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  • Matt Belisle

    Birth Date: 06/05/1980

    Matt Belisle Autograph

    Matt Belisle's Autograph

    Matt Belisle Bio

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    Matthew Thomas Belisle was born on June 6, 1980 in Austin, Texas.

    The Atlanta Braves took him in round two of the 1998 MLB Draft. He became one of the best pitching prospects in baseball, peaking as the 28th ranked prospect on the Baseball American preseason top 100 in 2001. Only 11 of the players ranked ahead of him were pitchers. Belisle was acquired by the Cincinnati Reds on August 14, 2003 as the player to be named later from a previous deal. He made his Major League debut for them on September 7, 2003.

    Belisle pitched with the Reds through 2008. He mostly worked out of the bullpen during his first few seasons, becoming a full time starter in 2007. Early season struggles in 2008 saw Belisle sent back down to Triple-A, where he began working as a reliever again. Cincinnati non-tendered Belisle after the season.

    He signed with the Colorado Rockies on January 14, 2009. Belisle was designated for assignment twice during the season, clearing waivers both times and remaining in their minor league system. He made their Opening Day roster in 2010, and enjoyed a career year. Belisle had a 2.93 ERA across 76 appearances in 2010, serving as the primary set-up man for Rockies closer Huston Street. He remained a regular in the Colorado bullpen through the end of the 2014 season, owning a 3.88 ERA across his six seasons with the club.

    The St. Louis Cardinals signed him to a one year deal for the 2015 season. He had a 2.67 ERA with them, but was limited to just 34 appearances due to an arm injury that caused him to miss July, August and the first week of September. Belisle was on their NLDS roster that fall, but did not appear in a game as the Cardinals fell to the Chicago Cubs in four games.

    He signed with the Washington Nationals for the 2016 season, boasting a 1.76 ERA in 40 relief appearances. His availability was once again limited due to injuries, and Belisle was left off the Nationals playoff roster that fall.

    The Minnesota Twins signed Belisle ahead of the 2017 campaign as part of an underwhelming off-season for the club. Minnesota was coming off a disappointing 103 loss season in 2016, and they only added two outside players on Major League deals that off-season; Belisle and catcher Jason Castro. Belisle got off to a rough start with the Twins, recording a 6.53 ERA over 33 appearances through the end of June. But things turned around quickly for the veteran reliever, and he didn't allow a single run over 12.1 innings in July. Belisle only allowed seven base runners that entire month.

    Minnesota traded All-Star closer at the deadline, and manager Paul Molitor gave the role to Belise. He continued his strong play through the end of the season, going 9-for-11 in save chances and helping the Twins sneak into the final playoff spot. Belisle tossed a 1-2-3 eighth inning against the Yankees in the 2017 AL Wild Card Game, facing the top of their order. Unfortunately, this didn't really mean much with Minnesota trailing by four runs.

    Belisle signed with the Cleveland Indians in the ensuing off-season, but he struggled early on and was designated for assignment in mid-May. The Twins picked him back up a few weeks later, hoping Belisle could repeat his second half turnaround that they saw in 2017. Things didn't work out that way, and his ERA with Minnesota in 2018 was north of nine. He spent a chunk of the second half on the injured list, serving as a mentor to many young Twins relievers while inactive.

    He did return to the active roster in September, taking part in Joe Mauer's de facto retirement celebration. With Mauer getting behind the plate to catch one final pitch, he requested that Belisle be the one to throw it. This would also wind up being the final Major League appearance for the 38-year old Belisle.

    Notable Events & Trivia

    • Belisle led the Majors with 80 relief appearances in 2012 while with the Colorado Rockies
    • Through the end of 2024, Belisle is third in Rockies history with 392 pitching appearances
      • He trails Steve Reed (461) and Brian Fuentes (428)

    Matt Belisle Statistics

    Standard Pitching Table
    Season Age Team Lg WAR W L W-L% ERA G GS GF CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BK WP BF ERA+ FIP WHIP H9 HR9 BB9 SO9 SO/BB Awards
    2003 23 CIN NL 0.0 1 1 .500 5.19 6 0 2 0 0 0 8.2 10 5 5 1 2 0 6 1 0 0 39 83 4.18 1.385 10.4 1.0 2.1 6.2 3.00  
                                                                           
    2005 25 CIN NL 0.1 4 8 .333 4.41 60 5 17 0 0 1 85.2 101 49 42 11 26 6 59 6 0 3 382 97 4.43 1.482 10.6 1.2 2.7 6.2 2.27  
    2006 26 CIN NL 0.6 2 0 1.000 3.60 30 2 5 0 0 0 40.0 43 18 16 5 19 1 26 3 0 3 180 131 5.12 1.550 9.7 1.1 4.3 5.9 1.37  
    2007 27 CIN NL 1.2 8 9 .471 5.32 30 30 0 1 0 0 177.2 212 111 105 26 43 4 125 7 1 6 771 87 4.58 1.435 10.7 1.3 2.2 6.3 2.91  
    2008 28 CIN NL -0.8 1 4 .200 7.28 6 6 0 0 0 0 29.2 47 27 24 4 6 0 14 0 0 2 142 61 4.55 1.787 14.3 1.2 1.8 4.2 2.33  
    2009 29 COL NL -0.3 3 1 .750 5.52 24 0 6 0 0 0 31.0 35 21 19 6 5 1 22 1 0 1 133 86 4.77 1.290 10.2 1.7 1.5 6.4 4.40  
    2010 30 COL NL 1.9 7 5 .583 2.93 76 0 11 0 0 1 92.0 84 34 30 7 16 5 91 2 1 3 365 158 2.68 1.087 8.2 0.7 1.6 8.9 5.69  
    2011 31 COL NL 0.9 10 4 .714 3.25 74 0 10 0 0 0 72.0 77 33 26 5 14 3 58 4 0 2 301 141 3.07 1.264 9.6 0.6 1.8 7.3 4.14  
    2012 32 COL NL 2.3 3 8 .273 3.71 80 0 14 0 0 3 80.0 91 36 33 5 18 6 69 3 1 1 348 125 2.97 1.363 10.2 0.6 2.0 7.8 3.83  
    2013 33 COL NL 0.6 5 7 .417 4.32 72 0 16 0 0 0 73.0 76 37 35 6 15 2 62 0 0 3 301 104 3.03 1.247 9.4 0.7 1.8 7.6 4.13  
    2014 34 COL NL 0.2 4 7 .364 4.87 66 1 13 0 0 0 64.2 74 35 35 5 19 2 43 1 0 3 282 88 3.74 1.438 10.3 0.7 2.6 6.0 2.26  
    2015 35 STL NL 0.8 1 1 .500 2.67 34 0 10 0 0 0 33.2 34 10 10 1 15 2 25 3 0 0 149 148 3.64 1.455 9.1 0.3 4.0 6.7 1.67  
    2016 36 WSN NL 1.2 0 0   1.76 40 0 6 0 0 0 46.0 43 13 9 2 7 3 32 1 0 2 186 244 2.84 1.087 8.4 0.4 1.4 6.3 4.57  
    2017 37 MIN AL 0.1 2 2 .500 4.03 62 0 20 0 0 9 60.1 48 31 27 7 22 6 54 2 1 2 247 110 4.07 1.160 7.2 1.0 3.3 8.1 2.45  
    2018 38 2TM AL -0.9 1 1 .500 7.86 33 0 14 0 0 0 34.1 49 32 30 6 11 1 25 3 0 1 162 56 5.20 1.748 12.8 1.6 2.9 6.6 2.27  
    2018 38 CLE AL 0.0 0 0   5.06 8 0 3 0 0 0 10.2 9 6 6 1 1 0 4 2 0 1 44 88 4.47 0.938 7.6 0.8 0.8 3.4 4.00  
    2018 38 MIN AL -0.9 1 1 .500 9.13 25 0 11 0 0 0 23.2 40 26 24 5 10 1 21 1 0 0 118 47 5.53 2.113 15.2 1.9 3.8 8.0 2.10  
    15 Yrs 7.8 52 58 .473 4.32 693 44 144 1 0 14 928.2 1024 492 446 97 238 42 711 37 4 32 3988 104 3.84 1.359 9.9 0.9 2.3 6.9 2.99  
    162 Game Avg 0.7 5 5 .473 4.32 64 4 13 0 0 1 86 94 45 41 9 22 4 66 3 0 3 368 104 3.84 1.359 9.9 0.9 2.3 6.9 2.99  
                                                                     
    COL (6 Yrs) 5.6 32 32 .500 3.88 392 1 70 0 0 4 412.2 437 196 178 34 87 19 345 11 2 13 1730 117 3.19 1.270 9.5 0.7 1.9 7.5 3.97  
    CIN (5 Yrs) 1.1 16 22 .421 5.06 132 43 24 1 0 1 341.2 413 210 192 47 96 11 230 17 1 14 1514 89 4.59 1.490 10.9 1.2 2.5 6.1 2.40  
    MIN (2 Yrs) -0.8 3 3 .500 5.46 87 0 31 0 0 9 84.0 88 57 51 12 32 7 75 3 1 2 365 81 4.48 1.429 9.4 1.3 3.4 8.0 2.34  
    WSN (1 Yr) 1.2 0 0   1.76 40 0 6 0 0 0 46.0 43 13 9 2 7 3 32 1 0 2 186 244 2.84 1.087 8.4 0.4 1.4 6.3 4.57  
    STL (1 Yr) 0.8 1 1 .500 2.67 34 0 10 0 0 0 33.2 34 10 10 1 15 2 25 3 0 0 149 148 3.64 1.455 9.1 0.3 4.0 6.7 1.67  
    CLE (1 Yr) 0.0 0 0   5.06 8 0 3 0 0 0 10.2 9 6 6 1 1 0 4 2 0 1 44 88 4.47 0.938 7.6 0.8 0.8 3.4 4.00  
                                                                     
    NL (13 Yrs) 8.6 49 55 .471 4.20 598 44 110 1 0 5 834.0 927 429 389 84 205 35 632 32 3 29 3579 107 3.76 1.357 10.0 0.9 2.2 6.8 3.08  
    AL (2 Yrs) -0.8 3 3 .500 5.42 95 0 34 0 0 9 94.2 97 63 57 13 33 7 79 5 1 3 409 82 4.48 1.373 9.2 1.2 3.1 7.5 2.39  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 3/14/2025.

    See all » Matt Belisle Articles

    TEX 18, MIN 4: Speechless

    What can you even say about this game?

    Well, to even call it Major League Baseball is an embarrassment on multiple levels. The Twins played very poorly, there was an epic ump show and things wound down with Chris Gimenez on the mound.

    What do we even call this? Total system failure is already taken.

    Gleeman & The Geek: Ep 384: The Experience Shoots Its Last Arrow

    Aaron and John talk about the Twins trading Fernando Rodney, Logan Morrison's season mercifully coming to an end, Kohl Stewart's surprising call-up and MLB debut, Tyler Austin getting his big chance, Ervin Santana's bad pitching and headline-grabbing quotes, and the upcoming event at Target Field with general manager Thad Levine. You can listen by downloading us from iTunes, Stitcher, iHeartRadio or find it at GleemanAndTheGeek.com. Or just click this link.

    Q&A: Offseason Plans, Molitor's Status and Much More

    I asked the Twins Daily community for questions earlier this week, today I'm going to take a crack at answering them. I'd also love it to see your answers down in the comments. Let's get things rolling with a question about the offseason ...

    CLE 10, MIN 0: Who Needs Chris Gimenez?

    Welp, everybody’s been saying Mitch Garver isn’t playing enough, be careful what you wish for. Garver made his first appearance on the mound tonight in the ninth inning of a 10-0 game. And you know what? He was the only Twins pitcher who didn’t surrender a run. Chris Gimenez, eat your heart out.

    CLE 6, MIN 2: Deadline Day Ends in Defeat

    The band-aid is totally ripped off now. Once Eduardo Escobar got dealt, the only question became just how many Twins players would be on the move between then and the start of tonight’s game. Clubhouse mainstay Brian Dozier was the final domino to fall just hours before the first pitch tonight. What had to have been a tough day on the team ended in a 6-2 defeat at the hands of Cleveland. Tomorrow is a new day.

    BOS 4, MIN 3: No Escobar, but at Least We Still Have Belisle

    The Twins traded away Eduardo Escobar earlier today, clearly raising the white flag on the 2018 season, yet their first game after it's been made clear that they're sellers they lost because 38-year-old scrap heap veteran Matt Belisle gave up a walk-off home run. I'm pretty sure this is not how rebuilding works.

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