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Ray Scarborough

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Ray Scarborough
Pitcher
Born: (1917-07-23)July 23, 1917
Mount Gilead, North Carolina
Died: July 1, 1982(1982-07-01) (aged 64)
Mount Olive, North Carolina
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
debut
June 26, 1942, for the Washington Senators
Last appearance
September 25, 1953, for the Detroit Tigers
Career statistics
Win–loss record80–85
Earned run average4.13
Strikeouts564
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Rae Wilson Scarborough (July 23, 1917 – July 1, 1982) was a starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Washington Senators (1942–1943 and 1946–1950), Chicago White Sox (1950), Boston Red Sox (1951–52), New York Yankees (1952–53) and Detroit Tigers (1953). Scarborough batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Mount Gilead, North Carolina.

Playing career

In a ten-season career, Scarborough posted an 80–85 win-loss record in 318 games, 168 games started, 59 complete games, 9 shutouts, 75 games finished, 12 saves, 1,428 ⅔ innings pitched, 1,487 hits allowed, 755 runs allowed, 656 earned runs allowed, 88 home runs allowed, 611 walks, 564 strikeouts, 44 hit batsmen, 30 wild pitches, 6,297 batters faced, 4 balks and a 4.13 ERA.

A Wake Forest graduate, Scarborough was used sparingly by the Washington Senators before World War II. After spending two years in the military service, he developed into a reliable starter. His most productive season came in 1948, when he had a 15–8 mark and recorded a 2.82 ERA, being only surpassed by Gene Bearden (2.43). In 1949 he won 13 games with the Senators, and again won 13 in 1950 for Washington (3) and the Chicago White Sox (10), a season in which he made his only All-Star appearance. On September 28, 1949, Scarborough ended Ted Williams' streak of most consecutive games reaching base safely at 84 games.[1]

After winning 12 games for the Boston Red Sox in 1951, Scarborough was purchased by the New York Yankees in the 1952 midseason, as he went 5–1 during New York's successful pennant drive en route to the 1952 World Series. He played for the Yankees and Detroit Tigers in 1953, his last major league season.

Scarborough often received attention from the press in New York and Boston due to his off-season work as a pickle salesman for the Mt. Olive Pickle Company in Mount Olive, N.C. One newspaper called him the "Pickle Peddling Pitcher," and others ran cartoons showing him dunking opposing players in pickle barrels.[2]

Retirement

Following his playing career, Scarborough moved to Mount Olive, North Carolina, where he opened an oil and supply company. Later he scouted for the Baltimore Orioles, California Angels and Milwaukee Brewers organizations, and also helped establish a baseball program at Mount Olive College. He spent the first part of the 1968 season on the Orioles' MLB coaching staff. Scarborough's grandson Garrett Blackwelder played basketball at East Carolina University from 1996 to 2000 and holds several shooting records.

Scarborough died in Mount Olive, North Carolina, at the age of 64.

See also

References

  1. ^ Baseball’s Top 100: The Game’s Greatest Records, p.44, Kerry Banks, 2010, Greystone Books, Vancouver, BC, ISBN 978-1-55365-507-7
  2. ^ http://www.digitalnc.org/blog/scrapbooks-from-baseball-star-and-pickle-salesman-ray-scarborough-now-online/ | DigitalNC Blog: "Scrapbooks from Baseball Start and Pickle Salesman Now Available Online"

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