A "cup of coffee" is a North American sportsidiom for a short time spent by aminor league player at themajor league level. The idea behind the term is that the player was only in the big leagues long enough to have a cup ofcoffee before being returned to the minors. The term originated inbaseball and is extensively used inice hockey, both of whose professional leagues (MLB and theNHL) utilize extensivefarm systems; it is rarely used inbasketball orAmerican football since neither theNBA norNFL have implemented a true farm system.
One example of how this term is used in a sentence was during the 1996 filmThe Fan, in whichRobert De Niro's character, a middle-aged former pitcher, says, "I was in the bigs for a cup of coffee myself until my arm went south."
One variant of the cup of coffee is theSeptember call-up, in which major-league clubs call up additional players from their minor-leaguefarm teams late in the season. For many years, this occurred from September 1 through the end of the regular season (typically late September or early October). Before the 2020 season, active major-league rosters expanded from 25 players to 40; however, since 2020, rosters expand only from 26 to 28. Notable players who made their debuts with a late-season "cup of coffee" include:
Shoeless Joe Jackson, who played five late-season games in 1908, five more in 1909, and 20 in 1910 before finally making the major leagues for good in 1911.[1]
Bumpus Jones, who made his major-league debut on the last day of the season, October 15, for the1892 Cincinnati Reds. Jones threw ano-hitter. He pitched in 12 more games in 1893, then never appeared in another major-league game.[2]
Francisco Rodríguez, who made his major-league debut by pitching5+2⁄3 innings in September for the2002 Anaheim Angels. Included on the Angels' postseason roster as a replacement for an injured player, he was the winning pitcher of five playoff games for Anaheim and helped them to victory in the2002 World Series, all before he made anOpening Day roster.
Another variant of the cup-of-coffee in baseball is a player who only appears in a single major-league game.Baseball-Reference.com maintains lists of players who have appeared in only one major-league game; as of April 2024, there are over 1,500 batters and over 700 pitchers listed.[6] Some notable players include:
Tom Burr. Normally a pitcher, Burr played one inning in center field for the1914 New York Yankees on April 21.[8] He had no fielding chances and the game was won before he came to bat.[9] In October 1918, Burr died in France while serving in World War I.
Eddie Gaedel. Gaedel, who was three feet, seven inches tall, was put on the roster of the 1951St. Louis Browns by maverick ownerBill Veeck and sent into a game as a pinch-hitter on August 19. His uniform number was 1/8. The promotional stunt ended when pitcherBob Cain, throwing at the smallest strike zone of all time, walked Gaedel on four pitches. Major League Baseball voided Gaedel's contract the next day and he never appeared in a game again.[12]
Moonlight Graham. Graham was an outfielder who played two innings of one game on defense for theNew York Giants inthe 1905 season, neither making a putout nor getting a chance to bat. He would leave baseball and enjoy a long career as a doctor inChisholm, Minnesota. His story was made famous when authorW.P. Kinsella included it in his novelShoeless Joe, which was then adapted into the hit movieField of Dreams. (Graham's story is reported incorrectly in the movie and in other sources. Contrary to the film's assertion that Graham only played one half-inning, theSociety for American Baseball Research discovered that he actually played two innings. Also, there was at least one base hit to the outfield while Graham was in the game, so he might have gotten the chance to field a ball in play.)[13][14][15]
John LeRoy. LeRoy pitched one game with theAtlanta Braves on September 26, 1997, throwing two scoreless innings, giving up one hit and three walks while striking out three batters and being credited as the winning pitcher against theNew York Mets.[18] On November 18, 1997, he was selected by theTampa Bay Devil Rays in theexpansion draft. LeRoy never played for the Devil Rays, and died on June 25, 2001, inSioux City,Iowa after suffering aheart attack andbrain aneurysm.
John Paciorek. Paciorek played one game with the 1963Houston Colt .45s on the last day of the season. He came to the plate five times, and did the following: two walks, three singles, threeRBI, four runs scored, career batting average and on-base-percentage of 1.000. Of the 27 players in MLB history with batting averages of 1.000, Paciorek is the only one with three at-bats.[19]
Fred Van Dusen. Van Dusen was a September call-up for thePhiladelphia Phillies in 1955. In his firstplate appearance as a pinch-hitter, he was hit by the third pitch he saw. He never made it back to the majors. Van Dusen is the only player to be hit by a pitch in his only major-league plate appearance, and to never play the field.
Ron Wright. Wright appeared in one game for the 2002 Seattle Mariners. In that game he accounted for six outs by striking out, hitting into a double play, and hitting into a triple play.[20][21]
Larry Yount. Yount, the brother ofHall of FamerRobin Yount, appeared in a game without ever actively participating in a game. He was summoned from the bullpen to pitch the top of the ninth inning for theHouston Astros on September 15, 1971. Yount hurt his elbow while warming up and was removed from the game before ever throwing a pitch. He never made it back to the major leagues. By official rule, pitchers who leave the game due to injury after being announced are credited with a game appearance; thus Yount is listed as playing in one game despite never actually doing so.[22][23][24]
Other players, who had cup-of-coffee major-league appearances under unusual circumstances, include:
St. Paul Saints of 1884. TheUnion Association began operation in 1884, and is listed in many sources as a third major league. However, the league faced multiple problems, including an uneven distribution of talent (the league championSt. Louis Maroons went 94–19) and poor attendance in a country that suddenly was oversaturated with baseball teams. As the season wore on, teams began to fold, and the league scrounged around for replacements. The last of these replacements were the minor-league Saints (Apostles), an entire team that got a cup of coffee when they were invited into the Union Association. They played exactly nine games, all on the road, at the end of the season. The Saints went 2–6–1. Three other UA teams played 25 games or less, with the Saints playing the fewest. The Union Association folded in January 1885.[25] (Although the league is conventionally listed as a major league, this status has been questioned[26] by a number of modern baseball historians, most notablyBill James inThe Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract. James and other baseball historians have noted the league's extreme instability and lack of major-league talent; James has also found that the contemporaryBaseball Guides didn't consider the Union Association to be a major league.)
Moses Fleetwood Walker andWelday Walker. Moses Walker played 42 games for the 1884Toledo Blue Stockings. His brother Welday also played for Toledo that year, debuting after Moses and playing for six games. The Walker brothers are the first knownblack major league baseball players, predatingJackie Robinson by 63 years.[27][28] The Toledo franchise folded after 1884 and player boycotts (Cap Anson being a ringleader) upheld baseball'scolor barrier. (Further research indicates thatWilliam Edward White, who played one game in 1879, preceded the Walkers as a black major-league ballplayer, although White's ethnicity can't be definitely determined and likely was not known to baseball authorities.)[29][30]
1912 Detroit Tigers replacement team. WhenTy Cobb was suspended for fighting a fan in the stands, 16 members of the Tigers voted to go on strike in support of Cobb. Unable to field a team for their May 18 game in Philadelphia, the Tigers scrounged up nine replacement players from around the city. Philadelphia drubbed the replacement Tigers by a score of 24–2. PitcherAllan Travers went the whole game for Detroit, giving up 24 runs (a modern-day record), 14 of which wereearned.[31] Of the nine replacement players, the only one to ever appear in a major-league game again wasBilly Maharg, who made it back for one more game in 1916[32] (and later was one of the fixers behind theBlack Sox Scandal). The real Tigers, after being threatened byAmerican League presidentBan Johnson with indefinite bans, came back for their next game.[33]
Joe Nuxhall. Nuxhall appeared in one game for the1944 Cincinnati Reds at the age of 15, during a time when the manpower requirements ofWorld War II were making it more challenging for professional baseball teams to fill out their rosters. Nuxhall is the youngest player ever to appear in a major-league baseball game. He came back to the majors in 1952 and had a 14-year playing career,[34][35] and later spent many years as a member of the Reds broadcast team.
Adam Greenberg. Greenberg was aChicago Cubs farmhand who got called up in 2005. In his major-league debut, on July 9, Greenberg was hit in the head with the first pitch he ever saw in the majors.[36][37] Seven years later, and after an online publicity campaign on his behalf, Greenberg got another at-bat as a member of theMiami Marlins.[38] He struck out swinging.[39]
Players who play only a few games in theNational Hockey League and spend the rest of their careers in theAmerican Hockey League or other professional leagues are common in professional hockey.
A special case unique to the NHL is that of theemergency backup goaltender. NHL rules dictate that a team carry at least two goaltenders in every game; however, there are sometimes circumstances (such as a short-notice trade or a mid-game injury) when a team only has one goaltender on the roster and does not have time to call up another from the AHL. In such a case, any goaltender 22 years of age or older can be signed as afree agent to a short-term contract to fill the second goaltender position until a more permanent solution can be found. Since the other goaltender is certain to play the game in question and is not likely to be injured during game play, the backup goaltender is likely never to set foot on the ice during game play. Thus, players with little to no experience can sometimes have a short cup of coffee in the NHL (video technicianRyan Vinz is one such example; he was pulled out of the stands to fill the position for one game for theBuffalo Sabres in 2014 despite not playing goalie since high school).[41] This position is typically held by an older, retired goaltender (Dwayne Roloson,Artūrs Irbe andBob Essensa, for instance, served in those positions for games in the2014–15 NHL season).[42][43]
^SABR Biographical Research Committee, reporting that Fred Chapman (listed in the Baseball Almanac page as playing a game at age 14) was actually a "Frank Chapman" who was 26 at the time