Black Aces| Jack Flaherty Has An Outside Shot To Join One Of The Rarest Fraternities In Baseball

Black Aces| Jack Flaherty Has An Outside Shot To Join One Of The Rarest Fraternities In Baseball

Through the first month and a half of the Major League Baseball season, Cardinals’ pitcher Jack Flaherty is on his way to joining one of the rarest fraternities in baseball: Black Aces.

The title of ace is given to a very select few in the game of baseball.  It comes with high expectations.  When an ace is on the mound, it is win day; period.  They stem the tide and stop losing streaks while also being able to be called on to perform in the biggest moments of the season and take down the best hitter on the planet.  

 

You Don’t Know Jack!

 

 

The Black pitcher, in general, is a rare sight to see in our game.  We see many of our MLB Bros showcase their athleticism while roaming in the outfield and even more recently have seen them anchoring defenses throughout the infield, most notably Gold Glove shortstop J.P. Crawford.

The term “Black Aces” derived from a book, “Baseball’s Only African-American Twenty Game Winners” written by former pitcher Jim “Mudcat” Grant, who was the first 20-game winner in the American League when he did it for the Minnesota Twins in 1965.  

To qualify for the fraternity of Black Aces, you must win 20 games in a season.  Looking at the current landscape of the game, there is one pitcher who looks like he will be on his way to having his own Probate this season, and it’s Flaherty.

The former 34th overall pick in the 2014 draft currently sits alone on the top of the throne for the Major League lead in wins.  His record stands undefeated at 7-0 this season with a 2.47 ERA.  He recently became the first Cardinals pitcher since Bob Gibson in 1965 to record a win in seven of his first eight games while having an ERA under three. 

 Flaherty will be compared to the late Gibson – who passed away last year at the age of 84 to cancer – throughout his entire career. 

READ MORE: The Deaths Of Bullet Bob Gibson & Base Burglar Lou Brock…

Gibson pitched for the Cardinals during his entire 17-year career and is one of the original Black Aces in the game of baseball.  He recorded five 20 win seasons during his time in St. Louis, which is second most all-time only trailing Ferguson Jenkins who had seven such seasons.

 

 

 

Flaherty is trying to be the newest member of the Black Ace fraternity since David Price joined the group in 2012.  

Recently retired future Hall of Famer C.C. Sabathia joined the group in 2010 and former pitcher Dontrelle Willis did so as well in 2005.  Before then, the feat had not been reached since 1990 when it was accomplished by Dave Stewart who remarkably completed four straight 20 win seasons from 1987-1990.

 

 

READ MORE: What Is A Black Ace? | CC Sabathia Blesses David Price With Some Brotherly Drip

Early this year, Sabathia presented Price with a custom sweatshirt and joggers.  The logo has an Ace of spade between the two C’s with a B hovering over the Ace of Spade.  

The numbers Flaherty is putting up this season have put him in the category of potential starters for the National League All-Star team in Colorado this summer, which won’t be easy in a National League that has the best pitcher in baseball – Mets’ Jacob Degrom – and the Padres’ Yu Darvish who has one of the deepest bags of pitches and the Brewers’ Brandon Woodruff whose strikeout-to-walk ratio is incredible. Hence, winning and continued quality starts will be key for Flaherty to give himself the starting nod.

After a shaky start on Opening Day, Flaherty has responded with a 1.47 ERA in his last 43 innings pitched.  He has only allowed one home run in the past seven games and has currently registered six quality starts in a row. 

 He is yet to walk more than two batters in a start this year and in his last four starts, he has at least six strikeouts.  Also this year, he joined the “Pitchers Who Rake” club when he hit his first career home run while pitching seven scoreless innings against the Rockies earlier in May.

 

 

The Black Ace Fraternity is ready to welcome Flaherty with open arms.  He is closing in on the halfway point to be allowed in the club, and there’s a possibility that he’ll break past the bouncer before seasons end.  

His next chance to start comes today as he will be on the mound in front of the St. Louis faithful taking on the Pittsburgh Pirates.  Last time he faced them, he notched a season-high nine strikeouts on May 1st.