Chuck Taylor (baseball)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chuck Taylor | ||
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Relief pitcher | ||
Born: April 18, 1942 | ||
Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
May 27, 1969 for the St. Louis Cardinals |
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Final game | ||
October 3, 1976 for the Montreal Expos |
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Career statistics | ||
ERA | 3.07 | |
Record | 28-20 | |
Strikeouts | 282 | |
Teams | ||
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Career highlights and awards | ||
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Charles Gilbert "Chuck" Taylor (April 18, 1942 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee) is a former right-handed Major League Baseball relief pitcher who played from 1969 to 1976 for the St. Louis Cardinals, New York Mets, Milwaukee Brewers and Montreal Expos.
Before being signed by the Cardinals in 1961, Taylor had attended Middle Tennessee State University.
Taylor spent three years (1961 to 1963) in the Cardinals minor league system before being traded on February 17, 1964 to the Houston Colt .45s with first baseman/outfielder Jim Beauchamp for outfielder Carl Warwick.
He spent only one full season in the Colt '45s/Astros farm system - 1964. Midway through the 1965 season, he was traded back to the Cardinals, this time with pitcher and former All-Star Hal Woodeshick for pitcher and All-Star Mike Cuellar and pitcher Ron Taylor.
Up until 1968, Taylor had had respectable - but not outstanding - statistics in the minors. He had been used both as a starter and reliever, and although he had a good season with the Arkansas Travelers in 1966 - he posted a 1.31 ERA in 30 games - his success was countered that season with some bad outings with the Tulsa Oilers, where he had an ERA of 6.48 in 21 games.
1968 was perhaps the best season of his entire professional career. As a starter, he appeared in 34 games for the Oilers, allowing only 202 hits in 230 innings, walking only 38 batters, and posting a record of 18 and 7 with a minute 2.35 ERA. At 26 years of age, he was fairly old prospect-wise, but he still managed to impress the Major League Cardinals enough to put him on their roster for 1969.
On May 27, 1969, Taylor made his big league debut with the Cardinals. He appeared in relief of pitcher Ray Washburn, and it was ultimately Taylor who gave up the winning run to the opposing team, the Atlanta Braves. Taylor was used both as a reliever and starter in his debut season, appearing in 27 games total, starting 13 of them, and posting a 7-5 won-loss record. His ERA was exactly a point below the league average: 2.56.
His next two seasons, 1970 and 1971, proved to be successful as well. Both years, he was used almost entirely as a reliever, and he posted ERAs of 3.11 and 3.53, respectively. Following the 1971 season, Taylor was traded with Jim Beauchamp, second baseman Chip Coulter, and pitcher Harry Parker to the Mets for outfielder Art Shamsky, and pitchers Jim Bibby, Rich Folkers and Charlie Hudson.
1972 was not a very successful year for Taylor. In fact, he ended up spending a large portion of it in the minors, where he posted a 4.70 ERA in 26 games. In the Majors that year, Taylor had a 5.52 ERA with the Mets before being selected off waivers by the Brewers in September. In 11 innings with the Brewers that year, he posted a 1.54 ERA, bringing his season ERA down to 4.43.
In March of 1973, Taylor was released by the Brewers and signed by the Expos a couple weeks later. In his first year with the Expos, he posted a 1.77 ERA, but appeared in only eight games. That performance, however, was something of a foreshadowing of what would happen in the year to come.
1974 was the best season of his Major League career. He appeared in relief 61 times, posting a 2.17 ERA in 107 2/3 innings. He ranked ninth in the league in game appearances, fifth in the league in saves with 11 and sixth in the league in games finished with 39.
The next two seasons, 1975 and 1976, were not as successful. He posted ERAs of 3.53 and 4.50 respectively. He wrapped his career up following the 1976 season, playing in his final big league game on October 3 of that year.
Overall, Taylor went 28-20 with a 3.07 ERA in 305 big league appearances. Of the 21 games he started, he completed six of them (five of them in one season, 1969) and shutout two. In exactly 607 innings of work, Taylor walked 162 batters and struck out 282. Interestly, only twice did his season ERA measure greater than the overall league ERA - in 1972 and 1976.
At the plate, Taylor hit .158 in 101 at-bats, collecting 16 hits. Of those 16 hits, four were doubles and one was a triple. He struck out 34 times and walked only three times.
In the field, he committed two errors for a .985 fielding percentage.
According to the Similarity Scores at Baseball-Reference, Taylor is most similar to Bob Humphreys.