This never works in practice Except for the 1985 Cardinals, who had four different guys with four or more saves and none with more than 19. Except for the 2005 White Sox, who got four or more saves from four different pitchers (Hermanson, Takatsu, Jenks, Marte). From May 11 to August 24, Marte was brought in about 1 out of every 6 times a manager normally brings in his closer. From August 25 to September 13, Ozzie Guillen used three different pitchers (Jenks, Marte, and Hermanson) in save situations, with Marte getting 1 out of every 3 calls. I really don't care if one guy is called "the closer" or not. But I blame Tony Larussa for the way modern "closers" are used, only working the 9th inning in save situations. The best reliever should be used when it most benefits the team, and sometimes that would be the 8th inning or even the 7th inning if that's when the opponent's heart of the order is batting. If I had Mariano Rivera, I'd rather use him against Pujols, Edmonds, and Rolen than save him for Juan Encarnacion, Aaron Miles, and Yadier Molina. Was it Joe Buck who started preaching the idea that the last 3 outs are the toughest? If so, it's just one more reason to hate Joe Buck.