Former Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Scott Sauerbeck dies
Staten Island Advance · 1d
Former Mets draft pick and long-time MLB relief pitcher has died at age 53
Former New York Mets draft pick Scott Sauerbeck, who was a relief pitcher in the majors for eight seasons, has died. The Cincinnati native was 53. Sauerbeck, who was a ‘lefty specialist reliever’ when the position was still popular, died of a heart attack in Bradenton, Fla., home on Tuesday, according to multiple reports.
MLB Rumors · 2d
Scott Sauerbeck Passes Away
Sauerbeck was a Cincinnati native who attended Miami University in Ohio. The Mets selected him in the 23rd round of the 1994 draft. Sauerbeck pitched four years in the New York system. They lost him to the Pirates in the ’98 Rule 5 draft. The 6’3″ southpaw would spend the majority of his career in Pittsburgh.
WLWT · 2d
Cincinnati native, former MLB pitcher Sauerbeck dead at 53
Former major league pitcher and Cincinnati native Scott Sauerbeck has died. He was 53. A 1990 graduate of Northwest Local High School, Sauerbeck was drafted by the New York Mets in the 23rd round of the 1994 MLB draft out of Miami University.
Former Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Scott Sauerbeck died suddenly at age 53; Rowdy Tellez signed with the Seattle Mariners; ...
The left-handed pitcher set the Pittsburgh Pirates record for most games pitched in a single season when he made 78 appearances in 2002.
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