánchez to
Class AAA Albuquerque, citing his struggles with control.
[16] As of May 29, he has not made any starts for Albuquerque due to shoulder injuries, which forced him onto the disabled list. On June 21, it was reported that his season was over after having
Dr. James Andrews perform surgery to repair a tear in his labrum.
[17]
Career statistics (through 5/1/2007)
Trivia
★ Starting when he was three years old, Sánchez would watch baseball games on television with his father, Aníbal, Sr., and imitate the windups of the pitchers he saw in the games.
[18]
See also
★
2006 in baseball
★
List of Major League Baseball no-hitters
★
Florida Marlins all-time roster
External links
★
MLB player page
★
Minor league statistics
★
Minor League Splits and Situational Stats