Clyde Wright

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Clyde Wright (born February 20, 1941 in Jefferson City, Tennessee) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher.

A left-hander, Wright pitched for the California Angels (1966-73), Milwaukee Brewers (1974) and Texas Rangers (1975). He is the father of Jaret Wright.

A star pitcher at Carson-Newman College, Wright defeated the Minnesota Twins on a four-hitter in his Major League debut (June 15, 1966). He was a spot starter for the Angels in his first two seasons, and in 1968 won 10 games while losing six, pitching mostly in relief.

In 1969 Wright won only one game with eight losses and a 4.10 earned run average; after the season, the Angels waived him. Teammate Jim Fregosi convinced Wright to accompany him to winter ball, where the pitcher experimented with a screwball and changeup.

Wright returned to the Angels in 1970 and had the best season of his career. He won 22 games to become only the second 20-game winner in franchise history (Dean Chance had won 20 games in 1964) and established a career-low 2.83 ERA, which earned him the American League Comeback Player of the Year Award. Wright also no-hit the Oakland Athletics 4-0 on July 3 of that year, the first no-hitter ever pitched at Anaheim Stadium (now Angel Stadium of Anaheim). He almost lost the no-hitter in the 7th inning on Reggie Jackson’s 400-foot shot to straight-away center field, which was caught by Jay Johnstone just in front of the wall. Prior to the game, Wright had been inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame.

Wright also was selected to the All-Star team in 1970, the only All-Star selection of his career. He was the losing pitcher of the game (which was played at the newly opened Riverfront Stadium eleven days after his no-hitter), giving up the single to fellow Tennessee native Jim Hickman (who, coincidentally, would be named the 1970 Comeback Player of the Year in the National League) in the 12th inning, which drove in Pete Rose for the winning run, Rose barreling over Cleveland Indian catcher Ray Fosse to score the run.

Wright went 16-17 in 1971 (but with a respectable 2.99 ERA and a career-high 135 strikeouts), and 18-11 in 1972 with a 2.98 ERA. After slumping to 11-19 in 1973, he was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers in a nine-player deal. In 1974 he had the dubious distinction of becoming the first 20-game loser in the franchise’s history (9-20), after which he was traded again, this time to the Texas Rangers. He pitched one season in Texas before being released just prior to the start of the 1976 season.

In his major league career, Wright won 100 games against 111 losses, with a 3.50 ERA and 667 strikeouts in 1728 2/3 innings pitched.

Not long after his release from the Rangers, Wright went to Japan and signed with the Yomiuri Giants. He pitched for them for three seasons, but his stay in Japan almost ended before the first was over. Early in that first season, manager Shigeo Nagashima pulled Wright from a game tied at 1-1 in the sixth inning, after Wright allowed the first two batters to reach base. Wright refused to hand over the ball, then charged off the mound and fired the ball into the dugout. He then went into the clubhouse, where he tore off his uniform and threw it into a bathtub. Fans and sportswriters called for Wright's release, but Nagashima, ironically, defended his pitcher.

Wright eventually became popular by throwing baseballs into the stands for young fans. He went 8-7 in that first season with the Giants and won Game 5 of the Japan Series, hitting a home run in that game. However, he lost Game 7 on two late inning home runs; he had told an interpreter to ask the team to remove him due to fatigue.

[edit] Trivia

  • Wright's nickname, "Skeeter," was given to him by Angel trainer Freddie Frederico "because you can't call a major leaguer 'Clyde.'" [1] He was also dubbed "Crazy Righto" after his antics in Japan; this nickname stuck with him throughout his stay in Japan.
  • Wright's 22-win season in 1970 made him, to date, the only Angel left-hander to win 20 games in a season. It also remains tied as a franchise record, Nolan Ryan having equaled it in 1974.
  • Wright had a brief bout with alcoholism after his Major League Baseball days. He began drinking heavily while in Japan, and over the next few years the problem became worse. In 1996 he told the Los Angeles Times that in 1979, his wife Vicki gave him an ultimatum: stop drinking or she would leave him. "I went golfing one day and then drinking and when I came home, she was gone. When she came back, Jaret was in the van. I went to open the door and he pushed the lock down. He was 3 years old." [2]
Preceded by:
Tony Conigliaro
AL Comeback Player of the Year
1970
Succeeded by:
Norm Cash

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