Save (baseball)
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In baseball, a save (abbr. SV or S) is credited to a pitcher who finishes a game for the winning team under certain circumstances. A save can be earned by entering a game in which his team is leading by three or fewer runs and finishing the game by pitching at least one inning without losing the lead; entering the game with the tying run in the on-deck circle, at the plate or on the bases and finishing the game; or by pitching at least three innings in relief and finishing the game regardless of how many runs his team was winning by when entering the game.[1] The number of saves or percentage of save opportunities successfully converted are oft-cited statistics of relief pitchers, particularly those in the closer role. The save statistic was created by journalist Jerome Holtzman in 1959 to "measure the effectiveness of relief pitchers" and was adopted as an official Major League Baseball (MLB) statistic in 1969.[2][3] The save has been retroactively tabulated for pitchers before that date. Mariano Rivera is MLB's all-time leader in regular-season saves with 652, while Francisco Rodríguez earned the most saves in a single season with 62 in 2008.
History
[edit]The term save was being used as far back as 1952.[4] Executives Jim Toomey of the St. Louis Cardinals and Irv Kaze of the Pittsburgh Pirates, and statistician Allan Roth of the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers awarded saves to pitchers who finished winning games but were not credited with the win, regardless of the margin of victory. The statistic went largely unnoticed.
The concept of a reliever "saving" a baseball game for a starting pitcher goes back even further. A 1933 Goudey baseball card of Firpo Marberry of the Detroit Tigers states he "Specializes in saving ball games when other pitchers are getting their bumps."[5]
A formula with more criteria for saves was invented in 1960 by baseball writer Jerome Holtzman.[6] He felt that the existing statistics at the time, earned run average (ERA) and win–loss record (W-L), did not sufficiently measure a reliever's effectiveness. ERA does not account for inherited runners a reliever allows to score, and W-L record does not account for relievers protecting leads. Elroy Face of the Pittsburgh Pirates was 18–1 in 1959; however, Holtzman wrote that in 10 of the 18 wins, Face allowed the tying or lead run but got the win when the Pirates offense regained the lead.[7][note 1] Holtzman felt that Face was more effective the previous year when he was 5–2. When Holtzman presented the idea to J. G. Taylor Spink, publisher of The Sporting News, "[Spink] gave [Holtzman] a $100 bonus. Maybe it was $200." Holtzman recorded the unofficial save statistic in The Sporting News weekly for nine years before it became official in 1969. In conjunction with publishing the statistic, The Sporting News in 1960 also introduced the Fireman of the Year Award, which was awarded based on a combination of saves and wins.[7][10]
The save became an official MLB statistic in 1969.[7] It was MLB's first new major statistic since the run batted in was added in 1920.[7]
Notable saves
[edit]
On April 7, 1969, Bill Singer was credited with the first official save when he pitched three shutout innings in relief of Don Drysdale in the Los Angeles Dodgers' 3–2 Opening Day victory over the Cincinnati Reds at Crosley Field.[11][12]
On April 27, 1969, Frank Linzy of the San Francisco Giants became the first pitcher to be credited with two saves in one day, registering saves in both games of a doubleheader against the Houston Astros.[13][14]
On April 29, 1970, Stan Williams of the Minnesota Twins became the first pitcher credited with a save without facing a batter.[15] In a home game against the Cleveland Indians with the Twins holding a 1–0 lead, Williams entered in relief of Jim Kaat in the top of the ninth inning with two outs and runners on first and second; he then picked off runner Tony Horton at second base, ending the game.[16]
On September 3, 2002, the Texas Rangers won 7–1 over the Baltimore Orioles as Joaquín Benoit pitched a seven-inning save, the longest save since it had become an official statistic in 1969.[17][note 2] Benoit relieved Todd Van Poppel (who entered the game in the first inning after starter Aaron Myette was ejected for throwing at Melvin Mora) at the start of the third inning, and finished the game while allowing just one hit. The official scorer credited the win to Van Poppel and not Benoit, a decision that was also supported by Texas manager Jerry Narron.[20]
On August 22, 2007, Wes Littleton earned a save with the largest winning margin ever, pitching the last three innings of a 30–3 Texas Rangers win over the Baltimore Orioles. Littleton entered the game with a 14–3 lead, and the final 27-run differential broke the previous record for a save by eight runs. The New York Times noted that "there are the preposterous saves, of which Littleton's now stands out as No. 1."[21]
On October 29, 2014, in Game 7 of the 2014 World Series, Madison Bumgarner of the San Francisco Giants recorded the longest save in World Series history, pitching five scoreless innings of relief in a 3–2 victory over the Kansas City Royals.[22]
In a 20–1 Philadelphia Phillies victory over the Miami Marlins on April 7, 2018, pitcher Jake Thompson recorded his first career save by pitching the final three innings.[23]
Usage
[edit]In baseball statistics, the term save is used to indicate the successful maintenance of a lead by a relief pitcher, usually the closer, until the end of the game. A save is a statistic credited to a relief pitcher, as set forth in Rule 9.19 of the Official Rules of Major League Baseball.[citation needed] The current definition has been in place since 1975.[24] That rule states the official scorer shall credit a pitcher with a save when such pitcher meets all four of the following conditions:[25]
- He is the finishing pitcher in a game won by his team;
- He is not the winning pitcher;
- He is credited with at least 1⁄3 of an inning pitched; and
- He satisfies one of the following conditions:
The definition of a save has not always been the same. As initially defined in 1969, a relief pitcher could earn a save if he entered a game with his team in the lead and he held the lead through the end of the game, regardless of the score or for how long he pitched.[26] This produced some especially "easy" saves, such as Ron Taylor being credited with a save after pitching a scoreless ninth inning in a 20–6 New York Mets win over the Atlanta Braves in August 1971.[26][27] In 1974, tougher criteria were adopted for saves where either the tying run had to be on base or at the plate when the reliever entered to qualify for a save, or the reliever had to preserve a lead of any size for at least three innings in completing a game.[28][29] The rule was slightly relaxed in 1975 to the current definition as outlined above.[30][29] Statistical sites, including MLB.com, include saves in pitching records prior to 1969 by retroactively applying the 1969 criteria.[citation needed]
Related statistics
[edit]The ratio of saves to save opportunities is save percentage.[31] A save opportunity (abbr. SVO, or "save situation") occurs when a reliever enters a game in a situation that permits him to earn a save. A pitcher who enters a game in a save situation and does not finish the game, but departs with his team still leading, is not charged with a save opportunity.
If a relief pitcher satisfies all of the criteria for a save except he does not finish the game, he will often be credited with a hold (abbr. H), which is a statistic that is not officially recognized by Major League Baseball.[32]
A blown save (abbr. BS; alternately BSV or B)[note 3] occurs when a reliever in a save situation surrenders the lead (allows the tying run, or more, to score). Like the hold, the blown save statistic is not officially recognized by Major League Baseball.[32] The blown save was adopted as part of the points system used by the Rolaids Relief Man Award starting in 1988.[33][32] If the tying run was scored by a runner who was already on base when the reliever entered the game, the reliever will be charged with a blown save even though the run is charged to the pitcher who allowed that runner to reach base. A reliever cannot blow multiple saves in a game unless he has multiple save opportunities, a situation only possible if the reliever temporarily switches to another defensive position, then returns to pitching.
Criticism
[edit]
As Francisco Rodríguez pursued the single-season saves record in 2008, Baseball Prospectus member Joe Sheehan, Sports Illustrated writer Tom Verducci, and The New York Sun writer Tim Marchman wrote that Rodríguez's save total was enhanced by the number of opportunities his team presented, allowing him to amass one particular statistic. They thought that Rodríguez on his record-breaking march was less effective than in prior years.[34][35][36] Sheehan offered that saves did not account for a pitcher's proficiency at preventing runs nor did it reflect leads that were not preserved.[34]
Bradford Doolittle of The Kansas City Star wrote, "[The closer] is the only example in sports of a statistic creating a job." He decried the best relievers pitching fewer innings starting in the 1980s with their workload being reduced from two- to one-inning outings while less efficient pitchers were pitching those innings instead.[37] ESPN.com columnist Jim Caple has argued that the save statistic has turned the closer position into "the most overrated position in sports.”[38] Caple and others contend that using one's best reliever in situations such as a three-run lead in the ninth—when a team will almost certainly win even with a lesser pitcher—is foolish, and that using a closer in the traditional fireman role exemplified by pitchers such as Goose Gossage is far wiser. (A "fireman" situation is men on base in a tied or close game, hence a reliever ending such a threat is "putting out the fire".)[38][39]
Firemen frequently pitched two- or three-inning outings to earn saves. The modern closer, reduced to a one-inning role, is available to pitch more save opportunities. In the past, a reliever pitching three innings one game would be unavailable to pitch the next game.[40] Gossage had more saves of at least two innings than saves where he pitched one inning or less.[41] "The times I did a one-inning save, I felt guilty about it. It's like it was too easy,” said Gossage.[42] ESPN.com wrote that saves have not been determined to be "a special, repeatable skill—rather than simply a function of opportunities.” [43] It also noted that blown saves are "non-qualitative", pointing out that both Gossage and Rollie Fingers, who each had over 100 career blown saves, were both inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.[43] Fran Zimniuch in Fireman: The Evolution of the Closer in Baseball wrote, "But you have to be a great relief pitcher to blow that many saves. Clearly, [Gossage] saved many, many more than he did not save."[44] More than half of Gossage's and Fingers' blown saves came in tough save situations, where the tying run was on base when the pitcher entered. In nearly half of their blown tough saves, they entered the game in the sixth or seventh inning. Multiple-inning outings provide more chances for a reliever to blow a save. The pitchers need to get out of the initial situation and pitch additional innings with more chances to lose the lead. A study by the Baseball Hall of Fame[note 4] found modern closers were put into fewer tough save situations compared to past relievers.[note 5] The modern closer also earned significantly more "easy saves", defined as saves starting the ninth inning with more than a one-run lead.[note 6][29] The study offered "praise to the combatants who faced more danger for more innings".[29]

Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight has suggested the "goose egg,” a new statistic that he considers to be a better evaluation of relief performance than the save.[45] A reliever earns a goose egg for each scoreless inning pitched (no earned or unearned runs, no inherited runners score) in the seventh inning or later, where when he starts the inning: the score is tied, his team holds a lead of no more than two runs, or the tying run is on base or at the plate. Should the reliever be charged with an earned run in a goose egg situation, he will be credited with a "broken egg,” the counterpart of the blown save, unless he finishes the game. The statistic is named for Goose Gossage, who is the all-time leader in goose eggs but recorded relatively few saves compared to modern closers.[45]
In the piece in which he introduced the "goose egg" concept, Silver added more criticisms of the save, noting, "It doesn't give a pitcher any additional reward for pitching multiple innings — even though two clutch innings pitched in relief are roughly twice as valuable as one. And a pitcher doesn't get a save for pitching in a tie game, even though it's one of the highest-leverage situations." He also considered saves and blown saves "highly punitive to guys who aren't closers." As an example, Silver noted that in the 2016 season, Chicago White Sox middle reliever Nate Jones, who by Silver's calculations converted 83% of his goose opportunities, led the American League in blown saves with nine, while only recording three saves. Silver added, "The problem is that you can only get a save if you finish the game, whereas blown saves aren't restricted to the final inning."[45]
Leaders in Major League Baseball
[edit]Saves
[edit]The statistic was formally introduced in 1969,[7] although research has identified saves earned prior to that point.[46]
- Key
| Player | Name of the player |
| Saves | Career saves |
| Years | The years this player played in the major leagues |
| † | Elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame |
| * | Denotes pitcher who is still active |
| L | Denotes pitcher who is left-handed |
Most saves in a career
[edit]The 10 Major League Baseball players with the most saves in a career are:
| Regular season | ||
|---|---|---|
| Player | Saves | Years |
| Mariano Rivera† | 652 | 1995–2013 |
| Trevor Hoffman† | 601 | 1993–2010 |
| Lee Smith† | 478 | 1980–1997 |
| Kenley Jansen* | 476 | 2010–present |
| Craig Kimbrel* | 440 | 2010–present |
| Francisco Rodríguez | 437 | 2002–2017 |
| John FrancoL | 424 | 1984–2005 |
| Billy WagnerL† | 422 | 1995–2010 |
| Dennis Eckersley† | 390 | 1975–1998 |
| Joe Nathan | 377 | 1999–2016 |
- Stats updated through the 2025 season[47]
Progression of career saves leaders
[edit]The following 14 pitchers have led the major leagues in total saves for a career, since the formation of the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players (NA) in 1871.[48] This table is based on career totals at the end of each baseball season, including retroactive application of the saves definition prior to 1969, when it was first recognized as an official statistic by MLB.
| Player | Start | End | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Season | Career saves | Season | Career saves | |
| Harry Wright† | 1871 | 3 | 1893 | 14 |
| Tony Mullane | 1894 | 15 | 1903 | 15 |
| Kid Nichols† | 1899 | 15 | 1906 | 16 |
| Joe McGinnity† | 1907 | 19 | 1909 | 24 |
| Mordecai Brown† | 1910 | 26 | 1925 | 49 |
| Firpo Marberry | 1926 | 53 | 1945 | 99 |
| Johnny Murphy | 1946 | 104 | 1961 | 107 |
| Roy Face | 1962 | 118 | 1963 | 134 |
| Hoyt Wilhelm† | 1964 | 146 | 1979 | 228 |
| Rollie Fingers† | 1980 | 244 | 1991 | 341 |
| Jeff Reardon | 1992 | 357 | 1992 | 357 |
| Lee Smith† | 1993 | 401 | 2005 | 478 |
| Trevor Hoffman† | 2006 | 482 | 2010 | 601 |
| Mariano Rivera† | 2011 | 603 | incumbent | 652 |
Notes:
- Mullane and Nichols shared the record from 1899 through 1903.
- Mullane pitched both right-handed and left-handed.
Most in a single season
[edit]Below are the Major League Baseball players who have recorded 50 or more saves in a single season.
| Regular season | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Player | Saves | Team | Year |
| Francisco Rodríguez | 62 | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | 2008 |
| Bobby Thigpen | 57 | Chicago White Sox | 1990 |
| Edwin Díaz* | Seattle Mariners | 2018 | |
| John Smoltz† | 55 | Atlanta Braves | 2002 |
| Éric Gagné | Los Angeles Dodgers | 2003 | |
| Randy MyersL | 53 | Chicago Cubs | 1993 |
| Trevor Hoffman† | San Diego Padres | 1998 | |
| Mariano Rivera† | New York Yankees | 2004 | |
| Éric Gagné | 52 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 2002 |
| Dennis Eckersley† | 51 | Oakland Athletics | 1992 |
| Rod Beck | Chicago Cubs | 1998 | |
| Jim Johnson | Baltimore Orioles | 2012 | |
| Mark Melancon | Pittsburgh Pirates | 2015 | |
| Jeurys Familia | New York Mets | 2016 | |
| Jim Johnson | 50 | Baltimore Orioles | 2013 |
| Craig Kimbrel* | Atlanta Braves | 2013 | |
| Mariano Rivera† | New York Yankees | 2001 | |
- Stats updated through the 2023 season[49]
Most consecutive without a blown save
[edit]| Regular season | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | Saves | Team(s) | Years | Ref |
| Éric Gagné | 84 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 2002–2004 | [50][51] |
| Zack BrittonL* | 60 | Baltimore Orioles | 2015–2017 | [52] |
| Tom Gordon | 54 | Boston Red Sox | 1998–1999 | [51] |
| Jeurys Familia | 52 | New York Mets | 2015–2016 | [53] |
| José Valverde | 51 | Detroit Tigers | 2010–2011 | [54] |
| John Axford | 49 | Milwaukee Brewers | 2011–2012 | [55] |
| Brad Lidge | 47 | Houston Astros, Philadelphia Phillies | 2007–2009 | [51] |
| Grant Balfour | 44 | Oakland Athletics | 2012–2013 | [56] |
| Brad Ziegler | 43 | Arizona Diamondbacks | 2015–2016 | [57] |
| Rod Beck | 41 | San Francisco Giants | 1993–1995 | [51] |
| Trevor Hoffman† | San Diego Padres | 1997–1998 | [51] | |
| Heath Bell | San Diego Padres | 2010–2011 | [51] | |
Stats updated through 2019 season[citation needed]
Blown saves
[edit]Career
[edit]The below table lists MLB pitchers who have accrued 80 or more blown saves during their careers.
| Regular season | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | Blown saves |
Saves | Save % | Years |
| Goose Gossage† | 112 | 310 | 73.5 | 1972–1994 |
| Rollie Fingers† | 109 | 341 | 75.8 | 1968–1985 |
| Jeff Reardon | 106 | 367 | 77.6 | 1979–1994 |
| Lee Smith† | 103 | 478 | 82.3 | 1980–1997 |
| John FrancoL | 101 | 424 | 80.8 | 1984–2005 |
| Bruce Sutter† | 300 | 74.8 | 1976–1988 | |
| Sparky LyleL | 95 | 238 | 71.5 | 1967–1982 |
| Roberto Hernández | 94 | 326 | 77.6 | 1991–2007 |
| Gene Garber | 82 | 218 | 72.7 | 1969–1988 |
| Kent Tekulve | 81 | 184 | 69.4 | 1974–1989 |
| Gary LavelleL | 136 | 62.7 | 1974–1987 | |
| Mariano Rivera† | 80 | 652 | 89.1 | 1995–2013 |
| Mike Timlin | 141 | 63.8 | 1991–2008 | |
Stats updated through 2020 season[58][59]
Single season
[edit]The below table lists MLB pitchers who have accrued 13 or more blown saves during a single season.
| Regular season | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | Blown saves |
Saves | Save % | Team | Year | Ref. |
| Ron Davis | 14 | 29 | 67.4 | Minnesota Twins | 1984 | [60] |
| Rollie Fingers† | 20 | 58.8 | Oakland Athletics | 1976 | [61] | |
| Gerry Staley | 9 | 39.1 | Chicago White Sox | 1960 | [62] | |
| Bob Stanley | 33 | 70.2 | Boston Red Sox | 1983 | [63] | |
| Bruce Sutter† | 27 | 65.9 | Chicago Cubs | 1978 | [64] | |
| Goose Gossage† | 13 | 22 | 62.9 | New York Yankees | 1983 | [65] |
| John HillerL | 13 | 50.0 | Detroit Tigers | 1976 | [66] | |
| Clay Holmes | 29 | 69.0 | New York Yankees | 2024 | [67] | |
| Dan PlesacL | 23 | 63.9 | Milwaukee Brewers | 1987 | [68] | |
| Jeff Reardon | 35 | 72.9 | Montreal Expos | 1986 | [69] | |
| Dave RighettiL | 31 | 70.5 | New York Yankees | 1987 | [70] | |
Notes
[edit]- ^ Baseball-Reference.com differs slightly and recorded it occurring in only seven of the 18 wins. Face blew leads in his wins four times (April 24, May 14, June 11, and July 12), allowed lead runs in tie games he won three times (April 22, Aug 30, and Sept 19), and allowed an additional run while already behind in a win once (Aug 9).[8] Associated Press also reported Face allowing a tying run to score in his July 9 win over the Chicago Cubs.[9]
- ^ Benoit bested the previous record of six innings by Horacio Piña of the Rangers in 1972.[18] Baseball-Reference.com retroactively credited eight-inning saves to pitchers prior to 1969 including Jim Shaw (1920), Guy Morton (1920), and Dick Hall (1961).[19]
- ^ An abbreviation of BL may be used to indicate that a reliever was charged with both a blown save and the loss.
- ^ The March 2006 study analyzed the career saves of Rollie Fingers, Goose Gossage, Bruce Sutter, Lee Smith, Dennis Eckersley, Trevor Hoffman, and Mariano Rivera. Hoffman and Rivera were still active, and had 436 and 379 career saves, respectively, at that time.
- ^ Tough save opportunities (tough saves + tough blown saves): Fingers (161). Gossage (138), Hoffman (49), Rivera (46).
- ^ Easy saves: Hoffman (261), Rivera (235), Fingers (114), Gossage (113).
References
[edit]- ^ "Save (SV) | Glossary". MLB.com. Retrieved 2024-06-14.
- ^ Weber, Bruce (July 22, 2008). "Jerome Holtzman, 82, 'Dean' of Sportswriters, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
- ^ Bloom, Barry (July 21, 2008). "Legendary historian Holtzman passes". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. Archived from the original on 29 April 2011. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
- ^ Newman, Mark (July 22, 2008). "Holtzman helped 'save' baseball". MLB.com. Archived from the original on August 24, 2013.
- ^ "#104 - Fred Marberry". tcdb.com. Retrieved July 28, 2024.
- ^ Holtzman, Jerome (September 16, 2003). "How the save formula began". MLB.com. Archived from the original on March 19, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e Holtzman, Jerome (May 2002). "Where did save rule come from? Baseball historian recalls how he helped develop statistic that measures reliever's effectiveness". Baseball Digest. Archived from the original on 2012-07-08. Retrieved 2008-10-21.
- ^ "Roy Face 1959 Pitching Gamelogs". Baseball-Reference.com. Archived from the original on November 10, 2012.
- ^ Wilks, Ed (July 10, 1959). "Dodger' Craig Old Self Again; Two Double Shutouts in American League". The Florence Times. Alabama. Associated Press. Section 2, Page 3. Retrieved December 4, 2012.
- ^ Zimniuch, Fran (2010). Fireman: The Evolution of the Closer in Baseball. Chicago: Triumph Books. p. 125. ISBN 978-1-60078-312-8.
- ^ "Famous Firsts in the Expansion Era of Major League Baseball by Baseball Almanac". Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ "Retrosheet Boxscore: Los Angeles Dodgers 3, Cincinnati Reds 2". Retrieved 5 December 2015.
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- ^ "Events of Sunday, April 27, 1969". Retrosheet. Retrieved June 6, 2021.
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- ^ "Cleveland Indians at Minnesota Twins Box Score". Baseball-Reference.com. April 29, 1970. Retrieved June 6, 2021.
- ^ Beck, Jason (April 6, 2013). "Smyly's long save has nothing on Benoit". MLB.com. Archived from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved April 25, 2013.
- ^ "AL roundup: Benoit gets 7-inning save against O's". Deseret News. Associated Press. September 4, 2002. Archived from the original on May 6, 2015.
- ^ "From 1916 to 2013, Recorded Save, (requiring IPouts>=21), sorted by smallest IP". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved April 25, 2013.(subscription required)
- ^ "Rangers MLBeat: Narron pleased". mlb.com. Archived from the original on June 9, 2003. Retrieved April 15, 2007.
- ^ Spousta, Tom (August 23, 2007). "With a 27-Run Cushion, a Save Is in the Books". The New York Times. Archived from the original on June 5, 2015.
- ^ "Did you know: Madison Bumgarner makes history". Major League Baseball. Archived from the original on November 1, 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ https://www.espn.com/mlb/boxscore/_/gameId/380407122
- ^ Posnanski, Joe (April 12, 2017). "Save evolves from stat to game-changer". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. Retrieved 29 April 2025.
- ^ "Divisions Of The Code" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-06-04.
- ^ a b Zimniuch 2010, p.126
- ^ "August 7, 1971 New York Mets at Atlanta Braves Box Score and Play by Play". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
- ^ "New baseball regulations may save Hiller record". The Times Herald. Port Huron, Michigan. AP. January 20, 1974. Retrieved June 6, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d Schechter, Gabriel (March 21, 2006). "Top Relievers in Trouble". National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Archived from the original on June 8, 2007.
- ^ "Baseball changes rules". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Lewiston, Idaho. AP. January 31, 1975. p. 3B – via Google News.
- ^ Dickson, Paul (2011). The Dickson Baseball Dictionary. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 120, 741. ISBN 978-0-393-34008-2.
- ^ a b c Tourtellotte, Shane (December 28, 2017). "The Unofficial Rules: Of Holds and Blown Saves". fangraphs.com. Retrieved June 6, 2021.
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- ^ a b Sheehan, Joe (September 11, 2008), "Prospectus Today: Closing In", BaseballProspectus.com, archived from the original on February 13, 2010
- ^ Verducci, Tom (July 22, 2008). "What would my idol say about K-Rod's chase of the saves record?". SI.com. Retrieved April 4, 2016.[dead link]
- ^ Marchman, Tim (July 22, 2008). "K-Rod May Be Baseball's First 60-Save Man". The New York Sun. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
Half of the Angels' games so far this year have offered a save opportunity, much higher than the typical team's rate, because they play a lot of close games, having only outscored their opponents 429-396.
- ^ Doolittle, Bradford (July 28, 2008). "Wishing that baseball's save statistic had never been invented". The Kansas City Star. Archived from the original on July 29, 2008. Retrieved February 28, 2011.
Prior to the save, there was no such thing as a closer in baseball. It is the only example in sports of a statistic creating a job — a well-paying job. But that's not my issue with the save.
- ^ a b Caple, Jim (August 5, 2008). "The most overrated position in sports". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on June 29, 2011. Retrieved May 24, 2017.
- ^ Passan, Jeff (April 26, 2010). "Should managers play Scrabble with relievers?". Yahoo! Sports. Archived from the original on January 19, 2012.
- ^ Zimniuch 2010, pp.xxvi,158–9
- ^ Schecter, Gabriel (January 18, 2006). "The Evolution of the Closer". National Baseball Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on June 8, 2007.
Gossage and Fingers weren't far behind, with Fingers the only pitcher who pitched at least three innings in more than 10% of his saves. Sutter and Gossage had more saves where they logged at least two innings than saves where they pitched an inning or less.
- ^ Zimniuch 2010, p.99
- ^ a b Philip, Tom (April 30, 2011). "Blown saves are overblown". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on August 8, 2011.
- ^ Zimniuch 2010, p.98
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- ^ "Clay Holmes 2024 Pitching Game Logs". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved September 24, 2024.
- ^ "Dan Plesac 1987 Pitching Game Logs". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
- ^ "Jeff Reardon 1986 Pitching Game Logs". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
- ^ "Dave Righetti 1987 Pitching Game Logs". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
- ^ "Player Pitching Season & Career Finder: For Single Seasons, In the Regular Season, since 1871, requiring BSv >= 13, sorted by greatest BSv". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
- ^ "Player Pitching Season & Career Finder: For Single Seasons, In the Regular Season, from 1954 to 2021, requiring BSv >= 13, sorted by greatest SV%". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
External links
[edit]Save (baseball)
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Rules
Official MLB Definition
In Major League Baseball, a save is a statistic awarded to a relief pitcher who finishes a game for the winning team under prescribed conditions, as defined in Official Baseball Rule 9.19. The rule states: "A save is a statistic credited to a relief pitcher, as set forth in this Rule 9.19. The Official Scorer shall credit a pitcher with a save when such pitcher meets all four of the following conditions: (1) He is the finishing pitcher in a game won by his team; (2) He is not the winning pitcher; (3) He is credited with at least ⅓ of an inning pitched; and (4) He satisfies one of the following conditions: (A) He enters the game with a lead of no more than three runs and pitches for at least one inning; (B) He enters the game, regardless of the count, with the potential tying run either on base, at bat, or on deck (that is, the potential tying run is either already on base or is one of the first two batters he faces); or (C) He pitches effectively for at least three innings." No pitcher may receive credit for both a save and a win in the same game.[5][6] A "save situation" arises when a relief pitcher enters the game with a lead of three runs or fewer, or when the potential tying run is on base, at bat, or on deck, creating a high-pressure scenario where the pitcher's performance directly impacts the outcome. This includes cases where the score is tied or the visiting team leads by one to three runs in the bottom of the inning, or when bases are loaded with fewer than two outs and the lead is narrow. The rule ensures the statistic recognizes pitchers who protect close victories without requiring extensive innings pitched.[5] The save rule was first codified as an official MLB statistic in 1969, building on earlier informal tracking by journalists and team officials to quantify relief pitching contributions.[5] Non-qualifying scenarios include starting pitchers, who cannot earn saves as they are ineligible for relief credit, or relief pitchers who secure the win themselves, as the rule explicitly excludes the winning pitcher from save eligibility. Additionally, a pitcher entering with a lead exceeding three runs must pitch at least three effective innings to qualify under condition (C), or the opportunity is forfeited if they fail to meet any criteria.[5][6]Qualification Scenarios
A save opportunity arises in specific in-game contexts that meet the criteria outlined in MLB Rule 9.19, where a relief pitcher must finish the game for the winning team without being the winning pitcher and pitch at least one-third of an inning while satisfying one of three sub-conditions related to the lead and game situation.[1] These scenarios emphasize the pitcher's role in protecting a narrow margin, with edge cases determined by the score, baserunners, and innings remaining. One primary qualification occurs when the pitcher enters with a lead of no more than three runs and pitches for at least one full inning while finishing the game. This applies regardless of baserunners but is most common in the late innings, where fewer than two innings remain to ensure the pitcher can complete the minimum without needing additional support. For instance, in a hypothetical game, the home team leads 4-1 entering the top of the ninth inning; the relief pitcher enters with a three-run lead, retires the side in order during the ninth, and the team wins 4-1, earning a save under this condition. If the same pitcher had entered in the top of the eighth with the same score, they would need to pitch both the eighth and ninth innings (at least one full inning total) to qualify, as they must be the finishing pitcher.[5][7] Another key scenario involves the pitcher entering the game with the potential tying run on base, at bat, or on deck, which can apply even if the lead exceeds three runs in rare cases. The "potential tying run" refers to a baserunner or batter positioned such that their scoring—potentially with assistance from subsequent batters—could tie the game, often interpreted as the tying run being in scoring position (second or third base), at the plate, or on deck for leads of one to three runs. For a one-run lead with bases empty, the batter at the plate represents the tying run; for a two-run lead with bases empty, the on-deck batter is the potential tying run, as two runs would need to score involving the current and next batters. In a two-run lead with a runner on third, that runner is the tying run on base. A hypothetical example: in the top of the ninth, the team leads 3-1 with bases empty; the pitcher enters with the tying run on deck (the second batter in line), holds the lead by allowing no runs over the inning, and secures the 3-1 victory, qualifying under this condition. For a three-run lead, this scenario typically requires the tying run already on base in scoring position (e.g., runner on third with additional runners to enable three scores), though single-runner tying is impossible, making the lead-based condition more common. No save is credited if the lead exceeds three runs unless this tying-run condition or the three-inning rule is met, preventing saves in blowouts without imminent threat.[5][8] The third qualification allows a save if the pitcher effectively pitches for at least three innings after entering with any lead that their team maintains until the end. This rewards extended relief outings and applies across various leads, including those over three runs. Example: entering the top of the seventh with a 5-2 lead (three-run margin), the pitcher navigates the seventh, eighth, and ninth innings without allowing the tying or go-ahead runs, finishing the 5-2 win and earning the save.[5][7] In extra innings, save qualifications follow the standard rules but are influenced by the 2020 extra-innings rule—made permanent starting in 2023—placing an automatic runner on second base at the start of each half-inning, often positioning the tying run on base for one-run leads or creating immediate pressure. For instance, in the top of the 10th with a 1-0 lead, the visiting team starts with a runner on second (the potential tying run); the relief pitcher enters, induces a double play and two flyouts to end the inning without the run scoring, then the home team adds insurance in the bottom half but the pitcher returns if needed—though typically one inning suffices here under the tying-run-on-base condition—securing the save in a 2-0 final. This rule has increased save opportunities in extras by heightening threats without altering core criteria. If a lead exceeds three runs in extras (e.g., 4-0 in top 10 with runner on second), qualification requires the three-inning minimum or facing the tying run, as the runner on second alone does not tie a four-run game.[9][10] Regarding 2020s adaptations, the COVID-19 shortened season adjusted game completion thresholds (games official after 4.5 or 5 innings), but save qualifications remained unchanged, applying standard rules to any completed contest. In international play like the World Baseball Classic (WBC), save rules mirror MLB's, including the extra-innings runner since 2023 and no unique tweaks for saves, ensuring consistency across competitions. As of 2025, no further MLB rule modifications affect save scenarios.[11][12]Blown Save Definition
A blown save (BS) is a statistic charged to a relief pitcher who enters a game in a save situation but allows the tying run or go-ahead run to score before his team regains the lead or the game concludes. According to Major League Baseball's official guidelines, this failure occurs when the pitcher permits the potential tying run to cross the plate, thereby eliminating the save opportunity, even if the pitcher is later replaced.[13] This statistic differs from earned runs in that a blown save is not dependent on whether the run is officially charged to the pitcher; unearned runs resulting from defensive errors or other factors still trigger the blown save if they tie or surpass the score. The focus remains on the outcome of the save situation rather than the pitcher's direct culpability for the runs allowed.[13] Blown saves have been tracked as a statistic since 1988, although not officially recognized by MLB, serving as a counterpart to successful saves to better evaluate relief pitchers' effectiveness in closing games.[13] Prior to this, such situations were not formally tracked, limiting historical analysis of closer performance.[14] Although a blown save precludes the pitcher from earning a save in that game, it does not affect eligibility for a win, loss, or no-decision based on the final result. For instance, a reliever might enter the eighth inning with a three-run lead, allow two runs (including the tying run via an error), but remain the pitcher of record when their team scores the go-ahead runs later, resulting in a win alongside the blown save.[13] This dual outcome highlights how blown saves measure situational failure without overriding broader decision credits.[15]Historical Development
Origin in the Early 20th Century
In the dead-ball era of the early 1900s, baseball saw the emergence of relief pitchers who were informally recognized for preserving close victories, laying the groundwork for the development of specialized relief roles that would later influence the save statistic. These "firemen," a term that later formalized the role but described early relievers extinguishing late-game threats, were often starting pitchers repurposed for high-leverage situations due to the era's emphasis on complete games and low-scoring contests. Christy Mathewson, one of the premier starters of the time, appeared in relief 83 times during his career with the New York Giants, including several instances where he closed out tight games to secure wins, earning praise from contemporary observers for his ability to stabilize innings under pressure.[16][17] During the 1910s and 1920s, as baseball transitioned toward more strategic use of bullpens, writers and scorekeepers increasingly highlighted "game-saving" performances by relievers in newspaper accounts and box scores, though no standardized metric existed. Babe Ruth, prior to his full-time shift to the outfield, made 56 relief appearances for the Boston Red Sox between 1914 and 1919, including outings where he protected slim leads in the late innings, which sportswriters lauded as pivotal to team successes despite the lack of official credit. This informal tracking varied widely, with journalists like those at The Sporting News occasionally compiling anecdotal lists of standout relief efforts, but inconsistencies in criteria—such as innings pitched or lead margin—prevented uniform recognition across the league.[18][2] The actual concept of the save statistic emerged in the early 1950s, when National League executives began unofficially tracking it to recognize relievers who protected leads without earning the win, and it was formalized by sportswriter Jerome Holtzman in 1959 with specific criteria for measuring relief effectiveness.[2] Parallel developments occurred in the Negro Leagues, where segregated competition fostered similar informal acknowledgments of relief pitching prowess before integration in 1947. Pitchers like Hilton Smith of the Kansas City Monarchs frequently entered games in relief behind stars such as Satchel Paige, delivering curveballs and control to maintain leads in exhibition and league contests, with Black press reporters noting these efforts as essential to victories in an era of grueling schedules and barnstorming tours. Such recognition, documented in periodicals like the Chicago Defender, mirrored major league practices but operated without broader statistical infrastructure, underscoring the parallel evolution of relief roles in Black baseball.[19]Rule Changes and Standardization
The save statistic was formally adopted by Major League Baseball (MLB) in 1969 as Rule 10.20, following years of lobbying by the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) and influenced by sportswriter Jerome Holtzman's earlier unofficial criteria established in 1959 for measuring relief pitcher effectiveness.[5][2] The original rule credited a save to a relief pitcher who entered the game with their team leading, preserved the lead until the end of the game (or was removed only for a pinch-hitter or pinch-runner), and was not the winning pitcher; if multiple relievers qualified, the scorer awarded it to the most effective one, with only one save permitted per game.[20] This broad definition allowed saves for any lead size without a minimum innings requirement, encouraging longer relief outings but lacking specificity for close games.[21] In response to the growing specialization of relief pitching roles during the 1970s, MLB revised the rule in 1975 to better reflect the emerging "closer" archetype, limiting saves to situations where the pitcher finished the game for the winning team (without being the winning pitcher) and met one of three criteria: entering with a lead of no more than three runs and pitching at least one inning; entering with the potential tying run on base, at bat, or on deck; or pitching effectively for at least three innings while preserving any lead.[20][3] This change eliminated the subjectivity of the "most effective" reliever and reduced the incentive for saves in low-pressure, multi-inning appearances, aligning the statistic more closely with high-leverage ninth-inning scenarios.[8] Subsequent updates in the 2000s focused on clarifications rather than overhauls, with a key modification in 2007 requiring relief pitchers to throw at least one-third of an inning to qualify for a save and removing the vague "effectiveness" standard for the three-inning provision, ensuring more consistent application.[20] Additional tweaks addressed extra-inning games by confirming that saves could be earned only by the pitcher who finished the contest, regardless of when extra frames began, while the introduction of official holds in the late 1980s (formalized later) helped distinguish middle-relief contributions from closing duties.[22] As of November 2025, the rule remains unchanged since 2007, with no major revisions post-2020 despite the 2023 pitch clock implementation, which shortened games by an average of 24 minutes from 2022 levels and potentially reduced extra-inning save opportunities by limiting prolonged contests.[23][24] Minor post-2010 adjustments incorporated instant replay reviews (starting in 2014) to verify game-ending plays affecting save eligibility, but these did not alter the core criteria.[25] These evolutions profoundly influenced pitching strategy, accelerating the shift from complete games by starters—down from 20% of games in 1969 to under 1% by the 2000s—to dedicated closers handling the ninth inning, as the revised rules incentivized protecting slim leads in late innings over extended relief stints.[21][2]Application and Usage
Role in Relief Pitching
In contemporary Major League Baseball (MLB) bullpen strategies, the save has solidified the role of the ninth-inning closer as a specialized position dedicated to protecting narrow leads in the game's final frame. This evolution, accelerated by rule changes in 1975, emphasizes one-inning specialists who enter primarily in save situations to maximize efficiency and minimize fatigue.[21][3] Mariano Rivera exemplifies this archetype, amassing a record 652 regular-season saves over 19 seasons with the New York Yankees, primarily by pitching the ninth inning in high-pressure scenarios, which underscored the save as a key metric for evaluating late-game reliability and closer effectiveness.[26] His dominance, with a career 2.21 ERA and only 80 blown saves, highlighted how saves quantify a pitcher's ability to secure victories when leads are most vulnerable.[27] Managers leverage save situations to strategically deploy their top relievers, often reserving elite closers for the ninth inning in close games to preserve leads of three runs or fewer, while using setup pitchers earlier to bridge the gap from starters. This approach, rooted in the save rule's emphasis on finishing games under specific conditions, allows teams to optimize bullpen matchups against opposing lineups but carries risks of over-reliance on a single pitcher, potentially leading to overuse injuries or fatigue in extended seasons.[28][2] For instance, the conventional strategy of holding a closer for save opportunities can limit their availability in tied games or earlier high-leverage moments, prompting some managers to adapt by deploying them preemptively in the eighth inning if a lead is imminent.[29] Internationally, save rules in Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) and Korea's KBO League largely mirror MLB's Rule 9.19, crediting relief pitchers who finish winning games while protecting leads under similar criteria, such as entering with a slim margin or pitching effectively for at least one inning.[30] However, cultural and managerial differences influence usage: NPB teams often employ more aggressive bullpen tactics, with closers frequently pitching in the eighth or ninth during tied contests to seize momentum, reflecting an emphasis on small-ball and proactive relief deployment rather than strict save preservation.[31] In the KBO, while the save statistic drives closer roles akin to MLB, the league's faster-paced games and universal designated hitter rule contribute to frequent late-inning comebacks that test relievers.[32] In the 2020s, emerging trends like the "opener" strategy—pioneered by teams such as the Tampa Bay Rays—have begun to erode traditional save opportunities by deploying relievers from the first inning to neutralize top hitters, followed by bulk pitchers to eat innings, resulting in more fluid bullpen roles and fewer scenarios where a dedicated closer secures a multi-run lead in the ninth.[33] This shift, driven by pitching injury concerns and analytics favoring matchups over endurance, has reduced the frequency of classic save situations, as games often feature closer contests and earlier high-leverage usage of top arms, prompting teams to prioritize overall bullpen depth over save accumulation. As of 2025, teams like the Rays have reduced opener usage, leading to a resurgence in more traditional save opportunities.[34][35]Recording Saves in Games
The official scorer, appointed by Major League Baseball's Commissioner's Office, is responsible for determining and crediting saves during and after games, observing from the press box and exercising sole authority over judgment calls related to Rule 9.19 criteria.[36][37] This process begins with real-time notations by the scorer as relief pitchers enter and exit, ensuring the pitcher meets all required conditions, such as finishing the game for the winning team, not receiving the win, pitching at least one inning, and entering in a qualifying scenario like a lead of no more than three runs.[36] Saves are documented in the official box score and pitcher stat lines, which form part of the comprehensive post-game report filed by the scorer within 36 hours, including details on innings pitched, earned runs, and save credits.[36] These reports integrate with MLB's centralized data systems, where tracking technologies like Statcast provide verifiable metrics on pitch counts, innings worked, and game events to support the scorer's decisions and ensure accuracy in official records. The save is awarded to the finishing pitcher who meets Rule 9.19 conditions.[36] Retroactive save awards are possible through post-game reviews, where the scorer finalizes judgments within 24 hours, clubs may appeal within 72 hours, and the Commissioner's designee can amend clearly erroneous calls, such as crediting a save if a pitcher's ejection occurs after they have met the finishing and effectiveness criteria upon further verification.[38][36] No save is awarded in walk-off losses, as the rule requires the pitcher's team to secure the victory, precluding credit when the opposing team scores the game-ending run.[36][5] By 2025, digital scoring applications integrated with MLB's platforms, such as the official MLB App leveraging Statcast data, enable real-time tracking and provisional save notations for broadcasters, media, and fans during live games, though these serve as aids rather than official determinations, which remain the scorer's domain.[39]Related Statistics
Holds and Inherited Runners
A hold is awarded to a relief pitcher who enters a game in a save situation, records at least one out, and exits without surrendering the lead, thereby handing off the game to another reliever while preserving the team's chance to secure a save later.[40] This statistic complements the save by recognizing the contributions of middle and setup relievers who maintain pressure in high-leverage moments without closing the contest.[41] Unlike saves, which are limited to the final pitcher, holds distribute credit across the bullpen hierarchy, emphasizing sequential effectiveness in late innings.[8] The hold was introduced in 1986 by statisticians John Dewan and Mike O'Donnell, founders of STATS Inc., as a means to quantify the impact of non-closing relievers in protecting leads.[42] Initially unofficial and tracked by media outlets like The Associated Press for statistical reports, it gained broader adoption through fantasy baseball leagues and sabermetric platforms in the 1990s and 2000s.[43] Although not an official Major League Baseball statistic, holds are now standard in box scores on sites like MLB.com and Baseball-Reference, reflecting their role in evaluating bullpen depth.[40] Inherited runners play a key role in hold situations, defined as baserunners already on base when a relief pitcher enters the game mid-inning.[44] Runs scored by inherited runners are charged to the previous pitcher, not the reliever, but for a hold to be earned, the entering pitcher must strand those runners—preventing them from scoring—while maintaining the lead overall.[45] This mechanic underscores the reliever's responsibility in stabilizing the inning despite inherited threats, tying directly to save situation criteria where the lead is narrow (no more than three runs with fewer than two innings left, or the tying run in scoring position).[40] For example, consider a pitcher who enters in the seventh inning with his team leading 4-2, two inherited runners on base (first and second, one out), and records the next three outs without allowing any runs to score; this performance qualifies as a hold, as the lead is preserved for subsequent relievers.[8] Such scenarios highlight how holds reward effective runner management under pressure, distinct from a save which requires finishing the game. In the analytics era of the 2020s, holds have risen in prominence as teams increasingly prioritize bullpen construction around multiple high-leverage arms, with data showing stronger links between total holds and overall team bullpen reliability than saves alone in contributing to win totals.[46]Advanced Metrics like Win Probability Added
Win Probability Added (WPA) is a sabermetric statistic that quantifies the change in a team's probability of winning resulting from a specific play or sequence of events, such as a pitcher's appearance in a game.[47] It measures the difference in win expectancy before and after the event, crediting or debiting the player based on how their actions shift the odds of victory.[48] In save situations, WPA highlights the high-impact nature of these moments; for instance, a reliever entering the ninth inning with a one-run lead and successfully closing the game typically adds between 0.16 and 0.24 WPA, depending on the exact bases and outs.[49] A save with one out already recorded in such a scenario might contribute around +0.15 WPA, reflecting the partial probability already secured.[49] Closely related is the Leverage Index (LI), which assesses the pressure of a game situation by calculating the potential swing in win probability from a single plate appearance.[50] An LI of 1.0 represents average game leverage, but save opportunities generally occur in high-leverage contexts with LI values exceeding 1.5, often averaging around 2.09 when weighted by common scenarios like close leads in late innings.[51] These metrics together provide a contextual framework for evaluating relievers beyond binary save outcomes, emphasizing the situational demands they face. Unlike traditional save statistics, which award credit based solely on rule-defined criteria without adjusting for variables like runner speed, defensive positioning, or ballpark dimensions, WPA and LI offer a more nuanced assessment by incorporating historical win expectancy models that account for such factors.[52] For example, WPA contextualizes a save in a hitter-friendly park as potentially more valuable than an identical performance in a pitcher-friendly venue, revealing disparities that rigid save rules overlook.[46] As of 2025, tools like Baseball Savant integrate WPA directly with save data through interactive leaderboards and game feeds, allowing analysts to filter pitcher performances by save situations while overlaying WPA contributions for comprehensive evaluations.[53] This enables detailed breakdowns, such as a reliever's WPA in high-LI save opportunities, aiding in modern player assessment and strategy optimization.[54]Criticism and Limitations
Incentive Distortions
The save rule has profoundly shaped managerial strategies in relief pitching by incentivizing the reservation of elite relievers, often termed "closers," exclusively for ninth-inning save opportunities, even when higher-leverage situations arise earlier in games. This closer monopolization leads to underutilization of top arms in critical non-save spots, such as a seventh-inning tie with runners on base, where win probability added (WPA) or leverage index (LI) metrics indicate greater game impact. For instance, managers frequently withhold closers like Josh Hader from high-LI moments to preserve them for potential saves, distorting optimal bullpen deployment and potentially costing teams wins.[55][56] This rigid usage pattern contributes to pitch count inflation among relievers, as they are often deployed in extended save chases with bases loaded or multi-run deficits, facing more batters per appearance than in neutral scenarios and heightening fatigue and injury risk. Relievers in high-pressure roles face increased injury risk due to intense usage, with studies showing correlations between workload, including consecutive outings, and arm injuries like UCL tears.[57] Contract structures further exacerbate these distortions, tying significant financial incentives to save accumulation through bonuses for games finished, which predominantly benefit closers. Jonathan Papelbon's 2010 contract with the Boston Red Sox, for example, included a $50,000 bonus for reaching 60 games finished, directly linked to save opportunities, while his 2011 Philadelphia Phillies deal featured a vesting $13 million option contingent on 55 games finished in 2015 or 100 over two seasons. These clauses encourage conservative usage to maximize countable saves, prioritizing statistical milestones over holistic game strategy. Post-2020 Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) innovations, including the three-batter minimum rule, have begun mitigating some distortions by compelling relievers to face more hitters per outing, reducing mid-inning specialization and promoting broader bullpen flexibility beyond save-centric roles. As of 2025, load management protocols—emphasizing rest and workload caps amid rising injury concerns—have encouraged teams to deploy high-leverage arms more flexibly, aligning usage more closely with leverage-based analytics, though save incentives persist.[58]Inadequacies Compared to Modern Analytics
The save statistic exhibits significant contextual blindness by awarding equal credit to pitchers for preserving leads of different magnitudes, such as entering with a three-run advantage in the ninth inning versus a one-run lead, without differentiating the inherent leverage or difficulty of each situation. For instance, on May 28, 2005, Joe Nathan received a save despite allowing two runs in a low-pressure scenario, while Juan Rincón's high-leverage eighth-inning performance that preserved a slim lead went uncredited.[46][59] In contrast, modern analytics like Fielding Independent Pitching (FIP), which isolates pitcher-controlled events such as strikeouts, walks, hit-by-pitches, and home runs, better evaluate underlying skill by removing the influence of defense, luck, and situational factors that the save ignores.[60] Similarly, expected ERA (xERA), derived from Statcast data on batted ball quality, provides a predictive measure of performance that highlights true talent over save opportunities, which can be inflated by team offensive support or lead size. A further limitation arises from the multi-outcome nature of save situations, where a blown save harshly penalizes a pitcher even if their team rallies to win after the tying run scores, failing to capture the pitcher's net contribution to the outcome. For example, Ron Davis amassed 29 saves in 1984 with a below-average 4.26 FIP, illustrating how the stat rewards volume over quality in relief roles.[46] Sabermetric analyses reveal that saves disproportionately overvalue ninth-inning appearances, with research showing weak correlations between save totals and overall pitcher effectiveness (e.g., a -0.328 correlation with FIP), as earlier innings often involve comparable or higher leverage without similar recognition.[46][61] The save also introduces bias toward handedness by promoting rigid closer usage that overlooks platoon advantages, such as deploying a right-handed specialist against right-handed batters in the ninth despite suboptimal matchups, while lefty specialists might excel in earlier frames against opposite-handed hitters.[62] This structural flaw contributes to inefficient bullpen deployment. In 2024-2025 sabermetric debates, particularly surrounding free-agent contracts, experts have increasingly pushed for Win Probability Added (WPA) to supplant saves in evaluating relievers, citing its ability to quantify leverage-adjusted impact—as evidenced in projections for closers like Edwin Díaz, where peripherals like strikeout rates and FIP outweighed save counts in valuation models, alongside discussions on the relative value of saves versus holds.[63][64] This shift underscores WPA's superiority in capturing pitcher value across contexts, as briefly referenced in advanced metrics like shutdowns.[48]Records and Leaders
Career Saves Leaders
The concept of the save as an official statistic dates back to 1969, but retroactive records recognize earlier relief specialists, with Firpo Marberry establishing the benchmark in the 1920s by accumulating 94 unofficial saves over his career, primarily with the Washington Senators, through frequent high-leverage appearances that set the stage for modern closing roles.[65] The career saves record progressed gradually in the pre-modern era, with Johnny Murphy surpassing Marberry's mark in the 1940s, followed by Roy Face in the 1950s and Hoyt Wilhelm in the 1960s, before the statistic's formalization accelerated accumulation among dedicated closers. By the late 20th century, Lee Smith held the record at 478 saves upon his 1997 retirement, a mark that Trevor Hoffman eclipsed in 2006 en route to 601, until Mariano Rivera claimed the all-time lead in 2006 and retired with 652 in 2013, a total that remains unchallenged as of 2025.[4] As of the end of the 2025 MLB season, the top 10 career saves leaders reflect the evolution toward specialized bullpen usage, with active players continuing to climb the ranks. Kenley Jansen added 29 saves in 2025 to reach 476, solidifying his position among the elite, while Craig Kimbrel holds at 440; other notables like Edwin Díaz, with 253 career saves including 28 in 2025, remain poised for further ascent despite injury setbacks.[66][67][68]| Rank | Player | Saves | Years Active | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mariano Rivera | 652 | 1995–2013 | New York Yankees closer; Hall of Famer |
| 2 | Trevor Hoffman | 601 | 1993–2010 | Signature entrance with "Hells Bells"; Hall of Famer |
| 3 | Lee Smith | 478 | 1980–1997 | Seven-time All-Star; record holder from 1993–2006 |
| 4 | Kenley Jansen (active) | 476 | 2009–present | Dodgers/Red Sox/others; 2025: 29 saves |
| 5 | Craig Kimbrel (active) | 440 | 2010–present | Braves/others; nine-time All-Star |
| 6 | Francisco Rodríguez | 437 | 2002–2017 | Angels/Mets; 2008 single-season record (62) |
| 7 | John Franco | 424 | 1984–2005 | Mets/Yankees; four-time All-Star |
| 8 | Billy Wagner | 422 | 1995–2009 | Astros/Phillies; seven-time All-Star |
| 9 | Dennis Eckersley | 390 | 1975–1998 | A's starter/closer; Hall of Famer |
| 10 | Joe Nathan | 377 | 1999–2016 | Twins/Rangers; six-time All-Star |
Single-Season and Consecutive Records
The single-season saves record in Major League Baseball (MLB) is held by Francisco Rodríguez, who recorded 62 saves for the Los Angeles Angels in 2008, a mark that remains unmatched as of the end of the 2025 season.[72] This achievement came during a year when the Angels won 100 games and captured the American League West division title, with Rodríguez appearing in a major-league-record 77 games and converting 62 of 65 save opportunities. Prior to Rodríguez, the record stood at 57 saves, set by Bobby Thigpen of the Chicago White Sox in 1990.[72] The proliferation of save opportunities in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, driven by expanded playoff formats and specialized bullpen roles, has led to several high totals, though no pitcher has surpassed 62 saves in the intervening years. The following table lists the top 10 single-season save totals in MLB history:| Rank | Player | Saves | Year | Team |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Francisco Rodríguez | 62 | 2008 | Los Angeles Angels |
| 2 | Bobby Thigpen | 57 | 1990 | Chicago White Sox |
| 2 | Edwin Díaz | 57 | 2018 | New York Mets |
| 4 | Éric Gagné | 55 | 2003 | Los Angeles Dodgers |
| 4 | John Smoltz | 55 | 2002 | Atlanta Braves |
| 6 | Mariano Rivera | 53 | 2004 | New York Yankees |
| 6 | Trevor Hoffman | 53 | 1998 | San Diego Padres |
| 6 | Randy Myers | 53 | 1993 | Chicago Cubs |
| 9 | Éric Gagné | 52 | 2002 | Los Angeles Dodgers |
| 10 | Mark Wohlers | 51 | 1996 | Atlanta Braves |