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'''1933 Goudey Burleigh Grimes'''

'''Burleigh Arland Grimes''' ([[August 18]] [[1893]] - [[December 6]] [[1985]]) was an [[United States|American]] professional [[baseball]] player, and the last [[pitcher]] officially permitted to throw the [[spitball]].
'''Burleigh Arland Grimes''' ([[August 18]] [[1893]] - [[December 6]] [[1985]]) was an [[United States|American]] professional [[baseball]] player, and the last [[pitcher]] officially permitted to throw the [[spitball]].



Revision as of 00:04, 2 July 2006

grimes.gif

1933 Goudey Burleigh Grimes

Burleigh Arland Grimes (August 18 1893 - December 6 1985) was an American professional baseball player, and the last pitcher officially permitted to throw the spitball.

Nicknamed "Ol' Stubblebeard", Grimes was born in Emerald, Wisconsin. He made his major league debut on September 10, 1916 for the Pittsburgh Pirates and in 1920, when the spitball was banned, he was named as one of the 17 established pitchers who would be allowed to continue to throw the pitch. The 26 year old Grimes made the most of this advantage, and over the course of his 19-year career, won 270 games and pitched in four World Series. At the time of his retirement, he was the last of the 17 spitballers left in the league.

Template:MLB HoF He played for the Pittsburgh Pirates (1916 - 1917), the Brooklyn Dodgers (1918-1926), the New York Giants (1927), the Pirates again (1928-1929), the Boston Braves (1930), the St. Louis Cardinals (the rest of 1930 and 1931), the Chicago Cubs (1932 and part of 1933), the Cardinals again (the rest of 1933 and part of 1934), the Pirates again (1934), and the New York Yankees (the last part of 1934).

He was the manager of the Dodgers in 1937-38, compiling a two-year record of 131-171 (.434), with his teams finishing sixth and seventh respectively in the National League. He then remained in baseball for many years as a minor league manager and a scout.

Burleigh Grimes was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1964. In 1981, Lawrence Ritter and Donald Honig included him in their book The 100 Greatest Baseball Players of All Time.

He died in Clear Lake, Wisconsin at age of 92.

Trivia

  • Grimes was well-known for his mean temper. He was so mean, he once threw a ball at the batter in the on-deck circle.
Preceded by Brooklyn Dodgers Manager
1937–1938
Succeeded by