In six major league seasons, B.J. Ryan has averaged exactly one save per season and it took him saving three games last season to reach that mark.
But those three games were the chance Ryan needed to prove to Baltimore Orioles manager Lee Mazzilli that the back end of his bullpen is secure despite an ineffective 2004 season from incumbent closer Jorge Julio.
As spring training winds down and opening day nears, Ryan is ready to build on his stellar 2004 and take over as the Orioles closer -- a position that is of extreme importance given that Baltimore resides in the American League East, home of the defending World Series champion Boston Red Sox.
So is Ryan, who saved six games in 1998 while pitching for Louisiana, ready to take over the closer's role?
"The only difference is that you pitch the ninth inning instead of the eighth inning," Ryan told The Miami Herald. "You throw the same stuff, approach the hitters the same way and still try to get outs. This game is pretty basic."
Ryan's do-it-all approach has served him well as he enters his seventh major league season.
The former Airline High School standout, who first played collegiately at Centenary before transferring, was a two-way standout in college and high school, but was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds as a pitcher in the 17th round of the 1998 draft.
He has pitched in varied roles throughout his career and appeared to carve a niche as a left-handed specialist. During his 2004 season, the 6-foot-6 left-hander limited left-handed hitters to an .094 average en route to a 4-6 record and a 2.28 ERA.
He was fairly effective against right-handed hitters as well, holding them to a .252 average.
Ryan's delivery allows him to hide the ball especially well from left-handers and his 250-pound frame produces his above-average fastball and a darting cutter that helped him ring up 122 strikeouts in only 87 innings.
Not only did his 12.62 strikeouts per nine innings rank among the major league leaders for relievers, it made Ryan the first relief pitcher since Toronto's Duane Ward in 1991 to lead his team in strikeouts.
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By Jason Pugh
jpugh@gannett.com