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Cisco Carlos

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Cisco Carlos
Pitcher
Born: (1940-09-17) September 17, 1940 (age 84)
Monrovia, California
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
August 25, 1967, for the Chicago White Sox
Last MLB appearance
September 27, 1970, for the Washington Senators
MLB statistics
Win–loss record11-18
strikeouts119
earned run average3.72
Teams

Francisco Manuel Carlos (born September 17, 1940 in Monrovia, California) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. A right-hander, Carlos pitched for the Chicago White Sox from 1967 to 1969 and the Washington Senators from 1969 to 1970.

Amateur career

Carlos was a pitcher for the University of Northern Colorado team that participated in the 1960 College World Series. He was signed by the White Sox as an amateur free agent in 1961 and spent the next six seasons in their farm system. After posting a 15–8 record in Double-A in 1966 and an 11–8 record with a 2.63 earned run average in Triple A in 1967, Carlos was called up to the Majors in late August.

Professional career

That year, the White Sox were involved in a four-way American League pennant race with the Boston Red Sox, Detroit Tigers and Minnesota Twins. The White Sox were eliminated from the race in the final days of the season, but not before Carlos won two games to keep them in contention. On September 10 he defeated the Tigers 4–0 in the second game of a doubleheader at Comiskey Park, allowing four hits in six innings; the game came hours after Joe Horlen's no-hitter over the Tigers in the first game. Four days later, Carlos shut out the Cleveland Indians 4–0 in ten innings, the ChiSox winning the game on Don Buford's grand slam in the bottom of the tenth.

Carlos was featured along with future Hall-of-Famer Johnny Bench on the front cover of Sports Illustrated as one of "The Best Rookies of 1968." [1] However, in this, the "Year of the Pitcher", he posted a 4–14 record with a 3.90 earned run average—almost a full run above the league average of 2.98. Carlos pitched mostly in relief in 1969 and, after posting a 4–3 record with a 5.66 ERA, was purchased by the Washington Senators on August 25, two years to the day of his Major League debut.

After pitching in five games in 1970, Carlos was sent to the minors and spent the rest of his professional career there. He posted a 13–9 record with the Senators' Triple A club, the Denver Bears of the American Association. He posted a 14–20 record over the next two years and retired after pitching in the Houston Astros farm system in 1973 (the Bears, for whom Carlos pitched at the beginning of the season, were now the Astros' Triple A affiliate).

In his Major League career, Carlos won 11 games against 18 losses, with 119 strikeouts and a 3.72 ERA in 237 innings.

Personal

For more than 20 years, Carlos has been a kitchen professional. He is currently the owner of Cabinets by Design in Phoenix, Arizona. He is of Mexican American descent.[1]

References

  1. ^ Larry Eldridge, Reading Eagle, "'We're fighting for the series', Stanky explains" ( Sep 1, 1967)