American baseball player (born 1950)
Baseball player
Michael Dwaine Phillips (born August 19, 1950), is an American former professional baseball player , a shortstop , second baseman , and third baseman who appeared in 712 Major League games from 1973 to 1983 for the San Francisco Giants , New York Mets , St. Louis Cardinals , San Diego Padres , and Montreal Expos . Phillips batted left-handed, threw right-handed, stood 6 feet (1.8 m) tall and weighed 170 pounds (77 kg).
Career
Born in Beaumont, Texas , Phillips attended MacArthur High School in Irving, Texas , and was selected by the Giants in the first round (18th pick overall) of the 1969 Major League Baseball draft . After four years of seasoning in the Giants' farm system , he made the Major Leagues in 1973 and was largely a utility infielder during his career, although in 1975 he was the Mets' regular shortstop, appearing in 116 games when the club's longtime starter at the position, Bud Harrelson , was injured. Phillips hit for the cycle on June 25, 1976, while playing for the Mets in a 7–4 victory over the Chicago Cubs .[ 1] He was dealt from the Mets to the Cardinals for Joel Youngblood at the trade deadline on June 15, 1977.[ 2]
Phillips registered 416 hits , including 46 doubles , 24 triples , and 11 home runs , during his MLB career.
Post-playing career
After his retirement as a player, Phillips worked for Dallas radio station KRLD in sports
marketing for nine years, for the Texas Rangers in corporate sponsorships for five years, and for the Kansas City Royals in corporate sales for seven years.[ 3]
In 2015, Phillips was inducted into the Irving Independent School District Athletic Hall of Fame.[ 4]
See also
References
^ "New York Mets 7, Chicago Cubs 4" . Retrosheet . June 25, 1976.
^ Durso, Joseph. "Mets Trade Tom Seaver and Dave Kingman," The New York Times , Thursday, June 16, 1977. Retrieved April 21, 2020
^ "Irving ISD Athletic Hall of Fame Names Inductees" (PDF) . Irving Independent School District . 2015. Retrieved November 26, 2017 .
^ "Athletic Hall of Fame" . Irving Independent School District . Retrieved November 26, 2017 .
Further reading
External links
1965 : Gallagher
1966 : Reynolds
1967 : Rader
1968 : Matthews
1969 : Phillips
1970 : D'Acquisto
1971 : Riccelli
1972 : Dressler
1973 : LeMaster
1974 : Lee
1975 : Barnicle
1976 : Kuecker
1977 : Landis
1978 : Cummings
1979 : Garrelts , Luecken
1980 : Reid
1981 : Grant
1982 : Stanicek
1983: None
1984 : Cockrell , Mulholland
1985 : Clark
1986 : M. Williams
1987 : Remlinger
1988 : Clayton , Wood
1989 : Hosey
1990 : Hyzdu , Christopherson , Jensen
1991 : S. Whitaker
1992 : Murray
1993 : Soderstrom
1994 : Powell , Cruz
1995 : Fontenot
1996 : White
1997 : Grilli , McKinley
1998 : Torcato , Bump , McDowell , Jones , Urban
1999 : Ainsworth , Je. Williams
2000 : Bonser
2001 : Hennessey , Lowry , Linden
2002 : Cain
2003 : Aardsma , C. Whitaker
2004: None
2005: None
2006 : Lincecum , Burriss
2007 : Bumgarner , Alderson , Fairley , Noonan , Ja. Williams , Culberson
2008 : Posey , Gillaspie
2009 : Wheeler
2010 : Brown
2011 : Panik , Crick
2012 : Stratton
2013 : Arroyo
2014 : Beede
2015 : Bickford , Shaw
2016: None
2017 : Ramos
2018 : Bart
2019 : Bishop
2020 : Bailey
2021 : Bednar
2022 : Crawford
2023 : Eldridge
2024 : Tibbs