Tim Flannery (baseball)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tim Flannery | ||
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Infielder | ||
Born: September 29, 1957 | ||
Batted: Left | Threw: Right | |
MLB debut | ||
September 3, 1979 for the San Diego Padres |
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Final game | ||
September 29, 1989 for the San Diego Padres |
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Career statistics | ||
Batting average | .255 | |
Hits | 631 | |
RBI | 209 | |
Teams | ||
Career highlights and awards | ||
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Timothy Earl Flannery (born September 29, 1957 in Tulsa, Oklahoma) is the nephew of former Major League Baseball player Hal Smith. He also spent 11 seasons in the Majors himself, playing from 1979 to 1989 with the San Diego Padres.
Before being drafted in the sixth round of the 1978 MLB draft by the Padres, Flannery attended Chapman University. Standing at 5 ft, 11 in tall and weighing 175 lb, Flannery batted left-handed but threw right-handed.
He spent less than two seasons in the minors before making his big league debut. During his time in the minors, he hit .350 in 84 games in 1978 and .345 in 125 games in 1979. He made his big league debut on September 3, 1979 at the age of 21, but his minor league success did not carry over to the majors. He hit .154 in 65 big league at bats, with his only extra base hit of the season being a triple. He was the eighth youngest player in the majors in 1979.
He spent 46 games in the minors in 1980, hitting .346. He hit only .240 in the majors that year, though.
By 1981, he was turning into a Major League bust. He only appeared in 37 games that year, and he batted .254.
Not a power hitter, Flannery was in his fifth Major League season when he hit his first Major League home run. It was a solo home run off Chuck Rainey. He was used as a bench player for the majority of his career. Overall, he appeared in 972 games in his career, and batted .255 (631 for 2473). He hit only nine home runs, stole 22 bases and drove in 209 runs. He did have a good eye at the plate, walking 277 times and striking out 293. In the field, he had a .977 fielding percentage. He appeared in four postseason games in his career, collecting two hits in three at-bats. He played his final big league game on his birthday-September 29, 1989.
In 11 seasons he played in 972 Games and had 2,473 At Bats, 255 Runs, 631 Hits, 77 Doubles, 25 Triples, 9 Home Runs, 209 RBI, 22 Stolen Bases, 277 Walks, .255 Batting Average, .335 On-base percentage, .317 Slugging Percentage, 785 Total Bases, 32 Sacrifice Hits, 24 Sacrifice Flies and 35 Intentional Walks.
Statistically, he is most related to Larry Milbourne. He spent nine seasons with Eric Show—longer than any other teammate.
After his big league career ended, he became a Padres coach. He was a broadcaster for the team in 2005, and currently coaches third base for the San Francisco Giants. He is also an accomplished musician/songwriter, releasing multiple CDs.
[edit] External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- Official Website