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  1. 7 de jan. de 2024 · Mark Buehrle was an All-Star again (for the fourth time) in 2009, thanks to a 9-2 start (3.14 ERA) in his first 17 starts. Buehrle didn’t pitch on the day of the announcement this year but still continued his All-Star curse (sort of) by throwing a clunker in his final start of the first half of the season (8 ER in 3.1 IP in Minnesota).

  2. View the profile of Toronto Blue Jays Starting Pitcher Mark Buehrle on ESPN. Get the latest news, live stats and game highlights.

  3. 12 de jan. de 2023 · Let's use Mark Buehrle's Hall of Fame candidacy as a vehicle to discuss why players can stick around for years on the ballot and then see if I've changed my mind on him as a possible Hall of Famer.

  4. 9 de jan. de 2024 · CHICAGO -- Mark Buehrle doesn’t possess a Hall of Fame vote. I don’t either, although I’m in my 22nd season covering the White Sox and it will be arriving soon. If the left-hander who so adeptly pitched 16 seasons for the White Sox, Marlins and Blue Jays had a vote, he still wouldn’t cast it for himself. “No, I think there’s zero ...

  5. 24 de dez. de 2023 · With more than 10 percent of likely voters reporting, Mark Buehrle is indeed in a precarious position. Ryan Thibodaux’s Hall of Fame tracker shows that he’s dropped beneath the 5 percent threshold to remain on the ballot: Here are the percentages through 41 logged ballots: On one hand, 10 percent is a small enough sample that one good week ...

  6. 21 de nov. de 2023 · The good news for Buehrle is that none of the new names* challenge his mantle as the best or second-best pitcher on the ballot, so his case still has room to breathe. That changes next year when CC Sabathia shows up, which is why this would be a good year for him to show up on more than 10.4 percent of ballots.

  7. Mark Alan Buehrle was a Major League Baseball player with the Chicago White Sox (2000-2011), Miami Marlins (), and Toronto Blue Jays (2013-2015).When Buehrle made his big league debut on July 16, 2000 (1.0 IP, 2 H, 1 SO, 1 BB, 1 ER), he became the first former student from Francis Howell North High School (St. Charles, MO) to play in the majors.