Dave Hostetler
David Alan Hostetler is an American former professional baseball first baseman and designated hitter who played for the Montreal Expos, Texas Rangers, and Pittsburgh Pirates of Major League Baseball. He also played for the Nankai Hawks of Nippon Professional Baseball. As of November 2007, he is the National Coordinator of Baseball Sales for equipment company Riddell and an ambassador to youth players.
Career
Collegiate and early minor league career
Hostetler was drafted in the 4th round of the 1975 amateur draft by the San Francisco Giants out of junior college but did not sign. In 1976, he was again drafted by San Francisco and did not sign. He was taken in the second phase of the draft by the Cleveland Indians but returned to school again. In 1977, the Giants drafted him for a third time with no success.He was a big star at the University of Southern California, where he was one of the key players on the team that won the 1978 College World Series, along with Dave Engle, Dave Van Gorder, and Tim Tolman. Hostetler hit a home run in the championship game against Arizona State University.
Drafted in the fourth round of the 1978 Major League Baseball draft by the Montreal Expos, he finally signed a deal. He debuted that year with the West Palm Beach Expos, hitting.269/~.361/.378.
In 1979, Hostetler spent his first full pro season with the Memphis Chicks, hitting.270/~.359/.445 with 20 homers, 114 RBI and 110 strikeouts. He tied for sixth in the Southern League in home runs, drove in the most and drew a league-high 14 intentional walks. He made the SL All-Star team at DH and drove in 19 more than runner-up Paul Householder.
Denver Bears
In 1980, he played on one of the truly great minor league teams, the Denver Bears, who won over two-thirds of their games. The other stars on his team that year were Tim Raines, Randy Bass, and Tim Wallach. Hostetler was the regular first baseman and hit.269/~.345/.371, with only 9 home runs and 58 RBI in a very hitter-friendly environment. He was the only member of the infield not to make the American Association All-Star team as Raines, Wallach and Jerry Manuel were all selected.While Denver was not as good in 1981, Hostetler was far better, hitting.318 with 27 HR and 103 RBI. His homer total was more than Nick Esasky and Ryne Sandberg combined in the 1981 American Association, and he was only one home run behind league leader George Bjorkman. Only teammate Dan Briggs, with 110 RBI, drove in more. Hostetler was the A.A. All-Star first baseman that year. Getting his first major league playing time, he went 3 for 6 with a homer for the 1981 Expos. All of his hits came in the Expos' last regular-season game, on October 4 in New York, after the team had clinched the second-half title . His monster home run off Pete Falcone was the team's only run in a 2-1 loss in which Montreal fielded a AAA line-up after the first few innings.