DETROIT — Mickey Lolich, who had three complete-game victories for the Detroit Tigers in the 1968 World Series, the last Major League Baseball pitcher to post the incredible feat, died Wednesday. He was 85.
The Tigers said Lolich's wife told them that he died after a short stay in hospice care. An exact cause of death was not provided.
Denny McLain was the star of Detroit's pitching staff in 1968, winning 31 regular-season games. But Lolich was the Most Valuable Player of the Series, with a ERA of 1.67 and a Game 7 road victory over Bob Gibson and the St. Louis Cardinals.
Bill Freehan threw off his catcher's mask and caught a foul pop-up by Tim McCarver for the final out. Lolich jumped into Freehan's arms — an iconic image of Detroit's championship season.
''It was always somebody else,'' Lolich told the Detroit Free Press in 2018, ''but my day had finally come.''
He is No. 23 in career strikeouts with 2,832, ahead of many others who, unlike Lolich, are in the Hall of Fame, and fifth among all lefties, according to baseball-reference.com.
Lolich was an unlikely hero in 1968. During a reunion of the World Series team, he recalled how manager Mayo Smith had sent him to the bullpen for much of August. He returned to the Tigers' starting rotation and was 6-1 in the final weeks.
''I was having a few problems, but I had been a starting pitcher ever since 1964,'' said Lolich, who was upset about the bullpen move. ''I remember telling him, ‘If we win this thing this year it's going to be because of me.' But I was only talking about the season. I wasn't talking about the World Series.