| Rick Wise | |
|---|---|
| Pitcher | |
| Born: (1945-09-13)September 13, 1945 (age 80) Jackson, Michigan, U.S. | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | |
| April 18, 1964, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |
| Last MLB appearance | |
| April 10, 1982, for the San Diego Padres | |
| MLB statistics | |
| Win–loss record | 188–181 |
| Earned run average | 3.69 |
| Strikeouts | 1,647 |
| Stats atBaseball Reference | |
| Teams | |
| Career highlights and awards | |
Richard Charles Wise (born September 13, 1945) is an American former professionalbaseball player andcoach. He played inMajor League Baseball as a right-handedpitcher between1964 and1982 for thePhiladelphia Phillies,St. Louis Cardinals,Boston Red Sox,Cleveland Indians and theSan Diego Padres. The two-time National LeagueAll-Star pitched ano-hitter on June 23, 1971 - and slugged two home runs to support his own effort. Wise was the winning pitcher for theBoston Red Sox in Game 6 of the1975 World Series, considered by some to be the greatest Series game ever played.[1]
Wise grew up inPortland, Oregon, and led his Rose CityLittle League team to theLittle League World Series in 1958, making him one of a handful of major league players to have played in both the Little League and Major League World Series.[2] He attended Madison High School (nowLeodis V. McDaniel High School) in Portland.[3]
Wise was 18 years of age when he debuted for thePhiladelphia Phillies in 1964, his second professional season. His first major league win was in the second game of a doubleheader on June 21, beating the New York Mets 8–2.[4] The first game that day wasJim Bunning's perfect game. Wise was the last player from the1964 Philadelphia Phillies team to be active in the major leagues, pitching two innings of relief (7th and 8th) for the Padres against theLos Angeles Dodgers on April 10, 1982.[5] He spent all of 1965 and the early part of 1966 with the Phillies' top minor league affiliate (theArkansas Travelers in 1965 and theSan Diego Padres in 1966) before making the majors for good.
He developed into a solid starter, winning 17 games with a 2.88earned run average for a last-place Phillies team in 1971, as well as being named to his firstAll-Star Game. The highlight of Wise's Philadelphia career took place that year on June 23 when he overcame the flu tono-hit theCincinnati Reds in a 4–0 win atRiverfront Stadium.[6] Only a sixth-inning walk toDave Concepcion denied Wise what would have been the secondperfect game in Phillies history. He also contributed a pair ofhomers, a one-out two-run home run offRoss Grimsley in the fifth and a leadoff solo shot offClay Carroll in the eighth.[7] Wise,Wes Ferrell (1931),Jim Tobin (1944), andEarl Wilson (1962) are the only pitchers to throw a no-hitter and hit a home run in the same game. On August 28 against the San Francisco Giants, Wise also hit two home runs. On September 18 against the Chicago Cubs, he completed a string of retiring 32 batters in a row, four shy ofHarvey Haddix's Major League record, also driving in the winning run in the 12th inning.
The following season, Wise became an unwitting participant in one of the most one-sided trades in baseball history. The owner of theSt. Louis Cardinals,Gussie Busch, ordered his team to trade its star left-handed pitcher,Steve Carlton, after a contract squabble. Since all of baseball knew of the trade mandate, teams drove very hard bargains, and the Phillies' offer of Wise was the best St. Louis could do. Wise won a total of 32 games during his two seasons (1972–73) in St. Louis, but Carlton won 27 for the last-place1972 Phillies alone and would go on to anchor their starting pitching staff for the next decade, ultimately winning 329 games and a place in theBaseball Hall of Fame.
At the time, however, the Carlton-Wise deal made some sense from the Cardinals' perspective. At the time, Wise had won 75 games, only two fewer than Carlton.Tim McCarver, who had caught for Carlton in St. Louis and Wise in Philadelphia, said at the time that the trade was "a real good one for a real good one." According to McCarver, Wise had better command on the mound while Carlton had more raw ability.[8] This viewpoint can be confirmed statistically; while Carlton had averaged more career strikeouts per 9 innings at the time, Wise allowed fewer walks and actually had the better career strikeout-to-walk ratio through 1971.
On June 13, 1973, Wise, having already pitched one no-hitter against the Reds, nearly joinedAddie Joss as the only pitchers to no-hit the same team twice (theCleveland Naps pitcher's two no-hitters were against theChicago White Sox, in 1908 and 1910; the former was aperfect game). This bid, however, was broken up in the ninth on a one-out single byJoe Morgan—the only hit Wise would allow.
Wise was traded along withBernie Carbo from the Cardinals to the Red Sox forReggie Smith andKen Tatum on October 26, 1973.[9] In 1975, he won 19 for the Red Sox, winners of theAL East. Wise had another no-hitter broken up against theMilwaukee Brewers on July 2. In the first game of adoubleheader, former Red SoxGeorge Scott homered off Wise with two out in the ninth to break up the no-hitter. Wise would have joinedCy Young andJim Bunning as pitchers who had hurled no-hitters in both leagues (Nolan Ryan,Hideo Nomo andRandy Johnson have done it since). Wise went on to win his only start in the1975 ALCS againstOakland, and was therelief pitcher of record in Game 6 whenCarlton Fisk ended the 12-inning game with his oft-replayedwalk-off home run.
On June 30, 1976, Wise was perfect against the Orioles untilPaul Blair singled against him to start the sixth. That was the only hit the Orioles would get off Wise as Boston won 2–0.[10]
In 1978, Wise was involved in a trade for a future Hall of Famer for the second time in his career. On March 30, duringspring training, he was traded by the Boston Red Sox withTed Cox,Bo Díaz andMike Paxton to the Cleveland Indians forFred Kendall and future Hall of Fame starter and relieverDennis Eckersley.
Wise led the AL in losses in 1978 with 19, but again came back to win 15 games for a poor team in 1979. He became a free agent after the season, signing with theSan Diego Padres. He played two full seasons with the Padres, and was released after appearing in just one game for them in 1982, ending his playing career.
In an 18-year career, Wise posted a 188–181 record with 1,647strikeouts and a 3.69 ERA in 3,127innings pitched. He pitched a total of 30shutouts. He was the first player to record a win over all 26 major league teams that existed before the 1993 expansion.[11]
A good-hitting pitcher, Wise hit 15 home runs in his career, with a season-high of six in 1971. He batted .195 (130-668) with 60runs and 66RBI. Defensively, in 723 total chances, he committed only 13 errors for a .982fielding percentage.[12]

Wise was thepitching coach for the 1985 and 1986 Madison Muskies, who were a Single A affiliate of the Oakland A's. Wise was the pitching coach of the Single-AAuburn Astros of theNew York–Penn League in 1988 and 1989. Wise was a coach for the 1991 New Britain Red Sox squad of the Eastern League. Wise was the pitching coach for theLancaster Barnstormers in 2005, helping them to anAtlantic League championship in 2006. He was promoted to interim manager in July 2007 after the organization fired manager Frank Klebe. He returned to his duties as pitching coach afterVon Hayes was named the new manager for 2008. After the 2008 season ended, Wise retired from coaching.
| Preceded by | No-hitter pitcher June 23, 1971 | Succeeded by |