Again he was called up to San Diego for the final month of the Major League season. He started slowly, going only two for eight (.250) in his first five games. But in his penultimate big-league game, on October 1 at home against the Atlanta Braves, Hinshaw collected four hits in five at bats, and knocked in the winning run in the tenth inning with his walk-offsingle off Sid Monge.[3]
Hinshaw started the following day, October 2, at third base, and in his final at bat, he hit another RBI single, raising his seven-game and 16-at bat average to .438. But it was his last game in the Majors. He spent the next five seasons at Triple-A, and bounced from the Padres to the Cleveland Indians, Cincinnati Reds and Los Angeles Dodgers' organizations. After putting up two gaudy seasons for the 1987–1988 Albuquerque Dukes of the Pacific Coast League, batting .338 and .340, Hinshaw departed for his season in Japan.
He appeared in 53 games for the 1989 Dragons, and batted .294 with eight home runs and 26 runs batted in.[4]
Hinshaw returned to North America to play two more pro seasons, in 1990 and 1993.
All told, as a Major Leaguer, Hinshaw had 11 hits in 31 at bats, with one extra-base hit, a double, for a career average of .355.
References
^the ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia. Sterling Publishing. 2007. p. 581. ISBN978-1-4027-4771-7.