William Forrest "Wild Bill" Hutchison[a] (December 17, 1859 – March 19, 1926) was an American professional
baseball player. He was a right-handed
pitcher over parts of nine seasons (1884, 1889–1895, 1897) with the
Kansas City Cowboys,
Chicago White Stockings/Colts, and
St. Louis Browns. He was the
National League wins leader for three straight seasons (1890–1892) and the
strikeout leader in 1892 with Chicago. For his career, he compiled a 182–163 record in 376 appearances, with a 3.59
earned run average and 1,235 strikeouts.[2] He is the last player in baseball history to pitch 500 innings in a single season, a feat which he last accomplished in 1892, appearing in 75 games in a 146-game season and pitching 622 innings overall.[2]
During his seven seasons with the Chicago franchise (now the Chicago Cubs) he ranks 4th all-time in franchise history in wins (181), 6th in games pitched (367), 2nd in
innings pitched (3021), 6th in strikeouts (1224), 3rd in games started (339), 1st in
complete games (317), 10th in shutouts (21), 1st in
base on balls allowed (1109), 1st in losses (158), and 1st in
wild pitches (120).