Dave Gray
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Other people". Template:Use mdy dates Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". David Alexander Gray (January 7, 1943 – July 29, 2020) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Boston Red Sox during the 1964 season. Listed at Script error: No such module "convert". and Script error: No such module "convert"., he batted and threw right-handed.
Gray played baseball at Ogden High School in Ogden, Utah, and, according to Gray, did not lose any games as a pitcher.[1]
Gray was signed by the Red Sox out of the Weber State University. After spending his first year in professional baseball, 1963, at the minor league level, Gray was kept on Boston's Major League roster for the entire 1964 campaign to keep him from being drafted by other MLB teams under the terms of the Bonus Rule then in force. In nine Major League appearances, Gray posted a 9.00 ERA with 17 strikeouts and 20 bases on balls in 13 innings of work, allowing 18 hits. He had one starting pitcher assignment and six games finished, and did not register a decision.
Gray was one of only a few dozen major leaguers to have a perfect lifetime 1.000 batting average. On June 20, 1964, he singled off Milt Pappas of the Baltimore Orioles in the seventh inning of the game at Memorial Stadium. According Gray, Orioles catcher Andy Etchebarren told him before the pitch that Pappas would be throwing a fastball.[1] It was Gray's only Major League at bat.
By the time he retired after the 1970 minor league season, Gray said he had lost all of his velocity.[1]
Gray died on July 29, 2020, in South Ogden, Utah.
References
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Sources
- Career statistics from Script error: No such module "String".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- Retrosheet
- Pages with script errors
- 1943 births
- 2020 deaths
- Baseball players from Utah
- Boston Red Sox players
- Major League Baseball pitchers
- Pittsfield Red Sox players
- Salt Lake City Bees players
- Sportspeople from Ogden, Utah
- Waterloo Hawks (baseball) players
- Weber State Wildcats baseball players
- Winston-Salem Red Sox players
- 20th-century American sportsmen