Matt Whiteside

{{short description|American baseball player (born 1967)}}

{{about|the baseball player|the composer|Matthew Whiteside}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}

{{Infobox baseball biography

|name=Matt Whiteside

|image=

|caption=

|position=Pitcher

|bats=Right

|throws=Right

|birth_date={{Birth date and age|1967|8|8}}

|birth_place=Sikeston, Missouri, U.S.

|debutleague = MLB

|debutdate=August 5

|debutyear=1992

|debutteam=Texas Rangers

|finalleague = MLB

|finaldate=May 7

|finalyear=2005

|finalteam=Toronto Blue Jays

|statleague = MLB

|stat1label=Win–loss record

|stat1value=18–15

|stat2label=Earned run average

|stat2value=5.23

|stat3label=Strikeouts

|stat3value=259

|teams=

}}

Matthew Christopher Whiteside (born August 8, 1967) is an American former Major League Baseball pitcher. He graduated from Charleston High School in Charleston, lettering in baseball, football, and basketball, in 1986, and then attended Arkansas State, graduating with a degree in physical education. While at Arkansas, Whiteside joined Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.

Standing at 6'2" and weighing 205 pounds, the right-hander was drafted by the Texas Rangers 661st overall, in the 25th round of the {{Baseball year|1990}} draft. Whiteside spent nearly three successful seasons in the minors before making his Major League debut on August 5, {{mlby|1992}}, at the age of 24. His first appearance came against the Oakland Athletics, pitching a perfect inning. In Whiteside's first season in the majors, he made 20 appearances, all in relief in relief, posting a 1.93 ERA and saving four games.

From {{mlby|1993}} to {{mlby|2001}}, the lowest ERA Whiteside had in a season was 4.08, while the highest was 13.91. He started only one game in his major league career, on July 20, {{mlby|1997}}. Whiteside pitched four innings, giving up six hits and five earned runs and received a no-decision.

After 13 games in the majors in 2001 with the Atlanta Braves (who picked him up as a free agent), Whiteside bounced around in the minors and international baseball (Yokohama BayStars in Japan in {{Baseball year|2003}}) until {{baseball year|2005}}. By that time, he had established himself as a very successful closer in the minors, saving 38 games in {{Baseball year|2004}} with the Richmond Braves, making the International League All-Star team, and saving 27 games in {{Baseball year|2005}} for the Syracuse SkyChiefs. After the latter showing, Whiteside was called up to the majors for a two-game stint with the Toronto Blue Jays. He struggled in that short time—in 3{{fraction|2|3}} innings, he gave up eight earned runs (six hits, three home runs, five walks, one hit batter) for an ERA of 19.64.

On July 15, 2005, Whiteside was suspended for 15 games for violating minor league baseball's steroid policy.{{cite web | title = Players suspended under baseball's steroids policy | work = espn.com | date = 2006-06-07 | url = https://www.espn.com/mlb/news/story?id=2474192 | access-date = 2007-07-20 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090224112532/http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2474192 | archive-date = 2009-02-24 | url-status = live }} He spent {{Baseball year|2006}} with the Indianapolis Indians, posting a 1.69 ERA in 20 games, collecting 10 saves.

In 1996, he served as a guest judge at the Miss USA Pageant.

References

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