Everything about Jim Gilliam totally explained
|deathdate=
|debutdate=
April 14
|debutyear=
|debutteam=
Brooklyn Dodgers
|finaldate=
September 25
|finalyear=
|finalteam=
Los Angeles Dodgers
|stat1label=
Batting average
|stat1value=.265
|stat2label=
Hits
|stat2value=1,889
|stat3label=
Runs batted in
|stat3value=558
|teams=
Career
Born in
Nashville, Tennessee, he began playing on a local semi-pro team at age 14 and dropped out of high school in his senior year to pursue his career. He was nicknamed "Junior" during his time playing in the Negro leagues with the
Baltimore Elite Giants, where he teamed with
shortstop Pee Wee Butts and was voted an
All-Star three straight years from 1948 to 1950; veteran
George Scales taught him to switch hit. In
1951 he was signed as an amateur free agent by the Dodgers, who sent him to play for their
International League farm team, the
Montreal Royals; he couldn't play for the Dodgers'
Fort Worth Cats affiliate, as blacks were still
barred from the
Texas League. After leading the IL in runs in both 1951 and 1952, Gilliam made his debut with the Dodgers in April
1953, with the formidable task of taking over second base from
Jackie Robinson, who was shifted to the outfield and third base; he proved capable,
batting .278 with a team-leading 125 runs for the NL champions. His 17 triples led the NL, and remain the most by a Dodger since 1920; he was second in the league (behind
Stan Musial) with 100 walks, and third in the NL with 21
stolen bases. For his excellent season he earned NL Rookie of the Year honors, as well as
The Sporting News Rookie of the Year Award.
He continued to play well during the team's Brooklyn years, batting .282 in 1954 with a career-high 13
home runs before slipping to a .249 average for the
1955 champions; he scored over 100 runs both years, as well as in 1956. With the
1956 pennant winners, he batted a career-best .300 and made his first major league
All-Star team, also finishing fifth in the
MVP voting; he was again second in the NL in walks (95, behind teammate
Duke Snider) and steals (21, behind
Willie Mays). On
July 21 of that year, he tied
John Montgomery Ward's
1892 major league record of 12
assists in a game. In the Dodgers' last season in Brooklyn in 1957, he batted .250 but led the NL in
putouts and
fielding percentage and again finished second behind Mays in stolen bases. He continued to star with the team after their
1958 move to
Los Angeles, California, though he gradually shifted to third base; for the
1959 champions he led the NL in walks (96), along with 23 steals, and was again an All-Star, hitting a home run in that year's second All-Star Game. During the team's Los Angeles years, he moved back to second base from 1961-63, batting .282 in the
1963 pennant year and placing sixth in that year's MVP vote; he also relinquished the leadoff role to
Maury Wills in the 1960s, instead batting second in the order.
He played in seven
World Series with the Dodgers, four of them against the
New York Yankees. In the
1953 World Series he singled to lead off Game 1, and had a solo homer in the fifth inning batting left-handed. He hit three doubles, scoring once and
driving in two runs, in the 7-3 Game 4 victory; he'd another homer, this time batting right-handed, in the 11-7 loss in Game 5. In Game 3 of the
1955 World Series, he drew a walk with the bases loaded in the second inning to give the Dodgers the lead for good, and he drove in the first run of the 8-5 Game 4 win; the Dodgers won in seven games for their first Series championship. In the
1956 World Series, he walked with one out in the tenth inning of Game 6 and scored on a single by Robinson to give the Dodgers a 1-0 victory, tying the Series; in Game 5 he'd
struck out and grounded out twice in the
perfect game pitched by the Yankees'
Don Larsen. In the
1963 World Series he scored the only run of Game 3 in the first inning after walking and advancing to second base on a
wild pitch; after advancing all the way to third base on an
error by
Joe Pepitone in the seventh inning of Game 4, he scored on a
Willie Davis sacrifice fly to give the Dodgers a 2-1 win and a Series sweep. He was also on Dodger teams which won the Series in
1959 against the
Chicago White Sox and
1965 against the
Minnesota Twins. His final major league appearance was in Game 2 of the
1966 World Series against the
Baltimore Orioles.
Gilliam was named a coach after the 1964 season, and intended to end his playing career, but team injuries resulted in his seeing substantial play at third base in
1965 and
1966, with the team again winning the NL championship in both seasons. In 1965 he was part of the major leagues' first all-switch-hitting infield, with shortstop Wills, first baseman
Wes Parker and second baseman
Jim Lefebvre. On
September 5, Gilliam hit a 2-run pinch triple in a road game against the
Houston Astros, giving the Dodgers a 3-2 lead in the 9th inning; the
Los Angeles Rams, playing a preseason game against the
Philadelphia Eagles at the
Coliseum, were playing so poorly despite their 10-0 win that the biggest cheer from the stands came from people listening to portable radios tuned to the Dodger game who cheered when Gilliam got the hit.
He finally retired as a player following the 1966 season with a .265 career batting average, 1889
hits, 1163 runs, 65 home runs, 558 runs batted in, 304
doubles, 71 triples, 1036 walks and 203 stolen bases over 14 seasons.
He continued as coach through the 1978 season, including three more Dodger pennant teams in
1974,
1977 and
1978; they lost the World Series in each year. Gilliam suffered a massive
brain hemorrhage at his home on
September 15,
1978, and following surgery lapsed into a
coma from which he didn't recover. He died in
Inglewood, California at age 49, one day after the Dodgers clinched their tenth pennant during his tenure in the
1978 National League Championship Series. His uniform number 19 was retired by the Dodgers two days after his death, prior to Game 1 of the
1978 World Series. He is interred in the
Inglewood Park Cemetery.
The book (2004) includes short stories from former Dodger pitcher
Carl Erskine. Gilliam is prominent in many of these stories.
Quotations
"What a great team player he was. He'd hit behind Maury, take pitch after pitch after pitch. And when Maury got to second, he'd give himself up by hitting the ball to the right side, even with two strikes, which most hitters won't do." - teammate Jeff Torborg, describing Gilliam as the ideal #2 hitter (External Link
)
"He didn't hit with power, he'd no arm, and he couldn't run. But he did the little things to win ballgames. He never griped or complained. He was one of the most unselfish ballplayers I know." - manager Walter Alston
"Father, friend, and locker room inspiration that will never be forgotten." - Davey Lopes, Dodgers second baseman from 1972-81Further Information
Get more info on 'Jim Gilliam'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://jim_gilliam.totallyexplained.com">Jim Gilliam Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |