Jack Billingham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jack Billingham
Pitcher
Born: (1943-02-21) February 21, 1943
Orlando, Florida
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 11, 1968 for the Los Angeles Dodgers
Last MLB appearance
June 20, 1980 for the Boston Red Sox
Career statistics
Win-loss record 145-113
Earned run average 3.83
Strikeouts 1,141
Teams

Career highlights and awards

  • World Series Championships: 1975 & 1976
  • All-Star (1973)

John Eugene (Jack) Billingham (born February 21, 1943) is a former starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Los Angeles Dodgers (1968), Houston Astros (1969-1971), Cincinnati Reds (1972-1977), Detroit Tigers (1978-1980) and Boston Red Sox (1980).[1] Nicknamed "Cactus Jack", the 6-foot-4 hurler won at least 10 games for 10 consecutive seasons, and he helped lead Cincinnati's legendary "Big Red Machine" to back-to-back World Series titles in 1975 and 1976. He batted and threw right-handed. Billingham is the cousin of Christy Mathewson.

Billingham proved to be one of baseball's greatest World Series pitchers. In seven games (including three starts) for Cincinnati, he went 2–0 with a 0.36 ERA, allowing just one earned run in 25.1 innings pitched. Jack came to the Reds in one of baseball's biggest trades. The Reds sent Lee May, Tommy Helms and Jimmy Stewart to the Astros for Billingham, Joe Morgan, Denis Menke, César Gerónimo, and (then minor leaguer) Ed Armbrister prior to the 1972 season.

Originally signed as a free agent by the Dodgers in 1961, Billingham was groomed as a reliever in the Los Angeles farm system, reaching the major leagues in 1968. Despite a good season (50 games, 3–0 record, 8 saves, 2.14 ERA), the Dodgers left Billingham unprotected in the expansion draft and he was selected by the Montreal Expos, though he would never pitch for them. In January, 1969, the Expos traded Donn Clendenon to the Houston Astros for Rusty Staub. Clendenon refused to report, and Billingham was later sent to Houston to complete the trade. In 1969, Billingham was again used as a reliever (52 games, 6–7 record, 4.25 ERA). In 1970 he was moved into the starting rotation (46 games, 24 starts), before becoming exclusively a starting pitcher in 1971.

On April 4, 1974, Billingham gave up Hank Aaron's 714th career home run, which tied Aaron with Babe Ruth for #1 on the all-time home run list at the time.

For his career, Billingham went 145–113 with a 3.83 ERA and 1,141 strikeouts in 2,230.2 innings.

Awards

  • Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame inductee: 1984
  • National League All-Star: 1973
  • Johnny Vander Meer Award (Reds' Most Outstanding Pitcher): 1973

NL leader

  • Innings pitched: 1973 (293.1)
  • Shutouts: 1973 (7)
  • Hit batsmen: 1971 (16) and 1977 (10)

See also

  • MLB All-Time Hit Batsmen List

References

  1. "Billingham to Red Sox". The Bryan Times (UPI). 13 May 1980. p. 11. Retrieved 1 June 2010. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.