Willie Smith (outfielder)

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Willie Smith (February 11, 1939 - January 16, 2006) was a left-handed pitcher for the Detroit Tigers (1963), and, after he converted to outfielder at the Major League Baseball level, an outfielder for the Los Angeles Angels/California Angels (1964-66), Cleveland Indians (1967-68), Chicago Cubs (1968-70) and Cincinnati Reds (1971). He threw and batted left-handed and was born in Anniston, Alabama.

Smith was a highly-regarded pitching prospect in the Detroit farm system. In 1963, playing for the AAA Syracuse Chiefs, he led the International League in winning percentage (.875) with a 14-2 won/loss mark, and posted a shiny 2.11 earned run average. He also batted .380 (30 hits in 79 at bats), with one home run and 13 runs batted in. Smith was still plying his trade on the mound when he was swapped to the Angels for Julio Navarro on April 28, 1964. He had compiled a 1-4 record with an earned run average of 2.84 with the Angels in 33⅔ innings pitched when Halo manager Bill Rigney shifted Smith to the outfield to get his bat in the lineup on a daily basis. Smith responded by hitting .301 that season (his career-best batting average) with 11 home runs and 51 RBI.

In nine seasons he played in 691 Games and had 1,654 At Bats, 171 Runs, 410 Hits, 63 Doubles, 21 Triples, 46 Home Runs, 211 RBI, 20 Stolen Bases, 107 Walks, .248 Batting Average, .295 On-base percentage, .395 Slugging Percentage, 653 Total Bases, 9 Sacrifice Hits, 15 Sacrifice Flies and 20 Intentional Walks. His record as a pitcher was 2-4 with a 3.10 ERA in 29 games and 61 innings spread over three MLB seasons.

He died in his hometown at the age of 66.

Willie Smith is perhaps best remembered by Chicago baseball fans for his dramatic extra inning walk-off home run at Wrigley Field on Opening Day, April 8, 1969, resulting in a Cub win over the Philadelphia Phillies.

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