Jim Gentile
Jim Gentile First basemanBorn: June 3, 1934(1934-06-03) (age 74)San Francisco, CaliforniaBatted: Left Threw: Left MLB debut September 10, 1957
for the Brooklyn DodgersFinal game September 3, 1966
for the Cleveland IndiansCareer statistics Batting average .260 Home runs 179 Runs batted in 549 Teams
- Brooklyn / Los Angeles Dodgers (1957-1958)
- Baltimore Orioles (1960-1963)
- Kansas City Athletics (1964-1965)
- Houston Astros (1965-1966)
- Cleveland Indians (1966)
- 3x All-Star selection (1960, 1961, 1962)
James Edward Gentile (pronounced "jen-TEE-uhl," born June 3, 1934 in San Francisco, California), also nicknamed "Diamond Jim", is a former Major League Baseball first baseman and left-handed batter who played with the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers (1957-58); Baltimore Orioles (1960-63), Kansas City Athletics (1964-65), Houston Astros (1965-66) and Cleveland Indians (1966).
A powerful slugger listed at 6' 4", 215 lb, Gentile languished for eight years in the minors for a Dodgers team that already had All-Star Gil Hodges in first base. Traded to Baltimore, Gentile enjoyed his best season in 1961, hitting a career-highs .302 batting average, 46 home runs, 141 runs batted in, 96 runs, 147 hits, 25 doubles. 96 walks, .346 on base percentage, .646 slugging average and 1,069 OPS. He was considered in the MVP selection (third, behind Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris). In addition, Gentile hit five grand slams -- including two straight in one game --, setting an American League record that stood until Don Mattingly belted six in 1987.
In a nine-season career, Gentile batted .260 (759-for-2922) with 179 home runs, 549 RBI, 434 runs, 113 doubles, six triples, and three stolen bases in 936 games.
Gentile managed the Fort Worth Cats when they returned to baseball in 2001 and 2002.
See also
- Top 500 home run hitters of all time
- Batters with two grand slams in the same baseball game
- List of Major League Baseball RBI champions
Sources
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube
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