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Del Unser
Born: 1944
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OF-1B 1968-82 Senators , Indians, Phillies, Mets, Expos
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| Games | Average | HR | RBI |
| Career |
1799 | .258 | 87 | 481 | | League CS |
5 | .400 | 0 | 1 | | World Series |
3 | .500 | 0 | 2 |
Unser was TSN's AL Rookie of the Year in 1968, despite hitting just .230
with 66 runs and 30 RBI as Washington's everyday centerfielder, because he established
himself as second only to Paul Blair defensively. He led AL outfielders in assists,
double plays, and total chances per game and finished just two back in putouts. In
1969 he improved his average to .286 and led the league with eight triples (setting
a ML record for fewest to lead the league). Traded to the Indians for 1972 and then
to the Phillies for 1973, he improved his hitting in the NL, showing a bit more power;
he had his best season in 1974, batting .264 with career highs of 61 RBI and 72 runs
in 454 at-bats. After that season he was traded to the Mets with Mac Scarce and John
Stearns for Tug McGraw and two utility outfielders, and he reached a new personal
best by batting .294. He slumped the next season and was never again an everyday
player.
He began pinch hitting in 1977 with the Expos, and although he was not
successful at first (7-for-58 in 1977-78), he improved on returning to the Phillies
in 1979, batting .304 in the pinch and tying a ML record with homers in three straight
pinch at-bats (June 30, July 5, 10). He pinch hit .316 in the Phillies' 1980 World
Championship season. In the decisive Game Five of the LCS, he went 2-for-2 after
coming in as a pinch hitter and then staying in the game, and he drove in a run and
scored two, including the game winner in the tenth inning as the Phillies beat the
Astros 8-7 to take the series. In Game Two of the World Series, he hit a pinch double
off Royals relief ace Dan Quisenberry in the Phillies' eighth-inning come-from-behind
rally. In Game Five, another pinch double off Quisenberry in the ninth inning tied
the game; Unser moved to third on a sacrifice fly and scored the game winner on an
infield single. Del's father Al caught for the Tigers and Reds during WWII.
(SFS)
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