Ray Culp


Raymond Leonard Culp is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball for the Philadelphia Phillies , Chicago Cubs, and Boston Red Sox.

MLB career

Ray was born in Elgin, Texas. He attended Stephen F. Austin High School and signed as an undrafted free agent with the Philadelphia Phillies when he was 17.
His first year was an impressive one, as he compiled a 14–11 win–loss record for the Phillies and was eighth in the National League in strikeouts, although his control was somewhat shaky … leading the league in walks with 102.
As a rookie, he made the NL All-Star squad and went on to retire Al Kaline, Frank Malzone, and Carl Yastrzemski, in a scoreless fifth inning of the Senior Circuit’s 5–3 victory.
Culp returned to the All-Star game in 1969, pitching a perfect ninth inning for the American League. He retired Pete Rose and struck out Randy Hundley and Tony Pérez.
He strung together four steady seasons for the Red Sox from –, winning between 14 and 17 games in each. None of his teams during Culp's career appeared in a postseason game.
In 11 seasons he had a 122–101 win-loss record, 322 games, 268 games started, 80 complete games, 22 shutouts, 21 games finished, 1 save, 1,898 innings pitched, 1,677 hits allowed, 863 runs allowed, 755 earned runs allowed, 188 home runs allowed, 752 walks allowed, 1,411 strikeouts, 70 hit batsmen, 73 wild pitches, 8,066 batters faced, 58 intentional walks, 3 balks, and a 3.58 ERA.

Accomplishments and statistics