armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

Pete Gray

(upload a new image)

Full Name: Peter J. Gray Primary Position: OF
Height/Weight: 6' 1"/169 First Game: April 17, 1945
Birthdate: March 6, 1915 Final Game: September 30, 1945
Birthplace: Nanticoke, Pennsylvania MLB Experience: 1 year
Died: June 30, 2002
Deathplace: Nanticoke, Pennsylvania
Bat/Throw: Left/Left
Rate this Player
4.00
(2 votes)

Contents

  • 1 Biography
  • 2 Statistics
    • 2.1 Batting Stats
    • 2.2 Fielding Stats
  • 3 Transactions
  • 4 Trivia
  • 5 Video Gallery
  • 6 Picture Gallery
  • 7 See Also
  • 8 Categories

[edit] Biography

Pete Gray was born on March 6, 1915 in Nanticoke Pennsylvania. He made his Major League debut on April 17, 1945, making him 30 years old when he played his first game. He played his final game on September 30, 1945 and died in Nanticoke at the age of 87 on June 30, 2002.

The thing that distinguished Gray from other players was that he had lost his right arm in an accident when he was a child. He attracted the attention of the St. Louis Browns when he hit 5 home runs, hit .333 while, and stole 68 bases for Memphis of the Southern League in 1944.

The Browns signed him for the 1945 season, and in that season, he hit .218 and hit 13 doubles and 4 triples while stealing 11 bases.

When fielding the baseball, he would be able to move the ball from his glove to his throwing hand in one smooth motion. Being naturally righthanded, he had to learn to hit and throw from his left side.

Hitting became a real problem when pitchers figured out he couldn't adjust his swing in time to hit curve balls so he saw a lot of curveballs. Some of his teammates on the Browns thought the presence of Gray on the team kept the Browns from repeating their AL championship of 1944.

Gray was not a great baseball player by any means, but his courage means more than any meaningless stat. For one major league season, he got to live the dream a lot of us would like to live and nobody could ever take that away from him. To his credit though he was the MVP of the Southern League in 1944.

If not for the loss of his right arm, Gray may have been one of the better players on a major league team.

It has been reported that he became a recluse after finishing his baseball playing days.

In his book Even the Browns his manager Luke Sewell wrote:

"He (Gray) didn't belong in the major leagues and he knew he was being exploited. Just a quiet fellow, and he had an inferiority complex. (They) were trying to get a gate attraction in St. Louis."

Hopefully most people who saw him play didn't think of him as a sideshow but as a 30 year old man who wanted to play major league baseball and put in the work it took to make it if even for only one season because by next season players were streaming back into the majors after VJ Day.

[edit] Statistics

[edit] Batting Stats

Year Team G AB R H HR RBI AVG OBP SLG 2B 3B BB SO HBP SH SB IBB GDP
1945 STL A 77 234 26 51 0 13 .218 .259 .261 6 2 13 11 0 6 5 0 2

[edit] Fielding Stats

Year Team POS G GS INN PO A ERR DP TP PB SB CS PkO AVG
1945 STL A OF 61 0 0 162 3 7 1 0 0 0 0 0 .959

[edit] Transactions

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Video Gallery

Add Videos

[edit] Picture Gallery

Add Pictures

[edit] See Also

[edit] Categories

Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Pete_Gray"

This page was last modified 16:27, 2 April 2008. Content is available under the GFDL.

Contribute

ArmchairGM's pages can be edited.
Is this page incomplete? Is there anything wrong?
Change it!

Edit this page Discuss this page Page history

Recent contributors to this page

The following people recently contributed to this article.

Embed this on your site

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise