Mexican baseball player (born 1945)
In this
Spanish name , the first or paternal
surname is
Piña and the second or maternal family name is
García .
Baseball player
Horacio Piña García [pee'-nyah] (born March 12, 1945) is a Mexican former relief pitcher who played in Major League Baseball over eight seasons between 1968 and 1978 . Piña also played professionally in Mexico for all or portions of nine years. He batted and threw right-handed, and was listed as 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) tall and 177 pounds (80 kg).
Piña reached the major leagues in 1968 with the Cleveland Indians , spending two years with them before moving to the Washington Senators /Texas Rangers (1970 –1972 ), Oakland Athletics (1973 ), Chicago Cubs (1974 ), California Angels (1974 ) and Philadelphia Phillies (1978 ). His most productive season came in 1972 with the last-place Rangers, when he posted career-numbers in saves (15), strikeouts (60) and games pitched (60). Traded to the Oakland Athletics for Mike Epstein on December 1, 1972,[ 1] he responded with a 6–3 mark, eight saves and career-highs in ERA (2.76) and innings (88.0), helping them to clinch the ALCS and the World Series Championship . He was dealt from the Athletics to the Cubs for Bob Locker at the Winter Meetings on December 3, 1973.[ 2] In an eight-season career, Piña posted a 23–23 record with a 3.25 ERA and 38 saves in 314 games. In three post-season games he had a perfect 0.00 ERA in five innings.
As a pitcher in the Mexican League , Piña threw a no-hitter in 1975 and a perfect game in 1978 while posting a 21–4 record with a 1.94 ERA that year. Piña gained induction in the Mexican Professional Baseball Hall of Fame in 1988.
See also
References
^ Durso, Joseph. "A's Send Epstein to Rangers; Scheinblum, Nelson to Reds," The New York Times , Saturday, December 2, 1972. Retrieved April 13, 2020
^ Durso, Joseph. "4 Trades Made at Meetings," The New York Times , Tuesday, December 4, 1973. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
The ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia – Gary Gillette, Peter Gammons, Pete Palmer. Publisher: Sterling Publishing, 2005. Format: Paperback, 1824pp. Language: English. ISBN 1-4027-4771-3
External links
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