Jim McGlothlin
James Milton McGlothlin, nicknamed "Red", was an American Major League Baseball pitcher. During a nine-year MLB career, he pitched for the California Angels, Cincinnati Reds and Chicago White Sox.
He died of a rare type of leukemia at age 32.
Early life
McGlothlin was born on October 6, 1943, in Los Angeles. When he was in his early teens, McGlothlin's father died, and he worked nightly at a gas station to help support his mother. He graduated from Reseda High School in 1961, where he was a standout pitcher on the baseball team, winning All-Valley honors. He met his future wife Janice at Reseda High. He was signed as an amateur free agent the following year by the Los Angeles Angels.Baseball career
McGlothlin threw and batted right-handed and was listed as tall and.Minor league
McGlothlin played in the Angels' minor league system for all or parts of the 1962-66 seasons. In 1965, playing for the Seattle Angels of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League, he had a 14–8 record, with a 2.55 earned run average, and 180 strikeouts in 205 innings. He was second in the PCL in strikeouts and fifth in wins. He was one win behind future major league pitcher and NBA Hall of Fame player Dave DeBusschere, and was one place ahead of him in strikeout ranking.California Angels
McGlothlin made his major league debut at age 21 on September 20, 1965, allowing four earned runs in five innings pitched in a 4–2 home loss against the Baltimore Orioles. He split the 1966 season between Seattle and Los Angeles, starting 11 games, with a 3–0 record in the American League that year.He joined the Angels full time in 1967. He was named to the American League All-Star Team in, a season in which he tied for the AL lead in shutouts, had a career-high nine complete games and posted a 12–8 record and a 2.96 earned run average. He pitched two innings in the All Star Game, giving up only one hit, allowing no runs, and striking out two. After having already started in 29 games that season, McGlothlin pitched in relief in the second games of both doubleheaders versus the Detroit Tigers on the final weekend of that season, and was the winning pitcher in the final game, which eliminated the Tigers from the American League pennant race.
The Angels had been one of five contenders in the 1967 race until a disastrous, mid-August stretch saw them lose 12 out of 15 games and drop from 1 games behind to 8 lengths out of the league lead. They finished 1967 at 84–77, but then slumped to losing marks in both and . McGlothlin's record suffered with his team's, as he dropped 31 of 49 decisions and posted above-3.00 earned run averages. On November 25, 1969, he was included in one of the off-season's high profile interleague trades when the Angels sent him and fellow pitchers Pedro Borbón and Vern Geishert to the Cincinnati Reds for hard-hitting outfielder Alex Johnson and utility infielder Chico Ruiz.
Cincinnati Reds
In his first season in the National League, McGlothlin proceeded to win a career-high 14 games for the pennant-winning 1970 "Big Red Machine", leading the staff with three shutouts and finishing third on the Reds in innings pitched. McGlothlin did not pitch in the 1970 National League Championship Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates, and started Game 2 of the 1970 World Series against the Baltimore Orioles. In Game 2, he did not earn a decision after working 4 innings. The Reds dropped that game, 6–5, en route to a five-game Series loss.In, he lowered his earned run average from 3.59 to 3.22 and remained on the team's top ten players in wins above replacement, but he dropped 12 of 20 decisions as Cincinnati won 23 fewer games than in 1970 and fell back in the standings. In strike-shortened, McGlothlin's final full season with the Reds, he started 21 regular-season games and posted a winning record for a pennant-winning club. But his effectiveness diminished: his ERA rose to 3.91 and, for the first time as an MLB starting pitcher, he allowed more hits than innings pitched.
He also started a game in the 1972 World Series. In Game 5, he allowed four earned runs in three full innings against the Oakland Athletics and Catfish Hunter. The Reds would win the game in the ninth, 5–4. McGlothlin received a no decision.
Used sparingly in, he made nine starts among his 24 appearances and split six decisions, but his ERA ballooned to 6.68 in 63 innings pitched.