Baseball’s second gentile-free strikeout
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Baseball’s second gentile-free strikeout

Max Lazar, Joc Pederson, and Garrett Stubbs made Jewish baseball history last week. (Getty Images)
Max Lazar, Joc Pederson, and Garrett Stubbs made Jewish baseball history last week. (Getty Images)

Regardless of who stood in the batter’s box, Jewish pitcher Max Lazar’s first career strikeout would have been a big deal.

But as it was, that moment in Saturday night’s game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Arizona Diamondbacks was significant for connoisseurs of Jewish baseball history as well.

The batter Lazar struck out in the bottom of the eighth inning, Diamondbacks outfielder Joc Pederson, is also Jewish. So is the player who gloved the pitch, Phillies catcher Garrett Stubbs.

That meant that Pederson’s at-bat became a rare trifecta in which the pitcher, catcher, and batter were all Jewish. According to the Jewish Baseball Museum, Lazar’s strikeout of Pederson was only the third instance of a Jewish pitcher-catcher-batter combination in the more than 100-year history of MLB. It was also only the eighth appearance of a Jewish pitcher-catcher battery.

The last all-Jewish trifecta happened 11 years ago almost to the day, when Boston Red Sox reliever Craig Breslow — who is now the team’s chief baseball officer — struck out Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Kevin Pillar on Aug. 15, 2013, with Ryan Lavarnway catching. The first Jewish trifecta happened 62 years earlier — and ended far more poorly for the pitcher — when Detroit Tigers pitcher Saul Rogovin gave up a home run to Philadelphia Athletics first baseman Lou Limmer, with Joe Ginsberg catching.

Lazar, 25, is a Florida native who had been one of the top relief pitchers in the minor leagues this season, and who was making his MLB debut in Saturday’s game. According to Jewish Baseball News, he is the 15th Jewish player to appear in MLB this season.

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

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