Clay Kirby
Clayton Laws Kirby, Jr. was an American Major League Baseball pitcher for the San Diego Padres, Cincinnati Reds and Montreal Expos.
Early life
Clayton Laws "Clay" Kirby, Jr, was born in Washington, D.C., and attended Washington-Lee High School in Arlington, Virginia. He was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals in the third round of the 1966 [Major League Baseball draft|1966 draft], however, in October 1968 he was chosen in the 1968 [Major League Baseball expansion draft|expansion draft] by the Padres, who would begin play in 1969 along with the Expos.MLB career
He made his Major League debut at age 20 with the first-year Padres on April 11, 1969 as the Padres fell at home 8-0 to the San Francisco Giants. The first major league hitter he ever faced was Willie Mays, who walked, as Kirby gave up three earned runs in four innings. Although he led the National League in losses that year with 20, he had a 3.80 earned run average in 35 starts with 215.1 innings pitched.Near no-hitter
On July 21, 1970, Kirby had no-hit the visiting New York Mets through eight innings, but was trailing 1-0. In the first inning Kirby had walked Tommie Agee, who stole second base. With one out Kirby walked Ken Singleton and the Mets pulled off a double steal, placing Agee on third. Agee subsequently scored on an Art Shamsky ground out to second baseman Ron Slocum. Now with two outs in the bottom of the eighth inning, Padres Manager Preston Gómez had Cito Gaston pinch-hit for Kirby, denying him a chance to complete the no-hitter. The 10,373 fans in attendance booed long and loud. Padres reliever Jack Baldschun then gave up two runs and three hits in the ninth. The Mets' Jim McAndrew had retired 15 batters in a row en route to what would be a three-hit, 3-0 victory for the Mets. According to Mets pitcher Tom Seaver. "The Mets bench just gasped in disbelief," Seaver told sportswriter Joe Durso. "I personally would have let him hit. If the pennant race were involved, no. But in this situation, yes." That season, Kirby posted a 10-16 record with a 4.53 ERA. The next two years Kirby had numbers of 15-13, 2.83 in 1971, and 12–14, 3.13 in 1972. In 1973 his record fell to 8-18 with a 4.79 ERA.The Padres, who began play in 1969, were the last Major League Baseball team never to have thrown a no-hitter until Joe Musgrove threw the franchise's first on April 9, 2021 against the Texas Rangers. Fans and writers occasionally attribute this unlikely failure to the "Curse of Clay Kirby," in recognition of the controversial decision by Preston Gómez to remove Kirby from the game.
Big Red Machine
In November 1973 Kirby was acquired by the Reds for outfielder Bobby Tolan and the move paid off as Kirby went 12–9 with an ERA of 3.28 as the Reds won 98 games. In 1975, Kirby was one of six starters to win 10 or more games for the Big Red Machine, who won the National League title as he went 10–6 with an ERA of 4.72 in 19 starts. The Reds later won the 1975 World Series, but Kirby did not play in the series.He was sent to the Montreal Expos for Bob Bailey on December 12, 1975. In January 1976 Kirby was stricken with a long bout of pneumonia before he joined the Expos in Florida for spring training. He was still weak and had a sore shoulder when the season opened. He got off to a miserable start and never recovered and in the 1976 season he fell to 1–8 with an ERA of 5.72, and it was his final major league season. Montreal released him on December 2, 1976. In January 1977 the Padres picked up their former pitcher to give him another chance. They invited him to their spring training camp in Yuma, Arizona. A knee injury in the final week of spring training delayed his comeback try for almost two months. The Padres placed him with their Pacific Coast League farm club in Hawaii. He won his first game for the Islanders on June 18, though never won another. According to teammate John D'Acquisto in his book Fastball John, "Game after game, I would see him step off the mound in despair, unable to do what he had done all through high school and through much of his time at the major league level: pitch competitive baseball." His record for the season was 1–8 with an ERA of 7.95.
After San Diego gave up on Kirby, he tried out with the Minnesota Twins during spring training in 1978. He lasted only two weeks before he was released. Kirby was out of organized baseball before his 30th birthday.
In his eight seasons in the Major Leagues, Kirby played 261 games and had a 75–104 record with a 3.84 ERA, 42 complete games, eight shutouts, 1,548 innings pitched and 1,061 strikeouts.