Héctor Maestri: Difference between revisions
BurmaShaver (talk | contribs) +xl; wiki |
BurmaShaver (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Hector_Maestri_1960.jpg|right|thumb|Hector Maestri (1960)]] |
[[Image:Hector_Maestri_1960.jpg|right|thumb|Hector Maestri (1960)]] |
||
'''Hector Anibal Maestri Garcia |
'''Hector Anibal Maestri Garcia''' (born on [[April 19]], [[1935]] in [[Havana, Cuba]]) is a former [[Major League Baseball]] [[pitcher]]. The right-hander was signed by the [[Minnesota Twins|Washington Senators]] before the 1956 season, and later drafted by the new [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Washington Senators]] from the [[Minnesota Twins]] in the 1960 expansion draft. (December 14, 1960) |
||
He is one of a small number of ballplayers to play for <u>both</u> of the Washington Senators franchises, and one of only three to play for them in consecutive seasons. ([[Hal Woodeshick]] and [[Rudy Hernandez]] are the others.) |
He is one of a small number of ballplayers to play for <u>both</u> of the Washington Senators franchises, and one of only three to play for them in consecutive seasons. ([[Hal Woodeshick]] and [[Rudy Hernandez]] are the others.) |
Revision as of 10:46, 14 November 2006
Hector Anibal Maestri Garcia (born on April 19, 1935 in Havana, Cuba) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher. The right-hander was signed by the Washington Senators before the 1956 season, and later drafted by the new Washington Senators from the Minnesota Twins in the 1960 expansion draft. (December 14, 1960)
He is one of a small number of ballplayers to play for both of the Washington Senators franchises, and one of only three to play for them in consecutive seasons. (Hal Woodeshick and Rudy Hernandez are the others.)
Maestri appeared in one game for the original Washington club, pitching two scoreless innings of relief against the Baltimore Orioles. (September 24, 1960) He also appeared in one game for the expansion Washington club, starting and pitching six innings against the Kansas City Athletics. He gave up three runs (just one earned) and took the loss in a 3-2 game. (September 17, 1961)
His two-game career totals were 8.1 innings pitched, 3 strikeouts, 3 bases on balls, a 0-1 record, and a 1.12 ERA.
External links
- Career statistics from Baseball Reference
- Retrosheet