Seth Yoder     
year
2000
2001
2002
2003
totals
ab
67
196
57
149
469
r
9
31
8
24
72
h
12
49
12
33
106
bi
5
36
8
18
67
2b
1
4
3
4
12
3b
0
0
0
0
0
hr
3
23
3
11
40
so
19
74
27
58
178
bb
6
11
9
8
34
ab/k
3.53
2.65
2.08
2.57
2.63
ob
.247
.290
.323
.261
.278
slg
.328
.622
.444
.470
.507
ba
.179
.250
.222
.221
.226
rat
16.80
26.90
21.24
21.42
22.89
ab/hr
22.33
8.52
19.00
13.55
11.73
ab/bi
13.40
5.44
7.13
8.28
7.00

year
2000
2001
2002
2003
totals
w
0
6
3
4
13
l
2
7
1
3
13
ip
15.0
46.2
16.0
39.0
116.2
h
23
43
14
28
108
r
14
33
2
12
61
so
22
63
21
64
170
bb
9
7
6
9
31
hr
7
20
1
10
38
bf
74
190
69
153
486
oavg
.354
.235
.222
.194
.237
era
3.73
2.83
0.50
1.23
2.09
rat
21.16
37.24
57.34
51.35
42.81
k/4
5.87
5.41
5.25
6.56
5.83
bb/4
2.40
0.60
1.50
0.92
1.18
hr/4
1.87
1.71
0.25
1.03
1.30

Notes:
Seth's rookie campaign in 2000 was preceeded by his first unofficial ABs during Winterball '99. Despite a hardball background, Seth was the E! True Hollywood Story of the event, going an intriguing 0-29 and causing fits of laughter from folks like James Vassar and...well, everyone really who witnessed it. He ignored the dire performance though and afterwards talked trash to anyone who doubted he'd be an impact player when the league started...which caused more laughter.

His 2000 season was not what you'd call a success (.179 avg, 3.73 ERA), but Joey Creighton saw the potential and took Seth in the first round of the 2001 draft. The two became career teammates, helping lead the Horsemen to becoming one of the premier teams in the league. He was never considered a good hitter, but Seth made up for it with his golden arm (ironically, Seth remains one of the few players in history to hit 6 HRs in one game during a 3-inning affair opposite the Y&R in 2001 that led to an unofficial James Vassar suicide watch). By the end of 2001 he was perfecting what would be his signature pitch, the splitter, which helped Seth culminate his career with his greatest achievement: unseating Scott Carmichael as the league's best pitcher.

--2002 Playoff MVP
--2003 Cy Young