20 seasons.
13 teams.
386 games.
248 begins.
And Rich Hill has not ended yet.
All those numbers are going to grow until a Tuesday night when the 45 -year -old pitcher takes the mound for the Cenus City Royals when they play the Chicago cub in the Wrigley Field.
Royals manager Matt Quatero confirmed on Monday that Hill would be called from Triple-e Omaha, where he has moved ahead with more than nine 5.36 ERAs and killed 10, nine and eight batsmen in individual games this season.
“He is well,” Quataro told Hill reporters who picked up for Boston Red Sox last year, which was last year before signing a minor league deal with Royals during offsen. “They had a couple of up and down, performance-wars. But when he was finding out, he is really good.”
In 45 years and 133 days, Hill will be the oldest pitcher to start the MLB game since Colorado Rockies Jamie Moyer (49 years, 191 days) on May 27, 2012.
Hill will also tie Edwin Jackson’s record of being played for 14 MLB teams and will do against the team for which he started his major league – and in the same park – on 16 June 2005.
Amidst their time with cubs and their upcoming start with Royals, Hill, Hill Baltimor Oriols, Red Sox (in four separate stents), Cleveland Indians, Angels, New York Yancis, Okland Athletics, Dojers, Minnota Twins, Tampa Bay Raz, Newuchsbets, Pitts and Sambar Diats Also played for.
While his term in Anahem was the only blip in just two matches during the 2014 season, Hill had an impact with Dojers from 2016 to 2019 during his four sessions.
During that period, Hill went to ERA of 30–16 with 427 strikeouts and 3.16 in a regular session. He appeared in 12 Postsen Games (including three during two world series runs), with 62 strikes with 1-2 and 2.70 ERA.
“I feel very good,” Hill said, going to their final season with doors and are in total 15th position. “I really don’t know where a point is enough enough. I think I can walk for a while.”
After more than six years, the hill is still continuing it.