Carlos Castillo (baseball)

Carlos Castillo (born April 21, 1975) is a former pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Chicago White Sox and Boston Red Sox in part of four seasons spanning 1997–2001. Listed at 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) and 240 pounds (110 kg), he batted and threw right-handed.

Carlos Castillo
Pitcher
Born: (1975-04-21) April 21, 1975
Boston, Massachusetts
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 2, 1997, for the Chicago White Sox
Last MLB appearance
July 22, 2001, for the Boston Red Sox
MLB statistics
Win–Loss record10–7
ERA5.04
Strikeouts130
Teams

Career

In a four-season career, Castillo posted a 10–7 record with 130 strikeouts and a 5.04 ERA in 111 appearances, including six starts, 32 games finished, one save, and 210⅔ innings pitched.

After that, Castillo pitched in the Japanese and Chinese professional baseball leagues. In between, he played winter ball in the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Venezuela.

Additionally, Castillo served as the pitching coach for the South Louisiana Pipeliners of the Continental Baseball League during its 2009 season.

gollark: So basically just "optics but we are HIGHLY engineer-like and use the small angle approximation".
gollark: According to Wikipedia, which I just checked, which makes me an expert,> Gaussian optics is a technique in geometrical optics that describes the behaviour of light rays in optical systems by using the paraxial approximation, in which only rays which make small angles with the optical axis of the system are considered. In this approximation, trigonometric functions can be expressed as linear functions of the angles. Gaussian optics applies to systems in which all the optical surfaces are either flat or are portions of a sphere. In this case, simple explicit formulae can be given for parameters of an imaging system such as focal length, magnification and brightness, in terms of the geometrical shapes and material properties of the constituent elements.
gollark: Fearsome.
gollark: Is this some kind of accursed statistics thing?
gollark: Yes.
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