Former big league right-hander Al Fitzmorris has passed away at 78. The Royals announced the news on Wednesday evening.
Fitzmorris was born in Buffalo but attended high school in San Diego. He signed with the White Sox as a 20-year-old. The 6’2″ righty never had an opportunity to get to the big leagues with Chicago. The Royals plucked him away as they built their first team via the expansion draft. Fitzmorris made seven relief appearances for the franchise’s inaugural team in 1969.
While he spent most of the ’69 season in Triple-A, Fitzmorris established himself on the MLB staff the following year. He posted middling numbers in a swing role between 1970-72. He took a step forward with 89 innings of 2.83 ERA ball in 1973 and excelled as a starter for the three seasons thereafter. Fitzmorris turned in a 2.79 ERA across 190 innings in ’74. He won 16 games with a 3.57 mark over a career-best 242 frames the next season. Between 1974-76, he led Kansas City with 652 1/3 innings. He posted a 44-29 record behind a cumulative 3.17 earned run average.
Fitzmorris was arguably the best pitcher on the ’76 team that won 90 games and earned the first playoff berth in franchise history. He ranked second on the club with 220 1/3 innings while turning in a 3.06 ERA that was the best mark among the team’s full-time starters. Nevertheless, skipper Whitey Herzog elected not to use Fitzmorris against the Yankees in that year’s AL Championship Series. New York advanced to the World Series on Chris Chambliss’ walk-off homer in the decisive fifth game.
That marked the end of Fitzmorris’ tenure in Kansas City. The Royals left him unprotected for the following winter’s expansion draft. He was selected by the Blue Jays, who immediately traded him to the Indians. Fitzmorris struggled to a 5.41 ERA over 29 appearances for Cleveland in ’77. He split the following year between the Indians and Angels. After one more season in Triple-A with San Diego, he retired.
Fitzmorris concluded his playing career with a 3.65 ERA over 1277 innings. He logged parts of 10 seasons in the majors and recorded a 77-59 record. Fitzmorris struck out 458 hitters and tossed 36 complete games, 11 of which were shutouts. The Royals announced that he returned to Kansas City after his playing days and remained involved with the franchise’s community and charity efforts. MLBTR sends our condolences to his family, loved ones, former teammates and friends.
BaseballBrian
A nice career in the bigs. RIP.
Robertowannabe1
RIP Al.
twentyfivemanroster
RIP Fitzy. I always enjoyed listening to him on sports radio. He’ll be missed.
all in the suit that you wear
RIP
HalosHeavenJJ
RIP. He lived his dream and gave back to the community. Life well lived.
Sucks we’re losing that generation.
TheGr8One
It really does.
Niekro floater
Wishing all his family n friends peace. RIP
Non Roster Invitee
Always got him and Paul Splittorff mixed up.
I have a sweet 1975 Topps mini test of Al.RIP Al Fitzmorris.
jorge78
ŔIP AL…..
This one belongs to the Reds
Al Fitzmorris. Remember him well from Royals teams and baseball cards in my youth.
RIP.
letitbelowenstein
An unfortunately long-forgotten pitcher who was pretty darn good. RIP, Al.
TheGr8One
My man through 432 innings over 2 years you’ll never see that again. Condolences to his family and Royals fans seems like he was a good man and a good ball player.
TOGuy73
Is Fitzmorris the only player to be taken in two different expansion drafts?
mike q.
Growing up as a fan in a NL city during the 70’s, there were a lot of AL players like Fitzmorris I only knew by their baseball cards and the occasional blurb in the Sporting News.