Showing posts with label 1975. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1975. Show all posts

Jan 20, 2022

Cy Young Profile: Jim Palmer, 1975

Pitcher, Baltimore Orioles

 

Age:  29

10th season with Orioles

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 6’3”    Weight: 190 

Prior to 1975:

A native of New York City, Palmer was adopted and originally named James Alvin Wiesen. Upon his father’s death the family moved to California and he was adopted by his mother’s second husband, whose last name was Palmer. Now Jim Palmer, he played Little League, Pony League, and Babe Ruth League baseball as a youth. The family relocated to Scottsdale, Arizona where Palmer attended high school and played football and basketball as well as baseball, where he pitched and also appeared in center field. While playing summer ball in South Dakota following his high school graduation, Palmer drew the interest of the Orioles, who signed him to a $50,000 contract. He had already suffered a knee injury in a car accident that required surgery. Assigned to Aberdeen of the Class A Northern League in 1964, Palmer started 19 games and posted an 11-3 record with a 2.51 ERA and 107 strikeouts, although he had problems with his control, as he issued 130 walks over 129 innings. But still he pitched a no-hitter and, after a winter stint in the Florida Instructional League, Palmer advanced to the Orioles in 1965. Utilized as a reliever and spot starter, he appeared in 27 games (6 of them starts) and went 5-4 with a 3.72 ERA and 75 strikeouts over 92 innings, while walking 56 batters. Palmer moved into the starting rotation in 1966 and contributed a 15-10 record to Baltimore’s pennant-winning season, along with a 3.46 ERA and 147 strikeouts. He also acquired the nickname “Cakes” as the result of his habit of eating pancakes on the mornings of his starts. The Orioles swept the Dodgers in the World Series and the 20-year old out-dueled LA’s star LHP Sandy Koufax in Game 2 for a complete game shutout. Palmer started the 1967 season well at 2-1, including a one-hit shutout of the Yankees, until arm trouble reduced his effectiveness and resulted in his being sent down to the minors for most of the season, returning to the Orioles in September. He finished with a 3-1 major league tally and a 2.94 ERA over 49 innings. With continued arm soreness, Palmer spent all of 1968 in the minors, appearing with three different teams with poor results. The Orioles expected him to pitch through the pain and during a winter stint in Puerto Rico the soreness disappeared. He regained his spot in the Baltimore rotation in 1969 and was 16-4, despite missing time due to a back injury, with a 2.34 ERA and a no-hitter against Oakland. In the first year of divisional play in major league baseball, the Orioles topped the new AL East and Palmer beat the Minnesota Twins in the third, and final, game of the ALCS. In the World Series he lost his only start against the New York Mets, who upset Baltimore in five games. The Orioles had three 20-game winners in 1970, with Palmer (20-10) joining lefthanders Mike Cuellar (24-8) and Dave McNally (24-9) as Baltimore again finished first in the AL East. Palmer also led the AL with 305 innings pitched. He and the team had better luck in the postseason, again sweeping the Twins as Palmer again won the deciding contest, and this time the Orioles won the World Series against Cincinnati, and Palmer won the opener and was pulled from Game 4 with a lead that reliever Eddie Watt couldn’t hold, which led to the only win for the Reds. The Orioles had an unprecedented four 20-game winners in 1971 on the way to a third straight AL pennant. Newly-acquired RHP Pat Dobson (20-8) joined Palmer (20-9), Cuellar (20-9), and McNally (21-5). Palmer battled shoulder stiffness along the way to 20 complete games and 282 innings pitched with a 2.68 ERA and 184 strikeouts. He was 2-0 in the postseason that resulted in a World Series loss to Pittsburgh. The Orioles dropped to third place in 1972, but Palmer had a third consecutive All-Star season on his way to a 21-10 record with a 2.07 ERA and 184 strikeouts. With an outstanding high fastball as his best pitch, Palmer also had command of a slow curve and slider. He also had an occasionally tempestuous relationship with manager Earl Weaver, who appreciated his righthanded ace’s talent if not always his baseball opinions. Baltimore returned to the top of the AL East in 1973 and Palmer contributed a 22-9 record with a league-leading 2.40 ERA and 158 strikeouts, and received his first AL Cy Young Award. He pitched a five-hit shutout against Oakland in the ALCS, which the A’s ultimately won. Following four consecutive 20-win seasons capped by a Cy Young Award-winning effort in 1973, Palmer had an off-year in 1974 while hindered by arm soreness. His record dropped to 7-12 although his ERA was still respectable at 3.27.


1975 Season Summary

Appeared in 39 games

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Pitching

Games – 39

Games Started – 38 [4, tied with Vida Blue & Ken Holtzman]

Complete Games – 25 [2, tied with Gaylord Perry]

Wins – 23 [1, tied with Jim Hunter]

Losses – 11

PCT - .676 [3]

Saves – 1

Shutouts – 10 [1]

Innings Pitched – 323 [2]

Hits – 253 [10]

Runs – 87

Earned Runs – 75

Home Runs – 20 [15, tied with Bill Lee & Jim Kaat]

Bases on Balls – 80

Strikeouts – 193 [4]

ERA – 2.09 [1]

Hit Batters – 2

Balks – 0

Wild Pitches – 4

League-leading shutouts were +3 ahead of runner-up Jim Hunter

League-leading ERA was -0.49 lower than runner-up Jim Hunter


Midseason Snapshot: 13-6, ERA - 2.26, SO - 105 in 175.1 IP

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Most strikeouts, game – 10 (in 10 IP) vs. Boston 9/3

10+ strikeout games – 1

Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 1 (in 9 IP) vs. KC Royals 6/8

 

Fielding

Chances – 88

Put Outs – 30

Assists – 52

Errors – 6

DP – 7

Pct. - .932

Awards & Honors:

AL Cy Young Award: BBWAA

AL Pitcher of the Year: Sporting News

All-Star

6th in AL MVP voting (82 points, 24% share)


AL Cy Young voting (Top 5):

Jim Palmer, Balt.: 98 pts. – 15 of 24 first place votes, 82% share

Jim Hunter, NYY: 74 pts. – 7 first place votes, 62% share

Rollie Fingers, Oak.: 25 pts. – 2 first place votes, 21% share

Jim Kaat, ChiWS.: 7 pts. – 6% share

Frank Tanana, Cal.: 7 pts. – 6% share

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Orioles went 90-69 to finish second in the AL Eastern Division, 4.5 games behind the division-winning Boston Red Sox. The pitching staff led the league in ERA (3.17), complete games (70, tied with the New York Yankees) and shutouts (19, tied with the California Angels). Starting off slowly, the Orioles were in the AL East cellar after an 11-17 May. Improvement over the summer months still left them 9.5 games out in early August, but a 15-3 run down the stretch pulled them into second place, where they ultimately finished.


Aftermath of ‘75:

Palmer won his third Cy Young Award in 1976 following a 22-13 effort with a 2.51 ERA and league-leading 315 innings pitched. He was the Cy Young runner-up in 1977 when he went 20-11 with a 2.91 ERA and 22 complete games and 319 innings pitched, which were both AL-leading figures. Palmer topped the American League in innings pitched for the third straight year with 296 in 1978, on his way to a 21-12 record with a 2.46 ERA. Twice on the disabled list with a sore arm in 1979, he finished at 10-6 with a 3.30 ERA as the Orioles topped the AL East for the first time since 1974. He was 0-1 in the postseason which ended in a World Series loss to Pittsburgh. Palmer had a solid 1980 season, compiling a 16-10 record with a 3.98 ERA. He dipped to 7-8 with a 7-8 tally in strike-interrupted 1981. Following a slow start in 1982, Palmer was briefly exiled to the bullpen but recovered to end up at 15-5 with a 3.13 ERA. He went 5-4 in an injury-plagued 1983 season which concluded with a World Series win in a relief appearance which gave him World Series wins in three different decades. Still, the end was near as Palmer was released by the Orioles during the 1984 season following an 0-3 start. For his major league career, spent entirely with the Orioles, Palmer produced a 268-152 record that included eight 20-win seasons and two ERA titles. His ERA was 2.86 and he compiled 211 complete games that included 53 shutouts. He also struck out 2212 batters over the course of 3948 innings. In addition to three Cy Young Awards, he was a six-time All-Star who received four Gold Gloves for his fielding prowess as well. Pitching in 17 postseason games, he was 8-3 with a 2.61 ERA and 90 strikeouts. Palmer attempted a comeback with Baltimore in 1991 that ended during spring training. Following his playing career, the intelligent and articulate Palmer went into broadcasting, which he had first involved himself with while still a player, as well as being a model in underwear ads. The Orioles retired his #22 and he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1990.


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Cy Young Profiles feature pitchers who were recipients of the Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1956 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1966 and from 1967 on to one recipient from each major league.   

Jun 15, 2021

Rookie of the Year: John Montefusco, 1975

Pitcher, San Francisco Giants



Age:  25 (May 25)

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 6’1”    Weight: 180

 

Prior to 1975:

A native of Long Branch, New Jersey, Montefusco played shortstop in high school, and didn’t pitch until he was a senior. Moving on to Brookdale Community College, where he set several school pitching records in 1971 and ’72, including 16 consecutive wins and 202 total strikeouts. His performance did not lead to being drafted by a major league club and he played semi-pro ball following college. Signed by the Giants in 1973, Montefusco was first assigned to the Decatur Commodores of the Class A Midwest League where he posted a 9-2 record with a 2.18 ERA and 126 strikeouts over 120 innings. Advancing to Amarillo of the Class AA Texas League in 1974, Montefusco went 8-9 with a 3.13 ERA before being promoted to Phoenix of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League where he produced a 7-3 tally and a 3.27 ERA with 90 strikeouts over 77 innings. Called up to the Giants, he was 3-2 with a 4.81 ERA and 34 strikeouts over 39.1 innings in his first taste of major league action. With his impressive fastball, slider, and slurve, in addition to a new nickname, “the Count of Montefusco” or “The Count” for short, Montefusco entered 1975 as a potential addition to the starting rotation.

 

1975 Season Summary

Appeared in 35 games

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Pitching

Games – 35

Games Started – 34 [14, tied with five others]

Complete Games – 10 [14]

Wins – 15 [9, tied with ten others]

Losses – 9

PCT - .625 [5, tied with Randy Jones, Doug Rau & Gary Nolan]

Saves – 0

Shutouts – 4 [5, tied with four others]

Innings Pitched – 243.2 [12]

Hits – 210

Runs – 85

Earned Runs – 78

Home Runs – 11

Bases on Balls – 86 [15, tied with Randy Tate]

Strikeouts – 215 [2]

ERA – 2.88 [7]

Hit Batters – 8 [4, tied with Charlie Hough]

Balks – 2 [13, tied with 21 others]

Wild Pitches – 6

 

Midseason Snapshot: 7-4, ERA - 3.00, SO - 93 in 120 IP

 

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Most strikeouts, game – 14 (in 9 IP) vs. Montreal 8/27

10+ strikeout games – 7

Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 2 (in 8 IP) vs. NY Mets 8/23

 

Batting

PA – 94, AB – 80, R – 4, H – 7, 2B – 0, 3B – 1, HR – 1, RBI – 2, BB – 5, SO – 44, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .088, GDP – 1, HBP – 0, SH – 9, SF – 0

 

Fielding

Chances – 37

Put Outs – 11

Assists – 25

Errors – 1

DP – 0

Pct. - .973

 

Awards & Honors:

NL Rookie of the Year: BBWAA

4th in NL Cy Young voting (2 points, 2% share)

 

NL ROY Voting:

John Montefusco, SF.: 12 of 24 votes, 50% share

Gary Carter, Mon.: 9 votes, 38% share

Rawly Eastwick, Cin.: 1 vote, 4% share

Larry Parrish, Mon.: 1 vote, 4% share

Manny Trillo, ChiC.: 1 vote, 4% share

 

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Giants went 80-81 to finish third in the NL Western Division, 27.5 games behind the division-winning Cincinnati Reds. With attendance poor and owner Horace Stoneham losing money, the club was dogged by rumors of impending sales and moves. Streaky on the field, they had no chance at challenging the Reds for the division title and were unable to catch the rival Dodgers in second place.

 

Aftermath of ‘75:

Brash as well as talented, “The Count” followed up with another solid season in 1976 that was capped by a no-hitter against the Atlanta Braves. Chosen as an All-Star, he finished with a 16-14 record and a 2.84 ERA with 172 strikeouts. Hindered by an ankle injury in 1977, Montefusco’s tally dropped to 7-12 with a 3.49 ERA and 110 strikeouts over 157.1 innings pitched and 25 starts, although he added a sinker and forkball to his repertoire. The Giants finished third in the NL West in 1978 and Montefusco’s contribution was an 11-9 record with a 3.81 ERA and 177 strikeouts while pitching 238.2 innings. The club returned to mediocrity in 1979 and Montefusco suffered through an injury-riddled season in which he finished at 3-8 with a 3.94 ERA and 76 strikeouts while pitching 137 innings. His 1980 season was marred by a scuffle with manager Dave Bristol, and he ended up posting a 4-8 tally and a 4.37 ERA while pitching 113.1 innings. On bad terms with the organization by season’s end, Montefusco was traded to the Atlanta Braves in the offseason. Injuries and controversy followed him to his new club during the strike-interrupted 1981 season in which he appeared in 26 games, only 9 of them starts, and went 2-3 with a 3.49 ERA. Released by the Braves, he moved on to the San Diego Padres in 1982, where he managed to start 32 games and provided valuable leadership as well as a 10-11 record and 4.00 ERA. In 1983, Montefusco ran afoul of manager Dick Williams, and despite a 9-4 record and 3.30 ERA, he was dealt to the New York Yankees in August. He performed well for the Yankees, going 5-0 the rest of the way. He ended up with a combined record of 14-4 with a 3.31 ERA and re-signed with the Yankees in the offseason. Injuries intruded again in 1984, including some sustained in a car accident, and while he finished strong in September, his season totals were 5-3 in just 11 starts, with a 3.58 ERA. 1985 proved to be a lost season due to a hip injury and the degenerative condition ended his career in 1986. For his major league career, Montefusco posted a 90-83 record with a 3.54 ERA, 32 complete games, 11 shutouts, and 1081 strikeouts in 1652.1 innings pitched. With the Giants his tally was 59-62 with a 3.47 ERA, 30 complete games, 11 shutouts, and 869 strikeouts over 1182.2 innings. A one-time All-Star, he never appeared in the postseason. He later served as pitching coach for the Somerset Patriots of the independent Atlantic League.

 

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Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were recipients of the Rookie of the Year Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1947 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1948 and from 1949 on to one recipient from each major league. 

 


Nov 28, 2020

Cy Young Profile: Tom Seaver, 1975

 Pitcher, New York Mets



Age:  30

9th season with Mets

Bats – Right, Throws – Right

Height: 6’1”    Weight: 195

 

Prior to 1975:

A native of Fresno, California, Seaver started in Little League at age 9 as a pitcher/outfielder. Performing well in high school, he moved on to Fresno City College, where he won 11 straight games in his second year and transferred to USC. In his first season at USC Seaver was 10-2 with 100 strikeouts in 100 innings pitched. He was selected by the Braves in the 1966 amateur draft. The Braves signed him while his college season was in progress, which was in violation of major league rules. Commissioner William Eckert voided the contract and allowed three teams, the Mets, Indians, and Phillies, to participate in a lottery for Seaver since they were willing to match the $51,500 offer made by the Braves. The Mets won the lottery. Seaver was assigned to the Jacksonville Suns of the Class AAA International League and compiled a 12-12 record with a 3.13 ERA and 188 strikeouts in 210 innings pitched in ‘66. Seaver advanced to the perennially-losing Mets in 1967. He posted a 16-13 record with a 2.76 ERA and received NL Rookie of the Year as well as All-Star recognition. Seaver followed up with another solid season in 1968, going 16-12 with a 2.20 ERA and again gaining All-Star recognition. With the Mets undergoing a transition that would pay dividends in another year, Seaver was joined in the pitching rotation by rookie LHP Jerry Koosman, to good effect. Seaver and the Mets prospered in 1969 as the club won the NL East in the first year of divisional play in the major leagues and went on to win the World Series over the Baltimore Orioles. Seaver contributed a 25-7 record with a 2.21 ERA and 208 strikeouts. In a July game against the Cubs, the chief division rival, Seaver took a perfect game into the ninth inning, only to end up with a one-hit shutout. The team’s primary leader and motivator, he added two more wins in the postseason and received the NL Cy Young Award in addition to placing second in league MVP voting. In 1970 Seaver tied the then-major league record with 19 strikeouts in a game against San Diego, the last 10 in succession. He went on to compile an 18-12 record while leading the NL in both ERA (2.82) and strikeouts (283). The Mets placed third in the NL East and Seaver finished seventh in voting for the NL Cy Young Award. He again led the NL with a 1.76 ERA and 289 strikeouts in 1971 while posting a 20-10 tally with the 83-79 Mets. The perfectionist pitcher known as “Tom Terrific” or “The Franchise”, with his excellent fastball and slider, continued to excel in 1972, going 21-12 with a 2.92 ERA and 249 strikeouts for an 83-73 club that finished last in NL team batting (.225). He tied for fifth in NL Cy Young voting. In 1973 the Mets rode a September surge to win the NL East with an 82-79 tally. Seaver went 19-10 with a league-leading 2.08 ERA, 251 strikeouts, and 18 complete games, and received his second NL Cy Young Award. He further contributed the NLCS-clinching win against Cincinnati to give the Mets the league pennant. He was 0-1 in the seven-game World Series loss to the Oakland A’s. Seaver was rewarded with a $172,000 contract that made him the highest-paid pitcher at the time but was dogged by shoulder and hip pain in 1974 and dropped to an 11-11 record with a 3.20 ERA and 201 strikeouts over 236 innings pitched. He missed being an All-Star for the first time in his career

 

 

1975 Season Summary

Appeared in 37 games

P – 36, PR – 1

 

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

 

Pitching

Games – 36

Games Started – 36 [7, tied with Bill Bonham & Randy Jones]

Complete Games – 15 [3, tied with Jerry Reuss]

Wins – 22 [1]

Losses – 9

PCT - .710 [2]

Saves – 0

Shutouts – 5 [4]

Innings Pitched – 280.1 [3]

Hits – 217 [19, tied with Steve Carlton]

Runs – 81

Earned Runs – 74

Home Runs – 11

Bases on Balls – 88 [11, tied with Steve Rogers]

Strikeouts – 243 [1]

ERA – 2.38 [3]

Hit Batters – 4

Balks – 1

Wild Pitches – 7

 

League-leading wins were +2 ahead of runner-up Randy Jones

League-leading strikeouts were +28 ahead of runner-up John Montefusco

 

Midseason Snapshot: 13-5, ERA – 1.93, SO – 137 in 163 IP

 

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Most strikeouts, game – 11 (in 8.1 IP) vs. Philadelphia 6/29

10+ strikeout games – 3

Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 3 (in 9 IP) at San Diego 6/15, (in 9 IP) vs. Montreal 8/7, (in 7.1 IP) vs. San Francisco 8/17, (in 10 IP) at Chi. Cubs 9/24

 

Batting

PA – 111, AB – 95, R – 7, H – 17, 2B – 1, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 5, BB – 8, SO – 24, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .179, GDP – 2, HBP – 1, SH – 7, SF – 0

 

Fielding

Chances – 68

Put Outs – 21

Assists – 43

Errors – 4

DP – 6

Pct. - .941

 

Awards & Honors:

NL Cy Young Award: BBWAA

NL Pitcher of the Year: Sporting News

All-Star

9th in NL MVP voting (65 points, 19% share)

 

NL Cy Young Voting (Top 4):

Tom Seaver, NYM.: 98 pts. – 15 of 24 first place votes, 82% share

Randy Jones, SD: 80 pts. – 7 first place votes, 67% share

Al Hrabosky, StL.: 33 pts. – 2 first place votes, 28% share

John Montefusco, SF: 2 pts. – 2% share


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Mets went 82-80 to finish third in the NL Eastern Division, 10.5 games behind the division-winning Pittsburgh Pirates while the pitching staff led the league in strikeouts (989). In a tumultuous season, manager Yogi Berra was replaced in August by Roy McMillan. They pulled as close as four games out of first on Labor Day before settling into third as September continued.

 

Aftermath of ‘75:

1976 was a relative down year for Seaver in which he produced a 14-11 record for the light-hitting Mets with a respectable 2.59 ERA and NL-leading 235 strikeouts. Seaver became embroiled in a contract dispute with board chairman M. Donald Grant that became highly publicized in the media and led to his being traded to the Cincinnati Reds for four players in the so-called “Midnight Massacre” in June of 1977. Seaver was 7-3 with a 3.00 ERA at the time of the deal and finished up the year with a 21-6 record and 2.58 ERA and 196 strikeouts, tying for third in NL Cy Young balloting. He followed up with a 16-14 tally in 1978 with a 2.88 ERA and 226 strikeouts. Battling injuries in 1979 Seaver went 16-6 with a 3.14 ERA and 131 strikeouts for the division-topping Reds. Arm trouble limited him to 168 innings in 1980 and a 10-8 record with a 3.64 ERA and 101 strikeouts. He bounced back to 14-2 with a 2.54 ERA in the strike-interrupted 1981 season and placed second in NL Cy Young Award voting. Suffering from a respiratory infection during spring training in 1982, Seaver’s record dropped to a dismal 5-13 with a 5.50 ERA for the last-place Reds, with a sore shoulder finishing his season in August. In the offseason, the 38-year-old fading star was traded back to the Mets. The result was a 9-14 mark in 1983 with a 3.55 ERA and 135 strikeouts in 231 innings pitched. He changed teams again in the ensuing offseason when the Chicago White Sox took him as a free agent compensation selection. He spent two ordinary years with the White Sox, producing a 15-11 record with a 3.95 ERA in 1984 and going 16-11, including his 300th career win, in ‘85 with a 3.17 ERA. During the 1986 season he was dealt to the Boston Red Sox, who were on the way to their first pennant since 1975, where his long career came to an end.  Overall for his major league career, Seaver compiled a 311-205 record with a 2.86 ERA and 3640 strikeouts in 4783 innings pitched. He pitched over 250 innings ten times and reached 200 strikeouts also on ten occasions, leading the NL five times. With the Mets Seaver was 198-124 with a 2.57 ERA and 2541 strikeouts. He was a 12-time All-Star (9 with the Mets) and won three Cy Young Awards (all with the Mets). In the postseason Seaver was 3-3 with a 2.77 ERA and 51 strikeouts in 61.2 innings pitched. The Mets retired his #41 and he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1992 by receiving 98.84 % of votes cast (a record at the time). He died in 2020 at age 75.

 

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Cy Young Profiles feature pitchers who were recipients of the Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1956 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1966 and from 1967 on to one recipient from each major league. 


Jan 30, 2020

MVP Profile: Joe Morgan, 1975

Second Baseman, Cincinnati Reds


Age:  32 (Sept. 19)
4th season with Reds
Bats – Left, Throws – Right
Height: 5’7”    Weight: 160

Prior to 1975:
Born in Texas, Morgan moved to Oakland, California with his family as a child. He played basketball as well as baseball at Castlemont High School. Following two outstanding seasons at Oakland City College, Morgan signed with the expansion Houston Colt .45s for $500 per month and a $3000 signing bonus in 1962. Assigned to Modesto of the Class A California League in 1963 he batted .263 in 45 games with 5 home runs, 27 RBIs, and 21 stolen bases. Advancing to the Durham Bulls of the Class A Carolina League later in the season, he benefited from the coaching of manager Billy Goodman, a former major league batting star, who helped him learn patience at the plate. He hit .332 with 13 home runs and 43 RBIs. Called up to Houston in September, the diminutive “Little Joe” appeared in eight games and batted .240. Moving on to the San Antonio Bullets of the Class AA Texas League in 1964, Morgan batted .323 with 42 doubles, 8 triples, 12 home runs, 90 RBIs, and 47 stolen bases. He was named league MVP and again received a September call-up to the Colt .45s. He stayed with the renamed Astros in 1965 and became the regular second baseman. He hit .271 with 14 home runs, 40 RBIs, 100 runs scored, and 20 stolen bases, placing second in NL Rookie of the Year voting. His speed and surprising power considering his size, made Morgan appear to be a star in the making. He developed a distinctive arm flap that served as a reminder to keep his back elbow up when at the plate. He missed 40 games in 1966 due to a fractured kneecap which kept him from appearing in his first All-Star Game. Playing in 122 games he batted .285 with 8 triples, 5 home runs, 42 RBIs, 60 runs scored, and 11 stolen bases. Morgan rebounded in 1967 by playing in 133 games and hitting .275 with 27 doubles, 11 triples, 6 home runs, 42 RBIs, and 29 stolen bases while performing well in the field. He was limited to ten games in 1968 due to torn knee ligaments that required surgery. Morgan returned in 1969 to bat .236 with 15 home runs, 43 RBIs, 94 runs scored, and 49 stolen bases as the Astros proved to be surprise contenders in the new NL Western Division. He was an All-Star in 1970 on his way to hitting .268 with 8 home runs, 52 RBIs, 102 runs scored, and 42 stolen bases. Morgan remained productive in 1971, batting .256 with a league-leading 11 triples, 13 home runs, 56 RBIs, and 40 stolen bases, while committing only 12 errors at second base. He also clashed with manager Harry Walker, who criticized his attitude, and in the offseason he was dealt to the Reds along with four other players for second baseman Tommy Helms, first baseman Lee May, and utilityman Jimmy Stewart. Morgan proved to be a solid addition to a pennant-winning team in 1972, leading the NL in runs scored (122), walks drawn (115), and on-base percentage (.417) while hitting .292 with 16 home runs, 73 RBIs, and 58 stolen bases. In addition to being chosen as an All-Star he placed fourth in league MVP voting. He received his first Gold Glove in 1973 and batted .290 with 26 home runs, 82 RBIs, and 67 stolen bases for the division-winning Reds. In 1974 he topped the NL with a .427 on-base percentage while hitting .293 with 22 home runs, 67 RBIs, 107 runs scored, and 58 stolen bases.

1975 Season Summary
Appeared in 146 games
2B – 142, PH – 5

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 639 [19]
At Bats – 498
Runs – 107 [4]
Hits – 163 [15, tied with Lou Brock]
Doubles – 27
Triples – 6 [17, tied with six others]
Home Runs – 17
RBI – 94 [11]
Bases on Balls – 132 [1]
Int. BB – 3
Strikeouts – 52
Stolen Bases – 67 [2]
Caught Stealing – 10 [10, tied with Von Joshua]
Average - .327 [4]
OBP - .466 [1]
Slugging Pct. - .508 [7]
Total Bases – 253 [12]
GDP – 3
Hit By Pitches – 3
Sac Hits – 0
Sac Flies – 6 [17, tied with seven others]

League-leading bases on balls were +22 ahead of runner-up Jim Wynn
League-leading OBP was +.060 ahead of runner-up Pete Rose

Midseason snapshot: HR – 13, SB – 40, RBI – 60, AVG – .345, SLG – .547

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Most hits, game – 3 on thirteen occcasions
Longest hitting streak – 10 games
HR at home – 10
HR on road – 7
Most home runs, game – 1 on seventeen occasions
Multi-HR games – 0
Most RBIs, game – 5 vs. Houston 4/20
Pinch-hitting – 1 of 4 (.250) with 1 R, 1 BB & 3 RBI

Fielding
Chances – 792
Put Outs – 356
Assists – 425
Errors – 11
DP – 96
Pct. - .986

Postseason: 10 G (NLCS vs. Pittsburgh – 3 G; World Series vs. Boston – 7 G)
PA – 47, AB – 38, R – 6, H – 10, 2B – 4,3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 4, BB – 7, IBB – 0, SO – 3, SB – 6, CS – 1, AVG - .263, OBP - .383, SLG - .368, TB – 14, GDP – 0, HBP – 1, SH – 0, SF – 1

Awards & Honors:
NL MVP: BBWAA
Major League Player of the Year: Sporting News
Gold Glove
All-Star (Started for NL at 2B)

Top 5 in NL MVP Voting:
Joe Morgan, Cin.: 321 pts. - 21 of 23 first place votes, 96% share
Greg Luzinski, Phila.: 154 pts. – 46% share
Dave Parker, Pitt.: 120 pts. – 36% share
Johnny Bench, Cin.: 117 pts. – 35% share
Pete Rose, Cin.: 114 pts. – 2 first place votes, 34% share

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Reds went 108-54 to finish first in the NL Western Division by 20 games over the Los Angeles Dodgers, while leading the league in runs scored (840), RBIs (779), stolen bases (168), walks drawn (691), and OBP (.353). The Reds got off to a 35-5 coasted to the NL West title, clinching on September 7. Won NLCS over the Pittsburgh Pirates, 3 games to 0. Won World Series over the Boston Red Sox, 4 games to 3 in a drama-filled battle that came down to Morgan’s RBI single in Game 7.

Aftermath of ‘75:
Morgan followed up with an even better season in 1976, topping the NL in on-base percentage (.444) and slugging percentage (.576) while batting .320 with 27 home runs, 111 RBIs, and 60 stolen bases. The Reds again won the World Series and Morgan repeated as National League MVP. Cincinnati was a second-place club in 1977 but Morgan hit .288 with 22 home runs, 78 RBIs, and 49 stolen bases. Hampered by a pulled stomach muscle in 1978, Morgan’s batting average dropped to .236 with 13 home runs, 75 RBIs, and 19 stolen bases. Injuries slowed Morgan again in 1979 and he batted .250 with 9 home runs, 32 RBIs, and 28 stolen bases for the division-winning Reds. In the offseason, the fading 36-year-old returned to the Astros as a free agent. Following a slow start in 1980 Morgan became a key to Houston winning its first NL West title, batting .243 with a .367 on-base percentage fueled by his league-leading 93 walks drawn. He also produced 11 home runs, 49 RBIs, and 24 stolen bases. Moving on to the San Francisco Giants in 1981 he helped to solidify the infield defensively while providing leadership during the strike-interrupted season. “The Little General” hit .240 with a .371 on-base percentage, 66 walks drawn, 8 home runs, and 31 RBIs. He followed up with an impressive season in 1982, by the end of which he was 39 years old, batting .289 with 14 home runs, 61 RBIs, and 24 stolen bases while the Giants contended in the NL West. He was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies in the offseason, which reunited him with former Cincinnati teammates Pete Rose and Tony Perez. The Phillies won the division and NL pennant as Morgan contributed a .230 average with 16 home runs and 59 RBIs. He added two home runs in the World Series loss to Baltimore. Released by the Phillies in the offseason, Morgan played one last year with the Oakland Athletics in 1984 in which he hit .244 with 6 home runs and 43 RBIs. Overall for his major league career, he batted .271 with 2517 hits that included 449 doubles, 96 triples, and 268 home runs. He further compiled 1650 runs, 1133 RBIs, 689 stolen bases, and 1865 walks drawn. With the Reds he batted .288 with 1155 hits, 816 runs scored, 220 doubles, 27 triples, 152 home runs, 612 RBIs, 406 stolen bases, and 881 walks drawn. In 50 postseason games he hit just .182 with 5 home runs, 13 RBIs, and 15 stolen bases. Morgan was a 10-time All-Star (8 straight with the Reds) and received five Gold Gloves. The Reds retired his #8 and he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1990. In retirement he went into broadcasting.

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MVP Profiles feature players in the National or American leagues who were winners of the Chalmers Award (1911-14), League Award (1922-29), or Baseball Writers’ Association of America Award (1931 to present) as Most Valuable Player.

Jan 11, 2020

MVP Profile: Fred Lynn, 1975

Outfielder, Boston Red Sox


Age:  23
1st season with Red Sox
Bats – Left, Throws – Left
Height: 6’1”    Weight: 185

Prior to 1975:
Born in Chicago, Lynn grew up in suburban Los Angeles. At El Monte High School he lettered in football and basketball as well as baseball, where he pitched and played center field. He turned down an offer from the New York Yankees to attend USC. Lynn was chosen by the Red Sox in the second round of the 1973 amateur draft and signed for $40,000. Assigned to Bristol of the Class AA Eastern League, he batted .259 with 6 home runs and 36 RBIs. He advanced to Pawtucket of the Class AAA International League where he hit .282 in 1974 with 21 home runs and 68 RBIs. Named a league All-Star he earned a late-season call-up to the Red Sox where in 15 games he batted .419 with two home runs and 10 RBIs. Along with left fielder/DH Jim Rice, a teammate in Bristol and Pawtucket, Lynn moved into the lineup for the Red Sox in 1975 amid high expectations thanks to his all-around hitting ability, speed, and defensive prowess.

1975 Season Summary
Appeared in 145 games
CF – 144, PH – 2, PR – 1

[Bracketed numbers indicate AL rank in Top 20]

Batting
Plate Appearances – 605
At Bats – 528
Runs – 103 [1]
Hits – 175 [7, tied with Mickey Rivers]
Doubles – 47 [1]
Triples – 7 [5, tied with Claudell Washington, Lenny Randle & Pat Kelly]
Home Runs – 21 [13, tied with Joe Rudi & Graig Nettles]
RBI – 105 [3]
Bases on Balls – 62
Int. BB – 10 [11, tied with four others]
Strikeouts – 90 [15]
Stolen Bases – 10
Caught Stealing – 5
Average - .331 [2]
OBP - .401 [5]
Slugging Pct. - .566 [1]
Total Bases – 299 [4]
GDP – 11
Hit by Pitches – 3
Sac Hits – 6
Sac Flies – 6 [15, tied with eleven others]

Midseason snapshot: 2B – 23, HR - 16, RBI – 71, AVG – .342, SLG - .620

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League-leading runs scored were +8 ahead of runner-up John Mayberry
League-leading doubles were +8 ahead of runner-up Reggie Jackson
League-leading slugging pct was +.019 ahead of runner-up John Mayberry


Most hits, game – 5 (in 6 AB) at Detroit 6/18
Longest hitting streak – 20 games
HR at home – 9
HR on road – 12
Most home runs, game – 3 (in 6 AB) at Detroit 6/18
Multi-HR games – 2
Most RBIs, game – 10 at Detroit 6/18
Pinch-hitting – 1 of 2 (.500) with 1 RBI

Fielding
Chances – 422
Put Outs – 404
Assists – 11
Errors – 7
DP – 1
Pct. - .983

Postseason Batting: 10 G (ALCS vs. Oakland – 3 G; World Series vs. Cincinnati – 7 G)
PA – 41, AB – 36, R – 4, H – 11, 2B – 2,3B – 0, HR – 1, RBI – 8, BB – 3, IBB – 0, SO – 5, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .306, OBP - .350, SLG - .444, TB – 16, GDP – 1, HBP – 0, SH – 1, SF – 1

Awards & Honors:
AL MVP: BBWAA
AL Rookie of the Year: BBWAA
Gold Glove
All-Star

Top 5 in AL MVP Voting:
Fred Lynn, Bos.: 326 pts. – 22 of 24 first place votes, 97% share
John Mayberry, KC: 157 pts. – 47% share
Jim Rice, Bos.: 154 pts. – 46% share
Rollie Fingers, Oak.: 129 pts. – 2 first place votes, 38% share
Reggie Jackson, Oak.: 118 pts. – 35% share

AL ROY Voting:
Fred Lynn, Bos.: 23.5 of 24 votes, 98% share
Jim Rice, Bos.: 0.5 vote, 2% share

Red Sox went 95-66 to finish first in the AL Eastern Division by 4.5 games over the Baltimore Orioles while leading the league in runs scored (796), hits (1500), doubles (284), RBIs (756), batting (.275), OBP (.344), slugging (.417) & total bases (2274). Young players, most notably Lynn and Jim Rice, propelled the Red Sox to an unexpected division title. Won ALCS over the Oakland Athletics, 4 games to 3. Lost World Series to Cincinnati Reds, 4 games to 3 in a drama-filled battle.

Aftermath of ‘75:
With expectations high following his phenomenal rookie season, Lynn staged a prolonged holdout in 1976. He had a somewhat lesser year, batting .314 over 132 games with 32 doubles, 8 triples, 10 home runs, and 65 RBIs while the team sagged to third in the AL East. He was once again an All-Star and remained impressive defensively in center field. Lynn began the 1977 season on the disabled list due to an ankle injury and appeared in just 129 games. His batting average fell to .260 and he hit 18 home runs with 76 RBIs. He came back strong in 1978 hitting .298 with 22 home runs and 82 RBIs while Boston jumped out to a big lead in the division that failed to hold up as the Yankees caught them and won a one-game playoff for the title. Lynn also received his second Gold Glove in recognition of his outstanding defensive play. In 1979, he had the best season since his Rookie of the Year performance, winning the AL batting title with a .333 average and topping the circuit with a .423 on-base percentage and .637 slugging percentage, thanks to his 42 doubles and 39 home runs. He also drove in 122 RBIs as a result of his career-best power production. Lynn’s 1980 season ended in August when he suffered a broken toe. In 110 games he hit .301 with 12 home runs and 61 RBIs. In the offseason he was dealt to the California Angels along with RHP Steve Renko for three players that included outfielder Joe Rudi. The Angels signed him to a four-year $5.25 million contract but he battled a knee injury during the strike-interrupted season and batted only .219 with 5 home runs and 31 RBIs while appearing in 76 games. In 1982 the Angels topped the AL West and Lynn contributed a .299 average along with 38 doubles, 21 home runs, and 86 RBIs despite being hindered by a rib injury down the stretch. In the five-game ALCS loss to the Brewers he hit .611 with 11 hits and 5 RBIs and was named series MVP despite playing for the losing club. In 1983 Lynn was an All-Star for the ninth consecutive year and hit the first grand slam in All-Star Game history to earn game MVP honors. It was part of a season in which injuries ultimately limited him to 117 games and he batted .272 with 22 home runs and 74 RBIs. He appeared in 142 games in 1984 (his most with the Angels) and hit .271 with 23 home runs and 79 RBIs. Lynn signed with the Baltimore Orioles as a free agent in the offseason. Back and ankle injuries held him to 124 games in 1985 and he hit .263 with 23 home runs and 68 RBIs while striking out a career-high 100 times. Hampered by injuries again in 1986, Lynn again slugged 23 home runs and drove in 67 RBIs while batting .287 in 112 games for the last place Orioles. Injuries limited him to 111 games in 1987 and he once more hit 23 home runs while batting .253 with 60 RBIs. In 1988 Lynn had 18 home runs with 37 RBIs and a .252 average by the end of August when Baltimore dealt him to the Detroit Tigers for prospects. With the Tigers battling for the AL East title Lynn accounted for 7 home runs and 19 RBIs in the final month. Detroit fell short and placed second to the Red Sox but descended to the cellar in 1989 while Lynn appeared in 117 games as a left fielder and DH, hitting .241 with 11 home runs and 46 RBIs. He signed as a free agent with the San Diego Padres in 1990, playing one last season at age 38. In 90 games he batted .240 with 6 home runs and 23 RBIs. Overall in the major leagues Lynn batted .283 with 1960 hits that included 388 doubles, 43 triples, and 306 home runs. He further compiled 1111 RBIs and stole 72 bases. With the Red Sox he hit .308 with 944 hits, 217 doubles, 29 triples, 124 home runs, and 521 RBIs. In 15 postseason games he produced a .407 average with 22 hits, 2 home runs, and 13 RBIs. A nine-time All-Star (six with Boston), he also received four Gold Gloves (all with the Red Sox). Lynn went into broadcasting for a time following his retirement. He was inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2002.

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MVP Profiles feature players in the National or American leagues who were winners of the Chalmers Award (1911-14), League Award (1922-29), or Baseball Writers’ Association of America Award (1931 to present) as Most Valuable Player.


Rookie of the Year Profiles feature players who were recipients of the Rookie of the Year Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1947 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1948 and from 1949 on to one recipient from each major league.