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A pinch runner is a baseball player substituted for the specific purpose of replacing a player on base. In the typical case, the pinch runner is faster or otherwise more skilled at base-running than the player for whom the pinch runner has been substituted.[citation needed] But occasionally a pinch runner is inserted for more subtle reasons (such as a double switch), ejection, or if the original player on base has become injured (such as having been hit by a pitch).

A pinch-runner is not credited with a game played for the purpose of consecutive game streaks, per Rule 10.24(c) of baseball's Official Rules. In fact, Alfredo Griffin of the Toronto Blue Jays scored the winning run in a game, yet his consecutive game streak ended as he appeared only as a pinch runner.[citation needed]

As with other substitutions in baseball, when a player is pinch run for, that player is removed from the game. The pinch runner may remain in the game or be substituted for at the manager's discretion. Earlier in baseball history, teams would occasionally use "courtesy runners" as well as pinch runners.[citation needed] A baserunner that had to leave the game temporarily due to injury would be replaced by a courtesy runner.[citation needed] The courtesy runner could leave the game and re-enter later, or could be a player already in the game playing a different position.[citation needed] The player who had to leave the game was free to return to play.[citation needed] The last use of a courtesy runner in Major League Baseball was in 1949.[citation needed]

Probably the most famous pinch runner of all time was Herb Washington of the Oakland Athletics.[citation needed] Oakland owner Charlie Finley, known as an unconventional thinker, came to believe that it would be useful to have a "designated runner"—a fast player on the roster whose only job was to periodically enter a game and run the bases for slower players. He signed Washington, a track star with no baseball experience. Washington appeared in 105 games for the Athletics in 1974 and 1975, scoring 33 runs and stealing 31 bases, without once playing the field or coming up to bat.[1] His 1975 Topps baseball card is the only baseball card in history to use the "Pinch Runner" position label.[citation needed]

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