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{{short description|American baseball player}}
{{short description|American baseball player (1940-2013)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2024}}
{{Infobox baseball biography
{{Infobox baseball biography
|name=Rod Miller
|name=Rod Miller

Latest revision as of 02:16, 10 July 2024

Rod Miller
Pinch hitter
Born: (1940-01-16)January 16, 1940
Portland, Oregon
Died: November 8, 2013(2013-11-08) (aged 73)
Cascade, Idaho
Batted: Left
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 28, 1957, for the Brooklyn Dodgers
Last MLB appearance
September 28, 1957, for the Brooklyn Dodgers
MLB statistics
Batting average.000
Home runs0
Runs scored0
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams

Rodney Carter Miller (January 16, 1940 – November 8, 2013) was an American professional baseball player who played in one game in Major League Baseball for the 1957 Brooklyn Dodgers when he was 17 years old. Born in Portland, Oregon, he signed with Brooklyn after graduating from high school in Lynwood, California. A second baseman and third baseman by trade, he batted left-handed and threw right-handed, stood 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 m) tall and weighed 160 pounds (73 kg).

Miller had spent 1957 in the Class C Illinois–Indiana–Iowa League before his recall to the Dodgers after rosters were expanded to 40 men post-September 1. In his one MLB game, on September 28, 1957, he pinch hit for Randy Jackson in the top of the ninth inning against relief pitcher Jack Meyer of the Philadelphia Phillies, and struck out. The game, played at Connie Mack Stadium, was won by the Dodgers 8–4.[1] It was the second-to-last game in Brooklyn Dodger history. Weeks after the 1957 regular season ended on September 29, the team moved to Los Angeles for the 1958 campaign.

Although the Dodgers' new home was minutes from Miller's high school alma mater, he never again appeared for them after 1957. Miller played three more years in the lower reaches of the Dodgers' farm system, leaving baseball after the 1960 campaign to join the United States Marine Corps, where he served for four years. He lived for 21 years in Reno, Nevada, before retiring to Cascade, Idaho, in 2009.[2]

References

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