Ben Grieve played in 32 games at designated hitter for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in 2001, starting in none of them.
, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Ben Grieve played in just one game at designated hitter for the Milwaukee Brewers in 2004 and did not start. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Ben Grieve played in 4 games at designated hitter for the Oakland Athletics in 1999, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Ben Grieve played in 3 games at designated hitter for the Oakland Athletics in 1998, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Tom Grieve played in 40 games at designated hitter for the Texas Rangers in 1974, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Tom Grieve played in 45 games at designated hitter for the Texas Rangers in 1975, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Tom Grieve played in 96 games at designated hitter for the Texas Rangers in 1976, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Tom Grieve played in 13 games at designated hitter for the Texas Rangers in 1977, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Tom Grieve played in just one game at designated hitter for the Texas Rangers in 1973 and did not start. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
Ben Grieve played in 37 games at designated hitter for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in 2003, starting in none of them. , equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in).
a player who hits but does not play the field.
The designated hitter is the tenth player in a baseball lineup. Designated hitters are players that do nothing but bat. They bat in the place of one of the team's player who is out in the field. For teams with designated hitters its always the pitcher that the DH bats in place of as so the pitcher can completely focus on pitching, but technically it could be any player.
Yes, but if that occurs the team loses the designated hitter and the pitcher replaces the DH in the lineup.