Skip to main content

Greg Harris - Major League Switch Pitcher


Greg Allen Harris

Ambidextrous Pitcher in the MLB


Born November 2, 1955 in Lynwood, California
High School: Los Alamitos HS, Los Alamitos, CA
College: Long Beach City College

Positions: RHP / LHP (one inning in the big league)
Bats: Switch hitter

Major League Pitcher for 15 years, from 1981 to 1995.
Pitching record: 74-90   Earned run average: 3.69   Saves: 54

Velocity:  RHP 85-86 mph; LHP 80-81 mph

Teams: New York Mets, Cincinnati Reds, Montreal Expos, San Diego Padres, Texas Rangers, Philadelphia Phillies, Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees.

Greg Harris's ambidextrous glove in the National Baseball Hall of Fame
Glove: Mizuno designed a custom six-fingered glove Harris could wear on either hand.The ambidextrous glove is similar to Venditte's - with two thumbs and a wide, pie-shaped pocket. In 1995, Harris donated his famous six-fingered glove to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Dominant hand: Right

Greg Harris switch pitched for one inning in the MLB

Harris is best known as the only pitcher in the modern era to pitch with both left and right arms. A natural right-hander, by 1986 Harris could throw well enough left-handed that he felt he could pitch with either hand in a game, but the opportunity did not arise.

Why he started pitching with both arms

Harris began using both hands in 1986 as a member of the Texas Rangers in an effort to save wear and tear on his right arm. He also began throwing batting practice with both arms. Harris pitched for the Rangers from 1985-87.

Harris' unusual ability to pitch with both hands led to some tension between him and the Red Sox, who forbade the ambidextrous hurler from throwing lefty. GM Lou Gorman insisted it would "make a mockery" of the game, leading Harris to grumble, "Boston is so conservative. People are afraid to try anything." In a muted show of defiance, Harris usually chose to wear an ambidextrous glove on the mound. (BaseballLibrary.com)

Harris alternated arms during one game

Harris finally threw left-handed in a regular-season game on September 28, 1995, the next-to-last game of his career, for the Expos. In the ninth inning, Harris retired Reggie Sanders pitching right-handed, then switched to his left hand for the next two hitters, Hal Morris and Ed Taubensee, who both batted lefty. Harris walked Morris but got Taubensee to ground out. He then went back to his right hand to retire Bret Boone to end the inning.

The last pitcher to use both hands in a pro game had been Bert Campaneris, who did so in 1962 while playing for Daytona Beach in the Florida State League. The last pitcher in the Major League to pitch with both his right and left hands was Tony Mullane in 1893. In 1888, Elton "Ice Box" Chamberlain of the Louisville Colonels in the American Association, pitched with both arms in a baseball game.

Harris faced 6,293 batters in his career. He threw left-handed to only two batters.

Harris threw a football to warmup before a game

Ranger pitching coach, Tom House, had Harris throwing a football almost exclusively in his pregame warm-ups.
When he did throw a baseball, Harris, a natural right-hander, alternated throwing right- and left-handed during warm-ups. At the time, Harris had never pitched left-handed in a game, but he claimed he is capable of doing it. 

House said he believes that alternating his pitching arm gives Harris a better idea of the mechanics involved in throwing a variety of pitches. Harris agrees. (latimes.com)


Harris comments on switch pitching:
"It's normal for me in the off-season. I always use both arms," he said. "To me, throwing left-handed saves the right. I used to do it in the minors to give the right arm a break."

Harris states that he used three tests to make sure he could pitch effectively as a lefty:
1. Reach at least 80 mph on the speed gun;
2. Throw a good curveball; and
3. Be able to throw at least 25 out of 30 pitches for strikes.
(Oneonta Star article)

Articles

For one inning, left was right
By Doug Miller | MLB.com, Sep 28, 2005

Greg A. Harris is a busy man these days.


Ten years ago today, Harris pitched in the Major Leagues -- with both hands.

The natural right-hander is the last one to do it and the only one in baseball's modern era. He was the first to accomplish the feat in over 100 years.



Harris Pitches with Both Hands
Lakeland Ledger, Sep 29, 1995
Greg Harris became the first player to pitch with both hands in a game in modern major-league history, working a scoreless ninth inning Thursday night for the Montreal Expos in a 9-7 loss to Cincinnati.

Gainesville Sun - Mar 2, 1994


Greg Harris, A Red Sox reliever, would like to be a baseball pioneer

 ‎Toledo Blade - May 24, 1992
A switch pitcher? Righty says he can pitch 'em lefty, too. Now pitching for Boston, Harris-Harris. For the time being he's just plain Greg Harris

Ranger Redux: A Football Helps Ex-LBCC Pitcher Bounce Back in Texas
LA Times, July 17, 1986 | Paul McLeod
The football is part of a workout program that has helped resurrect Harris' career.

Greg Harris - Assistant Coach, Cypress College, CA

Greg Harris (pitcher, born 1955) - Wikipedia

Greg Harris - BaseballLibrary.com

Career statistics from Baseball-Reference


Ambidextrous Harris Gives Special Glove To Baseball Hall Of Fame

October 15, 1995 The Seattle Times
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. - Montreal Expo pitcher Greg A. Harris, who became the first hurler to pitch both right-handed and left-handed in the same game in 107 years, gave the specially-designed six-finger glove that he wore to accomplish the feat to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum last week.

..

Comments

  1. Roger GarlandDecember 10, 2015

    Greg Harris is mistakenly known as the only pitcher in the modern era to pitch with both arms in the major leagues. Facing 2 batters, pitching left-handed, in a 15 year career is a disgrace since he had the ability to switch-pitch for years. What he really should be known for is being the ambidextrous pitcher who was sadly kept from pitching ambidextrously.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Pitchers Glove Rules - Size and Color

What are the rules on a pitchers glove? According to the official baseball rules, a pitchers glove can be up to 12 inches in size , of any weight , and any color except white or gray as long as it is not distracting.  The Akadema ABX-00 glove, pictured above, is 12 inches,  solid black and is not distracting according to local umpires. Little League Rules Gray glove is not allowed for pitching  White glove is not allowed for pitching Little League Rule 1.14: Each fielder, other than the first baseman and the catcher may wear a glove not more than 12 inches long nor more than 7 3/4 inches wide, measured from the base of the thumb crotch to the outer edge of the glove. The glove may be of any weight. Little League Rule  1.15 (a) : The pitcher's glove may not, exclusive of the piping, be white or light gray, nor, in the judgment of an umpire, distracting in any manner. (source: Little League Baseball Rules Regarding Bats and Gloves ...

Fastball Velocity - How fast do kids throw?

How fast does a Little League pitcher throw? The average fastball is between 50-60 mph for a  pitcher in the Majors division of Little League (11-13 yo). Pitchers in the Little League World Series throw fastballs 60-70+ mph. Only a few pitchers touched 70+ mph in 2015 and 2016. One man-child hit 81 mph on the radar. This velocity is almost unhittable from 46 feet  and extremely rare for a 13 year old. #18 RHP Carlos Gonzalez - Panama 79-81 mph fastball  105 mph MLB equivalent reaction time #18 RHP Jaekyeong Kim - South Korea 75-76 mph fastball #19 RHP Ryan Harlost - Mid-Atlantic, Endwell, NY 71-74 mph fastball Threw a complete game to win the 2016 Little League World Series Loreto Siniscalchi , a 6'1" pitcher from Canada, threw in the mid 70s and completely dominated the hitters from Japan.  He led Team Canada to its first victory over Japan in 18 years. Big right-hander Isaiah Head from Kentucky threw 70-73 mph fastballs. His recor...

Baseball Glove Options for Switch Pitchers

Custom made  Mizuno ambidextrous glove Looking for a glove for a switch pitcher? Before spending hundreds of dollars on a custom glove, please think about age of the player and how much time they will spend pitching. Here are glove options for ambidextrous pitchers, based on age: Age 3-5 Kids don't pitch at this age. They should be learning the proper way to throw. Young kids should try catching the ball with two hands. Use tennis balls or foam balls for throwing. Forget about the low quality plastic glove - it's in the landfill within a year. Gloves are awkward for young kids. If they learn two hand catch when they are young and continue with the skill, they will do well fielding balls when they are older. Learning to throw with both arms is easy at this stage. If a child can throw with either hand when they are three-years-old, it doesn't mean that they are talented or ambidextrous - it just means that they are a typical kid. Gloves:  Buy a smal...