Paul Foytack


Paul Eugene Foytack is an American former professional baseball player and right-handed pitcher who appeared in 312 games in Major League Baseball between to for two American League clubs, the Detroit Tigers and the Los Angeles Angels. He also played one season in Nippon Professional Baseball for the 1965 Chunichi Dragons. Born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, Foytack was listed as tall and.
Foytack signed with the Tigers in 1949 after graduating from Scranton Technical High School. He spent four full years in the Detroit farm system before his first trial in the majors at the outset of. He made the Tigers' varsity pitching staff in, and from –, he won 15, 14, 15, and 14 games respectively, averaging 40 games pitched and 33 games started. During that time, he was among the top ten pitchers in the American League in fewest hits allowed per nine innings three times, and also among the top ten in innings pitched, strikeouts, complete games, and fewest walks per nine innings. In 1959, he led his league in games started in with 37. Over his 11-year MLB career, he posted a won–lost record of 86–87 with a 4.14 earned run average in 1,498 innings pitched, allowing 1,381 hits and 662 bases on balls and striking out 827. He notched 63 complete games and seven career shutouts as a starting pitcher, along with seven saves coming out of the bullpen.
Foytack's production dropped off in the 1960s, and on June 15, 1963, he was traded to the Angels with Frank Kostro for George Thomas and a minor league player to be named later. A month and a half later, on July 31, 1963, during the sixth inning of a game against the Cleveland Indians, Foytack became the first pitcher to give up home runs to four consecutive batters. He was the only pitcher to achieve this feat until New York Yankees rookie pitcher Chase Wright gave up four consecutive home runs to the Boston Red Sox on April 22, 2007.
Foytack was released by the Angels on May 15, 1964, ending his major league career. He spent the rest of that season at Triple-A Syracuse, back in the Tigers' organization, before his lone season in Japanese baseball.