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Anthony Young, righty who lost record 27 in row, dies at 51

- By Ben Walker AP Baseball Writer

NEW YORK — Anthony Young pitched way better than his record showed. Working as a starter or reliever, whether at home or on the road, he often threw well enough to win.

But for the longest time, he never did.

Young, who set a major league record with 27 straight losses for the New York Mets, died Tuesday. He was 51.

The team said Young died in Houston after a long illness. He had told Mets teammates at a fantasy camp this year that he had a brain tumor.

“A.Y. took a lot of kidding about his losing records,” said Doug Flynn, a former Mets second baseman and fantasy camp coach. “But he was the victim of some bad luck during the streak. He knew inside that he was a better pitcher than his numbers.”

Young’s streak of losses began in 1992 with the Mets and stretched into the next season. In all, the drought spanned 74 appearance­s — he had a 4.39 ERA in that span.

The right-hander posted 15 saves in 1992. But he was 2-14 that season, then went 1-16 in 1993 for a miserable Mets team that led the majors with 103 losses.

The highlight of that awful season might’ve come on July 28 at Shea Stadium. That night, Young was summoned in the ninth inning against the Florida Marlins and gave up the go-ahead run on a bunt single, putting him in position for a 28th straight loss.

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