Matty Alou | |
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Outfielder | |
Batted: Left | Threw: Left |
Born: December 22, 1938 | |
MLB Debut | |
September 26, 1960 for the San Francisco Giants | |
Final game | |
June 21, 1974 for the San Diego Padres | |
Career Statistics | |
Batting average | .307 |
Home runs | 31 |
Runs batted in | 427 |
Teams | |
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Career Highlights and Awards | |
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Mateo Rojas "Matty" Alou (born December 22 1938 in Bajos de Haina, Dominican Republic - died November 3 2011 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic) is a former outfielder in Major League Baseball for the San Francisco Giants, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals, Oakland Athletics, New York Yankees, and San Diego Padres. He was the middle baseball-playing brother of the trio that included Felipe and Jesús.
Alou was a platoon player for the Giants for several years and was mostly unremarkable. His finest moment in San Francisco came in 1962 when his pinch-hit bunt single in the final game of a three-game tie-breaking playoff against the Los Angeles Dodgers began the rally that won the game and the pennant for the Giants. He batted .333 in the Giants' losing effort against the Yankees in that year's World Series. After Alou was traded to the Pirates before the 1966 season, he received instruction from expert hitting instructor Harry "the Hat" Walker that helped turn him into a formidable batter. He won the batting title with a .342 average, with his brother Felipe finishing second, and finished in the top five in hitting four more times after that (1967-69, 1971). He also led the league in at bats twice (1969-70), hits once (1969) and doubles once (1969). After leaving the major leagues following the 1974 season, he played three seasons in Japan (Taiheiyo Club Lions) and managed in the Dominican Winter League.
On Saturday, June 23rd, 2007 the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame inducted Matty Alou into their Hall of Fame during an on-field, pre-game ceremony before taking on the New York Yankees. He, along with San Francisco Giants shortstop Omar Vizquel were inducted in front of over 43,000 fans.
See also[]
- Players from Dominican Republic in MLB
- List of Major League Baseball batting champions
External link[]
- Baseball-Reference.com - Major league career statistics
Preceded by: Roberto Clemente |
National League Batting Champion 1966 |
Succeeded by: Roberto Clemente |