Curtis Ross Ohlendorf (born August 8, 1982) is an American former professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Yankees, Pittsburgh Pirates, San Diego Padres, Washington Nationals, Texas Rangers, and Cincinnati Reds, and in the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) for the Tokyo Yakult Swallows.
Ohlendorf attended Princeton University, where he majored in Operations Research and Financial Engineering. He also played college baseball for the Princeton Tigers baseball team. In 2002, as a freshman pitcher, he was named the Ivy League Rookie of the Year. Ohlendorf, a second-team All-Ivy selection, was 3rd in the League with a 3.02 ERA. He finished with a 6–2 record. In 2003, he played collegiate summer baseball for the Chatham A's of the Cape Cod Baseball League. As a student, he penned a 140-page senior thesis entitled Investing in Prospects: A Look at the Financial Successes of Major League Baseball Rule IV Drafts from 1989 to 1993.
Ohlendorf completed his degree at Princeton in 2006 while in the Arizona Diamondbacks' farm system. He received the George Mueller Award from the university for combining "high scholarly achievement in the study of engineering with quality performance in intercollegiate athletics". In his senior thesis, Ohlendorf used sabermetrics to demonstrate the return on investment from the Major League Baseball draft.
In 2006, playing for the Diamondbacks AA affiliate, the Tennessee Smokies, Ohlendorf went 10–8 with a 3.29 ERA and led the Southern League with four , earning a promotion to AAA Tucson for one playoff start.
Ohlendorf pitched mostly for the AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees in 2007. Ohlendorf struggled with injuries and inconsistency as a Starting pitcher with Scranton and was moved to the bullpen. Ohlendorf embraced his new role and pitched extremely effectively, able to maintain a higher velocity and precision on his pitches due to shorter outings. On September 9, when Scranton was eliminated from the playoffs, Ohlendorf was promoted to the Major Leagues.
On September 11, he pitched in his first Major League game against the Toronto Blue Jays for the Yankees. He pitched one inning without allowing a baserunner while striking out one. On September 15, he pitched 1 innings against the Boston Red Sox, allowing a walk and a home run, but recording all four outs on strikeouts. Ohlendorf impressed the Yankees enough in September to earn a spot on the ALDS roster, but struggled in his lone appearance in the series, allowing three runs on four hits and one walk in one inning.
Ohlendorf spent the first month pitching for the AAA Indianapolis Indians and was called up to Pittsburgh on September 2 when the rosters expanded. He was added to the starting rotation and made his first appearance on September 3 against the Cincinnati Reds where he pitched six innings and allowed four runs (three earned) in a 6–5 Pirates victory. When Ohlendorf faced Will Venable who batted leadoff on September 28, 2008, for San Diego, he became the first Princeton pitcher to oppose a Princeton batter.
Ohlendorf was a stamina pitcher, often lasting late into games. In all, he threw 176 innings, 45 more than his previous year total. The Pirates would shut him down for the remainder of the season following his September 19 start to rest him for next year. Pirates General Manager Neal Huntington would say, "We're looking forward to working with him to put him in position to where he can be a 200-plus inning starter for many, many years to come."
On September 5, 2009, Ohlendorf became the 40th major-league pitcher to throw an immaculate inning, striking out all three St. Louis Cardinals batters in the seventh inning on nine total pitches. Ohlendorf would pitch his first full season in the majors for the Pirates in 2009. His final 2009 stats were an 11–10 record, a 3.92 ERA, 25 home runs allowed, seven hit batsmen, 53 walks, 109 strikeouts, a .255 average against, and a 1.23 walks and hits per inning pitched in 176.2 innings. He would earn the status of being the only Pirates starter to have a winning record.
Ohlendorf was hit in the head by a line drive off of Troy Tulowitzki's bat in a July 28, 2010, game against the Colorado Rockies. He left the game as a precaution. This was the second time in 2010 a Pirates pitcher was hit in the head by a line drive, the first being Chris Jakubauskas. Unlike Jakubauskas, Ohlendorf did not miss any starts. Following the season and a 1–11 record with a 4.07 ERA, Ohlendorf won his arbitration hearing and a $439,000 raise to $2,025,000.
Ohlendorf only made two starts in 2011 before going on the disabled list with a shoulder strain, and after experiencing a setback in his rehab program did not make another major league start until August 23. On September 15, Ohlendorf hit his first career home run off Dana Eveland, also becoming the first Pirates pitcher to homer since Paul Maholm did so on May 9, 2009, against the New York Mets. Ohlendorf finished 2011 with a 1–3 record in nine games with an 8.15 ERA. On December 7, 2011, Ohlendorf was released by the Pirates.
Ohlendorf made nine starts in 13 total appearances for the Padres and posted a 4–4 record and a 7.58 ERA in 48 innings. He was optioned to Triple-A Tucson Padres on August 18 after lasting only 13 total innings in his last four starts with a 14.54 ERA. The Padres designated Ohlendorf for assignment on September 4, and he became a free agent after the season.
On March 26, 2014, the Nationals voided Ohlendorf's deal by sending him down to AAA. Ohlendorf did not pitch in the Majors due to numerous injuries, including a back injury which limited him to appearing in just five minor league games. After the season, he became a free agent.
After the 2006 season, Ohlendorf became an intern for the University of Texas System's Office of Finance. Following the 2009 season, he began an eight-week internship for the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
In 2010, Ohlendorf was chosen as the third-smartest athlete in sports by the Sporting News, behind baseball pitcher Craig Breslow and football player Myron Rolle.
Professional career
Arizona Diamondbacks
New York Yankees
Pittsburgh Pirates
Boston Red Sox
San Diego Padres
Washington Nationals
Texas Rangers
Kansas City Royals
Cincinnati Reds
Tokyo Yakult Swallows
Scouting report
Personal life
External links
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