Catfish Hunter
| Catfish Hunter | ||
|---|---|---|
| Pitcher | ||
| Born: April 8, 1946 | ||
| Died: September 9 1999 (aged 53) | ||
| Batted: Right | Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | ||
| May 13, 1965 for the Kansas City Athletics |
||
| Final game | ||
| September 17, 1979 for the New York Yankees |
||
| Career statistics | ||
| Win-Loss | 224-166 | |
| ERA | 3.26 | |
| Strikeouts | 2012 | |
| Teams | ||
| Career highlights and awards | ||
|
||
| Member of the National | ||
| Elected | 1987 | |
| Vote | 76.27% | |
James Augustus "Catfish" Hunter (April 8, 1946 – September 9, 1999), was a Major League Baseball right-handed starting pitcher between 1965 and 1979.
Career
The youngest son of eight children, Hunter excelled in a variety of sports; enjoying success as a linebacker and offensive end in football as well as a shortstop, cleanup batter and pitcher in baseball. His pitching skill began to attract scouts from major league baseball teams to Hertford, North Carolina. In his senior year, Hunter was wounded in a hunting accident which led to the loss of one of his toes and the lodging of shotgun pellets in his foot. The accident left Hunter somewhat hobbled and jeopardized his prospects in the eyes of many professional scouts, but the Kansas City Athletics had faith in the young pitcher and signed Hunter to a contract.
Charles O. Finley, the Kansas City owner, gave Hunter the nickname "Catfish". The investment that Finley and the Athletics made in "Catfish" was returned many times over. Hunter's first major league victory came on July 27, 1965 in Fenway Park against the Boston Red Sox. In 1966 Hunter was named to the American League All-Star team and was named again in 1967. In 1968 Charles Finley moved the Athletics from Kansas City to Oakland and on May 8 that year in a game against the Minnesota Twins, Hunter pitched the first perfect game in the American League since 1922. He continued to win games and in 1974 both received the Cy Young Award and was named Pitcher of the Year by The Sporting News. After a contract dispute with Finley in 1974, Hunter left the Athletics in 1975 for the New York Yankees. Catfish's statistics while he was with the Athletics were impressive: four consecutive years with at least 20 wins, four World Series wins with no losses and a 1974 league leading earned run average of 2.49.
Hunter was the highest paid pitcher in baseball when he signed with the Yankees in 1975. That year he again won more than 20 games and was named to the All-Star team for the seventh time. Hunter would be named to the All-Star team again in 1976. The Yankees won three straight pennants with Hunter from 1976 to 1978. However, the years of arm strain and the effects of diabetes had begun to tell on the pitcher and in 1979, Hunter retired from baseball. Hunter was an effective pitcher, not because he overpowered batters with his speed, but because of the precision of his pitching. He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1987.
Death
Hunter died in Hertford, North Carolina in 1999. He had been suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease) at the time.
Teams
- Kansas City A's (1965-1967)
- Oakland A's (1968-1974)
- New York Yankees (1975-1979)
Career statistics
| W | L | PCT | ERA | G | GS | CG | SHO | SV | IP | H | ER | R | HR | BB | K | WP | HBP |
| 224 | 166 | .574 | 3.26 | 500 | 476 | 181 | 42 | 0 | 3449 | 2958 | 1248 | 1380 | 374 | 954 | 2012 | 49 | 49 |
Notable achievements
- 8-time AL All-Star (1966, 1967, 1970 & 1972-1976)
- Perfect Game (May 8, 1968)
- AL Cy Young Award Winner (1974)
- AL ERA Leader (1974)
- 2-time AL Wins Leader (1974 & 1975)
- AL Innings Pitched Leader (1975)
- AL Complete Games Leader (1975)
- 15 Wins Seasons: 7 (1970-1976)
- 20 Wins Seasons: 5 (1971-1975)
- 25 Wins Seasons: 1 (1974)
- 200 Innings Pitched Seasons: 10 (1967-1976)
- 300 innings Pitched Seasons: 2 (1974 & 1975)
- Member of five World Series Championship teams: Oakland Athletics (1972, 1973 & 1974) and New York Yankees (1977 & 1978)
- Baseball Hall of Fame: Class of 1987 (elected with Billy Williams)
Quotes
- "The sun don't shine on the same dog's ass all the time."
- "My brothers taught me to throw strikes, and thanks to that I gave up 400 home runs in the big leagues."
- (About teammate Reggie Jackson): "He'd give you the shirt off his back. Then he'd call a press conference to announce it." (and about the Reggie candy bar) "You open it up and it tells you how good it is."
Miscellaneous
In 1975, he was the subject of the Bob Dylan song, "Catfish." It was unreleased by Dylan until his 1991 box set titled "the bootleg series volumes 1-3," however Joe Cocker recorded the song and included it on his 1976 album "Stingray." Also in 1976 he was the subject of the Bobby Hollowell song "The Catfish Kid (Ballad of Jim Hunter)," that was performed by Big Tom White, released on a 45 RPM single. Growing up together, Hollowel was best friends with the young Jim Hunter.
Portrayed by minor league pitcher Jason Kosow in the ESPN miniseries The Bronx is Burning which depicts the 1977 New York Yankees.
Trivia
| Trivia sections are discouraged under
Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Hunter's six major league home runs were hit against Barry Moore, Frank Bertaina, Dave McNally, Mike Cuellar, Sam McDowell, and Mickey Lolich.
- Hit a combined .429 (24-for-56) against All-Stars Mike Cuellar, Mickey Lolich, Sam McDowell, Denny McLain, Camilo Pascual, Gary Peters, and Mel Stottlemyre
- Held All-Stars Tommie Agee, Sal Bando, Bert Campaneris, Chris Chambliss, Doug DeCinces, Dwight Evans, George Hendrick, Frank Howard, and Bobby Richardson to a .129 collective batting average (40-for-310)
- Held Thurman Munson plus Hall of Famers Hank Aaron, Orlando Cepeda, Harmon Killebrew, Mickey Mantle, Brooks Robinson, Frank Robinson, and Carl Yastrzemski to a .211 collective batting average (107-for-506)
Catfish Hunter was only the 4th (and last) American League pitcher to win 20 games in a season for 5 consecutive seasons (1971-1975). The others were Walter Johnson (10), Lefty Grove (7), and Bob Feller (5). Jim Palmer had 2 consecutive 4-year streaks (1970-1973) and (1975-1978) for 8 in 9 years.
See also
- List of baseball players who went directly to the major leagues
- Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame
- List of Major League Baseball leaders in career wins
- List of Major League Baseball ERA champions
- List of Major League Baseball wins champions
- Top 100 strikeout pitchers of all time
- Pitchers who have thrown a perfect game
| Preceded by Sandy Koufax |
Perfect game pitcher May 8, 1968 |
Succeeded by Len Barker |
| Preceded by Jim Palmer |
American
League ERA Champion 1974 |
Succeeded by Jim Palmer |
| Preceded by Wilbur Wood |
American League Wins Champion 1974-1975 (1974 with Ferguson Jenkins, 1975 with Jim Palmer) |
Succeeded by Jim Palmer |
| Preceded by Jim Palmer |
American League Cy Young
Award 1974 |
Succeeded by Jim Palmer |
| Oakland Athletics 1972 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Dick Green | 2
Angel Mangual | 4 Don Mincher | 5 Mike Epstein | 6 Sal Bando | 10 Dave Duncan | 11 Ted Kubiak | 12 Gonzalo Márquez | 13 Blue Moon Odom | 14 Matty Alou | 19 Bert Campaneris | 20 Mike Hegan | 22 Joe Horlen | 24 Allan
Lewis | 25 George Hendrick | 26 Joe Rudi | 27
Catfish Hunter | 30 Ken Holtzman | 33 Dave Hamilton | 34 Rollie Fingers | 35 Vida Blue | 36 Bob Locker | 38 Gene
Tenace Manager Dick Williams |
| Oakland Athletics 1973 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Dick Green | 2
Angel Mangual | 6 Sal Bando | 7 Deron Johnson | 9 Reggie Jackson | 10 Ray Fosse | 11 Ted Kubiak | 13 Blue Moon
Odom | 14 Vida Blue | 16 Billy Conigliaro |
17 Mike Andrews | 18 Gene Tenace | 19 Bert Campaneris | 22 Jesús Alou | 24 Allan Lewis | 25 Paul Lindblad | 26 Joe
Rudi | 27 Catfish Hunter | 28 Horacio Piña | 30
Ken Holtzman | 32 Darold Knowles | 34
Rollie Fingers | 37 Vic Davalillo | 38
Pat Bourque Manager Dick Williams |
| Oakland Athletics 1974 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Dick Green | 2
Angel Mangual | 3 Herb Washington | 4
Billy North | 6 Sal Bando | 9 Reggie Jackson | 10 Ray Fosse | 12 Larry
Haney | 13 Blue Moon Odom | 14 Vida Blue | 15
Claudell Washington | 16 Dal Maxvill | 18
Gene Tenace | 19 Bert Campaneris | 22
Jesús Alou | 26 Joe Rudi | 27 Catfish Hunter | 30 Ken Holtzman | 34 Rollie Fingers | 38 Jim Holt Manager Alvin Dark |
| New York Yankees 1977 World Series roster |
|---|
| 2 Paul Blair |
6 Roy White | 9 Graig Nettles | 10 Chris Chambliss | 11 Fred Stanley | 14 Lou Piniella | 15 Thurman Munson | 17 Mickey Rivers | 19 Dick Tidrow | 20 Bucky Dent | 24 Mike Torrez | 25 George
Zeber | 28 Sparky Lyle | 29 Catfish Hunter | 30
Willie Randolph | 35 Don Gullett | 41
Cliff Johnson | 44 Reggie
Jackson | 49 Ron Guidry | 50 Ken Clay Manager 1 Billy Martin |
| New York Yankees 1978 World Series roster |
|---|
| 2 Paul Blair |
6 Roy White | 9 Graig Nettles | 10 Chris Chambliss | 11 Fred Stanley | 12 Jim Spencer | 14 Lou Piniella | 15 Thurman Munson | 17 Mickey Rivers | 19 Dick Tidrow | 20 Bucky Dent | 24 Gary
Thomasson | 25 Brian Doyle | 27 Jay
Johnstone | 29 Catfish Hunter | 31 Ed Figueroa | 36
Paul Lindblad | 41 Cliff Johnson
| 43 Ken Clay | 44 Reggie Jackson | 45 Jim Beattie | 46 Mike Heath | 49 Ron
Guidry | 54 Goose Gossage Manager Billy Martin | Dick Howser | Bob Lemon |
External links
- Baseball Hall of Fame
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- Retrosheet
- The Deadball Era
- box score of Hunter's perfect game
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