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36. Charles Nagy

  1. General
  2. Awards
  3. Career Stats
  • Born: May 5, 1967 in Bridgeport, CT USA
  • Weight: 200 lbs.
  • Height: 6'3"
  • Bats: L
  • Throws: R
  • Debut: June 29, 1990
  • Final Game: June 01, 2003
 
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Long before he was a fixture in the Cleveland rotation, Charles Nagy was already a champion, arriving on the North Coast with an Olympic Gold Medal from the 1988 Seoul Games. When he stepped onto the Major League stage in 1990, he traded his national colors for the Tribe’s navy and red, beginning a thirteen-season journey that would see him become the iron man of the franchise's most explosive decade.

Nagy’s career in Cleveland was a study in professional resilience, as he evolved from a young prospect into the staff’s undisputed workhorse. He established himself as a frontline winner during the club's resurgence, authoring a consistent peak that saw him reach the 17-win plateau on three separate occasions. These were not merely volume stats; he was a model of specialized efficiency, earning All-Star honors in each of those 17-win summers and consistently appearing in the top ten of the American League Cy Young voting. He possessed a specialized ability to eat innings, providing a steadying presence for a team that was constantly under the high-leverage pressure of the postseason.

The most profound aspect of his tenure was his role as a statistical titan during the club's legendary run at Jacobs Field. Nagy was a master of the "big game" workload, starting 297 games for the organization and twice leading the league in games started. His craftsmanship reached a statistical summit in the mid-90s, where he finished in the top ten for Pitcher bWAR three times, proving that his value extended far beyond the win-loss column. He served as the tactical engine of a rotation that bridged the gap between the lean years of the early decade and the championship-contending era, securing 129 victories in a Cleveland uniform.

The organization provided the ultimate punctuation on his career in 2007 by inducting him into the Cleveland Hall of Fame.

The Bullet Points

  • Position: Pitcher
  • Acquired: Selected in the 1st Round, 17th Overall in the Amateur Draft 6/1/88.
  • Departed: Signed as a Free Agent by the San Diego Padres 12/20/02.
  • Games Played: 313
  • Notable Statistics:

    129 Wins
    103 Losses
    4.51 ERA
    297 Games Started
    31 Complete Games
    6 Shutouts
    9 Games FInished
    1,942.1 Innings Pitched
    1,235 Strikeouts
    4.20 FIP
    1.419 WHIP
    2.12 SO/BB
    24.8 bWAR

    15 Playoff Games
    3 Wins
    4 Losses
    4.46 ERA
    14 Games Started
    1 Game Finished
    84.2 Innings Pitched
    55 Strikeouts
    1.38 WHIP
    1.83 SO/BB

    3 Runs Scored
    2 Hits
    0 Doubles
    0 Triples
    0 Home Runs
    0 Runs Batted In
    0 Stolen Bases
    .118/.118/.118 Slash Line

    No Playoff Plate Appearances 

  • Major Accolades and Awards:

    All-Star (1992, 1996 & 1999)
    Most Assists by a Pitcher (1997)
    Highest Fielding Percentage by a Pitcher (1996 & 1997)

  • Other Points of Note: Top Ten Cy Young Finishes:
    7th in 1992, 6th in 1995 & 4th in 1996

    Finished 8th in Rookie of the Year voting in 1991.

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