Dick Stuart
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Richard Lee (Dick) Stuart (November 7, 1932 - December 15, 2002) was a Major League Baseball first baseman from 1958 to 1969. Throughout his baseball career, Stuart was known as a fine hitter, but a subpar fielder, garnering the unique nickname of "Dr. Strangeglove" for his poor defense. That was a play on words of the movie Dr. Strangelove, which was released in the middle years of Stuart's career. Similarly, the movie Goldfinger inspired another nickname, "Stonefingers". [1] In 1963, he set a record by committing 29 errors, a major league record for first baseman that still stands.
Stuart played the bulk of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Boston Red Sox. He hit 228 home runs in his Major League Baseball career, with a batting average of .264. He was elected to the All-Star team in 1961. While Stuart never led the league in home runs, he finished in the top ten in five seasons (1959-61, 1963-64). As a minor league player, Stuart smashed 66 home runs for the Lincoln club of the Class A Western League in 1956; it remains one of the highest totals in the history of minor league baseball.
Stuart grew up in Redwood City, California graduating from Sequoia High School. Stuart died of cancer in Redwood City. [2]
[edit] Teams
- Pittsburgh Pirates (1958-62)
- Boston Red Sox (1963-64)
- Philadelphia Phillies (1965)
- New York Mets (1966)
- Los Angeles Dodgers (1966)
- California Angels (1969)
[edit] External links
Preceded by Harmon Killebrew |
American League RBI Champion 1963 |
Succeeded by Brooks Robinson |
Categories: Baseball first baseman stubs | National League All-Stars | Boston Red Sox players | California Angels players | Los Angeles Dodgers players | New York Mets players | Philadelphia Phillies players | Pittsburgh Pirates players | American League RBI champions | Major league first basemen | People from San Francisco | Major league players from California | 1932 births | 2002 deaths