Jim Coates

Jim Coates

Coates in 1960.
Pitcher
Born: August 4, 1932 (1932-08-04) (age 79)
Farnham, Virginia
Batted: Right Threw: Right 
MLB debut
September 21, 1956 for the New York Yankees
Last MLB appearance
September 30, 1967 for the California Angels
Career statistics
Win–Loss record     43–22
Earned run average     4.00
Strikeouts     396
Teams
Career highlights and awards

James Alton Coates (born August 4, 1932 in Farnham, Virginia) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. A right-hander, Coates pitched for the New York Yankees (1956, 1959-62), Washington Senators (1963), Cincinnati Reds (1963) and California Angels (1965-67).

Contents

Career

Early career

Coates was signed by the Yankees as an amateur free agent in 1951. He spent seven years in the Yankees’ farm system with a call-up in 1956, during which he made his major league debut. Shortly after reaching the Majors, he broke his pitching arm; the injury forced Coates to miss the 1957 and 1958 seasons. [1]

Fully recovered in 1959, Coates pitched in 37 games, all but four in relief, winning six games against one loss, with a 2.87 earned run average in 100 1/3 innings pitched. The season, however, was disastrous for the Yankees as a whole—after winning seven World Series and nine American League pennants in ten seasons, and winning 103 games in 1954, the one year in that stretch when they didn’t win the pennant (the Cleveland Indians won 111), the Yankees, beset by injuries all season, finished third, 15 games behind the American League champion Chicago White Sox. The lowlight of the Yankees’ season was falling to dead last on May 20.

1960 World Series

In 1960 Coates went 13-3 as a spot starter in Casey Stengel’s much-maligned rotation. After winning his last five decisions in 1959 and his first nine this season, Coates finally had his winning streak broken against the Boston Red Sox on July 9, a 6-5 loss in which Vic Wertz drove in four of the runs. Coates was also named to the All Star team, pitching two scoreless innings in the first of two games played that year (between 1959 and 1962, Major League Baseball had two All-Star games).

Coates was a member of the Yankee team that regained the American League pennant in 1960 but lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates in the World Series in seven games. In Game One, Coates gave up a home run by Bill Mazeroski for the deciding runs in the Pirates’ 6-4 victory. Before Ralph Terry gave up Mazeroski's second home run of this Series (the walk-off home run that won Game Seven 10-9 for the Pirates and ended the Series), Coates himself was almost the scapegoat in the Yankees’ loss. With the Yankees ahead 7-5 with no outs in the eighth inning of that seventh game and Bill Virdon on second and Dick Groat on first, Coates relieved Bobby Shantz and got Bob Skinner out on a sacrifice bunt, which advanced the runners. Rocky Nelson then flew out to Roger Maris in right field, and Virdon declined to challenge Maris’ throwing arm. Coates then got to an 0-2 count on Roberto Clemente and was one strike away from getting the Yankees out of trouble.

However, a lapse by Coates allowed the Pirates to keep their inning alive. Clemente eventually chopped a weak ground ball toward first base, and Coates initially ran toward the ball instead of running directly to cover first base. First baseman Moose Skowron fielded the ball as Coates changed direction and ran to the first base bag. But the momentary delay enabled Clemente to reach the base before Coates could get there. Skowron was forced to hold onto the ball, and Virdon scored to cut the Yankee lead to 7-6. Coates then gave up a home run to Hal Smith to give the Pirates a 9-7 lead. Terry then relieved Coates and retired Don Hoak to finally end the inning. The Yankees got Coates off the hook by scoring twice in the top of the ninth to tie the game, only to lose on Mazeroski’s home run off Terry in the bottom of the 9th. The Pirates had hit four home runs in this Series; Coates had given up two of them.

1961 & 1962 Championships

In 1961 Coates went 11-5 as a spot starter for perhaps the major leagues' greatest-ever team. Led by the hitting of Maris, Skowron, Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra and Elston Howard, the infield defense of Clete Boyer, Tony Kubek and Bobby Richardson, and Whitey Ford’s 25-4 season, the now-Ralph Houk-led Yankees (Stengel had been fired immediately after the 1960 World Series) won the World Series over the Cincinnati Reds in five games. Coates relieved Ford in Game Four of the Series and pitched four scoreless innings for the save in a 7-0 Yankee win; Ford had left the game with an injury, but not without first breaking Babe Ruth’s World Series record of 29 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings.

In 1962 Coates went 7-6 for a Yankee team that repeated as World Champions. Coates was the losing pitcher in Game Four of this Series, which the Yankees won over the San Francisco Giants in seven games.

Legacy

In his career, Coates, whose nickname, “The Mummy,” came from his funereal visage on the mound, won 43 games against 22 losses, with a 4.00 ERA and 396 strikeouts in 683 1/3 innings pitched. He was also well-known for throwing at opposing batters. Jim Bouton, in his book, Ball Four, said Coates, after throwing at the opposing hitters, “would not get into the fights that followed.” Coates now has a book entitled "Always a Yankee."

Today Coates' grandson, Aaron Pribanic, is a prospect in the Pittsburgh Pirates organization. Pribanic stated that he picked up his passion for the baseball from his grandfather. Jim Coates played in the Dominican Republic during the 1958 season with the Licey team. He received a serious deadball playing against the Escogido team. He layed unconsious next to the home plate and did not return to play the rest of the season. The deadball came from pitcher Garabato Sackie.

In the fall of 2010, MLB Network invited Coates to its New York studios to tape a show about the 1960 Series. Coates flatly refused. According to Pribanic, Coates stated, "Why would I want to go listen to them talk about how we lost?"[2]

Notes

External links