- Dick Stuart
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This article is about the Major League baseball player . For the Virginia state senator, see Richard Stuart.
Dick Stuart
Stuart being remembered and honored by the Pirates, on June 19, 2010 at PNC Park, for his role on the Pirates' 1960 World Series team.First baseman Born: November 7, 1932
San Francisco, CaliforniaDied: December 15, 2002 (aged 70)
Redwood City, CaliforniaBatted: Right Threw: Right MLB debut July 10, 1958 for the Pittsburgh Pirates Last MLB appearance May 27, 1969 for the California Angels Career statistics Batting average .264 Home runs 228 Runs batted in 743 Teams Career highlights and awards - 2× All-Star selection (1961, 1961²)
- World Series champion (1960)
Richard Lee Stuart (November 7, 1932 - December 15, 2002) was a Major League Baseball first baseman from 1958 to 1966 and 1969. In 1967 and 1968, he played in Japan for the Taiyo Whales. Throughout his baseball career, Stuart was known as a fine hitter, but a subpar fielder, garnering the unique nickname of "Dr. Strangeglove" for his poor defense. That was a play on words of the movie Dr. Strangelove, which was released in the middle years of Stuart's career. Similarly, the movie Goldfinger inspired another nickname, "Stonefingers".[1] In 1963, he set a record by committing 29 errors, a major league record for first basemen that still stands. Yet another less-than-flattering nickname for Stuart was "The Man With The Iron Glove". It has been noted that had the designated hitter rule existed then, he would have been an excellent candidate for such.
Stuart played the bulk of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Boston Red Sox. He hit 228 home runs in his Major League Baseball career (tied for 234th all-time as of 9/20/09), with a batting average of .264. He was elected to the All-Star team in 1961. While Stuart never led the league in home runs, he finished in the top ten in five seasons (1959–61, 1963–64). As a minor league player, Stuart smashed 66 home runs for the Lincoln club of the Class A Western League in 1956; it remains one of the highest totals in the history of minor league baseball.
Stuart was a member of the Pirates' 1960 World Series-winning team. He was on deck as a pinch hitter when Bill Mazeroski hit the ninth inning home run off Ralph Terry to win the 1960 Series at Forbes Field.
When Stuart was with the Dodgers, he pulled off a superb play at first, so impressive that an entry in the Dodgers' scorecard for that year commented "'Dr. Strangeglove,' Indeed!"
In their book, The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading and Bubble Gum Book, Brendan C. Boyd & Fred C. Harris, Little Brown & Co, 1973, on p. 77, the authors wrote an essay on Stuart's notoriously poor fielding. An excerpt: "Every play hit his way was an adventure, the most routine play a challenge to his artlessness. It is hard to describe this to anyone who has not seen it, just as it is hard to describe Xavier Cugat or Allen Ludden. Stu once picked up a hot dog wrapper that was blowing toward his first base position. He received a standing ovation from the crowd. It was the first thing he had managed to pick up all day, and the fans realized it could very well be the last."
Stuart graduated from Sequoia High School in Redwood City, California. Stuart died of cancer in Redwood City.[2]
See also
References
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference, or Fangraphs, or The Baseball Cube
- Dick Stuart at Historic Baseball
- The Deadball Era
- Dick Stuart at Find a Gave
Preceded by
Harmon KillebrewAmerican League RBI Champion
1963Succeeded by
Brooks RobinsonPittsburgh Pirates 1960 World Series Champions 2 Bob Oldis | 4 Bob Skinner | 5 Hal Smith | 6 Smoky Burgess | 7 Dick Stuart | 9 Bill Mazeroski | 11 Ducky Schofield | 12 Don Hoak | 14 Rocky Nelson | 16 Gene Baker | 18 Bill Virdon | 19 Bob Friend | 20 Gino Cimoli | 21 Roberto Clemente | 22 Joe Gibbon | 23 Joe Christopher | 24 Dick Groat | 26 Roy Face | 29 Clem Labine | 30 Wilmer Mizell | 31 Harvey Haddix | 32 Vern Law | 35 Fred Green | 39 George Witt | 48 Tom Cheney
Manager 40 Danny Murtaugh
Coaches: 41 Bill Burwell | 42 Mickey Vernon | 43 Sam Narron | 44 Frank Oceak | 45 Lenny Levy | Virgil TrucksRegular season Categories:- 1932 births
- 2002 deaths
- Major League Baseball first basemen
- Boston Red Sox players
- California Angels players
- Los Angeles Dodgers players
- New York Mets players
- Philadelphia Phillies players
- Pittsburgh Pirates players
- National League All-Stars
- Baseball players from California
- American League RBI champions
- American expatriate baseball players in Japan
- Taiyō Whales players
- People from San Mateo County, California
- People from San Francisco, California
- Águilas Cibaeñas players
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