José Uribe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jose Uribe | ||
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Shortstop | ||
Born: January 21, 1959 | ||
Died: December 8, 2006 (aged 47) | ||
Batted: Switch | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
September 13, 1984 for the St. Louis Cardinals |
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Final game | ||
October 3, 1993 for the Houston Astros |
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Career statistics | ||
AVG | .241 | |
Hits | 738 | |
SB | 74 | |
Teams | ||
Career highlights and awards | ||
José Altagracia González Uribe (January 21, 1959 – December 8, 2006) was a Dominican shortstop in Major League Baseball from 1984 until 1993. Most of his ten-year career was spent with the San Francisco Giants. He played for the Giants in the Bay Bridge Series against the Oakland Athletics, which is famous for having been interrupted by the Loma Prieta earthquake.
Born in San Cristóbal, Dominican Republic, Uribe was signed by the New York Yankees in 1977 but was released within the same year; he eventually signed with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1980, debuting with the team in September 1984 but playing only eight games before being traded. Uribe was humorously called the "Player to Really be Named Later". In February 1985, he was delivered as "the player to be named later" in a trade between the Cardinals and Giants. Between the time of the initial trade and his delivery, he changed his name from José González Uribe (Uribe is his mother's maiden name; see Spanish naming customs) to just José Uribe (González is his father's name) because, as he put it, "There are too many Gonzálezes in baseball!" Thus he really was "named later". He also earned a rather uncommon nickname from ESPN announcer Chris Berman when the stat known as the "Game Winning RBI" was an official statistic, José "Game Winning" Uribe.
Uribe was the Giants' principal shortstop for eight seasons, including their 1987 National League western division championship and 1989 NL pennant, leading the league with 85 double plays in the latter season. In the 1987 National League Championship Series he had a 2-run single with the bases loaded in the second inning of Game 5, giving the Giants a 4-3 lead. He then stole third base and scored as the Giants won 6-3 for a 3-2 series lead, though San Francisco went on to lose the final two games. He won the 1988 Willie Mac Award honoring his spirit and leadership.
Uribe was also a fan favorite at Candlestick Park and the cause of a unique crowd chant for a relatively light-hitting infielder. When he would come to bat, fans on one side of the stadium would shout Uuuuu! Then fans on the other side would respond with a Reeee! And, finally, the side who started the chant would end with a loud "Bay!"
Uribe signed with the Houston Astros as a free agent for the 1993 season, and ended his career with a .241 batting average, 19 home runs, 307 runs, 219 RBI, 738 hits and 74 stolen bases in 1038 games.
He was a second-cousin of current White Sox shortstop Juan Uribe.
Uribe was killed, at age 47, December 8, 2006 in a car crash at about 3:00 a.m. near his hometown of Juan Baron, Palenque, Dominican Republic.[1]
[edit] External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- BaseballLibrary
- Article about his name
- Why Uribe changed his name from Gonzalez to Uribe
- Former big leaguer Uribe dies in crash MLB.com
- Jose Uribe statistics MLB.com
he was one of the best hispanic players and is also related to juan uribe who currently plays for the chicago withe sox